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  • Type > Text (remove)
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  • Date > 1966-xx-xx (remove)
  • Series > Memos to the President (remove)

7 results

  • over the withholding of major U.S. aid and the need to solve the IPC problem. I think this conversation may provide an opening for us to go back at him with specific propisals for reaching an understanding on IPC which would permit aid to flow. Tom Mann
  • immediately severed diplomatic relations and withdrew its aid missions from both Honduras and the Dominican Republic. Such developments, Secretary Rusk declared, were . regarded in .Washington "with } ,, '. -~ i ' 296 . ti . - .. ~---;~ ' Tm: UNITED
  • Bell, they were told 1 among other things, that (a) AID is under a Congressional prohibition against providing budgetary assistance. and {b) notwithstanding this prohibition, the present US balance of payments position would not permit us to comply
  • serious problems of inflation and social tension with the Vietnamese. 7. Raise the risk that Soviets and others would have to expand aid to North Viet-Nam. 8. Increase domestic criticism based on high~r costs, major mobili­ zation, etc. 9. If war we
  • proclaims with government offe1ing economic aid and one mouth that lt will negotiate without technical assistance with the conditional prior reservations and then quietly as­ provision that the Diem government be­ serts with another mouth that lt will gin
  • Minister described and said he would attempt to obtain some satisfaction for the Prime Minister's request upon his return to Washington. He was informed that the matter had already been raised with David Bell and that AID was now engaged in testing