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  • have been well served in this respect by Amb. Waller who waa good enough to jotn· us. II you have probleme, let him know; he has the key to the front door and the back door of the Whlte House. As for Ed and Ann Clark, I have been worried that he wae
  • -::c1::>AN"iS: Sec1·ctm:y General of the United N'ations - U Thant Under Secretary General - Ralph Bunche STATES Secretary of State Dean Rusk Ambassador Goldberg Secretary of Defense-designate Clark Clifford (only for brief period) Under Secretary
  • : Assume they do say what Clark says, what do we say? AssUille if you take advantage, everything here comes to naught. Secretary Rusk: Start with points which go beyond our minimum position: DMZ, Laos, Accords, control by ICC, etc. General Johnson: Take
  • the bombing. They were telling the same thing to Fulbright, Clark, Mansfield, Church and some others. McBundy had lunch with Dobrynin, and he became an ardent advocate for a pause. Then McNamara came to Texas and said it would be a good idea. Rusk was a hold
  • . Joining the meeting: Senator Richard Russell Gene~al Westmoreland - . EYES ONLY FOR THE PRESIDENT NOTES OF THE PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH: SECRETARY OF DEFENSE CLARK CLIFFORD SECRETARY OF STATE DEAN RUSK GENERAL EARLE WHEELER ADMIRAL THOMAS MOORER
  • for bombing in May. The President: Clark, how long would you wait? Secretary Clifford: My approach is pragmatic. We made practical decision not to go above 19th to av oid incidents above 20th. The President: I thought we decided to lay off for awhile
  • we were there to prevent the subjugation of the South Vietnamese. General Wheeler: The President: You made a good statement, Clark (Secretary Clifford). What will they do on money? Secretary Clifford: The House wants minesweepers and a personnel
  • . Nixon Secretary Dean Rusk Secretary Clark Clifford General Earle G. Wheeler Director Richard Helms W. W. Rostow SANITIZED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NW 94-~' By ~ , NARA Date Lcl-.:a,.q" The PresideI:.t and President-elect came in at 3:00 p. m. The President
  • . Crawford of a report he had that Richard Goodwin, Arthur Schlesinger and Blair Clark have undertaken an effort to get Secretary McNamara to resign in protest to the handling of the Vietnam War. The President said the Congo has cooled off considerably. "We
  • a rough day. Why don't you go on and get rested for tomorrow. You and Clark can get together later to go over what we have discussed. {The President and the group then reviewed at length the recommen­ dations and answers to questions which are attached
  • it takes to move us. They would move on to another point. The President: They would move on to reconnaissance. Ambassador Ball: I share Clark's (Secretary Clifford) view emphatically. We are each "dug in" to doctrinal position, like Arabs and Israelis
  • was proud of all oi you on backgrounding Dean Rusk, Clark Clifford and General Wheeler. particularly Secretarv Clifford: The bombing in Laos up from 181 sorties to 405 - -±56 between November 1 and November 5. 1 November November 0j' ovember
  • , and that the attached would be forthcoming this evening. Honorable Ramsey Clark, Justice Honorable Wilbur Cohen, HEW Honorable Charles Zwick, BOB Honorable Arthur M. Okun, CEA Joe Califano Larry Levinson Bob Hardesty Attachment ,. .,n- tf . ~ ' .. ,., ..._t;.s
  • : be ~etter Ball: If you wind up bom':lin.g during New Year, wouJ.dn' t 1 t to do it during their ~ew Year? Wouldn't it be better to ao it before Congress comes back? Pres1ient: Incidentally, do ·we want a personal State of the Union nessage? ·Clark, I