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293 results
Folder, "McGeorge Bundy, Vol. 4, May 1-27, 1964 [1 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 1
(Item)
- oral message to Chanc e llor Erhard covering the Khrushchev exchange on troop reductions (Tab A ), George McGhee, on instructions (Tab B), touched on several additional items : 1. · He expressed on your behalf appreciation for the Chancellor's message
- /loh/oh As political luck would have it, at least that's the way I construe it, the very next day Khrushchev was deposed. That seized all the front page and the headlines and all of the columnists and all of the commentators. F: And drove Walter
- 20, 1963 pro zone would appl·Y, only to the oo&ata ot Near Ba.atern oountr1ea land areas. Group 5 Declassified one year after date of .origin. LIMITED OFFICIAL USE nuclear-free but not to their LIMITED OFFICIAL USE - 2 - Khrushchev's to Cairo
- and the Pathet Lao responsible for getting support to the Viet Cong into Vietnam.. Secreta:ry Mc:laNr., agreed that this was so. Mr. Wilson TOlunteered that he had asked Khrushchev why he dicln •t bring pressure to bear to en force the neutrality agreement 1D
Folder, "Berlin, Germany Berlin Papers for the Vice President," VP Papers, VP Security Files, Box 2
(Item)
- ~uccess of West Germany and West Berlin as compared to East Germany. This is the historical fact on which we must fasten our eyes. This is the historical fact which Khrushchev understands . He is trying to deal with it via barbed wire, troops, and bullying
Folder, "McGeorge Bundy, Vol. 4, May 1-27, 1964 [3 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 1
(Item)
- with Chairman Khrushchev concerning the reduction in the production of fissionable material for military purposes, Mr. Khrushchev raised some matters which I would like to report to you. I am most anxious that my correspondence with Mr. Khrushchev remain
Folder, "NSAM # 282: Project Sulky, 2/11/1964," National Security Action Memorandums, NSF, Box 3
(Item)
- - excavation techniq\les (See Tabs A and B), although the USSR leads the world in large-scale excavation with conventional explosives. Clearly, at the time of the Test Ban Treaty negotiations, Khrushchev did not ~nvisage early amendment of the Treaty, and his
- 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
- a lliance itself is "mo r e important than the buildup." He said that Khrushchev's major objective in Berlin had been t o smash the alliance but this had not been achieved. The European allies, he said, "now think the United States has leadership
Oral history transcript, Paul Henry Nitze, interview 1 (I), 11/20/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- these are the main ones. P: What do you see as significant milestones in our relations with Russia over the last seven years? N: Well, the first important point in my mind was the meeting in Vienna between Mr. Khrushchev and President Kennedy. I think
- is a provocative act, Khrushchev's statement might be quoted in which he said that he was aware of the U.S. satellite photograph:f,.ng the USSR, that he had not protested and that it could take as many pic tures as we wanted. Noted the President's request
- to reveal their flaws often Secretary that I would tike for you all to come up with some proposals beside just having [Khrushchev] run me in a corner and me dodge like a Mexican bullfighter. From a conversation with Roy Wilkins, January 6, 1964 I don't
- Khrushchev came to this country he visited the Mesta plant. M: Were you along on that visit. I wasn't along on that visit but I was with him twice afterwards. first place, him. I~s In the at the dinner at the White House that had been given for Then I
- into areas which were covered by our treaty commitments elsewhere. To give one or two examples, in June 1961 Chairman Khrushchev produced a crisis on Berlin in his meeting with President 3 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 1 (I), 11/14/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- we are interested in the life and times, and we're interested in your career there and elsewhere. B: Well, if you recall, Khrushchev fell in the fall, I don't recall the date--the fall of that year. And there was a document that circulated around
Oral history transcript, Adrian S. Fisher, interview 1 (I), 10/31/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
Folder, "United Kingdom - PM Wilson Visit Briefing Book, 12/1/1964 [1]," Country Files, NSF, Box 213
(Item)
- the Soviet plan unbalanced since it would preserve the con ventional military Superiority of the USSR even if the elimina tion of nuclear delivery vehicles could be satisfactorily verified. At the Moscow conference of 1963, Premier Khrushchev took
- Impressions of LBJ; Khrushchev's departure and the explosion of the first Chinese communist nuclear device; attending NSC meetings; the Sino-Soviet split; field experience in Taiwan as it related to Southeast Asia; patriotism and dedications
Oral history transcript, Robert B. Anderson, interview 1 (I), 7/8/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- came to the meeting in Geneva, they were really operating on a committee formula. divided between Khrushchev and Bulganin. The power was It was quite apparent to those of us present that the dominant figure was Khrushchev, but from a titular
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 21, February 12- 28, 1967 [2 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 13
(Item)
- friendly coexistence and all this junk because Khrushchev had just been over here. So I had a reluctance about the war. But once when we were in the war and in completely, there was a good deal of agony about it--a personal agony because my children felt
- Ky; Robert Komer; Tex Goldschmidt; Nguyen Van Thieu; RMN; Khrushchev; Max Milliken; William Westmoreland; William Gaud; Henry Kissinger; Phil LaFollette; Mike Monroney; Abe Fortas; Harold Ickes.
- talked to me about at that time was his desire to get along with the Russians. He hadn't worked out his policy yet but he did make one very important statement. He said that Premier Khrushchev had sent him the file on Oswald and this was the first time
- the summit in 1955, the kitchen debate in '58, the Vienna meeting between Kennedy and Khrushchev--I saw him during the test ban negotiations--he has served in Moscow--he's just absolutely superb. He took the record. He took these elaborate notes, can do
- . Stockholms-TiclninQc:m observe• that 11 the decision was not .free !ron1 risks even !or Khrushchev" since the Chinese Conununists " V1.'il.l n~urally take the Russian-American agreement a.a new evidence that. thoir theses are cor?'ect. 11 q -·.)J
- suggestion of Kosygin's role in the Soviet Union. He said he wouldn't be surprised at changes there, that the Soviets had changed on Khrushchev to show they could change. Kosygin's period has seen failures in Latin America, Africa, Indonesia and the Middle
- Control Policy under Khrushchev-Comparative Analy sis with Gorbachev's Arms Control Policy"; Davis S. Birdsell, "Rhe torical Dimensions of the Alliance for Progress" . 5 Evenings at the Library While she was deciding whether to make a run
- , the Soviet Union, today a powerful force for change is already at work. Education, the bedrock of democ racy, the enemy of dictatorship, is plowing its way. Inside the Commu nist block, powerful currents are surging against the dam. Premier Khrushchev
- in Leesburg, Virginia. 6/2 Khrushchev appears
- on President" S Sp 11/26/63 A "Communications between President and Khrushchev" S 2p 11/26/63 A # FILE LOCATION NSF, Subject File, President's Meetings,NoverobecZS-29,J963 CODES RESTRICTION Box 42 (Al Closed by Executive Order 12356'governing access
- 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
- of Mr. Khrushchev's whicll he sent me a few weeks ago, waa responded to during these few daya, but aa. you Jr.now I can't glve you any de talls because we need mutual agreement to publlah the letter. Mr. SPlvAK. Mr. Chancellor, you and Presi dent
- in the world, and he mentioned the Russians. He said, "We have to put ourselves into the minds of others, including the Russians, and see if we can't move on from the Test Ban Treaty to other things." He used the occasion of his response to Khrushchev's