Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Collection > National Security Files (remove)

234 results

  • to ask if the White House sees any connection w ith the events and Kosygin in Hanoi ? Q.. MR. REEDY: I am deferring a.11 com:nent et the present time . Q. At 9 o'clock or whatever time it broke up , the orders went out to carry out these r aids? MR
  • . .• H[.;(i\::{ ](W;'.:'t;. But it indicated that any reply to the .President's proposals would il} [iif-;i~!:i:!{Ij( ::::;;:;~= 1 ;J : · .: '-l : ;._ : :,.:_\ ·:; >:\-;;.-.)~-_.!_':·. , •.,:' met in London. Kosygin endorsed the statements reported
  • Washington, 10 spontaneous· 11 Harold 12 this 13 Wilson 14 . Marvin following program was recorded on Friday • ,0 ~ ,... ~ I ;S. I If - talks with with events Minister, President Premier bridge that Prime Johnson, Kosygin
  • . ') , 6 --//-'t( Thurs.• June 15, 1967 5:35 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: The Australian Minister called to ask ii Kosygin's dropping in will affect the party £0-r Holt. I suppose we have to get the scenario in New York. clear first. * My inclination would
  • to get into details. QUESTION: Moscow? Sir, can you shed SECRETARY CLIFFORD: with Kosygin. I have not received any light on what Mr. McNamara No. I know only that he was there the report of any details as yet. is doing in and had a talk
  • : "Aleksey Kosygin, Chairman of the Council of Ministers of tb.at the Indian and Pakistani leaders meet in Moscow for the restoration of peace, according to a. Moscow report. Kosygin's message the USSR, has suggested §lOCRFs/NO R>REIGNDISSEM
  • d'Affaires ad interim, in which you were so good as to give me information and your impressions concerning the conversations that you held -on June 23 and 25 with Mr. Kosygin, Prime Minister of the Sov:tet Union. "I have always believed not only
  • was not a reply t:o Kosygin's message_ The Ambassador said he fully understood. The Secretary said that one of the p1~oblems was the internal sltuacion in various countries, including Israel, He~ wciuld li.ke to draw the Ambassador's attent.iot1 to one very
  • thought it was a good move. 2. Dobrynin made a point of emphasizing that in Kosygin's discussion of some time ago with Governor Harriman, Kosygin had expressed the conviction that Hanoi was not a puppet of the Chinese Communists. Dobrynin observed
  • President Tubman o "PCI 1p # e tr • nt ~__!S:l.----l~p Or- ,t-i?tflu ~ 11-2,r, 7 s o to President .PCI 5p # a rp _ --PresrdenCtoKosygm c., 1 TS. 4 f) ~ t:7"" '5°" ...-/ [Duplicate of #41a, NSF, Files of W. Rostow, "Kosygin"] A 1 Rostow to Pres1 en
  • to Kosygin. b. Next steps c. Israeli and prospects. McNamara) ln New York. response to sinking of dest-roy-,r. DECLASSIFIED Other. E.O. 12356, Sec.3.4(b) White HouseGuide.lines. Feb. 24. 1983 Bv-11--, W. W. Rostow WWRostow:rln •TOP SECRET- NARA
  • to suggest this 1n the drafting of the proposed message to Kosygin. To make this more crediblet we might this week open some kind of conversation on Viet Nam with the Russians, either through a note from you to Kos.ygln, Secretary Rusk meeting Gromyko
  • HAND I GOT lN A GOOD REFERENCE GE~:-EVA AGREEMENTS AND THE CO-CHAIRMANSHIP. I WAS ALSO DETERMINED DESPITE KOSYGINS STRONG OPPOSITION TO COMMIT HIM TO ACTING WITH US IN SUPPORT OF A NEGOTIATED POLITICAL SETTLEMENT, AND, IN RETURN FOR SECURING THIS, WE
  • importance",. and an elment that no goverrment can overloo:-c. He said the program had to be "acCE?pt:ed". 'lhel \"as inpress~ by ·the am:unt of tirre Kosygin davof.ed to Vietnam~,1111!afi~a-@~e~enp!!!11!!!. ~na~s~J.!"'!S~~ he placed on the Front ~am. • f
  • I came Sitting in the living mainly about room to Glassboro to meet of President with Chairman Robinson's house, Kosygin. we talked four matters: The Non-Proliferation Treaty; The need for U.S. -Soviet the nuclear ·arms The Middle
  • to references to I . Wllson--Kosygin talks. ,.,.. 6. · State and Defense to prepare a position. in response to Kosygin's ABM letter; Sec. Rusk to prepare for Thursday releasEt a -·simple ·· ...,...,,...,_,-:. statement along the lines of Thompson's telegram fa
  • received at my home a telephone call from Tcherniakov, his DCM. Tcherniakov reported that a message to the President from Kosygin had just arrived, on Vietnam. We consulted together as to where the message should be delivered. We decided to minimize
  • A 6/26/68 A ~\\l~ #15a memo epjnlot~~,~ t\-\6'\ Intelligence Memorandum e"-'-"""+ S 3p PeF ~ r-1c.. 'i/ I\ loo °'f4":"- 7-8-93 1 I' "''-.) 5~.-;i. ~t) [Duplicate of #69, NSF, Files of Walt Rostow, "Kosygin"] -S [Duplicate of #69a, NSF
  • HAS ·ARISEN FROMTHE MEMBEl'lSHIP 0F THE NEWLY INDEPENDENT AFRICAN AND ASIAN COUNTNIES." 'COMMUNIQUECLOSED WITH SOVIET· APPRECIATION OF iAFGHAN NEUTRALITY AND "NON-ADHERENCETO ALIGNMENT." ,-RIME MINISTER KOSYGIN INVITED BY·YUSUF VISIT AF~HANISTAN
  • - ~S~~Al.t.J '1f/,-I~~ (duplicate, #92c, NSF, Files of Wal~ Rostow, "Kosygin") #35b cable Bangkok 20876 2p S 09/27/68 A FILE LOCATION National Security File, Memos to the President, Rostow , Volume 96, 9/26-30/68, Box 40 RESTRICTION CODES
  • wish to read what I had just finished dictating before you put me to work on the Friday message. I shall drop the Kosygin draft letter; although you might wish to send a letter to him simultaneously with your message to Congress. \)Y~Rostow -SECR:El
  • ALSO MADEHALT;AT MOScOW, WHERE I HADDISCUSSIONS WITH CHAIRMAN KOSYGIN. \ PAGE2 RUDSND409 IN PARIS, I WASRECEIVEDWITH~UCHWARMTH ANDCORDIALITY. PROBLEMS PRESIDENTDE GAULLESH01ED DEEP INTERESTOURECONOMIC ANDPEOPLE ANDfiS~UREDME OF EARN~STDESIRE
  • . apparently, has smoothed out ted against us. Besides, its misgivings. The decision they were also provid- • to supply ·su-7 aircraft to India and .Mr. Kosygin's re­ ing arms aid to us. Af­ cent official visit to Delhi ter the September'War, are indicative
  • ,sec. 3.5 .NlJ/,fA-c 1)7_, BY. &; ,NARA,Date l,~.;>8,I) 7 • ; 2 U, SJlMMABY A. Although a formal Indo•Pak rapprochement is not now in the cards,, tensions between the two nations have recently diminished; Kosygin's visit to Pakistan and India
  • as a little region all it·s own. GLOBAL 4. U.S. --Soviet relations. You'd like to tell him a little about your meeting with Kosygin -- your reflections on how far the thaw goes. 5. Iran-USSR. You'd like to hear his experience with the Russians. (He has moved
  • that Russian support had its limits. Kosygin apparently never got around to making any major new economic con­ ces.,;ions during his eight-day stay in Egypt, and did not even relax credit payments (Nasser owes Russia ,2 bil­ lion) which are straining Egypt's