Discover Our Collections


  • Collection > National Security Files (remove)
  • Tag > Digital item (remove)

Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

663 results

  • , role in the development of its South African in with nuclear efforts raw materials cooperate own nuclear resources. have been limited and to cooperating program of deve]!ping nuclear in this a Thus to supp!ying the free world
  • that would increase the cohesion of NATO and the North.Atlantic community. These should embrace two kinds of measures: a. Military and non-military programs affecting primarily the affairs of the Free World; b. Constructive political, diplomatic, and economic
  • to.be dopa stories in the press that he was going out to clean up the sitmtion anc;ldo somethfag about Diem. I cannot say who \Vas responsible for thqse 'stories, but my • , I -: •DECLASSIFIED i Authority,lC\'"IIt- fOQOl-1 o't'25 I. [ Rv-&L
  • FOR THE REQUESTING AND SUPPLYING OF SUCH INFORMATION. ~• FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS IN PANAMA LEARNE D OF MY MEETING WITH ARIAS ANO INQUIRED TODAY OF PAO DAVIS• I AUTHORIZED A REPLY TO PRESS INQUIRIES TO EFFECT DR• ARIAS HAD INVITED ME TO ~I~ HOME1 I MAD ACCEPTED ANO WE
  • CONYERENCE IS THE . WORRY THAT THE -. ,__,. ~ _ ·. ; · '!-. _,,',' CH INESE MIGHT -· PRESS THEIR CLAIM TO BE -THERE. -. . BUT · THE MAIN , POINT ·:-, : -~; . : :,:. IS THAT THEY _ARE NOT GOING TO MOVE, ABOVE ALL _IN PUBLIC, BEYOND
  • WITH KING CONSTANTINE THIS AFTERNOON, HE INTENDS TO PRESS FOR FULL GREEK SUPPORT FOR SPEEDY· SETTLEMENT. HE WILL THEN FLY TO ANKARA FOR MEETINGS WITH FONMIN AND PRESIDENT SUNAY. HE INTENDS TAKE LINE WITH TURKS THAT FRAMEWORK OF ACCORD NOW EXISTS TH.~T
  • TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY OF TH£ _. •• itTGDOMOF LAOS. .....~~·~··; ..-::~-'?:...~_t:~:,·~~ ..'::··~·,;..~ FINAt.LY/'ttt . ...- ~ , ..\ • . -.... .·PIEEMPHAstzr:tHAT •TH£ ·PEoPLE oFj;ourit .. •.., VIETNAM· MUST BE.. FREE FROM·coERCION •. ·NOVWHERE·1s
  • and it is our task to see that it does not happen . NOTE: There is attached a copy of the transcript of Press Secretary Salinger 1s press briefing which was author ized by the President following the meeting. 'i!OP S EE R 8 'f GODJ; N OllD J\:'f T J'LC WM E
  • to be clear about two other matters, to the G·e rmana as well as among ourselves: a. It is Paris, not Washington, that is pressing oa the aerm.aaa a choice between ~....ranee anc:l the u. s. ; 5. We ought to accompany the NATO reorsanb:ation with as manr
  • building construction. The present school building program is being assisted by some of' these contractors who have already started construction on some of the schools. This leaves the public works free to carry on its operation responsibilityo Under
  • impose a serious problem in this connection? What kind of legislation would provide the President with the necessary flexibility? (fhat kind of arrangements should we bargain for? Almost all other free world countries conduct their trade
  • he raues· in hi• year-end report. 1..S(,~)(c) 3.4(b)(i )(~) Ben also sent along some mementos o! your visit to Karachi: a collection of all the ~overage of your visit by the (government-controlled) press; a copy 0£ Ayub'~ official 1968 calendar
  • is a but not a U.S. fan of the Ankrah variety. The most your session with him are the points you impressed We're deeply interested in a free and prosperous his accomplishments; we will help where we can -­ permits. Ahidjo' s first concern is to maintain the unity
  • OF~E GOI WILL MEET ON ARRIVAL Atl> ACCCl'!PANY TO HOTEL. FRIOAY APRIL 21 WILL BE LEn FREE F
  • States to •1t a terrible price to pay for a pack o! Mr. HOS:\!ER. l\ir. Speakrr, today we ·selectively proliferate purely defensive words v.·hich could be quite meaningless re-~~!\·ed a message from the t>-residc:nt nuclear armaments to hard-pressed U.S
  • . McGeorge Bundy No release to the press. E:--v-_J_~• ., - . ~ - \~1 lo ~~ - 5' ADELPHI PAPERS NUMBER :z: THIRTEEN = -= OCTOBER 1964 r--..., c...> :,.-; zrn . - C)
  • and said he wished very much to carry on in the same spirit. (There then followed a few minutes interval while the press photographed the President and Prime Minister, after which the Secretary, Minister Martin, and Ambassador Ritchie, who had been
  • , dated to ~ou. As Mr. Bundy read this document for "back­ ! I I ground only," j• ! term. in the sense Any compromise useful channel Please in which the press of source of information return could dry up this potentially document
  • will be acceptable. In addition to the 245,000 tons under Title I, the Korean Government has agreed to purchase 155,000 tons of rice from the United States using their own foreign exchange and up to 36 months CCCcredit. This amoun~, together with other Free World
  • ! the Vlhite Heuee Press Secretary THE WHITE HOUSE STATEt1ENT BY THE PF\.,1:':SIDENT Followiog meetings w!th the National Security Cotu,cil, I have directed the orderly withdrawal of American dependents from South Vietnam. It has become clear that Hanoi has
  • Government can and does offer the fullest assurances that it will nev!!r use any weapon, large or small, with aggressive i..Ttter;t., But the United States, like other free nations, must be fully prepared to exercise effe(:tively the inherent right
  • on bilateral arrangement? for French to Strengthen (U.S. Forces France in Germany -- what line to take in NATO U.S. to de Gaulle? Copies to Wilson, Position Fully on Record Erhard, Moro, others? 2. · A Public Presidential Statement (press
  • toward the present and the future of the Panama Canal. On the basis of this review I have reached two decisions. First, I have decided that the United States should press forward with Panama and other intores ted qoverrut\ents, in plans and preparations
  • without making them individually or collectively lose "face." We operate with words; we "press" each other; we "argue" with each other. We submit "facts" to each other. We set quotas and goals and then see : .-·.•:~ . . . : :, "' ._:;·_,:... SECRET
  • Delhi increased many im­ port and excise duties last sum­ mer, fertilizer was permitted free entry, and a low statutory import rate was granted agricul­ tural machinery and light diesel oil which is used primarily as a fuel for agricultural irriga­ tion
  • These reports moment in any particular all on the negotiation 2. strongly sources, in danger ... , . that reason cessation and, to the press stating have the effect anti-Communist if Soviet diplomatic direction that we are not only of They also
  • , that the NVA is very much alive in SYN. When we engage the enemy near the borders, we often preempt his plans and force him to fight before he is fully organized and before he can do his damage. Although such fighting gets high visibility in the press, it has
  • no reason why the U.S. should have altered its plans in antici?ation of these discussions. Should the Soviets press this. issue, the U.~. should respond by inquiring whether the Soviet Union sees a practical way to provide verific~tion for any· limitations
  • , recommendations Wheeler reviewing press memo, 19 -- Ginsburgh communist briefing Clarke's memo, in "Second Wave" of Rusk-Clifford target possibilities ------- target ----------- report------------------------------ talking points deployment N
  • matters, the present work projects of the Habib committee -- PsyOps, anti-infrastructure, AID-CORDS relationships and US leverage -- carry forward recommendations earlier pressed by this office, relate to staff sections of Komer' s field organization
  • and (2) the Rusk press conference. We ::.·eplied tnat there-'.cou°id-be·.-no ·que·stion a11d assured him that what we had proposed wa~ fully authorized ·and still stands. We added that Lau misconstrued the Honolulu communique. We said the U. S. does
  • ~~MBERKENYADELEGATtON,B~T WASH ~~c~ WHENCORRESPONDENT ioLo Bi ~ONFERENCEoF,ICIA~ ootu WASNOT. BE MADEAVAILABLETo PRESS, SHIDLER sr1r.:1., H!R WE w,ILL C NTACT H 1M AGAtN TOM'0RRCHt l'tORN f NG si::e. rr HE 1-ti KNOW~ E ~r...-~~NTENTS, MAD£ ~. S~BSE UE T DESP~TCHKAMPA
  • You will remember that your brother-in-law went to Jordan about a year and a half ago to advise on the development of handicraft industry there.. Now his project has reached a point where he should go back. Because the press last time noted his
  • . casualties and fewer Vietnamese refugees. s. And it should hasten the end· of the war. 'POP SECRET = .NODf:S TOP OfJCft~T - NODIS I - 5- Our present practice of having virtually everything available to the press is also a loser. The enemy would never
  • ' signals ancl deoidina on his ov1n tir:un3." ~1.a.t is a pr1vilogo ~i,.o Press alloinl nQ public i'iBUJ:'th It 10 nlwo.ya EJCJol::inz to pl"obo and nnnounoo what ho is goinz to do boi"oro ho c1ooa :t t. Aa Noyoro put 1 t: ·: "Whi to nouso oorresponc1Gnts
  • ALLIANCE AND PEACE -AT HUE THE APPEALS OF WHICH HAD BEEN REPRODUCED IN THE VIETNAMESE PRESS. WHEN I ASKED HIM IF TH.ESE 'Two ORGANIZATIONS WOULD ' EVENTUALLY BE ASSOCIATED IN A COALITION GOVERNMENT, HE TOOK A RESERVED POSOTION. FOR THE MOMENT, HE TOLD ME
  • But Rejected; and VII. Recommendations. I. • • U. S. Objectives in South Vietnam We seek an independent non-Communist South Vietnam. We do not require that it serve as a Western base or as a member of a Western Alliance. E'outh Vietnam must be free, however
  • will have fortified her claim to office and b&..:in. to defy those who might entertain notions about displacing her. In that case, unless Indira. Gandhi should step down from the Prime Ministership of her own free will and for genuine reasons of health