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  • for completing an assignment which has lasted for nearly a year and a half. The first news tickers on the report are more helpful to us than to the Canadians. I think Mike Pearson may well give you a phone call, not to complain but simply to put himself
  • to get out this bill. He hopes to get it to the floor before the August recess but has not yet discussed this with Senator Mansfield. I feel strongly that we should get t_othe floor before the recess. nose-count on a bill of this magnitude looks very good
  • . mvtte Tomlc to accompany - l~vite T'-"imic sad Mo~rison to &ceompany G02'.1Flll£frt!AL - Wednesday·. May 17, 1967 -- 7:00 p. m. Mr. Preshlent: Sec:. Rusk reports that S9'l. Mansfield cannot go to Canada .o n May 25. He ha·s an wibreakable speaklng
  • DoD, JCS, and CIA (both in Washington and in the field) were opposed to any change. I myself 2 returned from Eu.rope on September 14, and vividly recall that •Mike Forrestal came to me at once to describe the whole contro­ versy and its background
  • Transportation Branch - Joseph A. Ryan,, FAS - Grain and Feed Division, Director - Raymond E. Vickery IADS - Matt Drosdoff, Administrator Assistant to Secretary - Mike Walsh STATE NEA, Deputy Assistant Sidney Sober PPC Robert Johnson Secretary - William J
  • on an expanded scale or further increase the number of u.s. troops . in South Vietnam. d. matter The President should come before the Congress and see the before he expands U.S. forces in Southeast Asia. debat~d ~ I .I I; I I 2. Senator Mike Monroney
  • of Vietnam demonstrations; The possibility of European l e aks that Se c, Rusk ' s requests have been refused, which could enfl a me both Congress (protectioni s m and Mansfield) and the priv ate c a pita l a nd money mark ets 13. r Timing of s t atement
  • ~ble (ttOA plus carryover) for :deVelo,.._.t ·l ,o,ud.. ) (Sec. 205 of the A.et; ~ec·. i02(d) of the bill) ' . · ••io ·. •r~_2.-.·.- at~oa _ f_« •O . '.I . t. . _pCHIC:CA"L COOP!RATIO~lf Gran·cs. miking MIO ~~ G&\fl!!. l. A,ddad Cl~iter1
  • Senator Mansfield Richard Russell Mar gar~t Chase Fulbright Robert C. Byrd Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative \ McCormack Albert Boggs Bates Bolton Mahon Smith INFORMATION EYES ONLY ~BUTTERCUP
  • . A possible sequence, to be explored with Senator Mansfield and others, would involve hearings on the Miller Report this session, and a bill early in the next. 6. The Miller Report should be given wide circulation both in the Senate and the House. McGeorge
  • of the statement t o be issued from th e White House ann oun cing the reprisal alr strikes in Nor th Vietnam . Why c annot we handle this matter th rough the United Nations ? Senator Mansfield: Can't the Geneva powers act? The President: This cannot be done
  • or Mansfield: Pleas e d to hear the mildly encouraging report of the Vice President. What is the monthly infiltration rate of North Vietnamese ? The Vice P r esident : He had not asked this question in Saigon . Our team in South Vietnam supports the bombing
  • for a special r e port from G en e ral W es tmoreland on Senator Mansfield's alle gations conc e rning drinking and irr egular activities of o ur for ce s . TOP SECftE I /SENS! l'I VE §IMCESET ·.• .. -2­ -TOP SECRET/&ENSTTIVE Ambassador Lodge praised
  • it as a choice between Israel and Vietnam and believe we ought to withd raw from Vietnam. He told Secretary Rusk to let Senator Mansfield know that this kind of music in the Senate is just what Kosygin wants to hear. Secretary Rusk before leaving the meeting
  • that we should keep the bases. The President n oted that Senator Man sfield was going to Japan and other Far East points to make l ectur es . He asked for one page memos which would list some of the things he might discuss with Senator Mansfield before
  • Goldberg: If we took an initiative, the Security Council would i1ounde r in a state of disagreement. The President: In the event chis happened , would we be ahead oi where we now are? Senator Mansfield would probably say, yes , we would be; but t::te Se
  • aECREl' fflENSITIVE 3 * ....,. * Senator Mansfield: The North Vietnamese attack has opened many eyes . We are not now in a penny ante game. It appears that the local populous in South Vietnam is not behind us, else the Viet Cong could not have
  • record of opposition except for Senator Langer. Present Members of the Connnittee who were serving at that time are Senator Fulbright, Senator Sparkman, Senator Mansfield, Senator Aiken, and Senator Morse. Senator Alexander Smith and Senator Mansfield
  • suggested in the Mann memorandum, the Administration would support it. 5. A possible sequence, to be explored with Senator Mansfield and others, would involve hearings on the Miller Report this session, and a bill early in the next. 6. The Miller Report
  • of Senator Sparkman. Others present were Senators Mansfield• Lausche, Gore, SymiL1.gton, Pell, Hickenlooper, Aiken, . Williams, Mundt, and Cooper. ·· The Secretary opened with a general review of events, the steps taken and the options open on the i~cident
  • in talking make Senator to me was to urge that the Administration Mansfield and Senator Cooper a part of the US negotiating team. This, of course, is not a new suggestion on the part of Senator Fulbright, but he was pressing it very hard in his remarks to me
  • Thuraday, Oct. 26, 1967 3:30 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: Herewith the State Department unanimously recommends a brief letter of acknowledgment to Senator- Mansfield, inviting him to an • early breakfast meeting at the White House. 1 gather
  • out with all key Senatars, who might be interested, such a .s Mansfield, Fulbright, Hickenlooper, Dirksen, et al. I have already talked with Senator Aike-n and apologized handsomely for misleading_the President as to our ability to tra-n:s late
  • he is against the Mansfield Resolution. Perhaps it would be possible for a troop thin-out in the West to come first, if the Russians would agree to follow with a thin-out of their own. The President will pursue a cautious but constructive policy