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  • the Pentagon; that is, all the members of the JCS and the service Secretaries, as well as Clifford and Nitze; -- the Strategic Rese rve call-up (par a. 3) would be announced at the same time as the call-up to support the thirty thousand deployment, but it would
  • and to provide the items and dollar amounts of thle asehtance. The Department ha• concluded that release at thh time of certain of the information of the kind reque ■ted would be prejudicial to the defen ■ e lntere ■h of the United States and that the non-dleclo
  • . They are particularly insistent in light of the fact that the President transmitted the prior authorization bill in 1965. If you approve, I will have the writers attached). and have the material ready shortly after the State of the Union. Approve ----- 1 • II
  • IHSS"E:M course. component, Improvement of aaREt/NO relations with the United States excluded, virtually continued policy A mo e lausi with the Soviet. Union. wolds e pos em to be i it The success w of this d policy e some wou d
  • be cove:re-d at some other time. If you want a full day 1a rest along the route, this could be easily arranged at the half-way point - - Lima·, Peru. The tentative program contains a good mix of popular receptions in big cities with ·v isits to Alliance fo1
  • and North America. C. As the Soviet Union continues to harden mis­ sile sites and increases its mobile mari­ time weapons , this capability will grow both in abso l ute terms and in terms of the striking power that would remain after the Soviet Union
  • AT 151st PLENARYMEETINGOF THE ENDC (ENDC/PV 151, pp.11-12) "In our statements we have repeatedly indicated that if that amount is for some reason unsatisfactory to the Soviet Union we should be prepared to consider, within reason, appropriate adjustments
  • informed the Soviet Union that any further attackS on the Federal Republic of Germany would be casas belli. At the· same time, however, ---SECRET- NOFORN - Page.! ot 6 Pages ✓ -J;" SECRET- NOFORH it became clear to Moscow that the US was attempting
  • affecting a Plebiscite. C. District Political Patterns, Problems and People. D. Attitudes toward Affiliation. E. Timing and Terms of a Plebiscite. F. Preparation for a Plebiscite. G. Present and Post-Plebiscite Territorial Government. H
  • with the desirability of conducting Project SULKY sometime in December. It was agreed that the AEC would include Project SULKY in its regular authorization request for WHET STONE II and that final approval would be given at that time after the Re ommittee had an o
  • Robe1·t S. McNariia1·a today made the following statement·: · !; I would· like. today to discus-s· with you certain intelligence it1101·matiou. w~ have collected on a series of space system !light tests bein.g conducted by the, Soviet Union.. These 1
  • ; at a critical time you served with 1reat die­ tlnction ae our Ambaaeador to Brazil; you have driven forward the Alliance for Progress over the past years with marked eucceas. As you leave to take up your post 1n Baltimore. the Alllance for Pros.,.ees le ho
  • to prevent South Vietnarn from being taken over by Hanoi. At the same time, we s eek to avoid a confrontation with either the Chinese Communists or the Soviet Union . S ec.r etary McNamara: Summarized the military situation in Vietnam: a . The nurnber
  • legislator. For a brief time Marine went to New York and worked as editor for identified Communist David Livingston and his District 65 union, but returned to associate with Keating's publication. Marine was a Marine during World War II, but when the Korean
  • , a stationing along th e Chinese border of units which would otherwise be maintained elsewhe r e in the Soviet Union and therefore the movement eastward is not a major factor in the Soviet military budget. .· The President: resignation. Spoke about recent
  • surrounds the tenure of a.nd succession to the 77-year-old Pa.pandreou. The Center Union Government The Center Union achieved its present mandate in February 1964 largely because of Papan­ dreou 's talent as an orator and the popular desire for a. change. He
  • and in the common right which are being the United with the job of stabilizing to set a time and a place asked own interest and the Soviet the level for for forego the and in the co1nrnon Union to get on of nuclear arms - - in interest. view. We
  • and development O'f relations with the Soviet Union. The leading figures of the United States must take this fact into consideration, and not merely those who now find themselves in power but also those whose names figure in the election campaign. . President Joh
  • ..~ ~n direct procurement, but it wou l d lay the foundation in ~srae: · -=.or the r.~-equipment progr.am required sorr.e ·y e.ars 1:2nce.'.and, · at the · sa~e ·.time, , h·e l? ~-p;,:t-"' 'l.:::rer:ip·Ioyed ·· wit'h­ i.::.: _Isra.e.1 back to work
  • . 3/19/2009 ---- Initials - THE NEW YORK TIMES, 'Pf[URSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1968 China', Late,t At~m.. Teat I• -Believed a Failure . ~ IIY JORNW. FINNEY -.i .. '1'1111..., Tenll'lmle WASRINGTON,Jan. :f-Pre- '· ,. UJ. lfetn • Ducr,,-c1 off
  • America'• aympathy for CncboalovaJda in a D.Clll-political and American ■ ettiag. W. W. Roatow ---- Speak to Jim Jones tentati•ely about a time No ---- Speak to me _ _ __ -· ·•:i~" . ·· • ,. • , ~ T0 B~ :'\}.! f..Dt
  • by the Government for expenses incurred in traveling and time lost from work. Industry, too, planning. The of the costs to duction for tax is e::ncouraging workers to participate in family Union Government compensates companies for much their employees: the'-b
  • RESULT IN RESIGNATION OF GOVERNMENT. . FESTEJltING POLITICAL S-ITUATION . WHICH HAS DEVELOPED AS RESULT OF PALACE AND ERE ALARM AT .. ALLEGED': .EFFORTS OF PAPANDREOUS AND CERTAIN. OTHER CENTER UNION ··ELEMENTS TO ESTABLISH POLITICAL. CONTROL OVER
  • and other reform s were initiated. ~ Dissention between Czechoslovakia and the S o viet Union rose rapidly. The summer maneuvers 1\'r;'r"J 1.,• .... .i J;il\) ~· . i'' I -.q:._ 11 .1 • Gy Ch I \..-~ ,- .~ - I ' . ,,, ~-, , ·· ...._... c q
  • am, and I think it ls simpler if he simply comes at Max Taylor's invitation ln tho same plane. Moreover, the quick departure which I suggest hardly gives time to get him out to the area ln any other way and, as I say. I am sure that there la no point
  • ChiComs The General Council of the World Federation of Trade Unions (W FT U), meeting in Sofia last week, withdrew the right to speak from the Chinese Communist delegation. The ChiCom delegation leader had attacked the Soviets in violent terms and had
  • a• you too have recopized thia time. and in eubcoutinent. we pvlna moat sober attention mo•t unlikely NL _________ ~ ·1t 1ettin& top level Ae you have aeen, our intention is to move carefully Aa to food in particular. L\Uo aad concern• major
  • with countries which might be involved and asserted that the Soviet demand is totally Unacceptable. He described how he had offered the Russians a chance to have joint tracking stations in the Soviet Union and the U.S. The Russians would not agree . He said
  • boys", the parish councils, do the job since they are apparently a source of the Prime Minister's political strength. At times Bustamante has gone so far as to call for the complete elimination of the NW A and for the cancellation of the AID loan. 3
  • Examination of the British Proposal for a Mari time Group and Declaration ••..••....•••.•.....••. 44 Consideration of the French Proposal for a Four-Power Meeting and the Question of French Aid to the Arabs and Israelis
  • and ~onsular functions in Cuba. The adoi)tion by tho preoent C\1bn.nr,oveITlllxmt or a tot.all tar.Lan c om,~.miat rr.rstem a.nd its all.gnmant with t,.ljc intt.:rn~tioml coi':U'!l\miot mover.10nt, which ware already clear at that time havo become more complete
  • Union would be a helpful move at a time when they are in deep trouble with the Chinese. There appears to be no way to prevent the Russians from getting the machines from other buyers in Europe. Secretary Freeman asked again whether we wanted to help
  • \ - 3 - ·the Soviet Union such great responsibilities for the future of man­ kind. If this hope should meet with a positive response from the Soviet Government, it wo-µldbe a great satisfaction to propose definite times and to offer a more formal
  • . The Kennedy statement at Fort Bragg referring to th e U.S. G over nment's position at the time of the Geneva Conference. 2 . The Taylor Report, 196 1 -- that part which discussed what might be necessary if current moves did not work in Vietnam . 3. The Geneva
  • In the donor's deed of gift. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION. NA FORM 1429 (8-86) -I ...... -..) a,. -.J NEW YORK TIMES Friday, December l, ATOM ARMS GAINS DESPITE TEST BAN I ACHIEVED BYU.&i JacksonTells of Advancesil FormerlyHeld
  • of NU-66 and the Honolulu Conference, a 29 minute video-swmnary of the politico-military games NU I and II-66 was presented a second time at the Pentagon and other interested on 24 March, for senior participants officials. Individual film showings were
  • ·t:o\·iards"·'a · return .-to ·-'c 6nstituti6nal{sm·; . without at the same time undermining .his own relationship with the government leaders or provoking them to a final confrontation . ... . bo . :-: . . · . : .· c·•.. . The 'Amer.ic.a n
  • 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
  • separation plants for this purpose., preferring to have the 'WOrk done by the U:3, uc, France or the Soviet Union under bilateral agreements. In fact, Indtl.a is the onq non-veaponG power with such a :facility, if' one ex~tJSthe multilatera.J..·European