Skip to main content
-
Type >
Text
(remove)
-
Specific Item Type >
Folder
(remove)
-
Collection >
National Security Files
(remove)
-
Specific Item Type >
Meeting notes
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Series
Specific Item Type
Time Period
54 results
- their technical
as s istance program to increase food production in Latin
A· . ~erica, Asia and Africa, with assistance from U. S. through
PL 480 .
3.
Cou ld step up aid to South Vietnam - possibly one or two
L ST ships for U. S1 us e .
Korea (President Park~ P
- have to have somebody carry
a message to Garcia. What do we do?"
General Wheeler responded by saying that our first approach
should be to give Isra el military aid and all the support it needs for long
term military operations. If we are convinced
- funds or from a supplemental appropriation,
Mi:. McNamara s aid both, but felt that, as far as Defens e was
concerned, needs co'.ll.d be met largel y from e::Csting appropriations .
Mr . McNamara and Mr . Barr noted that the Export- Import
Bank
- Communists and the Soviets to increase aid and add to
their existing commitments.
-TOP 3ECRETJSEI>ISITIVE
SERVICE SET'
,,.
..
. . 'i' 0P SD &R
- , Presiding
The Speaker of the Hause of Representatives
ACDA
William C . Faster , Director
AEC
Glenn Seaborg, Chairman
AID
David E. Bell, Administrator
BUREAU OF THE BUDGET
Kermit Gordon, Director
CIA
John A. McCone, Director (Statutory Adviser)
Lt. Gen
- Vietnamese
requests for this kind of aid would be costly to the Soviet
position, the more so if such aid had previously been promised.
9.
On balance, we think that the chances are about even
that the Soviets would provide some SA-2 defenses to North
- Jenkins, Special Assistant to the President
Douglass Cate:r, Special Assistant to the President
Bromley Sntlth, ~cutive Secretary, National Security Council
SEtHlCESET
A TT EN DANCE LIST FOR THE 536th NSC MEETING
JULY 28, 1964, AT 12: 15 IN THE CABINET
- 1s quotation about governm e nts based on the cons ent
of thi• go v e rned, and
b. Deni.ti that th e r e was any U.S. or NATO attempt to intervene
in C:r.1•d1oslovakia as a lleg ed by Moscow.
Dobrynin ha
- 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
- 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
- , 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
- captured
by the >forth Koreans . S ecr etary McNamara s aid he had little in the
way of facts to add to what has been in the p r ess except for one point-
that the incident appeared to have been pre - planned. In a d dition to this ,
two other facts made
-
LONDON v: 9529
01 OF 02
__..P.iJ' ...- .
0420241
...J ~'.:·. ·,
,,_JC:;·' ..
_ic.:.::·:
8 J ·S
,...J'~~:i:
2~
ACTION EUR
•.J ~·: :
f"'
I NFO AID 28 1CEA 0c 1CIAE 00 1COM rrn 1E 15,FR B 02 .dNR 07 1NSAE
sp
~
02
J
sT~
08
I
- has been more than offset by the
increased flow of military and economic aid, largely from the USSR and
Communist China.
3.
The aspects of the basic situation that have enabled Hano i to continue
its support of military operations in the South