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  • a danger to Western European security. Europe, long ago recovered from the effects of World War II, now faces problems common to affluent societies. Stable, prosperous and slightly smug, Western Europe has suddenly broken out in a rash of political
  • .""-"- ~zz7 . . . -f~-- _/Z _-:_ _ 5:hc_,.,k~(., __} L.,f_ .Ii"'""~ {__l-:
  • .. •• DECLASSJFTED • • 'fOP SECRE'f /:3'.l!:N~i II V~ - FOR THE PRESIDENT ONLY SUMMARY NOTES OF 580th NSC MEETING January 24, 1968, 1:00 P. M . The President said the meeting has been called to discuss Cyprus but prior to doing so he would like to ask Secretary
  • of the Conservative Party would be an improvement. He doubts that the Conservatives could handle the economic situation, especially a wage-price policy, as well as the Labor Party has done . SffiVICEsr -SECREl'/SENSI II 9'E : ...r.. ':" ~ET /SENSl'llvE
  • of the peace talks . - 'l:OP aEGRE'f - SENSI II VE SERvlCESET TOP SECRE'f/SEWSU1YE The President: - 8­ Asked Secretary Clifford if he wished to comment, S ecretary Clifford: Of the three items mentioned by Secretary Rusk - -DMZ, cities and GVN
  • II"~~ ...~·~!'+'...';;:'~· - SHEET ,(PR ESIDENTIAL. LIBRARI S) OCTOBER 20, 1967 - 7:30 p.m. Secretary Rusk Secretary McNamara Under Secretary Katzenbach Walt Rostow Professor Henry Kissinger Mr. Justice Abe Fortas General Maxwell Taylor Clark
  • . II""~/ ... -;:., ,. 'WITHDRAWA SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL lfBRARIES) CORR-ESPOr;.JOENTS OR T l from 11/21{6 7 - 8:30 a,,m. me,e ting with VP .Rusk, · ~am.er Wbe.e l·e r, Westm.o reland 1 ~~~~........~M-*H;] ~ ·c RICTlON CODES . ' ) CtDllfld
  • General Wheeler Walt Rostow Ambassador Goldberg Samuel Berger - State Department Clark Clifford Richard Helms George Christian Tom Johnson The meeting started at 1 :26 p. m . The meeting ended at '!'OP SECRET ,,,.i_,id -­ ~ ., .. , • .. '"ii
  • and then let him fight the war. I asked him how many allies he had under his command duxing World War II. He said, including U.S. and allied troops, he had about five million. MEEftM6 ''10:Y:ES Poblkotion C.Of' Y'.i: . - ..... ,... ~IWT;r.ns Pet mission
  • ./, ln~rnc.; 1 ;;t,,, s ~n l SERVICE SET MEET!t~S Mu I c~ (O?YRIC.f.ITED ...I?.. 1hljc.f; -.•;· • 1":· '··~'• '1:~,... ­ gt•y "''~?''\,.:Ii~.:'> -7­ If the troops for South Korea and the naval units are disapproved, the figures would be decreased
  • recommendation when you have before you an appropriate action document to sign. II,..< J,Aj.o!JJ. R ostow SERVICE SET . l,n I ' , EXECUTIVE OrF ICE OF THE PRES IDENT Of"F"IC£ or £MER0£NCY PLANNING WASHIN GTON. 0 . C . 20504 o,.,.,cr; 0
  • CTZ 15 MINOR 4 MAJOR II CTZ 7 MINOR 0 MAJOR 2/0 III CTZ 8 MINOR 0 MAJOR 0/0 IV CTZ 24 MINOR 2 MAJOR 1/0 9 ·3/3* 19 ""} .: .uvti.s "c..f 2 . 4 '" fvJ F 1 *- MAJOR ATTACKS WERE GROUND/FIRE ATTACKS ON TWO REFUGEE CAMPS AND ONE HAMLET
  • ...., .. ... ·­ r..JV v -­ ' ---· . . ,... __ ~- ­ .,_\; ~ .. •• s: .:::~ ­ ' (\ :t I I 4 () ~:: ··l ; t•1 II •"I ' } U ( > ,· : O ::i: Pl ·•1 ::,.. 0
  • in the South. General Maxwell Taylor expressed two reservations: 1.) the close defense of ·the frontier on the DMZ and in the highland area; 2.) no clearcut decision has been made on what we will offer the Viet Cong. 0 II. What about ·our·· C'OurB"e-br-1'.'f
  • TI"Z::: -- T~!~Y • OF cz:cHOSLOVAKIA AS A ~~ ~ 6~?U3LIC . r ! .~ FG '.~ THIS -~E~i ::ATI:J ·' · rc; sr CAM:Z TH:: Si.i::.vE:.sro :.i A!') SU::JJ!.JGATIO:! OF cz:::cHJSLOVAi
  • . II ' 'l In the Twentieth Century, it has I ' .J I I I controlled explosion. tak~n on the aspects of a Barbara Ward, the British social commentator and economist, noted that in the four years of the Second World War, "the ~ericans equ
  • billions of dollars in the Middle East. The President said 11 if nothing came out of this meeting but the smiling faces and warm reception that the people of Glassboro gave to Kosygin, that is something that we haven 1 t had since World War II." Mr
  • ~e •' .' r1!cNama:::-a : t0 a Our llili tar,r ac tion approach i s an unac ceptable Nay 3u;ce3~ful ~ J~c l us ion~. 3:all: ::a:::: le? J'l!C_~.9.:ln. ra: ... ii ~~1t • rfli ,: Geer: .J U c i1 t,1...::-:.1.ll C ti on . i ~0 ...."lG ~O :J .:J".l
  • . ( ' ~ ') 0 \.J I ·1 J ( iI ·l ! 1 [1 t..1AR 1964 l 1 ·l 1 l .) .1 .,i MEMORANDUM FOR THE RECORD SUBJECT: National Security Council Meeting, 1 7 March 1964 PARTICIPANTS: The President The Speaker The Attorney General White House: Mr. Bundy
  • of. cooperation that he expects from us. Ii we ea.eh have internal public problems, which differ som cwhat, the point is that ot1r two Presidents should in consultation decide how to proceed in a way to deal with both sols of problems. We cannot give
  • .>Jovember 2 3 ~ovember 5 4 181 393 -±07 -±5 6 -±05 MEETING ~~o:res COPYllG.HTED Pt1blicotion Requires P..armjssjon of Capyright Walt Rostow: They will feel it in Laos. H·o·tdar.-W. T~emes Johnson ·~ M!:: I ii
  • , then we must plan for additional expendi- I tures. Ii it doesn't end, I don't know how to guess it. thousand men out there. he has asked for. We have 300 . General Westmoreland has received all that He'll ask for more. And if he does, we 111 send
  • Pcblicatieft R1~ 0 iw een:piui... ef ,.,.,.si9bt H9ida1. i•V. fhoma: J 1ilP'?O -- [5 of 12] #. wane the (b) . . DNC commg m to run ilis elecClou. II' 1 the peo~ iD Che On tM matter oi John Bailey, I frankly would n&MI" have J'ohn Conna11y tb&D
  • ~ I i1 -II-~ I , CO PYRi:J~ED C ONFir>J!JN I !Ab Meeting began: Meeting ended: 6 :40 p. m . 7:55 p. m. NOTES OF THE PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH LABOR LEADERS in the State Dining Room MiiT'NG bl9TES COPfRIGHTEO ~i~atieft Peqvi-=­ Perililss101t ef
  • that the Soviets have proceeded with testing very vigorously. The meeting adjourned with no decision being reached. # # # [4 of 4] SW:RV!CE SET THE V{ASl-iI?'JGTON POST Octcoer 25, 1967 SECRET PROTES':' ON A-BLAST TOLD by Chalmers IvI. Roberts 1
  • MEET1N_GJ~~OJ-~TED Pobficc:.ii::;1: it, .. ~ Ji:--::-s P~i ~·= SERVICE SET .. d ,...... ~· .- -.... j,.. ~-t H.ok~~;"\.-:'. ' 7 :~ .... .· - .. . ~)~:/:~on [4 of 5] - 5 - of the committees, but it does not strengthen our system to air our
  • . The meeting ended at 1 :40 p. m. OETERa~1 ;1rn TO f:'. '.tf IDIUUlSTBATIWE taAilJIQ; 1& tt ~II /-C-,\6- ,f ) ­ 'FOiil=SEG"iWT-· ·- EYER ONL.}7 ' . n.o • J'.1 T \,\-iJI r. 0. t 25 5r), S'.:c. -~. 4 ~~rL 'il> ·-/'13 fk_.;..,£..;.~tr '.\.' .\fi ,\. D:uc
  • 29, .1968 THOSE PRESENT: '",:~ .Th~ Pr~~:.i_~.;n~~¥'ii .· · Rusk,;\/>, ',:;:~ Secretary «::~: S~~ ret~ry C~i£.f'6·~·d G e?eral T~. ylo~:( General Ahrarris · •I·' , CIA ·Director Helms · General Wheeler Harry McPherson Walt I_{ostow .9
  • tives in South Vietnam; II. Present U. S. Policy in South Vietnam; Ill. The Prese nt Situation; IV. Alternative Present Courses of Ac· tion; V. Possible Later Actions; VI. Other Actions Considered But Rejected; and VII. Recommendations. I. U. S
  • this rood was repo :-~~:4 :~ ~-=ii)' or.d ,... ic'-Ap1i l . . . _ . In south-central Loos, t:-uc~ c::>"' o:>v 3 hove beeri ~epo;•ed o 1~r ro~1tes leading toward Tchepone o.,d Muong P h ; r ; e - ­ Within the post seve;al weeh : tLie;-?" ~a 1e beer o r,1.1m.b
  • ADMINISTRATION GSA FOAM 7122 (7·72) / - -- ,, -----....-..-...--.--..-i;1:• 0 1~; WWW 1 ' :~ ~~}'.'\ . _·. ~ '· t .for.~:.:-: ry ,•, II - , •• :,·jD ; • . ­ ' ...(..: 5, 19 66 THE SECllETAP-.-i Tii!! UWJER SECW::l'tillY 1. We hEi v~ cont'1
  • , you need to get from Westmoreland his plan for using our resources and what results - - what happens July - - and next January. What is estimate of NVN response? 1!1 :..J~ t..K 'iI Rusk, give much thought to this 'Fhi! witl be subjected to immense
  • solution. No one predicted speedy end. Aggression can be def eated, subversion could be stopp·~d~ social revolution can be started. Difficult to talk o f victory in this country. I we n t as res ca:r c!ier, not as advocate. Ii we do:-i 1 t bette r Som
  • don't force money on bureaucrats when they haven't asked for it. 11 Manatos said "Senator George Murphy may offer a motion to recommit Title II because there have never been any hearings on it." The President said "That's good but this should be done
  • that the Leadership urge Committee Chairman to expedite their legislation. .. .~ Cc·+~-;,~., " vn ''-''''cprl;;;~ic;c o I ·l~'~4i~~ 1'T' .. , ·~ '"' . "' ......... •.... , ":" .. l~"."'11,~1- · ~. . . . \;«, ,(\ ..1.tp.. ,?;,-~ .... -~ .. ~· ~·~ ·, ~1:"·' II
  • Jerusalem is the most e)..- plosive issue. Ii it can"le to the Security Council now, it could destroy o I -&-BCRET - - 3 ­ Jarring's effort. Operationally, aside from nudging the UAR and Israel toward talks , the big question for us is when and at what
  • it. We will have good men to testify if called upon. MEiJl~JQ ~~O'FES COP¥RIGI l'FC~ Raqui •v• p eubl1eoffun • e1 n11ssfon of Copyright Hal.4er. 'II. Tl1oma1 Jofinsun . ·· .,# __ .. ·, ... , .. ~.,.,;__ ,_~,-- - .- - - - - - - - - - - - ••.-... -'!f