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  • Contributor > Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (remove)

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  • , are complicated by the exist• gaining sufficient setr-confi­ ence of military regimes that dence to shrug off the shadow belie democracy. But Castro, of U.S. strength and the record . while his subversive efforts have faltered, continues to of U.S. intervention
  • on television. Finally, there were the . "heroic" examples of Fidel Castro, Ernesto "Che" Guevara and Patrice Lumumba. Latter day Marxists, ex-student revolu- iionaries, these three had a charisma--an appeal which owed nothing to 1ogic or political realities
  • COME FOR OTHER COUNTRIE~ TO f.?EMONSTRATE SOLIDARITY WITH VENEZUELA BY ~PPROVING MEASURES AT MEETiNG OF FOREIGN MINISTERS WHICH WILL PUT AN END TO FIDEL CASTROS lNTENi TD COMMUNI~E OUR COUNiRY. 11 BERi\JBAUM UNCLASSIFIED PRESERVAT:0 COPY
  • Amerlc:an state• to be held at the Organization'• headquarters on July 6 and 7, 1968. l look forward to Joining you and your colleaau• ln the meeting and to being with you and the people of El Salvador. Sincerely, Hi ■ Excellency A. Fidel Sane he z H
  • sent you an abbreviated viait (Tab A) which has you departing on Sunday noon. Castro. The weight of opinion of those on the scene -- Ambassador Marty Underwood and Bob Sayre -- la that lt would be a aerioua mistake not to adhere to the original
  • Votre pays et la Paix du Monde. que Yous continuerez de mon fidele • Son Excellence Monsieur Lyndon B. JOHNSON President des Etats-Unis d'Amer}que Veuill~z souvenir. agreer, Monsieur le President, /) r., )' Ui
  • , however, to collect in:for~ati.on on U. S. Government plans and policy vis-a-vis Cuba, a~d data on the efforts of Cuban exiles to overthrow Fidel Castro. __None _of tflese operations.we.re cletermi~e~ to .J.?.av:~ _been '. _ targetted directly
  • on "Che" Guevara in the tria l of Regis Debray• .a young French Marxist intellectual, who ia close to Fidel Castro and strongly suspected of being on a courier mis sion when ho was caught in guerrilla territory in Bolivia last April. It is not in our
  • / .. , .· '• · ... : '/ , : -~- :· ._.:. Herewith are two intelligence reports on Cuba of particular int_e rest. 1.S(c) ·:. .-,·-·'. _-·. I I ~ ••. • •• ~• 3.4(b)l1) \: .:: : ..:. ...! -:_I" .'.. , ~.:-.-:... - .... ,; 1,' . ~ /.-·,'( , ,,.., _.. ,·._ . ·" :···_· ·_,.: of the Castro
  • as suggested by Mr. Cherne; -- handling of second inaugural Soviet flight to the U. S. 4. Sugar Conference (Sect. Rusk) -- UNCTAD World Sugar Conference scheduled for Sept. 23. Likely sugar agreement that would emerge would double Castro 1 s income from
  • ORGANIZED IN JANUARY 1964; DR. -ARRIGO GUAR~If CONTE, ~HO HAS A LO~G HISTORY OF ASSOCIATION WITH CO~MUNISTS AND WAS AN ORGANIZER OF THE VANGUARDIA DE ACCIO N NACIONAL, A PRO-CASTRO REVOLUTIONARY GROUP; AND DR. GUSTAVO TEJADA MORM\N FORMER TREATY NEGOTIATOR
  • by Frei. IV. Cuba Our long•r!Me objective is to see the Castro regime replaced by a non-communist government which would not be a threat, direct or indirect, to us or to other Hemisphere nations. Our inmed.i.ate object,ives are to prevent the use