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  • •■A'""-'' ■■r V m m'^ ■4 ■' -S',:- COPY LBJ LIBRARY . i •J INCOMiMG IlMQim Departm ent o f State 46 LIMITED OFFICIAL USE - -- .y Action NNNNVV M JA 1 2 2 JIA 8 2 3 FE RR RUEHCR Info DE R U t-lJlR 545A ZNY CCCCC ss G SP SAH L H
  • :­ ,u/;> • ---if-· S6- ~~ I 'T' ) ' ~~ ~h. 4 .. ­ :;.. .s-,ff l .. ~1l~---- !°'I 2 Meeting in Cabinet Room February 26, 1966 ~s.~..:__President of Security Council at UN has letter to U Thant -­ amounts to resignation of UN fro:n problem, Had
  • TITLE ‘ ^ ^ 3 S ‘ 2. 2 p 7/26/64 Ip 7/25/64 RESTRICTION A zr ip 8/10/64 2 p 7/26/64 A fv/u\ fffC/ oZ’'o2 DOD TS Gp 1 ------------^•^HOm AC SOG 7005 / ^.^’ 0 3 5 / 2 , '^78 C a b l e (P“ j yxi>Yy\^o£::^— 1p 7/28/64 A UU) U ( U ^ ^ 2
  • with China Experts] [Briefing Papers for Tuesday Luncheon, February 6, 1968] [February 21, 1968 - 1:00 p.m. Meeting of Rusk, U Thant, Others on Vietnam (President Did Not Attend)] [February 27, 19&8 Meeting of Advisors on Vietnam (President Did Not Attend
  • for a date to begin these discussions . He said that he had just talked to U Thant about achieving some sort of arms lilnitation and about registering with the UN arms shipments to the Middle East. He said all he had done at the Ranch with Prime Minister
  • ICAN COUNTR I ES, SHOULD BE INST ITUT ED AS PROPOSED SY U THANT, FOR PURPOSE OF VERIFYING COMPLIANCE. STEVEf'iSGN ANP G,! L,PATR IC REVE~TED TO QUEST l ON OV.ER-FLI
  • to appear with theirs, sign this page and mail to ---------). J THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Wednesday, March 29, 7:45 P.M. . 1967 Mr. President: Secretary Ruskts report of Ambassador Goldberg's c~µversation with Secretary Gener.a~_ U Thant was based
  • are worthwhile. Secretary Rusk: We did not promise not to put U. S. aircraft north of the 20th. We ·p romised not to bomb. If a plane veers over 20th in a turn, I have no problems. We do not want steady erosion of our strength due to Joe Clark, U Thant
  • OU A SITE F0:1 T f\L!\S U1 .!TH i1ANOI .~ D NEUtR?L SH!? -- ASK U THANT TO ARRA~GE --ASK NOSI COUNTRY ro PROPOSE CNOTE: l;J£ SUGGESI£D A SiH? FOR AiHl!S!ICt TALKS IN KOREA> • 2) ACCEPT THE!R CHOICE FOR ·coN!~CTS"
  • by Jim Jones and Larry Temple. . . .he went to the desk and read the AP and UPI tickers which had come in his absence, ^df and then he went to the bar area and sat w/ Walt Rostow and talked about discussions with Rusk and U Thant re peace talk feelers
  • . Goldberg described his efforts to upgrade the caliber of Latin American UN representatives, particularly those on the Security Council. Secretary General. Ambassador Goldberg explained why we continue to favor U Thant as Secretary General. He noted
  • . of activity. Have noticed 60 shallow river dredges to utilize rivers in lieu of roads. Rusk: (reported on peace offensive) Goldberg: (reported on UN and Pope} President: response. McNamara: You've talked to U Thant and all the others in UN - and no Joint
  • . DHCLASmPIED E.O. 123.'6, Sec. 3.4 ,; CiiCMT NIJ f3/-l f( B' ~
  • ) along the Israeli-Eg-.rp__Q.,a n border in Sinai. Secretary­ General U Thant promptly COffiPiled with the Egyptian request. In these new circumstances, President Johnson sent a letter to Prime Minister EslL~ol of Israel on May 17 expressing sympathetic
  • the commitment to South Vietna.in• In general, the peace offensive is supported, but doubts are expressed that it would produce any results. Ambassador Goldberg reported on his conversations with UN Secretary General U Thant, the Pope, Italian leaders, de Gaulle
  • Kennedy a couple of months encouraged to go ahead. U Thant and We are, also giving us full support. State Department informed. this proposal with ago, and we were then Ralph Bunche at UN are or course, keeping the • l , · We have scheduled a preliminary
  • . IN CONNECTION 1JITH. A. PEACE-?ETTLEMENT. r _"._ • : ·.._·5) KEY. EL£(1ENTS OF THE GZNEVA ACCORDSAND THE MANILA . '.:· C0:1i'lUNI~U! AS TH!Y RELATE TO PEACE DISCUSSIONS, INCLUDING ··_ . MUTUAL.DE-ESCALA_TORYMEASURES, POW QUESTION, ~ lTHDRAVAL • OF F.ORCESAND
  • A s 3 9/22/65 A opw 3/t°i/l°1 f U{ -t6 FepeFt Researel"lM1smor.Rdb11+1, RFe 37.9 ~'--r--c 17 report (UrG ~~ 10.1-cs- Research Memorandum, RFE-37.8 SOJ1 \tl 1ld 3/zq/,q Collection Title National Security File, Files of Robert W. Komer
  • prepared to consider anyl:xxly's SU3"gestion for ending it. asked Mr. lbstc:M to check the time and manner of our consultations on u-Thant's latest proposal and that he wanted to shCMthis data to the Priroe Minister. O:MPIDE!!'fflL'.1,L • CONEIDmTIAL -2
  • on the current A r ab-Israeli situation. He d escribed it as serious but not yet desperate: -- The U. N. Security Council is meeting , and it is import ant to have it in session on this issue. We do not yet have a full report from U Thant's talks in Cairo
  • and Ankara, his next job will be to bring Makarios into line. DECLASSIFIED l\ulhortty N L.J R~. j g-:;n g' ("[pLJ2 NARA. Date /';) ·f(-1J3 SECRET ..SECRE~ -2­ Next is U Thant. He has already called for the "total demilitarization" of Cyprus and may
  • . Thia i• a matter ~f deep_concern, and it i• a matter for Saudi _Arabia,~ •h~ desires, to raise at the United Nati~­ Saudi Arabia had alr:eady done 10 m a letter ~~nt to U Thant. " • • ControlofBulkofNation KETAF, Yemen, Feb. 1 year~ as our grandfathers
  • Rusk's report of Ambassador Goldberg 1s conversation with Secretary General U Thant was based on the attached summary of a telephone report from New York. The full m~morandum of the conversation is not yet ready but will be available by morning. Bromley
  • affected the military situation. llI. Until recently, the enemy was countbtg on a. lon~ war of attrition wh.kh would ev~nt1..1ally w~ar do·#n the willingness o!. the South Vietnamese and the U. s. to .continue to Ii2ht. Tlds has not proven
  • SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE ? 1163 Re.po.r.t bl fP,U I... S-t--a.teTop Sec.Fatr~-:- Guba DATE W 2 1!/77 U1
  • should of course s t r e s s these assessm ents n e c e ssa rily based on propaganda and other evidence to date, and that :ve ta.king these factors very much into account as we proceed with program. 3. Although Indians and U Thant publicly, Canadians
  • , Tape 1 -- 12 things as the [J. Blair] Seaborne mission.We were interested when third-party governments tried to get into it--the Canadians, the Soviets, the Poles, the Hungarians, the Rumanians--or when individuals like U Thant or private citizens tried
  • : We are ready to help any way we can, and the Ambassador has told the Secretary General this. But the Turks, as all of us know, mis trust U Thant. DECLASSlF!ED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3..6 NLJ _9~7:....""'...::3;.;.;:10~~-By u, , NARA Date 1-,z1-n ..!f10
  • -~ Cl~ U.--1 ~11-~"-exchange i. letters on Cuba. t,:. y-------~::'.l-- U-~ ~ I cannot be~ieve that there could have)0 ~ been any
  • senior position with the United Nations,C!,b.P.I. Radio and Visual Dep~rtment by the federal government of USA because of my memorandum and documentation addressed to the' Secretary General U Thant requesting to supervise by a special committee my global
  • and Canadians) to stop their support of our Vietnam policy. 7. It will meet some per sist~nt objections of unaligned nations and leaders {primarily the Indians and U Thant}. 8. It will somewhat de-fuse the Algerian meeting by strengthening our supporters
  • July 28 , 196 5 WEDNESDAY The Whit e House Released text of carried to him by Goldberg Ltr expressed his faith *L and his ltr U to _2 confidence Thant which was hand ' in Goldberg Dick Goodwi n George Meany Jack Valent i Secy
  • 3HORTFALL ............ $ 555,o26 NOTES: Secretary General U Thant, in his report on Cyprus to the 3ecurity Council dated June 15, now estimates the finacial obligations for the operations of UNFICYP, for the thze~-month period ending June 27, at $5,430,000
  • : But that didn't cripple the operation? S: Oh, hardly! M: Did the bureau ever constru ct a satisfac tory of Adlai Stevenson's Hardly, hardly. conversations with U Thant that were relayed by--? S: Well, that's a very, very fascinat ing chapter , because
  • ; the U Thant initiative; the Harriman group; the Chester Cooper mission to London
  • (the Pope) a letter saying we have gone along with a ceasefire in fourteen points -- in U Thant proposal, and in the State of the Union Message. MIDDLE EAST The President: George Ball is our Middle East man. Ambassador Ball: We're getting
  • rpt CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE Bio Sketch C ~ +. -Je.q i' DATE Ah-~ 'i► ~, ~ RESTRICT ION 1/19/ 68 A 1/19/68 A 2p [Duplicate in Diary Backup, 2/20/68] #32c rpt Bio Sketch ~ ,,... 3• - , 8 Ah- C ct q I,-~, r 1p U~ae½t~ - - E~eH~~-te
  • the document. in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. GENERALSERVICES ADMINISTRATION GSA DC 73-495 GSA FORM 7122 (7-72) --16 Feb 68 thru GENERAL 29 Feb 68 February: 16 -- Msg from 16 -- Rostow U Thant memo, 16
  • ; escalation decisions; bombing of Haiphong POL; Adlai-Stevenson-U Thant initiative; bombing pauses; peace efforts