Discover Our Collections


  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Specific Item Type > Folder (remove)
  • Contributor > Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (remove)

44 results

  • in the Security Council on India and Pakistan affairs. At dinner I asked him whether the Soviet Union was prepared to accept any solution which was agreeable to India and Pakistan, indicating that that was our general attitude, and he indicated that their position
  • . Mac Bundy1 s staff a.n.d State Department was almost entirely a figment al press imagination.. For five yeal"s, I bad seen Ma-e operate -- and ha-d certainly done. so- myself -- as an essential liaison between the :Departments- aad t.h e President. We
  • ~ /-,;, ~ Io tl:i.lil l?x:lilfii'1-illt SQeret.....: fx:om Cilpati:4.G, 2§- t)' 04{21f6t:- ,/, il16b Memo DOD To Pres for Natl. Security Top Secret 2 p Affairs from McNamara 05/18/6~ A Ic.p..Secret -for FILE LOCATION 'Qep1:1ty See-. -Bef-. frem
  • between the Department of State and the White House over the combat role of U. s. troops and after the Government's handling of the B-52 affair. Those who oppose the Government in presently concentrating on the demand that with the Viet Cong
  • . Max is on the State Department payroll until 14 September, which carries him through this next period of travel and speech-making, and his suggestion is that he might take a little leave in the first part of September and then be available to begin
  • ' '} -~ / {:.? • , ·\1'u\, ,• D"• ~e .3 ~ - ....T I~ I 3 c r >.:_if DEPARTMENT OF STATE AMBASSADOR AT LARGE 12/9/65 . I Mac: The Secretary wishes.· this memo to be placed in the 11 series 11 and very closely held. . J .. . LEThompson
  • friends in Latin America - - this will not work. They want to make up the lists of persons to depart, but they explicitly recognized our right to veto persons on their lists. They do not want the Red Cross to participate, noting that the Swiss can do what
  • . Barring an economic recession, the chances are Wilson will have the time he needs. The Prime Minister will be accompanied by Ambassador Dean and George Thomson, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs. I will also be available. UK Objectives Mr. Wilson
  • Dean Rusk telephoned to re-e.mpba:sbe hls strong recommendation that you really ahoald spend a few mlDutes with Bowles. I have done my beat with. Bowles and wlth the Department to explahl how buay you are, but we are dealing here wUh a former Under
  • . The Department of .State examined this proposal; the Bureau of Inter­ American Affairs {ARA) supported the CIA reasoning. They felt that of all possible methods, paramilitary activities have the best chance of creating within Cuba the political, economic
  • ; -...:.,_ 1 C f • • L IMITED OFFI CIAL USE DEPARTMENT OF STATE AGE CY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT WASHINGTON OFF I CE OF T H E AD M IN ISTRATOR March 22, 1966 M EMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Funds Available for India and Pakistan Summary
  • (tentative 50~9 i. I r, .· . 50.4 final estimate) · ..... · For FY 1966 -new obligational authority requested by the . Presi­ dent in·. January 1965 for the Department of Defense was · $48.6 billion and expenditures ..were then estimated to be $49
  • LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE Agency: DATE RESTRICTION Department of State #48a Cable compilation of Sullivan cables s 17 p 2/1/65 #50b Cal51e lt64 Fm Vi en Li ane s 1 p tt3'1 tfJ5 #50c Cable 1165 fm Vientiane s l p
  • will be worth $millions in aid. Approve j R. W. Komer Disapprove _ _ cc: Mr. Moyers P. S. The State Department would like you to hand the signed original to the Ambassador tomorrow, and if you approve this plan, a signature at Tab A will put us in position
  • and startling has come in and the above report is the essence as it now stands. McG. B. DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NLJ 'ib · /tJ3 By , NARA Date .,:z.-'J SEGRE'r i , .\ ..... .. .- ( \
  • today. As I said on the phone, it iB_, polite but uninformative. I think Gronouski has slightly over-read its meaning in the last paragraph, and my guess is that is what the Poles intended. But then I am a veteran of similar treatment fr om Dobrynin
  • that when you announced the Air Force MOL space project, you specifically reaffirmed this country's intention to honor the UN resolution. In order to clarify this situation, the State Department concluded that the wisest initial course would be a private
  • and NSC Staffs. that of 1 August 1962. ,1j11_£°"",-vt (!.. l/ . lf tJ...,1.,,.u-r.rr.- Neilson C. Debevoiae BELK United Nations Affairs Africa South of the Sahara (not including Horn of Africa) BU!\RIS Vice Presidential matters " Space - Astronauts
  • to administer the department, he has consistently made it impossible for anyone else to do so. 6. The third-ranking member of the department, Averell Harriman, is probably the one man of the first magnitude on the 7th Floor. On world affairs he has courage
  • the President is so specialized in domestic affairs he almost automatically would leave more of the foreign matters to Mr. R:Jsk, to yourself, to other people in the State Department, and to Mr. McNamara. Mr. Bundy: Well, let me say first of all -- I'll just
  • Department CAS Saigon. 3~ 02 /)tvv~#j fm Lodge _ T\ A t1 'l-t t/-oo N L -l qq-cro 10 . (Ci;> A #36i Cable 664 to Vientiane S~c.. 5~~ \-;'2..o..\.\~ l -J~-60 /.J&.~ TS c;ct-2.'1 7p 2/26/64 .~ 8 . (OfaS A F I LE LOCAT ION NSF ~X , McGeo
  • of the Above Actions The above actions will involve a limited increase in u.s. personnel and in direct. Defense Department costs. More significantly, · they involve significant increase in 1Military Assistance Program costs and in the budget of the GVN itself
  • . Cooper SECRET -· \0 Sunday, July 10:30 a.m. 1965 Mr. Preaident: The attached letter .from Roa Gilpatric give• a very good brief summary of the coaeens\l& of?tblnklng on Vietnam in the President' e Panel of Conaultanta on Forei10 Affairs, and I
  • on the lnteai-Americ.a a Committee of the Alliance f o• Progrees. II thl• aomlnatlon l• accepted by the tnter.Ameri.can Committee. 01'. Rostow will hold this office ln addltlort to hla present appointment as Couaa.e loi- of' the Department of State. •• I w
  • depai-ta:re after we are somewhere over the Pacific. ll. w. Komer ~r March 30. 1966 \Vednesday, 13:40 P.M. MR. PRESIDENT: Tom Mann and the Bureau of .Ab-lean Affairs are the uwbo 0 in thla case. a. w. Komer ... ~· G8HFIBEt.f'fl:AL March 30
  • CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE Agency: RESTRICTION State Department ~ ~/ t:-ft:,h 1~~-L.C~;;.&_~r--....u..ci.u.;.J...U.Ull.L-.i.u..-Wl.::u..L~L!lel.l.:.ui._______,_ ___J-___ .3 P--·---b . undate.d ____ ~ ~ A p -#12 Memo- #13 Hen10 -a..upJ ieait es #24 Memo
  • . Instead, I think the Department of State should be instructed to generate as many expressions of concern to Paris from other countries as possible. You yourself will want to be in a position to shrug this off if it happens. McG. B. 1
  • ..----------------------------------------------------------------------------------NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE I WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT Agency: #53n Paper DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE RESTRICTION Department of Defense Possible US/Allied countermoves A F I LE LOCATI ON NSF McGeorge
  • a~l of us, we shall surely attain our goals of improving the material well-being of all' of our people and strengthening representative democracy throughout the hemisphere. Lyndon B. Johnson" Department does not plan to release, but has no objection
  • at noon on April ·H>. The administrative heart of this problem is that responsibility is shared by departments which have sharply different views, and that in the last three years no one short of the President has had authority to make clear-cut decisions
  • · . . .~ -~-:·'· . reached on April 1 and reported .l n paragra~ 11 of National ·.• 1:. Security Action Memorandum No. 328 dated April 6. •· ".. ' " ... The President requeat• that the Depa.. tment of State and the " . . Department of Defenaa take furtheir enewgetlc
  • been similarly treated by Les Arends. 4. Our plan now is that a formal answer to their letter to you will be made by the Department of Defense in a short and straightf~rward way, and without publicity. If you prefer a different handling, you have only
  • of backlash from Tokyo. So, on his recommendation I have agreed that the initial statement will be made in the Department of State. We will pick up the backgrounding in a day or so to show yi0ur own deep interest in the matter and how it has contributed
  • , espe c ially if you fall in with the State Department's desire to have this man work in their building. (My own hunch is that it will be better if it is done in the EOB and if the man has clearcut White House standing - - the use of a White House car
  • -1939), Angers, France (with the Polish Government-in-Exile), Madrid (temporarily), Lisbon, Tangiers, returning to Warsaw in 1945. He served in the Department as Assistant Chief, Division of Eastern European Affairs, from 1946 to 1948. After attending
  • Treasury Department F I LE LOCAT ION NS , , Mc George Bundy, M emos for the President , Vol . 1, 11/63- 2/64 RESTR ICTION CODES (A) Closed by Ex ecutive Order 11 65 2 governing access t o national security information. (B) Close d by statute
  • with you really makes some difference to~' in your job as President. 4. U. S. Ambassadors and other U.S. dignitaries dealing with foreign affairs, who generally need little more than a picture. This fourth class can be cut back further if you wish
  • . In 1951 he became a member of the Directing Committee of the RPF Parliamentary group and of the Assembly's Foreign Affairs Committee. But in March 1952 - 2 he resigned from the RPF with 30 other members, formed the L'Action Republicaine et Sociale
  • his memorandum at Tab Band a good one-page from Bob Komer at Tab A. The Secretary and Bob Komer are b.oth ready to go ahead on this and I am sure they are right from every point of view but that of Congressional reaction. The Department (Rusk
  • and commentators: [ For these three days I have followed your Convention You can be proud of what you have achieved and the way you have conducted the affairs of a great party. Although I haven't understood why you need to keep on all those lights. I deeply