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  • -Ar.eric~"l acts ranging from ir.dividual harass­ ments to sabotage of oil installations. If' the transaction should be i.Ylevitable we should exact Isr~ .li cooperation on Jordan waters, the Joseph Johnson refugee . plan, and strenethenmg of tnrrso. Near
  • ••••••••••••• f •••• MACV till ••••••• DIA D-2 n W ~ gq 8'1 - I l ~- NOFORN UNITEDSTATESTEAM Seniors Honorable Joseph Honorable Williams. W. Barr Ambassador U. Alexis Mr. William Jordan General J.P. Honorable General ................... Gaud
  • OF PURE STALINISM BEING REIMPOSED EITHER IN USSR OR ANY PLACE IN EASTERN EUROPE. 2. COMMENT: HEALEY HAS JUST RETURNED FROM VACATION AND WAS AT PAINS TO STRESS THAT HE HAD NOT DISCUSSED CZECHOSLOVAKIA AT LENGTH YET WITH HIS CABINET COLLEAGUES. ~ an --,r
  • Pledge, split over the Hitler-Stalin -Pact in 1939 and revived briefly for the period of Henry Wallace's candidacy in 1948. These earlier dissidents carried picket signs, manned soup kitchens and fo~ght in Spain. On the whole, however, their Marxism had
  • LEAGUE AND CZECH JOSEPH LENART, SWARAN SINGH PRESENTED DETAILED CRITIC-AL INTERPRETATION AND COMMENT· ON MOST TOPICS THAT WERE COV,ERED •. • I O'\J NONPROLIFERAT ION ISSUE HE REPEATED SOVIET VIEWS ON MLF AND ARGUED THAT JO INT. PARTTCI PAT I
  • ques­ tions which have divided us and also those which have helped pull us together. In 1950, in collaboration with Joseph Stalin, the Chinese mounted a major attack on the U.N. forces which were defending South Korea. The ultimate target
  • Stalin the community cnJoycd compara• they wanted to push the figu1 the expenditure by the United States of $25 tive freedom and indeed encouragement, hours. The Russian instructors billion a year. Being so admirably dis­ particularly on the cultural
  • . This issue has its base in deep nationalistic, cultural, and historical yearnings. At the same time, the growth of the UN, the intensification of the cold war, the shift in Soviet attitudes after Stalin, and the various changes and vicissitudes which Pakistan
  • Marxist­ Leninist principles. ·This thesis 'Was. usetul to Stalin and his ro·l lowers. It contributed importantly to ths discipline of their movement. It left millions or sincere Marxists with the reeling that there was no real altemative between
  • has not pushed de­ stalinization strongly and completely and has shown little if any incli­ nation to liberalize its internal policy although it issued a broad amnesty in September 1964. It has also been slow in implementing the policy of "peaceful
  • , but wound up protecting aggression. Kosygin said that he had been -3- Stalin's deputy for 12 years. He had served in Leni.Jagrad. He would never forget the time when arm in arm we resisted Fascism. we could agree on some of these moves now. He
  • their countri es of the Czech liberal reforms . 3 . The Czechs were printing, for the first time, supressed accounts of the horrors of the Stalin regime. The Kremlin leaders were acutely embarred. 4. The Czechs were requesting financial backing from the USSR
  • . In Russia, Khrushchev treated me with respect, because I sat next to Stalin when he was at the lower end of the tableo Kosygin met me first when he was an assistant to Mikoyan at a time when I was negotiating with Stalin. I know Harold Wilson from his days