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  • ---== j. ta te 915 10, 5 PM. -JESSUP ~01n~s0N _l{LElN JO~ER - ~'01, eA.UNDER~~ jil£ ~ In personal letter I was informed today b~ime Minister that President Edward Mutesa Second has been invited by Presi­ dent New York World's Fair 1964-65 corporation
  • that it will pnioote stability in the area, and we were pleased in 1963 wh:m the new govenment succeeded in restorin;J diplanatic and ocmnercial relaticns with Pakistan. Gra-r.i.ng pains develq,ed su&Enly last October when a new Parlianent, elected by seci:et ballot
  • the sending of U . S. military forces to Vietnam would require a new Congressional Re solution. He felt that our sending troops to Europe i n the early 1 50s was not a relevant analogy. The President asked the group what Ambassador Taylor wou l d be taking
  • Thieu is a stabilizing force. He prefers to sit in the back ­ ground, consequently, he will not take the post of Prime Minister. The present Saigon Government framework is solid but the members of the new government are not yet well - known to us
  • in New York, and this provides an opportunity for the broadest high-level consultations. Security Coun sel. Secretary Ball reported his conversation with Foreign Secretary Brown in which he told the British we would not use the veto on an African race
  • Soviet fishing fleet commanders by Coast Guard District Commanders will also be made if possible. This procedure will continue for the four countries concerned until new instructions are received from the Department of State reflecting the status
  • Secretary Clifford said that the Germans have an eno r mous need for new military aircraft. We should be able to work something out in the area of joint production of new p lanes . Unde r Secretary Nitze discussed the prospects for the F - 5 and estimated
  • , 1959 and stated citizenship, Oswald was a Private Corps. ment any information right in New Orleans passport, he had been contemplating time, Reserve Squadrons that American born Texas. that He told on a tourist in Moscow for Soviet He
  • pressur es . McGeorge Bundy summarized briefly the latest U.S . intelligence estimate of Hanoi ' s reaction to a new U. S . air strike . (A copy is attache d. ) ( Tab D) The President sugg ested w e discuss our position w ith the Soviet Ambas­ sador
  • much clearer. The new government could still be a little harder for us to deal with than the old -- i£ we ever have a. chance to deal with it -- but if we had to have a Baathist govcrnmont there, this is probably the best we could expect. The Baathists
  • of the That Section 24 of the of America in Congress assembled, Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, is amended by adding a new sub­ section "d. d. as follows: an Assistant who shall General l-Bnager for Military be an active commissioned officer and who
  • to upgrade ARVN units with M - 60 machine guns and grenade launches as well as a new mortar. There will be new e quipment avail able by the time the 140, 000 new recruits are trained. H e reported that an effort must be made to also improve the RF and PF
  • of India would reverse their previous refusal of ANTON BRUUN~ Dr ·~ Panikkar stated that he would like to inspect ANTON BRUUN while he was in New York: Arrangements were made "to have him escorted through the ship on Tuesday, July 16, by a representative
  • , and psy­ chological pressures; and the development of some of the potential new lands requires cooperation among South American countries as well as between them and the inter­ national financing community. The growing industrial and technological compe­
  • EMBASSY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA New Delhi, India, December 2 2, Dear Bob: I am enclosing a photostat of a. recent essay by Harrison Salisbury of the New York Times in which he analyzes the forces which are shaping Asia and comes up
  • . ' ,... f a.t I.= ft' !' ""'I _, -8feRET TO THE CONGRESS On May 16, 1964, Atomic Energy concurrence provide the Secretary Commission, for cooperation Atlantic a. and the Chairman a proposed in the exchange Organization to me, with the new
  • , OR TO PRIMEMINISTERPAPADOPOULOS. WEDO NOTADDRESS ROUTINE MESSAGES · TO THE REGENT.THIS POLICYIS THE SAMEAS THE ONE FOLLOWED IN THE PREPARATION OF THE PRESIDENT'S 1968 NEW YEAR'S GREET ING. IT WOULD NOTBE APPROPRIATE TO SENDPRESIDENTIAL MESSAGES TO THE UAR, YEMEN,"IRAQOR
  • a amall British contingent along with larger ones from Australia and New Zealand. Our own commitment would have gone up and there would be a better caae for aeldng the Bdtleh to Joln in. On the other hand, Tommy Tbompeon point• out that Uthe British Co
  • an important teat of new technolo1y at reaeonable coat (about $58 mllllon). We would gain &lmoat aa much in technological knowledge a• we would from the $100 million plu• that would be needed at a minifflllm. from us to help build the $250 million larger plant
  • ;, ··~\ ~_oy, -· ~ ~ • TO NEW D.ELHS ·• ..,.., ;v ' 7 JJ {1_uJ~ , 1-,\ i5 -'/1~ i/ )t, ONLY FOR. BOWLES FROM BUNDY Ha jut een your 30§1 aakJ.na lp OJl pendma matters. be.tore to • WthVl · which Uk ly to e ..ary to p • h th m thro\1ih. i
  • FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: New Delhi Assesses New Indian Cabinet Ambassador Bowles reports that the new Cabinet w ill be dominated by a " troika" composed of M rs. Gandhi, M orarji Desai in Finance, and Chavan in the Home Ministry. If they work together closely
  • - Januarr TO: Tlle Pre•ldent F&OM: W. w. • s. 1968 AC TION 1\oatow SUBJ'ECT: M••••a• to Bollvf.aa Preeideat Barrleato• Pre•ldaat Barrieat•• arri••• bl New York tomorrow (Saturday. J.... r, 6 ) for a U-hotu •top-o,,er before proc•ecl..ba& to La Pas
  • will strike India in August, September and October just before the new crop is gathered in November, the following suggestion is offered for consideration. The accession of the new Indian Prime Minister presents~ logical occasion to suggest that the mounting
  • in Soviet policy, decisions which have yet to be made , and possible new developments not yet susceptible to our detection . II. In the past two year s the Soviets have expanded their ICBM force by adding l aunch sites at the II existing major
  • the new arrange­ ments may have on the administration of the area. A month after the issuance of the President's order in 1951, the Secretary of the Interior issued his own Order No. 2658 to "delimit the extent and nature of the authority of the Government
  • Andreas and other political prisoners their lives. In any case, we think our chance of getting him out of jail and out of the country will be a lot better if we play-1. it this way than if we pick a public fight with the new regime. The attached response
  • ~rnber 1966, June 1967, June 1968 and June 1969. The last two are those referred to in the attached reply. The Shah hasn't yet defined his new program precisely enough for us to know how it would be related to the present program. DECl.A.SSIFIED NSC
  • proposals when as ked a bout them -• . !" ...) some days ag o . SECRET J SERVJCESET -, . I - 2 ­ Mr . McCone said the photographic intelligence shown the President was so new that there had been little time to analyze it. He said that neither
  • private investment by industrialized countries in Southeast Asia. 5. A review of the pros and cons of an immediate increase in U. S. assistance to Southeast Asia even before the estab­ lishment of a ·new regional development program. In par­ ticular
  • Departments of the Govermne.it with special competence in our continuing attack on hunger, ignorance and disease to bring their resources to bear in Vietnam. I have expressed my special interest in the progress of these new initiatives
  • if they provide any new insights. Meanwhile, today's developments on the grormd do not ~take us much beyond where we were when we talked this morning. )f9, Nathaniel Davis Harold OECR:E':P H. Saunders THE WHITE H1.1uSE WASHINGTON 'Tl,.:s ;, 7lvl OCJ
  • "'bite House ✓ AFC DOD At lunch today, and again at dinner, Foreign Minister Nogueira expressed himself with great bitterness with regard to the role and attitude of the Upited States Government in the recent Security Council session in New York. He said
  • Four of this publication is appended as Tab A. 2. Acting on this authority, was received, issued their p. m., 22 November. the JCS, after news of the Dallas shooting message 3675, appended as Tab B, at 2: 15 3. Acting on this message, USCINCSO
  • and tanks that they are absolutely sure of their bargaining position. Therefore, we should begin in New York or elsewhere, talking Russians and, if possible, with the Egyptians and others about of a settlement: Eilat open observers a Soviet a turn
  • is destined to contri­ bute much to the building of a new future for Israel and other nations in the Middle East. _This impression has been greatly strengthened_ QY your own forward looking statements and by our contacts with those who speak for you. mortified
  • Ambassador in New York to maintain close contact with the Ambassador of the Soviet Uni_on and trust you will want to do likewise. Respectfully, Lyndon DECLASSIFIED I\J.SC..I c, ~~-J1 B. Johnson
  • emphasized our position to Israel by every means. restated our views in the strongest terms to Israelis New York and by message to Tel Aviv. Could you confirm that you have Syrians for this same purpose. employed your that -we have We have just here
  • with up to $90 million of new commitments. :. :~ , ·... "'. ~ On the other hand, President Valencia holds a different view. While, in May, he appeared ready to go along with the above comprehensive economic program, he has more recently said
  • NEW DELHI FLASH Deliver Info, Radhakrishnan. ss G PR p Will be released Johnson to President Washington 11:00 a.m. Washington daylight saving time. QUO?E Dear President USIA NSC Radhakrishnan: Once again we come together beloved man
  • and the United States, and to Korea's own resources of youthfulness and effort for self-help, Korea is now developing into a country of righteousness and resoluteness. I wish to present Korea to you today as a new country packed with aspirations. I affirm