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  • Contributor > Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (remove)

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  • MCCONE REPORTS ON PANAMA SITUATION; CUBA, GUANTANAMO WATER CRISIS, PRESS REACTION TO HANDLING CRISIS; FIDEL CASTRO
  • ~ansportation ties with Castro's Cuba)) JH _,fl!.! p.at't.Jr.~.c t'. £~ ,t1s ·, v.r~·~1J. · I ~age ·4 ··of telegram to '. . . b . . Amem ass y BONN M9BBT j ' regime _, no~ only jeopardize our ·efforts to reduce the Cuban•Communist .· tJ:?.reat tb
  • ATTACHMENT ·'At 1L""IZED E.O 12958, Sec. 3.6 NLJ ,,1-:....;;~__:...;__.;:r;~By . NARA, Date 2.15.il~ 1 -6ECRE'F MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Status of Proposed Reactivation of US Paramilitary Activities Against Castro On June 2, 1965
  • to notifying the Soviets of our position. The text .of our reply is enclosed; In recent mo~ths Fidel Castro has repeatedly alluded to violation of Cuban air space by U.S. aircraft. The most forthright of his statements was made in a press conference
  • · their ow~ ostensible position of fidelity to the Vienna and . Gene"ra agreements. The U.S. problem is to create whatever incentives may induce the Communists to revert to some form of .acquiesence in the sur­ vival of the tripartite coalition. Bloc
  • BUNDY REVIEWS SITUATION IN DOMINICAN REPUBLIC; STATUS OF US FORCES; OAS; REQUESTS FOR ASYLUM FROM REID CABRAL, RAMON CACERES TRONCOSO; EVACUATION OF US CITIZENS; CASTRO, POSSIBLE COMMUNIST INVOLVEMENT; WH MEETING; BUNDY'S TRIP TO NYC; LBJ'S TRAVEL
  • week were the notable progress toward elimination of the rebel zone in the Do·m inican Republic, the labor difficulties in Uruguay requiring emergency security measures, and the favorable _..: though qualified - - response of Castro to our proposal
  • Laos (Sanitized 6/29/00, NLJ 99-40; more released than previous sanitization) 52 memo Bundy to President re Castro announcements (Sanitized 2/10/00, NLJ 96-106) (duplicate #52a, this file) 52a memo Bundy to President re Castro announcements
  • of the leftist revolutionary (a communist as a student) who turned evolutionary, democratic, moderate reformer. Internationally, he has been a staunch friend of the U.S. and a vigorous partner in the Alliance for Progress. An outspoken foe of Communism and Castro
  • German trade wlth Castro at the lowest level that is legally possible a~d to bar export gua.rante-es of any sort from the government. on the milita*Y offset arrangement.e , the Chancellor makes no. ~flat commitment. but McNamara has· hlt him again
  • in Panama.,caused by years of neglect, we have come forward at the end of the year with the boldest and most magnanimous proposal in decades. We have made the year a bad one for Castro and a good one for the hemisphere. We have shown understanding
  • . It remains to be seen whether they will face up to the neces s ity for constitutional reforms. There is some movement in this direction. 7 Panama. /Pressure from the opposition Panamenista Party and from ultranationalist and Castro/ Communist elements
  • called. He made the basic proposal to them that he ·m ade to you and me, namely that Bosch should make a state.ment which would cover the following points: 1. Recognition of the danger of the Castro Com·munist group and belief in routing them out. 2
  • of refugees increase. But, we are off to a good start. The situation requires careful monitoring. Secretary Gardner's task force is now set up to do this. Meanwhile, Castro continues to show signs of his discomfort over our having taken him up on an offer