Discover Our Collections


  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Collection > National Security Files (remove)

Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

517 results

  • to be tested for subsequent acceptance or discard when further facts become known. Within my post there is a healthy range of opinion on which I have drawn and which should facilitate future hammering-out of conclusions on the anvil of argument. Multiple
  • ERN OVER ·c HAL MERS ·ROBER T S STORY IiN ' WASH I NG 'f1 0N "POST" SEP TEMBER 12 DERIVED FROM SENAT~ .SOURCE A'ND QUO T l NG . KING AS HA VIN G S A ID DU R ING MEE TI NG WIT H ·SENA TE 'FOREIGN REL~ T lON S COMMI TTEE ' TH AT CUR REN T GOG WAS ,NO T
  • , 1967; 10:45AM I I- I' ! Mr. President: L. I I ·J l ' l1 Francis Bator asked me to make sure you had seen the attached lead editorials from this morning's Post and Times, and to let you know that S~will send copies to all capitals for use
  • KY ~UN TOOET !◄ E~ ON .4 JOINT TICXET ~!TY Hir:SSl~ .IN T"iE TO? - POST. THE ANNOU~tME•n. 1J.~S GRE~TEO 1.HT1i APPLAUSE. THIEU TOLD T~E ~E~B£R9 Or Tl-iE COUNCIL TH!T Ir ~E '4Ef1£ £L£CTED . vm ·,outn JJRESI!>E~T IT 'iAS rH! ARMEr.> FORCCS TijA! H W0
  • • Jolm McNaaahton llllam Ba.Ady Bill oyera Jack Valeul WWRostow:rln ) / THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Monday, April 11, 1966 TIAL MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT General Ankrah, the head of Ghana 1 s post-coup Government, has written you {Tab
  • . Krishnamachari would become Chairman of the Planning Commission Mr. Kamaraj said "You all don't seem to want to know TTK as he is. He would· never touch any other post except that of the Finance Minister.· He is like that for what it is worth. So., ~eave him
  • .; MOOl E SAI D THAT MARTIN Af)""' T T rr WOULD NOT LOOK RIGHT FOR THE POST TO NEW f1AN ARRIVES IN MARCH. E VAC NT UNTIL I iJ.Q MAV!NG IN MIND STATE 138951~ I GATHEREJ> FRGJ JE. •· 3. I RATHER S RPR! SING ACM ISSI ON THAT THE MILITARY W R
  • caught up with him on Viet Nam. Murrey Marder, The Washington Post: Clifford-Taylor m.lsslon. A long telephone call before he filed his story. I sought to shl!t hln1. over to the summit preparation away from troops. Perhaps some am.all effect on his text
  • ON ONE OCCASION ( j4 FEB It WITH 2 ARMED ATTACKS ON A KPA GUARD POST 116 ANO 19 FEB 11 WiTH THEDtSPATCH OF ARMED VESSELS INTO KKPA WESTERN COASTAL WATERS j 16 FEBli ANO WITH AN AI R VIOLATION IN THE VICINITY OF PANM~NJON lt8FEBI• l• UNCL NOTED CHARGES
  • million, with ·more available to support plans when they are sub~itted and approved. ·· -~~e?
  • Relations December 16, 1965 The honorable Dean Rusk Secretary Department of State Washington, D. C. 20520 Dear Mr. Secretary: It was reported in a dispatch by Anatole Shub in this morning's Washington Post under the headline "Accord Seen on 5-Nation
  • ; at a critical time you served with 1reat die­ tlnction ae our Ambaaeador to Brazil; you have driven forward the Alliance for Progress over the past years with marked eucceas. As you leave to take up your post 1n Baltimore. the Alllance for Pros.,.ees le ho
  • A 60MM l10RTAR IN ATTACKING THE MAYOR·s OFFICE. OTHER IN DANANG INCLUDED HEADQUARTE~S OF ARVN SPECIAL SECTOR i :~f.DANANG ~NO ITS ENVIRONS AND TWO POLICE POSTS. THEY WERE TO I ; •.,UNCH THEIR ATTACKS SIMULTANEOUSLY-AT -0200 HOURS ON 5 MA.Y
  • /-(Z -00 Sec. Post. Sec. (Sec. Clifford; Clifford -SECRB',F - Under Sec •. Katzenbach) SECRET Friday, J\IM 14, 1968 MEMORANDUM FOR. THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Reaffirmation of NATO at Time of Non-proliferation Treaty Signing At Tab A la
  • HONORABLE HAROLD WILSON. Prime Minister of Great 00 PM EST Brit~in NEWS CORRESPONDENTS: Martin 1\gronsky . CBS News St. Marquis Chilcls Louis Post-Dispatch Marvin Kalb CBS News DIRECTOR: PRODUCERS: NOI'E TO EDITORS: Prentiss Robert Childs
  • security protection of sensitive US sites, we should institute closed areas which are locally posted as being off limits to unauthorized personnel. This would effecti vely bar access to all potential intelligence collectors, not merely to certain-Official
  • their posts as President and Prime Minister, that the military members of the Directorate were meeting then and had concluded that if the Assembly insisted on following the recommendation of the Special Committee some "strong action" might be necessary. He
  • l: _ Meyer has been named to the number two post, hitherto filled by Mr. Karamessines. 2. As I am sure you are aware, the section of the Central Intelligence Agency we are discussing is the operational directorate which has the mission
  • by protecting threatened elements of the population in 9re-planned safe havens. (This will be discussed with the British and the Canadians on Thursday and we have alerted our posts in other countries contributing components to the UN force in ?reparation
  • interpreter: translates for Ikeda - 10 seconds - for one minute Translates for Premier Ikeda Introduction from Japan of Shingo ~lke. Minister of Posts and Telecommuntcations - 10 seconda - ln English Mr. speaks Kolkei for one and a half minutes
  • ------ ~:;;. Special Ambassador to the New York Times and Washington Post SECRE'F - ·~ THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON March 24, 19 64 ~EI~ITIVE SECRET - MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT: On March 6 we sent the Secretary of State a memorandum asking for a strong plan
  • ln the Afroyim case, there is a possibility that Andreas Papandreou may still retain his American citizenship. Previously, .Papandreou was held to have Iost : his citizenship in 1964 for .accepting an" office, post, or employment , under
  • responsibilities for intelligence relating to the Vietnam theater. Also, the Board made requests for additional information concerning specific aspects of the subject. These requests led to a post-mortem study by the United States intelligence community
  • --:as the committee on post-Vietnam adjustment I announced in my Economic Report last year· has been doing-and act boldly, we will have that 3 percent of output to add­ over a year or two-to our normal 4 percent a year of economic growth. If we preserve a healthy
  • . He was reappointed to the same Cabinet post by the late Prime Minister Dpnald Sangster after the 1967 elections. An affable gentleman farmer, one of two white members of the Cabinet, Gyles is unlikely to gain any great power in the political structure