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  • Department eent out the two attached telegrams to all our Ambaa ■ador• pving a deacription of the Pueblo incident and 9Umffl&rizing the action• we have taken thus far. Each Ambaandor is instructed to talk to the appropriate Government official atreaeing
  • ■ countriaa cona1der the Article to be too aeneral. If poa ■ lble, Fiaher would like to have the trall8Dlittal coincide with hi• appearance before the Hou ■• Foreign Affair ■ CoaaittN on february 1. Althouah thi• would be helpful in aupporting the HP
  • of classifiedtis r nsmittal uncl ss"fied. Si ce ely e enclosu e, if form becomes yours, _Edg~ Dir~~~o~ 00 ~ Enc CONFIDE TIAL GONPIBBNTIAL UNI1.ED STATES FE D F. H AL DEPARTMENT B U Jl EAU WASHINGTON, In Reply, J>lcaseRefer to OF JUSTICE O F 1 N V
  • in Atlantic Ernest A. Gross Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt and Mosle Roger Hilsman School of International Affairs, Columbia University Joseph E. Johnson Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Milton Katz Harvard Law School George Kistiakowsky Department
  • requeat. There are two separate issues to decide: 1. Quantity. larael reque,ted a $33 million program. The Departments recommend $27 million (same as laat year) becau ■ e Israeli and US experts differ over Iaraeli requirements, even after we sent
  • SETTLEMENT SHOULD BE BASED ON THE RIGHT OF THE LOCAL PEOPLES T,O SOLVE THEIR INTERNAL AFFAIRS WITHOUT .IT. THEY ALSO REFUSED TO CONSIDER INCLUDING A GOOD PASSAGE WE HAD DRAFTED, _TRYING TO TIE THEM AS .WELL AS US TO SUPPORT FOR YOUR CURRENT EFFORTS, Ii
  • FOR OfflCIAl USE ONLY Polls taken since 1962 show that country-wide most agree with the Administration's over-all course in foreign affairs. This support is not unqualified, however, and varies from region to region. The Washington Post reported from Boston