Skip to main content
-
Type >
Text
(remove)
-
Tag >
Digital item
(remove)
-
Specific Item Type >
Folder
(remove)
-
Subject >
Arms control and disarmament
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Contributor
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Series
Specific Item Type
Time Period
12 results
- :
Ellsworth Bunker on West New Guinea, Joseph Johnson
on Palestine
Refugees).
It is eaaentlal
to make a clear distinctien
between what
is symbolic ud what la real la th• UN. Th• General Aaaeably session
we are ju.at winding up.contains
o~• excellent
example ot
- .
- 3 -
appointed by President Kennedy the same day the
enabling Act was signed into law.
The Director
is also the chief U.S. negotiator in the field of
arms control, and much of the time he or the Deputy
Director is away at Geneva or New York
- Joseph A. Califano, Jr.,
established the guidelines and schedule for the Departmental
Histories Project. Mr. Califano described the purpose of the
project in the following terms:
The basic purpose of this project is to
compile for the use of future
- with West German participation
and,
in particular,
its implications
for the successful
negotiation
of a treaty
to halt the further proliferation
of nuclear weapons.
Sincerely,
Joseph
JSC:hse
S. Clark
COPY
Congress
of the United States
Joint Committee
- ~·
MEETING OF THE PRESIDENT WITH
HUGH SIDEY OF TIME MAGAZINE
FEBRUARY 8, 1967
This was a general discussion on American involvement in Vietnam.
The President said that President Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson
had done everything possible
- ,
to our children, to our forebears and our posterity, to prevent
such an holocaust. Eut the proliferation of nuclear weapons
immensely increases the chances that the world might stumble
into catastrophe .
President Kennedy saw this clearly. He said
- Kennedy's Address to the Nation of October 22, 1962,
concerning
Addreast
the presence
the President
of Soviet missiles
in Cubao In that
said:
/
"It shall be the policy of this Nation to
regard any nuclear missile launched from Cuba
against any nation b
-
The President said he was astounded
to find that there were several groups of people who were working
to get Congressmen who are in agreement with our policies to
make a reassessment. In this case, Senator Teddy Kennedy had
approached Congressman O'Neal
- ,
■After the Cuban missile crisis
(1962), Premier Khrushchev
offered President Kennedy two or three on-site inspections
a year as a political concession.
The Soviet Union also
^See Review of International Negotiations on the
Cessation of Nuclear Weapon
- not participate in the ENDC, vjhich they had not been
*
invited
to join.-^
Since Eisenhower, the United States had had general and
c
complete disarmament as its ultimate goal, and the Kennedy
Administration introduced an elaborate plan for general and
complete