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McCone, John A. (John Alex), 1902-1991
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Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973
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Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963
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Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971
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Mansfield, Mike, 1903-2001
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Rusk, Dean, 1909-1994
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13 results
- LF..ADERSH I f..l.
TH IS SEEMED CLEAR
FROM REMAF
- Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971
- said, he had
!men summoned for II long
private talk with Nikita s.
Khrushchev and Anastas Mi
koyan an extraordinary
honor for an official in his
fairly humble position. Khru
shchev and Mikoyan had
asked him many questions
about the President
- . As
for us, we view the introduction of additional demands as a
wish to bring our relations back again into a heated state in
which they were but several days ago.
Sincerely,
N. KHRUSHCHEV
11P
SPECIAL HANULING
EYES ONLY
TO:
FROM:/JI~
NUMBER: /o ?tJ
DATE
- Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971
- military
strength in a manner which would not create domestic
or foreign panic,
nor at a rate or form which would antagonize
Khrushchev.
At the same
time the level of U.S. effort should be such as to be fully convincing
of
U.S. intent.
Rusk observed
-
.
~- ~-:,
;- : -. :~
4
indicate the danger of forcing Khrushchev to take a
militant defensive attitude with respect to Cuba.
Secretary Rusk said that should the Cubans shoot down
a U-2, raid peaceful shipping off the coast or should
there be a strong OAS resolution
- PORTIONS PRES• AND O\t.JN STATE
MENTS TCl PROVE JET BOM~ERS HA0 AlWAYS BEEN INCLUDED 1-N CATEGORY
OFFENSIVE WEAPdNSo STATED QU6:ST\qN IL-28 AIRCRAFT WAS BEING
TAKEN UP BY P~ES Wl'TH KHRUSHCHEV TODAYe NOTED ALL OThl[R MATTERS
ON WHl~H S0VS NEGATIVE WOULD
- control of the SAM system, and we do not rule
this out despite the high political cost to the USSR.
The US, how
ever, can have no assurance that Khrushchev will take this way out.
Indeed, we continue to estimate that the odds favor the complete
turnover
- the .question of Tito and asked if I could give him the name of the best
rran who could serve as Ambaseador to Yugoslavia who would be able to
"win the girl away from Khrushchev." He said that ln his opinion this man
should be an experienced, able man. perhaps
- modus•
vivendi could be achieved without giving up recent ga!nso
If U.S. military
deployments were accompanied by a commun1·
cation to Khrushchev conveyin~ our intent to employ our forces
if necessary,
while holding out hope of a negotiated
arrangement
- fron
other sources.
It is n P re n ~a Latina story with a
Rio dateline, speculating on tho impaot of the
Khrushchev-Eisenhower visits on our policy in Latin
Amer ica.
I would hope that wo would find an opportunity
to express ourselves vi g orously