Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Soviet Union - was created in 1923.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Soviet Union - ended in 1991.
Ministry of Justice - Soviet Union - was created in 1970.
Ministry for State Security - Soviet Union - was created in 1946.
People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs .
Ministry of Justice - Soviet Union - ended in 1991.
That was Germany's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Von Ribbentrop.
Leon Trotsky was a Soviet Socialist revolutionary, politician and founding leader of Red Army. He was People's commissar of foreign affairs in the initial days of Soviet Union and after he helped establish Red Army, was People's commissar of military and naval affairs. He was one of the first members of Politburo.
my dad is fromAzerbaijan (Soviet Union),and his rank is higer than Major(Ministry of Internal Affairs). I dont know how it would be in British rank. do u know?
J. L. Black has written: 'Soviet perception of Canada, 1917-1987' -- subject(s): Attitudes, Bibliography, Canadianists, Foreign news, Foreign public opinion, Russian, Foreign public opinion, Soviet, History, Journalists, Public opinion, Relations, Russian Foreign public opinion, Scholars, Soviet Foreign public opinion 'Nearly Neighbours' 'Soviet newspaper reporting on Canada, 1945-1987' -- subject(s): Foreign public opinion, Soviet, Press, Soviet Foreign public opinion 'Canadian-Russian relations' -- subject(s): Congresses, Foreign relations 'Canadian-Soviet relations, 1917-1985' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Relations 'Soviet-Canadian relations, 1917-1985' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Foreign relations
Gorbachev promoted cooperation with western countries in order to change soviet foreign policy.
Not a thing. Soviet foreign policy never had any of Gerber chiefs.
On May 3, 1939, Stalin announced that Maxim Litvinov was being replaced by Vyacheslav Molotov as the Commissar for For Foreign Affairs. Litvinov had held that positions for years. The Kremlin's explanation was that Litvinov was having health problems, and that there was no change in Soviet foreign policies. Diplomats world wide suspected that Stalin was being less than truthful, in that former foreign commissar had been anti-Hitler for years, and that Litvinov was a champion for collective security among the nations of Europe. Also, it was not overlooked that Litvonov was Jewish. Western diplomats believed that at the least, Stalin's dismissal of his commissar meant a change in his views, but to what extent was unknown. The West had over the years come to understand what the Soviet Union's foreign policies were and this change had a purpose. In diplomatic circles, the 'unknown" is cause for concern.