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  • ~· i?; .! 1 e·. ~'~-1 t~:; ,J .J .---Pei m;ssiou cf Ce py..tght Melder. "II. Themaa Jgbsu00 _ [3 of 5] 101 SEC±&T - 4 The Vice President said that the South Vietnamese know who the enemy is. Those boys out there who are being shot and maimed don't
  • information. ) ere.ct by statute or by the agency which originated the d()CJ'fDant. :) crmm Jn eccordance with nstrictionl contained In the donor's deed of gift. ii'.'. ..,..-:~.... " _:.. ~~-~.: "~~:~~~;~ "~-;:;:~ -~ ! .. ; : : · :.' - . ~TtONAL
  • _ : ' .. • ·, , ..._.__ .~ ' ~ ·:...:.i ,;...-. ~·.... ~ii 1~011 •• - 5 ­ t.AE~:T:N5 t lo:TES COPYRIGHTED ibqu1r0i ?- , ~. J.. :..?J:.:i 1 -: ,~7?~~;:.:::~-f;!:r.~.~~~ri~W~:on ­ The NATO Forces includ 24 divisions, 62.0, 000 men. They could be a lot more ready. We will have 300
  • you to change your mind. If you are going to follow the right course, you must do it before Thieu does. ";,. > •• • '"' I (· - 7 ­ . •\(iillblG t>ilO+ii COP¥RISI !TED P'ubllcoliun Requi,.es Pea MiHieA ef CeJ9) Fi9kt Helde;. W. Thoilics
  • '-' _,;) I I .:._.r:_ I II I V 11 llU v I .... U II ­ --· -­ ? /?C:. IC:.C:. [declassified 2/18/88 per NLJ 86-201 11 C11 restrictions sanitizes € e-{05~ ~ 3 {).-Cf -11.>­ FILE LOCATION Meeting Notes File, Box l OCH l 0/81 RESTRICTION CODES
  • a fresh assessment. -- continuity of a ,11_ _ _ _l program which Sect. Rusk will raise with you. 2. PL 480 package -- you have the papers. ~ I I I I I I I I I I I II r I I I I I I I I I I 1­ II I I -
  • matters of world concern . ... ..,;.. . ... IJECLASSlFJED · E.O. 12356. Sec. 3.4 NIJ siv ·k'::f . ·: 90- 13 e/ NARA. Date / - 3- 7t CONFIDENTIAL.__ C 0 NF I DE N I I AL - 2 ­ II. Major Issues A. Czechoslovakia On this subject, we fully
  • "es LITER.ALLY EYES ONLY 'M missiouu cf 'ep)«dght Mel~". 'II. flu1&a1 Jahn,,," ! ; ·i I I fI July 12., 1967 7:30 p.m. I • I 1 ! MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT T o"" FROM: Tom Johnson ·1 Attached is a report of the President 1 s
  • -·-··-:.:.. ·-·- -·---·....~- -- ·-·· - .... .. .~--- -····· . . . ! ; ! -·-· ...___... ii . --~- · . . -·· 1· .- · . ' ; SERVICE SET , . . . . ·-····- -. ..... - ·····• ·-· ...- ... ~M!ETU~B : ·. M.Olr!< (,jpy RIGHTED. Poblicetie1• Reetttires Pea miseieA ef Cepyright · Hol~.,. W. 'fhomos Jotinso11 ·g-o CFJ ~ U 0 i; G 9
  • -- ~·... . .. . :._ ,_ :_: ·•· •· :· ~~ . CM--:--J1:-----r---~-­ =.:~ ·.·.· _·;/:_~.· . :·.: ·.~.:. :·~ i.· .~· ·..~ :···.:·,::~··. -~.' .~ II,
  • GSA DC 73.495 .., ~· NSC PRIMARY INTERE3T _... f!f? 11!-1 August 19, 1967 12: 30 am LEJ LIBRAR-: l\Lndatory he V13W Ca,:;e;, NLJ f.2-s1 Document If /Ii' 1 TO: THE PRESI DENT FROM: Jim Jones SUBJEC·r : ( ~j ~ Meeting with Secretaries
  • now that we 1re willing and able to get some results, we may not get to negotiations because they may figure the Jarring mission is hopeless without our behind-scenes help. rj.~tow Attachment: Amman 3270, 2/3/6 8 D~ L ~ ii~·~ uthodtJ f@+§k
  • espionage [iI!;nA om~--;~;:; r;eS?:i.onag'.l 11 ] prepa:r;lr;iom; for espionage oc t i­ \"J_-1.;:Le:-; . Then we d. i~guLnr.'. mj' :;;:-ii_o as o:n~ erie;ar;1~d ~n re:5ca:.... r.hcs of:..-rm--0ceano~raph::.r.; O':•r)r.,:::;;a:-ig :KGNA :L:").terna t~. onal
  • Clifford General Wheeler General Taylor . -~~ii~~~f!~~{::::r::::e . ;:~~:E~~f~~~t Walt Rostow George Christian Tom Johnson ·· .. ..,.... '. _.·. MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Mar ch 12, l 9 6 8 12 noon FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: Tom
  • • . ',... ·.,,.. ' ~ ' ..· ' II . I .... ' ' I • ~· • EYES ONLY FOR THE PRESIDENT ' - 8 ­ Up to now, Hanoi's emphasis has been on military and not negotiations. Abrams and Bunker concur in instructions on cessation of bombing. Thieu made a decision on the spot
  • with an open mind. "These were clean elections. II Hughes said the formal election safeguards were unimpeachable in his opinion. He talked to about 200 election board officials peasants , village chiefs, etc. The enthusiasm of the people was great and more so
  • assumption? r i SECRETARY RUSK: It takes in the full proposal by saying "in accordance With. II THE PRESIDENT: What if we sat cbwn in Paris on Monday and they began shelling? SECRETARY McNAMARA: You can shoot back or bomb in the vicinity of the DMZ
  • . If additional men are mobilized, RF /PF units could be organized and equipped with V/orld War II-type weapons available by virtue of receipt of more modern weapons by ARVN. General Westmoreland's proposed FY 69 program involves an increase of 93, 000. A formal
  • is to contribute as best I can to bringing about peace. Coming from the country I do, our experience in Burma in World War II -- 95% of our people were elated - we worked for them. The more they stayed, the more Japanese stayed on, the more bitter the feelings were
  • . II Corps - - the U. S. has 61 Maneuver battalions vs. enemy 2 5 - 2 8. III Corps -- the U.S. has 90 battalions vs. enemy 14 - 17. IV Corps -- the U. S. has 48 battalions vs. enemy 11 - 13. Hence, they are not going to run over us. Secretary
  • . Let them know they are in a war. We killed civilians in World War II and nobody opposed. I'd rather kill them than have American boys die. Please, Mr. President, don't get one foot back in it. Go all the way. Saltonstall: It's clear to me if we have
  • .:..r -.:'3~Z·~ ii;::c .-o~olution~ ·.vcr~ ~.. ~c~tcC. ::::. the Uni:cd N~tio:ia. He Da.id t~a U. !':. could vote today on tb.c Sovie; ::~:;olu!icn.. He poi:ited out t~~ ·fac Sov~·~t.:J h:i.d call.~d :o:: 3. C..;:.ic:a.l A=~ecbly meeting
  • ] .. ' '\ EYES ONLY - 2 - Since World War II there has been considerable evidence that the U. S. will not intervene against whites. We did recently, supporting Mobutu against the White Mercenaries. Katzenbach said he thought this would have a substantial pay-off
  • said that only four or five businessmen out of 100 contacted oppose the tax increase. Most of the others advised going ahead. The President said he hopes that the administration also can cut departmental spending. II. Crime Control Congressman Albert
  • Congressman Albert Postmaster General O'Brien Joe Califano Mike Manatos Barefoot Sanders The Meeting started at 5:35 p. m. and ended at 6:55 p. m. SERVICE SET ~ MKJtw-: j'{cnr-.s r-c c YCI (j ;..: I ii Q MEETIP~G t~OTES CQPYRIGM'JE9 . R . ft PuoI,.1
  • will train, provide jobs and other needed health and education services. Government will pay the extra costs involved. 9. The National Alliance of Businessmen to Promote the Program Headed by Henry Ford, II 15 top business leaders will serve on its
  • ) • . •, '• 1 I FEBRUARY 6, 1968- 10:30 a. m. 'j} I I ! SENIOR FOREIGN POLICY ADVISERS Secretary Rusk Secretary McNarr.a.·ra General Wheeler Clark Clifford SERVICE SET Walt Rostow George Christian Tom Johnson II MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE
  • as Kuznetsov suggests or July 15? Wheeler) ii"ifr( '_. . :> !-i.!·~~~~~-~ ,~:'. ~ .'.~r~~~i:j' . .';'~:. ·~· :·:~~· ~ ·: Symington pressure in Senate and increasing pressure from Israel, the ·~-..;'~··.-. k:f!:::·· ·. ..'-.· candidates, etc
  • ~.- . ... =...•~ ·:· . .: . .. ...... ·. ~ ·~ ~ - .. ... . . ·• ,.. .. .•.. ~ ~ ~: .... -:. '. . ' .. ..• ·, · .. .. .. . . .. . . ... it· .. _: ·:~ . '' .. . ~ ~ ..:. -:.· ::­:·./ l: . ... ... •. .• . I• .
  • ~uia er ~sstnof.::= M • 'II T6a n - 3 ­ Let's concentrate on our embassies, Saigon and Hanoi between 6 - 8, or 7 - 8. Secretary Rusk: Times will be "ungodly" in Australia, New Zealand. Walt Rostow: 6 p. m. EST = N Z EST 5 p. m. is Secretary
  • if we gave them the A-.:e th:!y doing u:; any :\.ft 0~ .t: dam::.g~ Tet, I can't say. SANITIZB'I now? They h:i.ve thrown mort:>..rs ~ ~us. Ii I I I i i. ! SANITIZED 2 l':L
  • ;• (B)'.Cloaed by etat~te or. ~y the agency whic~ oriqtnated the doc:;ument~ .. ·., ( C). Closed in acc~clanc:a w.lth ~~trictione contai;led in the donor' ii d&ed of g'ift. GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION GSA DC 73. OS I I .:.,.. - Meeting
  • and pessimistic side. The truth is that we are winning militarily, but t~{s story is not being told. The failure of the press accounts for som; of the d i sallusionment among t he p eopl e . I i I II / r1 1 ~MtSFtilG TO HANDWRITIN~ Ffll 3 The President
  • for our pulling out of Vietnam. SECRET -BECRE'I' -3­ II. This is one possible way to handle the meeting this morning at 10:30 a. rn. 1. Thank them for giving their time; and suggest the importance of maintaining the existence and substance
  • rates were the significant things. The President said 11 We can't survive without more taxes. 11 He pointed out that since World War II we have sent $30. 9 billion worth of food over-seas. 11 Some think we ought to spend $2 billion more now on food
  • at 11:00 a.m. and ended at 12:02. The meeting was held in the Cabinet Room. SERV\CESET rm~i.:!::~:J ::l r: ':1 t.D~tlSlaAH\'ii ~;&rJlllN m out 011 / C' .-~;;-;?~ ..... --·· :IBP SE:CRET ., NOTES OF PRESIDENT'S FRlDAY MORNING MEETING
  • WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT 8a notes CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE NSC meeting, 1/24/68 TS DATE 6 p. Part I ~T'n"'l-t-ii~-+-1~.P--~-'*"-i-A-
  • Folder, "January 24, 1968 - 1 p.m. Pueblo II - National Security Council," Papers of Tom Johnson, Box 2
  • ~)-5 serio1:1s deteriorat7on itL race relations elsewhere in A£ric*f.l•'; · (particularly Zambia). i --Jf J~~~ ­ ·~ COPY LBJ LIBRARY II -4­ - Fe r.:h lre -:he British that- a phased movement toward maj orlt:y rule in Rhodesia. is the best way
  • 'Holder: W. Thomas-Johnson [1 of 7] t- ,ia. · 1 J; 1 , ;. ·· i ''" ~~- ·· CG~\' !
  • . General Taylor: I am dismayed. different one from that you have. let 1 s do something about it. t • t l ~ I I~ Ii The picture I get is a very Let's not concede the home front; Fortas: - The U . S. has never had in mind winning a military victory out