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  • to Fidel Castro. He said that he felt that the present raiding assets should be held in being pending resolution of Secretary Rusk's two points but that in the meanwhile the fundamental question should be debated. Mr. Vance said that he agrees
  • should try to get adva.Ace amhority so that we do not have to go back to the OAS in the event of another action by Castro. In response to Mr . Bundy's question, Mr. Chayes. aa ~e State Depart· m.ent Legal Adviser, pointed out the legal di!ferenc:es
  • .? MEETING NOJES eeP¥&GHTED ~bliculioo Re~11ires H PerfftiHiun 1~ W :1:: of eeppight o &err. T1iOrikii Jalinaon CIA Director Helms: He is leader without question. The level of subsistence is not yet back to pre-Castro level. All the intelligent people left
  • by pro-Castro group. Last year was the first year in Latin American history that there was not a coup dLetat. The Speaker: Any agression from North Korea to South Korea. Secretary Rusk: No real step-up. There is still guerilla activity
  • as suggested by Mr. Cherne; -- handling of second inaugural Soviet flight to the U. S. 4. Sugar Conference (Sect. Rusk) -- UNCTAD World Sugar Conference scheduled for Sept. 23. Likely sugar agreement that would emerge would double Castro 1 s income from
  • ' i t ' 'i ( • !t ; ~ r \. '~ ';• ;r 11. In response to a question of the President, as to the involve­ ment of Castro - · 1.S{c) Mr. McCone recalled a report 3.4(b)(1) warned of a move in December 19 3 - January 19 The President requested
  • ." The President added: "I am Iisting everything we can think of to make this hemisphere better." The President said failure of the United States to act in the Dominican Republic would have resulted in another Castro, and that the threat of communist aggression
  • weeks in office were the worst. We had the Warren Commission, the men being held for ransom in Bolivia, the shootings in Panama, and Castro cutting off our water at Guantanamo. Not long after that came Cyprus and the Dominican Republic. We have had
  • thereof with the USSR as to overflights of Cuba. All agreed that there had been a tentative agreement with Khrushev for on-site inspections,, which Castro refused to allow, but that there was no agreement,, positive or negative, with respect to overflights
  • &iayas1a problem. Z. The President then turned to Cuba. He asked how effective our policy was and what waa the future of Cuba. He aaked how e!fective the economic denial program was and how we planned to dispose of Castro. He said he did not wish any