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  • Collection > National Security Files (remove)
  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Contributor > Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (remove)

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  • . Fulbright George A. Smathers Everett M. Dirksen Thomas H.- Kuchel Bourke B. Hickenlooper Leverett Saltonstall Congressman Hale Boggs Congressman Carl Vinson Congressman Thomas E. Morgan Congressman Leslie C. Arends Congresswoman Frances P. Bolton {Invited
  • -1939), Angers, France (with the Polish Government-in-Exile), Madrid (temporarily), Lisbon, Tangiers, returning to Warsaw in 1945. He served in the Department as Assistant Chief, Division of Eastern European Affairs, from 1946 to 1948. After attending
  • problem is tough and is being very cagey as t .o what part, if any, France wW play. On China, the G-e neral gives what we have reason to think is au accurate accowit of bla interview with the Chinese .Ambassador . We very much doubt Middleton 'a report
  • . I did not see how they could do both. Couve said that France aspired to no private role and that we could not object if the French stated their honest opinion. This 'Ms the only sign of heat which he displayed ln the whole meeting. My conclusion ls
  • to do so very shortly. Most of the NATO countries have recognized, inĀ­ cluding France, U. K., Italy, and West Germany. So have Spain, Japan and the Vatican, as well as several other countries. On the domestic front, Gare ia Godoy has weathered two crises
  • in both the native language of Laos and in international language which will permit more gifted students to continue higher education elsewhere. He said that French had traditionally been the second language but that France provided such limited
  • enterprise dates from the second world war -- more precisely, from the fall of France in 1940. Since that time our policy has rested on four fundamentals: 1. Purpose. 2. Military strength. 3. The strength of the 4. Our understanding of adversaries