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  • Specific Item Type > Histories (remove)
  • Contributor > Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (remove)
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  • the Use of Nuclear Weapons^ 19 61-196 7 (Disarmament Document Series, Ref 516). â– CUtTFIDENTIAir i^tlPTnnTTTTTiTi I. SUMJIARY AND ANALYSIS OF PRINCIPAL DEVELOPMENTS The U.S. Arms Control and Disarmanient Agency (ACDA) , established under the Kennedy
  • . - 3 - appointed by President Kennedy the same day the enabling Act was signed into law. The Director is also the chief U.S. negotiator in the field of arms control, and much of the time he or the Deputy Director is away at Geneva or New York
  • , â– After the Cuban missile crisis (1962), Premier Khrushchev offered President Kennedy two or three on-site inspections a year as a political concession. The Soviet Union also ^See Review of International Negotiations on the Cessation of Nuclear Weapon
  • not participate in the ENDC, vjhich they had not been * invited to join.-^ Since Eisenhower, the United States had had general and c complete disarmament as its ultimate goal, and the Kennedy Administration introduced an elaborate plan for general and complete