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  • Subject > Great Britain (remove)
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6 results

  • of the press today. When I heard that on my morning radio, I thought, "Well, there they go again, always wanting me to dance to their tune." But I am a man who really, after all, loves harmony. I was ready to believe that Mr. Merrill and Miss Tyler were
  • that if we pressed them to bu_y more m111tary eqUipneut frail· the less free us. We should avoid agreeing to U.K. they would °blJ1' encourage a deliberate sh1f't of German m111tary procurement from the U.S. to the U.K. Our balance of ~ts situation
  • was creating so much anti-British j feeling over here. The President said that after the Prime Minister's . press L FORM 8•Cl1 DS-1254 . -SECtt!:!' GE'.:~_,;? I Excludod frv. automatic down.grarlil!,: .. ~1d deolas::iit·L-·i;:..on .J --BECKE'l' -2
  • Secretary like Mr. for a luncheon President du:4: 15 Bundy 1, 1965 called Rusk to press appt with the for PM Wilson. would . J'l-7 V sa MfR 2 2 1965 • MEMORA)U)UM J'OR TD su,.ot! PRESIDENT Ltmcuon for Prime Minister 'WUlcm Apa111t_ l.96~ R
  • will be pressed to ace~~~. The Germans, Italians and Dutch are all watchir.__. ,;11th u::-c.:tt interest, much anxiety and some suspicic~ the outco.::::.eof the Wilson visit. 2o We must take is a multilateral care to make clear at all tmes that this proposal
  • in making a generally go0d ~~pression upon an initially hostile press and public. The April SEATOmeeting and Troop Contributing Conference will provide South Viet-Nam with another forum from which to advance its ideas, while in the meantime it will continue