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- - A. L D. OVERS~AS OPERATIONS
IX
Near East and South Asia-
X
Latin America
XI
Africa ...
XII
East Asia
XIII
Vietnam
. .
.
.. . . . ..
.. .. .. .. . . ..... . . .
...
.. . . .. ...
. . ..
. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .
• 177
233
310
- East and South Asia .
Latin America
.. . . . . . . . .
Afric:a . . . . . . . . . . .
East Asia
Vieb1am . . . . . . . .
233
..................
........
310
343
377
PART III
XIV
xv
XVI
XVII
XVIII.
XIX
xx
XXI
XXII
Inter national Cooperation
- )............
97
Secvirity Covincil Action on Security
Assurances.....................................
102
Treaty Opened for Signature ...................
103
Renewed Effort for Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks With the Soviet Union (1968)................
104
- with the question
Puerto
"As we interpret
before
it will
of advanced time for Hawaii,
be appropriate
Alaska
and
Rico."
The Uniform Time Act of 1966 provides
that
each zone shall
be advanced one hour on April
the state
action
takes
The Department
- *)
----1962
196~-
1964
1965
1966
l..967
1443
1561
1591
1484
1754
1040
1440
10, 313
780
726
717
896
834
535
668
5156
Latin America
128
167
296
104
187
69
233
1185
East Asia
182
206
208
151
188
138
187
1260
Vietnam
32
53
- beautification
2. Maritime policy
3. Interventions
in regulatory
actions
a.
Inter-American
freight case
b. Washington and Old Dominion Railroad
4. Investigation
of automobile insurance
5. The District
of Columbia highway problem
6. The Department and new
-
to the· total
transportation
picture
in North
America
and to the role
of air transport.
- 3 What I will
--That
ask
of you
you be aware
of
--that
you be aware.of
new technology;
of
--and
that
your actions
today
is
quite
the
desires
- ••
1\~:~.~~ ...of project'
.. ~., .. -~ : . . .
. . :-:.·. .
in'mind
•
•
~
•
·in ~h·e appli-
(luring
_the ·.•...••• •
••••
action
and~.·-a.ft~rward
..:.·. . .· ...·
.'
..,,
~ur 1ng
... •.·.
~
.
.·• ... .
.
;:: . ..... .
. ,.
1
- that the United States would not
take any actions inconsistent with the resolution.
It should
also say that the United States was continuing to work toward
the establlshjnent of an MLF^ which was consistent vvith the
resolution.
At the same time
- "omnibus" resolution, approved by the Disarmament
Commission on June 15, condemned continued testing, called
for a comprehensive agreement, and asked all states to adhere
to the limited test-ban treaty.
The United States voted
^Summary of Action, Meeting
- .
(_)
()
· -: Border incidents, raids, am retaliatory- actions between
the Israelis and the· Arab revanchists operating out o£ Egypt,
Jordan, ·Syria,_ and Le~non had been commn occurrences ever
since the· establishment of the State of Israel·. in 1948. On
only -'tw
- with the right of collective or
3/
individual action to fulfill this obligation.
Defense
was made a tripartite responsibility of Cyprus, Greece and
4/
A complex constitution establishing the rights
Turkey.
of the Greek and Turkish Cypriots was incorporated
- action and the death of President Kennedy created
fear and apprehension in the UAR that the change in Adminis
trations had allowed forces LmSympathetic to the UAR to gain
gECREI
the upper hand in Washington.
1/
The new US Administration made
- that the United States did not p l a n to place
any, weapons of mass destruction In orbit:
Today there Is no doubt that either the United
States or the Soviet Union could place thermonuclear
weapons in orbit^ but such an action is just not a
rational m i l i t a r
- ~ -
WJ.1
i~J v,,~
r,
u-j
CON:PIDENfIAL
c..
IV.
THE NEAR EAST AND SOUTH ASIA
A.
OVERVIEW
America's concerns -- its problems and its opportunities
in the Near East and South Asia are as varied as the area
itself, where nearly one
- the fact
situation
and the Federal
of the Department
wished to arrive
to the Inter-American
Washington without
Secretary
of
1
The matter
States.
to allocation
in the issue were the
of State
the action
carriers
carriage
monopoly, waiver
- be roquiro..
! .; ; ._·.
_
:J.L'.'.(
_~: • ·}, :,•
!:~:~~b~;;;~;;~::;;
0
·.i\i•_'.:\!~•I
:;;;;::;:;;;:;~~;;~
{!·O:·•:
0
1
- the wars this Nation has fought.
Today, there are 95 million motor vehicles in the U.S.; by 1990 there
will he at least 156 million cars, trucks and buses on America's streets
and highways. The Federal Highway Administration estimates that it will
take
-
• The representatives,
agencies,
chosen
were_ .Cecil
Admiral
Trimble,
CAB; Ernest
BOB. Admiral
Executive
by the head
Guard;
Frank
ICC; Bernard
Trimble
Secretary
Turner,
Rosen,
appointed
actions
supplying,
required
Captain
budget
1
financing
- on the HUD action.
discuss
DOT will
3
of HUD. Since
new communities
sentatives
system
new towno
will
in Northwest
diversified
Associ.ntion
transportation
a public
new
A to
was a $277,733 gro.nt by the UM'J.
cor.nnuni.ties.
designing
- of the Office
1.
coordination
Translating
is as fo 1:.ows:
de.sirad DOT?Olicy into legislation
of lezislativ~
pro?os~:s
and pr~paration
acvice as to methods and timing of presentztions,
of the pre?aratio~
2.
of supp6rting
Obtaining
action
support.for
-
Administration.
of the several
PL 89-670 assigned
Agency, the Bureau of Public
Government agencies,
gated by the Secretary
of the functions
Advisory
of electronics
the responsibility
Highway Administration,
Aviation
Science
technology
Actions
-
for
Highway Administration
in 1967.
table
would affect
F. Lally,
DOT was involved
the
would be employed
as the contractors,
action
an agressive
be awarded
a manning
This plan
employn1ent oppor
an affirmative
to develop
he could
- &-is ac.complishedboth by Board proceedings result
ing in refunds of excessive profits and by the voluntary actions of
contractors. Determinations of excessive profits made by the Board
during fi8cal 1968 aggregated $28,069,748,bringing the total since
1951to
- and limiting ABMs, the relationship and i n t e r
action b e t w e e n ABMs and limitations on offensive missiles,
and the implication of possible overseas developments
of A B M s .
C l o s e l y related to the " a r e a ” contracts was a
reimbursable
- whose expertise
is drawn upon by the Agency for special projects
or other problems.
INTERNAT IONAL RELA T IONS BUREAU
T he Bureau has a dual responsibility:
first to
translate U.S. disarmament policies into action at.
the conference table