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  • - l~COMING TELEGRAM '--->epartment of Stai~ GONFIDENTIAL 7 Action IO Info ss ~ SP SC SAH L H SAL AF .ARA EA EUR NEA p NSC INR NIC ACDA AID PC RSR VZCZCDTA936 PP RUEHC DI JIUEHDT ,654. a,te531 ZIY CCCCC P 1sa.s,1zJUII ,1 '"USl'IISSIOI USUI IY
  • velopments. pertaining to NATO; aid to developing countries, European economic cooperation; East-West relations; and the situation in some critical areas of world politics. Also participating in the talks were Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Ger~an Foreign
  • it a point whenever there was interesting matter in my bailiwick that I thought would interest the Vice President, I sent him a copy of my memos, or would send them down to Walter Jenkins. Busby wasn't with him then of course. I sort of tried to keep him
  • the Walter Jenkins thing happened we expected them to try to get other scandal s--we didn't know what they were, but we felt like the other shoe would drop. We knew that the other side was getting increasingly desperate, and when an opponent is desperate
  • programs and the whole thing. As I told Al Jenkins whowent along and Marshall Green who also went along, I'm sure I saw more of what was going on than they did. correspondents and Of course, they were in the meetings. The TVpeople were out on the street
  • anothero AID and USIA increasingly overlap each other's purposes and targets in countries where both operate. A large Defense military assistance program has been administered with little contact with AID or USIA in Washington or in the fieldo In addition
  • an answer to a letter Senator Symington had sent to the Secretary on February 3 connecting the Academy with foreign aid. On February 17, the Secretary declined to sign the letter and has not yet done so. You will recall the draft suggested
  • the President just could not have anyone laying down a commission or proclamation that would give aid and comfort to HanOi and so that is the way it got out. We sure didn't start it. DALEY: Thanks. WATSON: And I know - DALEY: Ok, Marvin, fine. (Daley
  • . aad d&ea wllea we talked oa Mollday I daoapt we came to Clae aareemeat. 1 recall JOUr ••fiAI that it roa take an aide thea •ftl"J'DM will taave to take an aide, &Ad 1 •aid tit.at 1 can't apeak fol" tile re•t of tb•m. l'm Jut appealJac foz' my owa
  • (SIG) chaired by the Under Secretary of State and including as members the Deputy Secretary of Defense, the Ad­ ministrator, AID, Chairman, JCS, Director, USIA, and the Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs. The SIG
  • · corresponding to the jurisdiction of the geographic bureaus in the Depart­ ment of State. Each IRG shall l;>e composed of the regional Assistant Sec­ retary of State, Executive Chairman, and a designated representative from Defense, AID, CIA, the Organization
  • of forwardin[; a copy o your proposal to r. A. C .. Curt·s at AID w o is ~ 1·eady famil"ar with you. interest in helping Uganda. :> . Curtis can be reached on DUdley 3-7180 an wi be y to exp ore this mat er furthc w'th you. Do e him -"'or n a po"ntmcnt. Rest
  • . - CONFIDENTIAL =-= i· . 6 in U.S. policy and operations in the country to be studied. In the usual case, the working group would include at least the representatives of the Department of State, the Department of Defense, AID, CIA, USIA, Treasury, Connnerce
  • . Walte r Jenkins Senate Office Building FROM: L. Executive Secr etary nAr.1e The enclosed memorandum of t he Vice Presiden t's conversation with Chancellor Adenauer is r eferr ed fo r approval prior t o distribution . The Vice Pre siden t ' s r emar
  • on December 18, if I remember correctly. President N a s s e r told me and then later said publicly, that he was aiding the Congo rebels at a time when we were lifting our people out of there, causing great, great consternation here in the U n i t e d
  • on the Arts; Bill Fulbright; UAR ambassadorship; incident in Egypt; Dr. Ramsey Stino; US-Egypt relationship; US aid to Egypt; Congo; Greek coup; Yemen crisis; Arab-Israeli War; Tri-Partite Declaration; Johnson administration as pro-Israel; opening of Abu
  • without an in depth study of the feasibilit y and impact of the project. The French, German and U. K. counterparts of Ex-Im have indicated that they are not anxious at this time to make a commitment to aid participation by their nationals in the project
  • BUILDING D.A.LL.A.S 2 , TEX.A.S August 22, 1961 Mr. Walter Jenkins Office of the Vice President New Senate Office Building Washington, · D. c. Dear Walter: I am enclosing herewith copy of this morning's Dallas Morning News which has a very complimentary
  • I­ •' f i I I i ! I I ; I I ~ ~ :. ',~ PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S NOTES ON CONVERSATION WITH /). / 0 t../ It.. RAY BLISS AUGUST 23, 1967 Pre•ident John•on i nvited Ray Blb• to go to Viet Nam with the election-watching group -· •aid he had
  • to Kenya. The two Ministers were here to push two Kenyan pro­ posals - a request for counterinsurgency arms to fight the Somali guerrillas, and a settlement of a minor dispute arising from the terms of a recent food aid agreement. Neither problem
  • , , , . • I , •• :'I '. -C O J.J F I D ,E H T I A b- DECEMBER 2, 1J66 , ,'· SUBjE CT: .US TRADE AND · INVESTMENT MISSION TO KOREA •, I • ~ .. , • ' _. _, , ..., .'",, (.' i AID 9 SfATE, AND CO MMERCE HAVE COM E SOME DISTANCE
  • in the donor's deed of gift. NA TIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION. NA FORM 1429 (6-85) WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FOR M OF DOCUMENT DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE RESTRICTION 0pLf1 ~ VV gJi C l1/ 1£> l1t #29a memo Ball to AID
  • for International Development, which is a part of the State Department. So I was observing the MACV thing from quite another angle, really, and was not ever anything important at all in the military aspects of MACV. G: What was AID doing in Vietnam in those days
  • McGarr, Charles Timmes and Paul Harkins as commanders of Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) and later Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV); Jacobson's work for Agency for International Development (AID) in Vietnam; the 1963 coup in Vietnam
  • ~ lbd.W to lJ:l. tZl.e caae of Oreece ~ '1J.XJD. tari1m" us uatatuc.. u.s. ant 11141 botb Sil the fol'lll flla.lCllnmt ~ prlor ccmdtmma aDl1 t.wdn1,ag.. 6h po11q u ~ Cllllta- count.riU ml I ~ , but 1lbere 1• aoo4 N.IMOll 1io ~ tha't ..,_., aid Dez
  • deputy." 1 President Johnson •aid that each member of the Joint Chiefs ol Stall had qreed to the 1u1penston. SERVICE SET .•. - 2Prealdent Johnaon then uked that all of them aay nothing, m•wer no telephone calla md do no l•akin1. Pre•ldent John
  • predominant color if we look a little longer. We, I think, went too far in our reaction to the India-Pakistan war in cutting off economic and political aid to them. I think that this was the result of enormous concern in the Congress and in the public
  • on the Arts; Bill Fulbright; UAR ambassadorship; incident in Egypt; Dr. Ramsey Stino; US-Egypt relationship; US aid to Egypt; Congo; Greek coup; Yemen crisis; Arab-Israeli War; Tri-Partite Declaration; Johnson administration as pro-Israel; opening of Abu
  • them tha t t here i s any future for those who a r e already c aught on the 11 wrong 11 aide of the line . 7. Attached to this memorandum l e a r eport on our conversations with Chancellor Adenauer and Mayor Br andt . Thi s include s a point-by-point
  • here, when we talked before, and I asked for your comments. The Vice ~resident s aid I ho had no co1nmcnt, bllt thanks vc1·y inuch; Vic e P rc ::: hkn t Nixon said, 11 Well, as you know, this is cons i s te nt wifo. what my position ha.s b een all
  • very strong statements about Vietnam in 1954. The whole military advisory effort was carried out under the Eisenhower Administration, and the very extensive aid program began under Eisenhower. So, I would say that from that time on, from Geneva
  • employees working in the Embassy, for instance, your AID or your intelligence area or anything else. A: In Sofia? P: Well, yes. A: Or Copenhagen? P: Either one, but I was thinking--did this corne to bear in this particular situation
  • Str t, N. W. ·.~. W "in to-J.1, C. · \·. al ntl to e t aid n f::XEr.~ 1i V co, Au u S cJ 3 31, 1965 (!CJ D r Mr. Ar ba ador: Ambassador Hand and 1 woul lik you to join u !or an intormal 11:mchcon bore at th White Hou.so on W dnc•day, S pt
  • . M: But there has been a lot of comment by ex-aides. For example, I heard Bill Moyers on television saying that dissent, as he put it, was widespread in the government by some certain date. Does this get expressed? F: You mean dissent on Vietnam
  • was then president of NBC and who later became a Johnson aide--he was the man to whom the displeasure was made evident, and he never to this day has mentioned it to me. This is where I think the President sometimes mi sea lcul atedo M: Do you think the President