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  • . The U.S. Government was als? very much involved in that situation; tne U.S. does not want to see India go under due to pressure from China; the Late President Kennedy tried very hard to find a just settlement of the Kashmir dispute. In the circumst~ces
  • visit to Washington just before Jack Kennedy died. (There is a copy in your files.) I think you will be impressed all over again with the opportunity which we had then to evolve a realistic South Asian military-political policy which would take
  • . President Kennedy's decision to go to India's aid against China in 1962. The decision was probably inade shortly prior to his October 28 letter to Nehru but his policy had tended in this direction since the spring and further decisions implementing the basic
  • USSED WITH ·PRESIDENT KENNEDY LAST A?RIL. FURTHER TO REDUCE THI S ALREADY 'CURTAi.LED AMOUNT INCREASES POSSIBIL ITY.POL ITI CAL- MILITARY SITUATION HERE CANNOT BE . CLARIFIED AS OUR INTER ESTS REQUIRE IT TO BE. FOUR RUSB~E 472 S E 0 R E T"' . IF WE CAN
  • -East hand, but fittingly so because I don't think there's been a more important sub..-····· ._. ... stantive meeting since Kennedy met Khrushchev in Vienna. The flo~ of people and memos citing this as a historic opportunity to settle on a new course
  • a pretty coherent picture. November 1963. You saw Bhutto twice while he was here for President Kennedy 1 s funeral, the second time to ::-eceive a note from Ayub. You told him you were " a friend of Pakistan and would try to continue to be one if Pakistan
  • as Presidential yacht in 1945 and served in this capacity under Presidents Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Placed out of _commission in June 1953, the ship remained on reserve status until 1962 when President John F. Kennedy made her available
  • . By itself, it 5o The memory of Joh."1 1:·. Kennedy has mucl1 magic in India. is «::.:'letwill bo a. positive force for us. However, it is too often invoked in·Inc.ian ?resida ••t II!ir..ds as a syt1bol of \"!hut might have boen in ter.ns of.' world pea.co
  • dis a ppointed with what he felt was a f ailure by Presiden t Kennedy to u nderstan~ fully Pakistan ' s probl em with arms assistance to India and had counted on a moce sympathet ic h earing from Pr esident Johnson. Ayub f e lt that we were not taking