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  • Japan of China. and does has maintains He said not CHIANG Kai-S.ek. President situation and situation, Communists as relations in Chinese attention SJ:'para te treaty we can. trade Japan Minister Japan history
  • LIBRARIES) FOR M OF DOCUM ENT REST R ICT ION DAT E CORRESPONDENTS O R TIT L E Burma ,, /YL.J 86 -d).S~ un a ea. A II II ·-shek from Pre from Rostow re: nitea 1Zingaom ~ 1--/10/qf( 1-"'ft--- - t --Hti""fO 's/&6 f,;_ - ~ 1 /i {/A'i res:i
  • LMarxis~/ has taken root in China. "Kao is vital, fat and positive; not ascetic, thin and negative like Chiang. Along with Churchill, Mao is one of the greatest figures of modern history." The article went on to say that Mao has a "persecution com­ plex
  • to express it, but he was all in favor of the heaviest all-out war of calling on Chiang Kai-shek's troops. (Interruption) Then came the bombshell. Truman fired MacArthur, dismissed him from command in that field, recalled him. The country was in an uproar
  • it was constant headlines, the fall back, fall back, fall back of the Nationalist China under Chiang Kai-Shek. The phrase one used was "old China hands." There were certain senators, there were certain lobbyists, and good friend, Tommy Corcoran was among them, who
  • immediately "border control" item (b) on page 5 above (i.e •• Vietnamese patrols• with appropriate U,S, aerial resupply, into Laotian territory). (3) Have Khanh negotiate with Chiang Kai-Shek for the movement of two or possibly three divisions
  • for that function. When I mentioned earlier the émigrés--as you may know, on the Taiwan scene, which was recent history, there was the whole third-force phenomenon. Somebody has to talk to the third force, which was neither Chiang Kai-shek nor Mao Tse-tung
  • in Taipei, the crowds were almost uncontrollable with their wild enthusiasm. And this had a psychological effect. Chiang Kai Shek made a statement at one point that this trip reversed the whole tide in Southeast Asia. B: This may be an almost impossible
  • theme of the Chinese representatives in the Warsaw talks was always that we must abandon the Chiang Kai-shek clique. We must turn Formosa over to the mainland, and get our forces out of Asia. So it was a very stiff set of talks without any real give
  • coming across the straits to take the islands of Quemoy and Matsu. Humphrey was very skeptical about the commitment of American forces in that area and raised questions about the corruption of the Chiang Kai-shek regime in Taiwan. He also was a very
  • Johnson -- XXI -- 23 the federal government. It was really a transition year. There was lots going on in Europe and in Asia, although somehow or another we didn't pay much attention to Asia in those days. G: Now China was about to fall or Chiang Kai
  • last week of General Th_a ng is ·bound to stir this up. 2. The root of the worry is, in a sense, historical. The experience with Chiang Kai-shek and the Soong family · in China (and before them with the Manchu dynasty) ·· suggests that when a Mandarin
  • IBE . VERY ADVERSE EFFECT ANY. sUCH FRECH . ACTIO~ -.:·'.. ::·:~:·,:;~ . ~:~:.;~ ·;· ;,~_ti\ , · ~:·
  • ("Are yc:m at Peace?") Anyonghi Kasipsio (Un-yong-hee Ka-shib-shee-o) - Good-bye · ( "Go in peace" - said to person leaving) Anyonghi Kesipsio (Un-yong-hee Kay-shib::.shee-o) - Good-bye ("Remain in pease" - said to person remaining) Komapsumnita or Kamsa
  • [William F.] Knowland [R.-Calif.] had made one of his typical P.R. speeches for Chiang Kai Shek and China, the necessity for maintaining our strong ally in Asia, the Republic of China; and Senator Johnson had spoken very favorably about Senator Knowland's
  • impressions of Khruschev, Castro, de Gaulle, Nehru, Nasser, Chiang Kai-shek ... their changing tactics­ targets-strategies, now shaping tomorrow's head­ lines. THIS PRIZE - WINNING ... Free-Lance Corres­ pondent, uncommitted but to his conscience, aud­ iences
  • Wednesday, October 12,. 1966 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: 80th Birthday Message to President Chiang On October 31 President Chiang Kai-shek will be 80 by the Chinese calendar, 79 by Western count. Special importance is being given in Taiwan
  • and the adoption ol "neo-Trujillo'' policies. 3. Chiay to Avoid Provocation of ChiComs Embassy Taipei offers the following assessment of the likeli­ hood of a Chiang Kai- shek initiative against the ma.inland: 1'There continues to be no overt signs
  • their American masters. In October the General Assembiy ot the United Nations voted to ~eat·the'Chinese·Pepple!s·Republic. Before the 1ssne reached the Security Council. Peking angrily rejected the proposition unless the Chiang Kai-shek faction was expelled
  • course of nuclear development. This was made quite evident in my meeting with President Chiang Kai-Shek when he asked that the U.S. consider means of · increasing its assistance to the nuclear research program in the Republic of China. A useful program