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  • dirAction chnng~~ ev~ry month. George, and make your oth~r pointn. The costs, aR well as our western Europ~an a.J lies, is not relevant to their situa~ion. Wh~t . th~y ar~ concerned about is their own security -- troopP in Berlin have reai meaning, none
  • , was flown by a Jacksonville boy, Charl_ie Ge\.rge coward, and one of the pilots on General Smith's plane, which is to :fly me to Berlin this afternoon, is Captain Shelby St'Ulklin, another Fort MYers boy. Robert H. Milton, from Mariana, Major is here
  • scene. From the day in 1916 when he took up a post as Attache in the American Embassy ~t("~~~~~~- in Berlin, to the leadership of negotiations to expand and liberalize world trade....which he was exercising to the day of his death.- he participated
  • to apply for a network--I think we may have tried NBC first. We wound up by making our big push to get CBS. We did get it. G: He went up to New York, I guess, and met with Dick Berlin and maybe Bill Paley. J: Bill Paley, and of course Ed Weisl. Bill
  • the President was very firm. The President was very clear on this, just as he was on the maintenance of troops in Europe, just as he was on the Berlin issue. But I think it was tactical from the President's point of view. I think his feeling [was that] to put
  • and let's multilateralize them. With this new necessary force let's also get the political advantage of having some effort at partnership, and so forth. Well, partly as a result of the Cuba crisis, partly as a result of the cooling off of Berlin which came
  • weapons is deterred. How ­ ever, the nuclear situation does not dete r other uses of lnilitary force, such as halting convoys on the Berlin autobahn. Neither side now has a deployed anti - ballistic missile system. It would cost $15 billi on to g ive 3 0
  • no doubt utter threats against the Turks , it would not engage its own forces in any Cyprus crisis. We: cannot, however, ignore the possibility that Moscow might see~ to exploit this crisiu of NATO through moves elsewhere in the world, i . e.: Cuba, Berlin
  • committee appointed by President Eisenhower, headed by General Lucius Clay, the Berlin war airlift hero--was to set up a government coproration which would be authorized to issue bonds for the construction of the system and have pledged to the corporation
  • of America. The Russians in the various Berlin crises have responded the same way. There was thus reason to believe, again reasoning from experience and from analogy, that the North Vietnamese would react in that fashion too. They were smaller. They were
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Graham -- II -- 9 Berlin by saying something wicked to a Russian lady cop who had a submachine gun across her back. He was kind of a crazy man
  • was not. M: Either to Vietnam or to Berlin? S: No, no. M: Your most famous association, of course, is the one that came in December of 1966 in connection with your visit to Hanoi. S: That's right. M: I know that you've written a full book as well
  • the war for a year, and read the Dallas News, which was in those days a rather jingoistic newspaper, which announced with regularity that Texans were bombing Berlin and invading Italy and so on. Anyway, we came down here never supposing that the first
  • of view despite the Berlin crisis of '61 and '62; despite the Cuban missile crisis. You'll remember President Kennedy did go ahead and complete the partial Test Ban Treaty. M: You mentioned awhile ago the SALT talks--that got interrupted
  • . I remember Jack Kennedy called some reserves in over Berlin, and the Pentagon I think felt, "Gee, if we're going in this deep, we really ought to have some new troops called up and then we III get some more money and we can handl e th i ngs better
  • through Dick--well, the president of Hearst, such a good friend, I'll think of it in a minute--but he was the one I think that originally introduced Lyndon to Weisl [Dick Berlin] . He saved Hearst ; Hearst was about to go bankrupt . G: During
  • if he could break President Kennedy on Berlin. I do not see the Soviets in an ultimatum mood on either Viet Nam or the Middle East at the moment. There is always, of course , the chance. But if the chance exists it is _J)ecause the Soviet Government
  • that you p~opl e have got to stand up the Chur chills of some steel, not be the Cham berlin s of your time but I said. And your time. And that was my thoug ht and that was what zine this week that's what it will show I said. And just like Life maga rm. Well
  • , the Arab-Israeli Berlin crisis dispute, with the Vice President. worthy of confidence, NATOproblems, and the We have found the Shah to be and the Vice President might wiah to be quite frank with him in exchanging information and ideas
  • and Berlin. .These f.ac.ts temper but do n'Ot ·alter Embas•y view that.visit at .time and with itinerary-as proposed.would not produce .sufficient returns to offset considt1rations set forth below. Guatemalans have .previously invited President .t~ vieit hare
  • -;.'essive pressures and thrusts i::cc~:i Berlin to Ko1--ea.1 • trom tr.10 Cai•ibbea_~ to Viet-Nam.~ L11 short, we are involved in Viet-Nam.'because we know from p~iruul m:pe:dence that tho mlnlmum condition for order on ow.· pl:met ls that :J.ggrcsslo11
  • is PM'6~ 89 5 USBER BERLIN .,, .· SS r ior Chance l l or Erhar d's de pa rture from Washington June 13, Secretary G p s . ' handed h im :foll4wing message from President: USIA NSC .~ QTE Dear Mr . Chance llor : As you leave Wa shi ngton, I
  • Agency: DATE RES TRICTIO N White House, for FAA concurrence. #16 t1ern6 ll /29/63 #7fJ Memo 11/29/63 #60 Memo Bundy t o the President re J . Bu rke Knapp e~:qges witb b&t-ween a nan~aggres5io~ Berlin - Germ an¥ problem p~ct 1 p A c 12/ 7/63