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  • "- --- · ---· ·. ' · .. :.CT! O,-J: Aatembassy NEW DELHI u0 ·- ·•- . . ff1m H.,u\tI.EDIA r· E 1 18 ~ Jo 1'fl '1,T STATE 197663 ~rs . E:YES ONLY FOR A1vIBASSADOR FROM THE S~CRE'i'AF:Y I have just received a FBIS' excerpt (embargoed \J.ntil morning May t~) for Ho
  • . Their principal and to inflict I Corps. and military defeats Tne net result, situation new VC units, large units phase so2etime within objectives in nuch of the country; making a ,'ig­ are to destroy· also to reduce the on US forces in battles
  • . CIA has funded and managed throughout. 3. I told ~OB that we would actively explore alternatives to develop recmnmenda.tions for your FY 69 budget decisions, but believed present arrange:p1.ents should continue in FY 68. ~easons: The new pacification
  • ()}(_ ?..:\ SAID VE>.HAD MANY,REPORTS, HANOI WAS SPREAD.ING RUMORS-•:, THAT THE THIEU-KYGOVERNMENT HERE-ANDIN SEVERAL COUNTRIESABROAD 'i/AS ABOUT TO COMEAPART,_A NEW GOVTCRISIS, WASIN .THEOFJ:ING~ AND THATCOMMUNIST AGENTS STRATEGICALLY PLACED IN GVN AND MILITARY
  • and that the appointment be made public on Tuesday or Wednesday. He would also appreciate it if you would have Jim Thomson let Marshall Jones know when a White House statement on Len's new job will be issued, so that the Depart­ ment can announce his appointment as Deputy
  • 1968 with the second slice ($2.. 7 million) of our 5-year program It's a routine determination euch as tho ■ e you've ■lgned for Tunisia. ln pa ■t year ■ for Tuni ■ ia--not one of the new Come-Long determination ■• Charlie Zwick'• memo {attached
  • are closest to us on Vietnam -- the Lao, the Thai, the British, the Australians, the Canadians, and the New Zealanders. We have said the same thing to the senior military and civilian officials of Saigon. They are now waiting to see whether we mean what we
  • In the donor's deed of gift. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION. NA FORM 1429 (8-86) -I ...... -..) a,. -.J NEW YORK TIMES Friday, December l, ATOM ARMS GAINS DESPITE TEST BAN I ACHIEVED BYU.&i JacksonTells of Advancesil FormerlyHeld
  • . . ' . . another. · Ono could make 'out a . ca.so that. . that ·.1966 .irlb~ogiio . . . was much . . '. too wel1 covu~ed by ·American. masa media, a.11 •with a·n 1.-isatiable ' ; . . . . ', ·,·· ' .' daily appe~ito fov so~e new pieae ·of. human .drama
  • September 9 to take up bi ■ new poat a• our Ambaaaador to Canada. State recommends an appointment with yoa before lle leave■• I believe a meeting very helpful. witb yoa would be w. w. Arraugo meetmg with Linder No Call me ~F:mm -- Roatow JCI~ SSI ED
  • of Army and Marine military at the same force time and Europe, in main- and the United States. ready for combat in two months 1961 to 23 on 30 June two to six months The total number fire of artillery (Most of the new artillery propelled
  • Philip Geyelin, Washington Post, on telephone Joseph Alsop, on telephone Peter Lisagor, Chicago Daily News, on telephone Wednesday, January 31, 1968 Joseph Rogaly, London Financial Times Thursday, February l, 1968 Richard L. Wilson, Cowles publications
  • General U Thant promptly co~iled 'With the Egyptian request. In these new circumstances, President Johnson sent a letter to Prime Minister Eshkol of Israel on May 17 expressing sympathetic understanding of the strain placed upon Israel's patience
  • of this language by the Secretary of Defense. -Please ·1et me have your approval as soon as possible because New York press.ures and the need to advise key Hill figures , is becoming urgent."· ! I '· I §§CRSTAttachment
  • oo-7LJ 1189 cable President's Daily Brief - fh..er > ,',t;/4; ,/of,'d~~¼­ TS 1 p ~~ f (
  • of international 7 were communism. , of Cuban arms cache in Venezuela while demonstrating • I growing capacity subversive effor;s of vigilance ~-·. of Hemisphere to detect l also sounds a new alert ca,ling Cuban ·for redoubling by American Republi·cs
  • 1709 USON,New York ACTION: INFO: Amembassy, CAIRO 2765 ti JIDDA 482 LONDON3763 " t1 TAIZ 477 1t orTAWA 517 YEMEN lnfo1 ss G SP L EUR NEA Suggest USUNseek early p IOP INR of continuing RMR to present UN presence if possible decisions
  • far, Mose w has refrained from comment on Peiping's nuclear explosion. Howe er,/in the case of its policy toward Yugoslavia, the new Soviet leadersh·f. made its intentions clear when military delegation to participate it dispatched a second high
  • AND US.UAL .DRIVE. :;, !iE HAS - REGULARIZED COORDINATING GROUP OPERATION. AT DAILY 1700 MEETING, MINISTERIAL REPRESENTATIVE P4GE 2RU MJ IR 19121 SEO R g T -WILL REPORT ON DAY" S ACTIVIITES AND RAISE PROBLEMS OR · PLA ~S REQUIRI NG COMMITTEE ACTION
  • WITH F L U ). AFTER LUNCH, KHANH TOOK US ASIDE AND PRODUCED A ROUGH ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF HIS NEW RPT NEW CONSTITUTION. FULL TEXT. WITH NOTES, TRANSMITTED BY SEPTEL. WE FOUND IT BRUSOUE IN LANGUAGE AND SUGGESTED TO KHANH THAT IN PRESENT FORM IT WOULD
  • done what law and order required in seating those who were duly elected and who mean to stay with our Party. On the other hand, you have made new room for new voices which deserve to be heard in our nation at large. Cff- You have struck a ~. f
  • Vietnamese Constituent Assembly's second and third largest political groups have recently merged to form the Democratic Alliance Bloc. The new bloc -- composed of Catholic, Hoa Hao, and Nationalist Party supporters -- seems to represent an effort by some
  • PARTICIPM '1'S: The Preetdent Ambassador Wa lter Mcconaughy Mr . Phillip!1 Talbot , Assistant Secretary of State , NEA (J) Mr. R. W. Komer , Wh i te Hous e COPIES TO: S U M NEA-2 (Mr . Talbot Amembassy NEW DELHI (Amb . Bow l es ) DOD (Mr . Solb e rt
  • ITEM BY PRINCIPAL! LISBON DAILIES• 2, SEPT 15 SECULO !INDEPENDENT) HEADLINED ANI !OFFICIAL PORTUGUESE NEWS· AGENCY l DESPACH WHICH I ND I CA TED' SPAIN HELD SEVERAL VALUABLE TRUMPS WlTH 1 PRESENCE OF', SOVIET SHIPS IN MEDITERRANEAN, ABDICATION
  • A S IC A L L Y FOR HIM BUT HE STATES THAT Hfi I S URGING THEM NOT TO MAKE ANY MOVE S I N C E , FROM A NATIONAL P O I N T OF V IE W , A NEW COUP WOULD BE D I S A S T R O U S . d e o a s ^ bd _________ REPRODUCTION FROM THIS COPY IS ^ •T O T ' S E C R
  • with the included more than S108 million for whole new f'ntcrprise of sea Ooor en• r~a~ and engineering programs. p;inrering.'' Ten years ago the Navy was sending only one or two offirers a year for ul the Navy isn"t ti1inkinp; of ocran JlClSt•graduate oceanography
  • OFFLOADED AND ONE PARKED BESIDE AIRCRAFT. BEIRUT DAILY STAR PHOTO 12 FEB. IS AP WIREPHOTO WHICH WE ASSUME IDENTICAL TO PHOT'O CARRIED IN ISRAELI JERUSALEM POST• 2. CAPTION BELOW BEIRUT WlftEPHOTO STATES JORDANIAN SOLDIER PAGE 2 RU QMKG 189A .c-~~~-rt-~-N
  • /Commander through Major General and their civilian counterparts. It consisted of three moves and lasted one week, from 26 to JO July 1965. Using qualified "experts" on opposing teams and Control, its purpose was to obtain new perspectives on the developing
  • Bien Phu was no great shakes. It was no Mukden or Passchendaele or Stalingrad. The French toll was 16,200 troops killed or captured, a cruel blow by any standards but far short of total military disaster. ~ --.. --~...-- ~ ~- .. and of new heavy
  • produced a new sense of pride and confidence in the Republic of Vietnam Arm.ed Forces. There is a degree of satisfaction in the population that their armed forces and the civilian administration, through their own efforts and backed by a heavy U.S
  • ·\~· •·: .'AUSTRALIA, ~ NEW ·. ZEALAND, ·. :PAK IS (OBSERVER-) ·~: ;P.HIL!PP;_INES -,1:: THAILAND, .- UNITED ·: KINGDOM,:· u~s •. !· : _:' -,_- :. :.;•/':COUNTRI~S? REPRESENT. :',·,Y,\f., .. ; -•~:,:"::.;;,.;- ,-,,~~:i: t•~. :•., f'r
  • continuing . efforts to examine those situations where military forces or military activity might be involved. My principal assistant for politico-military natters, the Assistant Secretary of Defense (International Security Affairs), is in daily contact
  • the Post Presidential documents are in this section . Contains WWR's summary memo (5/14/73) and two copies of the full chronology . most of the news clippings are in this section 3. Documents fastened to the right side (#64-114) . These documents date
  • ?ONSE D°'1 SUGGESTiliN GOI MI ~T T_~Y. ~~ND OUT ttORDANIANS THRCUGH DAUD, ustr~J THE;r.R. NEW DSIS WHO SA~D - ~9__, 1' : BE Q.D ACQUAINTANCE D~UD' S, ARG OJ .RE.PLIED..N 0 GR clJND.:0 -- ·--. -.. -;... WORK DONE AND CHANCES OF SUC .:ESS EFFORT OBfAIN
  • . .D. . . . THE..FIGURES SHOWN. IN COLUMNCD ARE PREL.IM.INARY, UNRE.FINED. . ••BATTLEFIELD REPORTEDCASUALTIES RECEIVED DAILY. . . FROM. . COMUSMACV t·HE -FIGURES IN COLUMNS(2> THROUGHC5f ARE VERIFIED FIGURES REPRESENTINGCASUALTIES.REPORTEDDURING
  • sincere (~ood will of tl,e Go\-ernroont and people 0£ tho U. ~. to-.,rnrds the new Government and th.e poople o.r C\1b.a. · · The Cor-rnnist Party daily Hoy appears in Habana tor the first Dinco 1953. . . time Ernesto Guevara, Co:r.il!'.an:!or of la C
  • mentioned previously that I believe they have been working together better than at any time since my arrival here last April. I think there is good reason to hope that this present experience will show them the way to work effectively together in the new
  • feelings. 1 5. Bustamante s illness and upcoming trip to the U.S. adds a new dimension. Ambassador Doherty will probably not discuss the NW A problem until after Bustamante has made his trip. Hopefully, Bustamante will be in a better frame of mind to talk