Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

429 results

  • the war with maximum imag.lnatlon within accepted limits. Bunker's position on bombing is "eetiom·:lnp,a.ragraph 1, above. W. WWRostow:rln ·SECRET w·. Rostow SECBET Tuesday, November 21, 1967 3:35 p. m.. Mr. President: Herewith Kosygin's leteat
  • by .Kosygin .and Co.lone! General Uvarov (Anti~-Aircraft Missile Troop Commander) created speculation that more sophisticated Soviet missiles and radar would soon be used to counter American air blo~s. Voices were raised in the American Congress and press
  • of us can do Job alone. II. East-West Relations 1. We were encouraged by the answer to President 1 s letter to Kosygin on ABM. Look forward to frank discussions. We will ·seek agreement on ways to avoid futile ratchet in arms -race, and perhaps to even
  • IN PRODUC ING THE CURRENT S TO TALKS. HE HAD STRONGLY REBUTTED T A THE MO EY THE US WOULD SAVE BY NOT DEPLOYING DBE PUT INTO ICBM'S. HE SA ID KOSYGIN HAD BEEN 0 T SUBJECT OF CHINA: THE TROUBLE WITH THE US OS GI S ID, WAS THAT THEY DID NOT REALIZE
  • separately on the dinner table discussions on Kashmir and disarmament matters. Be fore dinner Gromyko and I had a private talk with no one else present. I told him that following Harriman's discussion with Kosygin, we had take n Kosygin's suggestion and had
  • or Kosygin an t1nt a Cz.ech brondcniat; u ..., --- Ciroc.}hko 11ad 1·os1gnccl, Mnl'Sht\l .·.: in t:or \ho we... aday, Aq. 12:0S p.m. 70PS!.CK%: MB. PRESIDENT la■t 1 Herewltll a pl'•p••e4 mea..,. la n■paaM to hl ■ attached to Wll- 21- 19'8
  • -. LIMDJS. ---· -- -- --- . 1 v P0L'.f'ANSKY,--REcE ivEo -M°E· FoR--AN HOUR TH Is MORNI NG. KORN I ENKO AND. AN .uN I DENT I F ·iED A i D: wERE. p RE s ENT-. HE s A I D' HE HAD TALKED By TELE~HONE TO KOSYGIN WHO• HAD EX~RESSE0 HIS REGRET AT NOT BEiN~ ABLE
  • not discus.s the substance of communications to London, when Kosygin was there; and I did not propose to do so now.. I could tell him, however, that to the best of my knowledge there was no conflict or incompatibility between what was done in Londo:11ir
  • conventional war, or a nuclear war. spokesmen of all three capitals, Khrushchev, Kosygin, Lin Pi Mao, all of them have proclaimed openly: do it." 0, The Giap, IIThis is the way we're going to So this is the real test of whether or not this technique
  • was on this business when Wilson, having had Kosygin down at his country house in Chequers over the weekend and apparently having talked Vietnam to him all night, then drove him home to Claridge's Hotel at eleven o'clock at night, or midnight maybe, and then at two
  • PHO~E CALL; e.. H! 'i'JUt:J STilA!GHTA''lAYTAKEPRESIO£NTJOH~JSON •s ~~S3~GZI~ TO AYUaAT THE CONFE~ENCEJ A~O c. HE WOULD EXPECTTHATAYUBWOULD EITHERSPEAK AT KOSYGIN AIRPORTDEPARTURE AT TOMr ~20UTT~E MATTER 113~ ~~U~3 nR CALLME I~ LATERronAY OR TO~ORROV
  • not insist upon the Israeli.position that Israeli-Arab talks at this point must be face-to-face. There was haggling going on between the two sides, each trying to gain. The Secretary said that the US was disappointed with Kosygin's L J P'ORM 1•11 DS-1254 6
  • Minister· Alexei N. Kosygin, meeting him for the first time at Glassboro, N~J., bitterly up-' iiraided him as an "immoral capitalist."! The harshness of that attack seemed to surprise even the Russian because two . days later, -in gentler tones, he invited
  • Johnson an Sovi t Chair­ manAlexsei Kosygin at Glassboro, New Jersey. The conversation re­ corded between President Johnson and President Dwight Ei enhower about these events i parti ularly worthy of note. Researchers may either listen to the recordings
  • of all the oppo rtuni ties that reall y strik e me, the one relati ng to the Chet Cooper mission to London. M: That was in 1967. S: The one where Kosygin was visit ing London, I think perhaps that was an opportunity that offered some good prospect
  • BORDER ANDOF SOVIETPLANSDEVELOPED-DURING KOSYGIN•sVISIT·TO HANOITO PROVIDEMILITARYEQUIPMENT.WITH TECHNICIANS AND ·AIJ!tCRAFT MANNED BY SOVIET PERSONNEL. FOR..-~TH[S AND ANY OTHER .INFORMATION HA1UUMANSAID VE WERE GRATEFUL GOI HAD,.ESPECIALLY FROM.HANOI
  • -Lf70 ~ 5 -~;J.JJ/c:>-- /J~S r-----4---Rp-. ~ RESTRICTION qr .Jc M .J '1 /wt( t=0 Dominican Republic S 3 pp. .V-,1,2/,. f =.:;:; ;;i:;ff.q ) etr.. 59 memo DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE q/-4-=fl,f letter to Kosygin -PCI J pp. ~ S·:19-9.$' NJ-J
  • be accompanying Premier Kosygin, Therefore Mrs. Johnson would be part of this, and we had to do something with and for the lady. talked to Dick Hughes. The President meantime had He and Betty had thought that a day at a beach with a normal family might
  • the frustrations that security imposes. But you sure can't get over a shot in the dark and the guy jumping on you. We were so lucky with Kosygin in Canada. I had Kosygin in Canada, but he hadn't planned . . . It was such a quickly arranged visit, that all he
  • was interested in going to the Soviet Union and was probing that, [Robert] McNamara made sort of a surprise visit to the Kremlin and met with Kosygin at 15 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • CONNECTIONS HADBEEN STRONGADVOCATES OF INVASIONBECAUSE OF THEIR FEARS OF BEING INFECTEDgy HUMANISTIC SOCIALISM. GRECHKO PERSONALLY THE ARMYHADFAVTREDINVASION-- ALTHOUGH HADNOT. BREZHNEVHADWAIVERED ANDFINALLYCOM~OVERTO THE INTERVENTION SIDE. KOSYGIN
  • -we can. conceive. 1. I begin with the fact that both Tommy Thompson and Chip Bohlen feel a certain regret that we did not pick up Kosygin 1 s message, institute a total bombing halt, and then lean very heavily on the Soviet Union to produce :resulta
  • !.esidium meeting is conflicting and sparse. There are unconfirmed reports that Brezhnev is visiting Warsaw and Berlin in preparation for it. Kosygin and Podgor.n.y are in ;Mqs~ow~ Dubcek is in Prague. The most frequent rumors are that th~&etiu""g-wim1·:1