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  • has no source legal this to Produce Nuclear Japan could 1970, without potential as 1966 if those of uranium free Japan's the capability force, potential change. capacity, treated * NIE 4-2-64, Japan will actually ultimate decision
  • in discouraging specific countries and areas from acquiring nuclear weapons, including: (a) (b) (c) (d) India Japan Israel Latin America, Afric~, and the Middle East where nuclear free zones may be feasible. 888KEI -4­ J. Test Ban Three alternative
  • •: • . i~ not. subject by claim of sovereignty or·by any other means. to national by means of use or There shall be free access of the d~ep o6ean floor. -n~· Di.:..,1-r
  • for a neutral Europe and nuclear-free zones in Europe. c. Have East Germany announce their of any development of nukes. renunciation d. Hold out vague promises of detente and de-escalation of the arms race if West Germany desists (even though we proceed
  • *GPO: IHI O • 202-217 (204) AN ARMSRACE--ON THESEABED? I'/w Missiles stored in silos drilled into the ocean floor ... Permanent manned stations under the sea ... Free-swimming aquanauts at depths of 1,500 feet-Current research indicates that all
  • States to •1t a terrible price to pay for a pack o! Mr. HOS:\!ER. l\ir. Speakrr, today we ·selectively proliferate purely defensive words v.·hich could be quite meaningless re-~~!\·ed a message from the t>-residc:nt nuclear armaments to hard-pressed U.S
  • Government can and does offer the fullest assurances that it will nev!!r use any weapon, large or small, with aggressive i..Ttter;t., But the United States, like other free nations, must be fully prepared to exercise effe(:tively the inherent right
  • us, and we should not start down this road unless the Soviets proved ready to go the route with uso How­ ever pressure alone -- unaccompanied by any effort to meet security problems the Indians regarded as both real and pressing -- might still failo
  • to be an atomic bomb. United States drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Bishop Oxnam anc. John Foster Dulles ask suspension of atomic bomb use. Soviet press urges atomic knowledge pooling and hints at international rac:e to better US bomb. Major General
  • by the White House Press Secretary, unless he directs otherwise. The Executive Secretary of the National Aeronautics and Space Council will be responsible for coordinating requests for approval action and announcements of such launches. kiJ~ 4.J McGeorge
  • Intelligence, and the Special Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, With the Spec­ ial Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs as an adviser), consulting w1th the Press Sec­ retary to the President and the Director, USIA
  • . This will be a tough one to handle because the Department of Defense is pressing for this weapon even though the technical studies make it of more doubtful value than previously thought. I . New weapons in the other major categories of increase are the deployment of lv
  • on. In early 1970, incontrovertible US intelligence that the Soviet Union was committed to achieving uclear su eriorit. It also had been confirmed In the Middle being pressed indicated strategic that the with outside-help. Although~ _ _.increased trade