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  • successors will hardly most of whom now accept military matters belong to his not only the size of the military budget will the "reserved but also the again become sub­ of contention. In a pinch, aid funds de Gaulle to the nuclear
  • of Conference on Foreign Assistance Act of 1967 After seven weeks,. the conferees have reached agreement on the foreign aid authorization bill. Doc Morgan is not certain when he will bring the confe·rence report to the floor, but he e:xpects Passman to hold
  • assistance . To assume that no No rth Vietnamese would ever call for Chinese aid is to underestimate the degree of ideological fervor and anti-US hostility that today exist in Hanoi . 4o Either respond i ng to such a call , or even on their own
  • is sent. might wish to issue a few days after As you will note, the draft st:atament closely follows the le·tter but reL.es on the info::::-raatim-i cont2.:.ned in the Aide Memoire and thus avvids c~uotir1g G2n-:..::al De Gaulle ts letter to you. Secretary
  • . IT IT WERE VERY BAD, THEY lHGHT BE FORCEDTO ACT IN AN UNFORTUNATE~AY. JENKINS THOUGiiT THAT MIGHT BE DISASTROUS. ro DELAy THE i•iEETING UNTIL THE WEEKEND THE- SECRETARY1:IENT ON TO SAY THAT ON THE BASIS OF THE LATEST MARKET INFORi·lATION WE HAD, THE SITUAT
  • r th th e o f f i c i a l view o f p a st even ts,, Both th e s e documents have been review ed ex ­ t e n s i v e l y h e r e , in DOD, th e A gency, AID and USIAc, The Q and A i s th e more p o l i t i c a l l y im portant o f th e tw o, s in c e i
  • is at least 10 years old, and the Public Works Office s aid that "it is in the shop three days a week to get two days operation out of it." The small crane in use at the crusher site broke while the survey Mission was there and parts are expected to take
  • reporting the bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong will be a challenge to them to give all aid necessary to make up the loss . The Chinese Communists as well as the Soviets wi ll not sit by. At the very least they wi ll replace the petroleum and the facilities des
  • ? Should we not instead downgrade it, or at least make it com­ pete with other forms of energy?) d. Help with isotope and medical research. (This suggestion avoids direct aid of the bomb, though it does focus on the atom. Could it be ex­ panded to include
  • the need for a decision about aid to Indonesia in the light of new provisions under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1963, and the decision to send the Attorney General as the best emissary available to review the situation and to attempt to create
  • . -.laace of paym•ta, ta­ dlcati• the bapertaace, la bl• eptaloa, of acWttionaJ U.S. mea•ur•• to m-,tlaea our bal••~•-of•pa-,meat• poeltioa. Jn thl• coaaectlon he relene4 to aaclttloaal c11t1aack•of u. I. •peDdlt.ru a.woad wbicll, h• aid, ha.cl lMten a.peed
  • , concerning overseas communications, navigation aids, and data collection and space tracking facilities: (a) The communications requirement to support an intelligence collection facility would be reduced to the extent that the intelli­ gence collection
  • UNCLASSIFIED 1722132 JUN 64 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINCilTON 12 June 1964 Forwarded from Commander Josephson, Naval Assistant Military Aide, at the request Captain Dowdell. to the of ~ ~~~1~ =.:~i'i ..,. QlEV, 6-61) NAVY DEP~RTMENT -r-c J 67 41
  • to providing financial assistance, Japan furnishes technical assis­ tance through participation in the U.S.­ sponsored AID Third Country Training Program and through bilateral arrangements, and it is a leading member of the Asian Productivity Organization
  • '••••ce? that tlley dld mader■talld lt. It wa• clear that tMlr laltlal lutnactloaa after the bombiJla halt forbue flrlaa oa N!.CT aircraft. •'•aw• He tbea ••lrad : What waa La•'• readlOD wbea Vaace ralHd tld• matter with blm la Pad ■ ? I Aid that be took
  • )ENTIA:C- s... ,., Decemller 17, 19'7 -- 2:40 p. m. MEMOBANDUM FOil THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: CABlllOLET Meettaa. Mike Maaato• report• that Sea. Paatore 1• la llbode lalaad a.lllcl Sea. Aadereoa la oat of towa. TheN are the by m- oa the Seaate aide
  • usociated them Jea11--Paul and the Yugoslav , well known 00°aided popaaa.diaili cleao o-f the proje~t •f ·ti. poup wu al•• ..,..ened d d.\e "~ln • sponaon • majo-r aour@e •f actioa ,,.e Seqhn A,6) The pres~ig~ publie • of t:he ''Berlltrand
  • Examination of the British Proposal for a Mari time Group and Declaration ••..••....•••.•.....••. 44 Consideration of the French Proposal for a Four-Power Meeting and the Question of French Aid to the Arabs and Israelis
  • , retana1a1 via lal'ael. where be wOllld be coalroated by people who auppon OGr Vietnam podtlOL I •aid I wallld npon hla call to yov., but polated out it would be laapproprlate for me to offer political advice. Marplly aald he would ·remaia •te&dy aacl try
  • • l••• dn-eleped cowdriea from a tarW avcba.r1• meaaue. Milla •aid he did aot tbmk the Coqreaa would proride aay exemptloa even 11 it were recommaded by the Admtaiauation. -- Mill• viewed ltuopMD and Japaa••• intereet la accelerated Ke-Hy Round
  • DATE REST RICTION "The aide memoire handed to the Pres¼defl't ... " 1 f> ~ 9 - q_qq AILS 97-33J- PCT C O/U' /VW 11--3~3 lp ~emcr - r --roo5ssrt'io5'wN1oo""Pi~:'rt'e:ITt"' G /I CJ-F-'if ti II lp [Duplicate in Diary Backup, 5/ 17/68] ,, II
  • against overoptimism and referred to Canada's public pledge of last September of $500, 000 v/hich has not yet been drav/n because of failure to agree on projects. Cals (Netherlands) said tliat v/Mle military aid v/as impossible he would see what else could
  • AD M I NIS T R ATION NA FORM 1429 (6-85) -OO?i:FID£MTL4J:;-- 'Wednesday, May 31, 1967 -- 8:55 p. m. Mr. Presidtmt: Herewith the situation on matching for India !ood aid. As you see, we have lirm pledges, for more than one-half of the $190
  • the people are won over, the war is won. Such a"true revolution" cannot be done by GVN or AID but by the people themselves, through nongovernmental organizations. The notion that problems must be solved by working through government -- which worked· in Europe
  • MANIII and POSEIDONmissiles, carrying multiple re-entry vehicles and equipped with modern penetration aids, will be capable of inflicting un­ damage to the acceptable Soviet Union. It is believed by some ex­ perts that the Soviet con­ ducted extensive
  • ? In my opinion, there is a common interest in the four nuclear nations having a policy ofstopping additional Nth nations from developing their own atomic-hydrogen weapons. I do not believe the Soviets, any more than the United States, want to aid
  • 43 Action . SCI · Info SS GPM · SP SC L H NEA p I ­ I.l' USIA NSC :INR CIA ·NSA I· I. ~ ;I ~ DOD 1',11 SFW AID tI. cu COM I I f DOI INT UNCLASS IF I,=ED::::-..--­ l RSR J I It : t I ! I l 1 1 l {r
  • :• cu INR &; p 10 .... Fao AID A-708 PRIORITY 5ECl'USl' i-(O . HANOL.ING INDICATOR Department of s~~~\lr~~11>TE (Department PalY~~ 1 €~ _t_~ llo1fJ9g Addresse.s ) . DIA, ACSI/DFig I\ TO INFO: · JUH . COPY NO. SERIES· B
  • of our problems in this area are likely to arise, with weexpiatned -CONFlOEN'r1AL - 6 - our policy in an Aide•Memoire given the French Government last The purporrt the Aide•Merrioire is that (?f the US will not find it possible· to p~rinit
  • , Special Assistant to the President Major General Chester V. Clifton, Military Aide to the President Jack Valenti, Special Assistant to the President Harold Saunders, National Security Council Staff Bromley Smith, Executive Sec retary, National Security
  • AMEMBASSY NICOSlA 793 •• 5 ~ C R E TATHENS t -.J • i • 3683 trXD ·I S INITIATIVE '· GAVE ME COPY OF E~lS' REACTION TO THE F FE 9 l 9 • TEXT BY SEPT EL :, TOO~Y f o CANADIAN AMB AIDE•MEMOIRE G eAN~ DI AN AI D~ _ 2• FEAVER SAI6 PIPI LIS EXPRESSED
  • of Vietnam.. I 11 out of • • then asked~ Was it true that the Warsaw Pact forces are~vin2 . ....,..,,._,,,,,.,aid Polish . Czechoslovakiai He hastened to tell me that Bulgarian, as well as some Soviet forces were moving out of Czechoslovakia. He added
  • to the General Aasembly by its Foreign Minister, Mr. Gromyko, on 19 ..-•,...t as here Septeaber 1963, declar d that the Sovi t Gov•Y'"l' and now ready to take ■easur s to prohibit the arms r c fr apreading to outer apace. Mr~ Gromyko al o aid that wer desirO\d
  • •• t•hn!Ml .)> tar r tar ranmsi, £#))(1) PIIIOt ■ ldll ~ QllS no m.dw• data to .,,_ Son aid Cbicaa DOV • pdata but Mrelt than that waured not. be danpl- ot tbia lllgbt <-hcN&bWa aboal.d imtieatien ..-.1¥ to Jl'Nnch tran.d.Nien
  • -Moooy -RE(by -SAUND£Rs -SAYRE -THOMSON EMBTEL844, DEPTELs·l062, 1085. Text .aide memoire received words deleted~ from SAG January 6 supe:rfluous DOD DAC A.EC WHB IU'iI{ Begin Quote. With referencf~. aide memoire left by Ambassador Satterthwaite