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  • for a natloaal political pnty; etc. 8. In abort, we have a battle to ftatat which la aot yet complellld. We ha.-e men ud &Ulbadea aad aaNta oa oar aide wblch ha.-e wltJM&tood the lull b"9t ol. the maxlmam •-my attack on the dtl••• nnlftd, aad ralllec It la macll
  • relationship without aid ties to broaden our presence as widely as possible. On the other, there is something to be said for the argument that a constructive Arab attitude wil-1 ·not be possible until .the radicals come to their senses and that we should
  • there we.re two quhftions mor;t difficult in this situa.tio1.1, and one was thot7the Suez Canal and the other that of Jerusalem. He s aid tha t one of the difficulties was that the Arabs constantly sup.ported each othar in everything; for exatnple, assuming
  • cable ~o +- 31> - -,8 ;()~ \)- 4J,.~1s- Itosrow to President, 2: 10 p.m. -S 1 p ~ c; - 16•C:,S-- ~tJ"q"3--SG,i[Ouplicate of #99 , NSF, Country File, Vietnam, "50(3) , Allies' Troop Commitment; Other Aid (Alphabetical: Korea-UK)] 1 I' ~ 4?/a, ht, ~ lh
  • MARCH 21 69 70 71 - - - - - -•·..·····-······-·-· ..... . • •'i AID will . make a seventh grant in · the next two weeks, and expects to make three more by the end of June. By the time the program expires in 1969, it is expected that 15 to 20 · U.S
  • ,SAL 01,sso 00,CCO 00,NSCE· 00,Cl.AE 00,NSAE 00,ss 20,GPM 03, INR 07,AID 28,IO 13,EUR 15,RSR 01,MM 01,/103 W ' ~11~--- 0 R 03 t300Z JAN 68 ZFF-1 FM AMEMBASSY SAIGON TO SECSTATE WASHDC IMME~IATE 5580 C!NCPAC 1NFO USIA WASHDC 4496 DOD UNCLAS SECTION
  • aid programs and the possibility of military equipment support. Uy instructions concerning the Peshawar negotiations are not to allow them to be linked with either aid or military supply and I shall of course observe those instructions scrupulously
  • leadership la the lnter-Amerleaa Bank. The Bank b as•IIDWll a lara•r role ha the Alllaac:e. Laat r•r a.,...1 lavestmut• ~ the Bank reachefl ti. hall billion mark. It dld more dollar lU1dlag than 011r entire AID proaram 1n La.Un America. My hunch h that tu
  • the var~ous ~ase T::.e ..::, had become submerged i~ h!.s own sea of c!eter.s!.vc! 1teaauras." 2 no~ attack. ~hey beca~e af:-aid that we would a~tack ..• so t:iey cete:-::li~ed not to pull out. place to:- us to be de!"eateci. '?hey sa.,, 1 t
  • THAT !! iliUST 3E GIVEN HIM BY THE PRESIDENT WITHI:-.1 THZ FFtC\t•!E:iORX OF T:G: CONSTITUTION.) · 4.; SO:'.! OF· XY' S AIDES HAVE EXPRE·SSED SYMPATHY AND U~uERS!~Z..:1) !N3 WITH KY' 5 REASONING AND, THEREFOR!:, HIS INTEN! ION. A! !:-::: s;:J1E THIE, !HEY P~ED!C
  • the people are won over, the war is won. Such a"true revolution" cannot be done by GVN or AID but by the people themselves, through nongovernmental organizations. The notion that problems must be solved by working through government -- which worked· in Europe
  • , ·.,&- RUHHHQA/CINCPAC FOR POLAD . STATE GRNC ·BT SEC~~ T \ 'STATE PASS SAIGO N 19121 AID · SUB/SITUATION REPORT PROJECT RECOVERY -- 1800 HOURS, 12 FEBfUARY 1. THANG' H/: FULL. . CHARGE -,,OF cooi DI NATING- GROUP 'TOD.~ Y ACT ING? · \~l,J.11:·A'.UTHORIT Y