Yugoslav Materials in the LBJ ArchivesMain MenuThe Yugoslavia ArchiveWelcome to this curated selection of digitized archival materials on Yugoslavia housed in the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Archive and digitized by the UT Libraries.Key DocumentsA selection of key documents from Box 232 of the Yugoslavia files with accompanying essays.Index of DocumentsAn index of the Yugoslav archival box's documents, with descriptive titles for each item.ES Librarian at UT Austina966648bfc0b32297dd765df3f1b759ab94cd497
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1media/Screenshot 2025-01-23 at 2.16.09 PM_thumb.png2025-01-23T11:17:20-08:00UT CREEESf1567cf04c35a5383a1e5c6f992ee20ec474e210276901Note Regarding Content of Meetingplain2025-01-23T11:17:22-08:00UT CREEESf1567cf04c35a5383a1e5c6f992ee20ec474e210
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12025-01-23T11:04:05-08:00Folder 411Folder 4 (36 documents) - August 1965 - June 1966plain2025-01-23T19:42:58-08:00Folder 4 (36 documents) - August 1965 - June 1966 Contains memorandums, notes, and letters that are revealing of US priorities for its evolving relationship with Yugoslavia regarding trade, economic assistance, and the Vietnam War. This folder also raises and answers questions of the US principles of engagement with communist countries through the lens of tobacco trade disputes, detailing how the US finds a balance with Yugoslavia while maintaining the containment policy. In addition, much of the documents discuss a financial assistance package and its potential use as leverage for the US as it fostered deeper engagement with Yugoslavia, a uniquely non-aligned communist country. Overall, these documents offer a more personal flair through an abundance of person-to-person notes and briefings that range from presidential summaries on US-Yugoslavia bilateral relations to a singular demand that a meeting must be kept to 10minutes long. Other documents include information on the Skopje earthquake, the India-Pakistan dispute, and a photo inferred to be a wooden charter for LBJ.