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  • ?8 / LI~ OFFICIAL USE 2I10 - Ralph: Any need for these reports? B KS February 7, 1964 2137 MmMJRANDUM FOR Kt. ?CGEOBGE BUNDY 'l'HI WHITE HOUSB SUbject 1 NSAM' s 1'2 and 164: Panarra On April 30 and on June 15, 1962 President Kennedy signed
  • , construction programming and related actions. Accordingly, we should know Canadian intentions concerning the NORAD requirement as soon as possible. At their Hyannis Port meeting in l·1ay 1963 Prime Minister Pearson intimated to President Kennedy
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • in President Kennedy's Administration was the fact that he, Kemal, had been allowed to have an entirely private 10-minute audience with President Kennedy. Kemal also said that he has Nasser's authority to have a similar private interview now if you invite him
  • in individual cases, he really has no shortage of access to responsible officials. This is an old battle with Joe. He had one round with President Kennedy and of course had an unending contest with President Eisenhower. He plans to raise this question again
  • million improvement in our trade position. We could ask for immediate consultations to lay out the alternatives open to us . -d.,,__.:.,_ For example, the Europeans could agree to ·suspend part o f ~ border taxes, accelerate Kennedy Round cuts, lower
  • 1963, though he had come to Washington since then at the time of the funeral ceremony for President Kennedy. I The President said to Mr. Wilson that things seemed to be going a little better in Cyprus, and Mr. Wilson agreed though he commented
  • would like nothing better, and we are prepared to react inunediately ~ to such an eventuality o· Approve _____________________ Disapprove_____________________ Discussion: I I j. .. The late President Kennedy and I on various occasions following
  • : .. ·":.->·>":~:.:.~, . . . '4 . '.:4. · [' ' ' • _, ' ,. • 1- ~. • ' I • ' • ' ' . ) : " ;· . i:1N INDIA ·?RESIDENT ·. KENNEDY WAS LOOKED .UPON ·· ~ s.PECIAL :·FRI.END . ;..·,· . ~1 ·· · .. WHO WAS . AUTHOR OF ' INDIAN ~ RESOLUTIOt-f I'N CONGRESS~ · WHO HAD
  • , to our children, to our forebears and our posterity, to prevent such an holocaust. Eut the proliferation of nuclear weapons immensely increases the chances that the world might stumble into catastrophe . President Kennedy saw this clearly. He said
  • will discuss three issues of key importance wh ich are not to be t aken up today, i.e. , the Kennedy Round, the Non-Prolif eration Treaty , and the European financial discussions. Under Secretarv Katzenbach : The State Department pap er (copy attached
  • this to . the Special Committee that President Kennedy set . up in the Cuban . . ,. Missile Crisis? MR. BUNDY: The two situations are not identical • . Like that committee -- and like others tbat have been set up from time to time over th~ last six or sev~n years
  • would reaffirm together the under•tanctin,s o£ our two Government• with rc,iard to con•ul~tion in tho uae of nuclca.· weapons. I now confirm this ·agrooment in the attached Memorandum o£ Underatandlna. It la wry- much like the one which Prem.dent Kennedy
  • in this recommendation. You will recall that the Secretary of Defense submitted his report in response to President Kennedy's instructions. It recommended that such a demonstration be carried out in a U.S. Navy ship. The Paris MLF Working Group has discussed this subject
  • . END RUSI< Draflod by, ARA/CAR:MESinn:dd3/9/64 Clearances, ARA - I Telegraphic transmlulon and cl1ulflcatlon approved by, Mr. Boster S/S - Mr. McKesson SCI - Dr. Rouleau (substance) ~r DS-322 ARA/CAR- Kennedy M. Crockett House - Mr Dungan U
  • make specific suggestions, and it would be best, therefore, if he should put forward any specific proposals, to say we would need to consider them before taking any position. (A fuller discussion of this subject is appended at page 5.) 2. Kennedy
  • 10-~o. ,1 l\4arch 31, 1967 HIGHLIGHTS OF THE VICE PRESIDENT'S TRIP TO EUROPE Conversation with Willy Brandt (March 29) Kennedy Round and Food Aid The Vice President: 1£ Kennedy Round fails it will set in motion forces detnanding troop cutbacks
  • quick reaction to Senator Edward M. Kennedy's speech. I understand you have seen Ambassador Bunker's views and those of the Embassy Statf and I have tried not to duplicate. OETf,RMINEO TO IE 4N ADMINISTRATIVE MARKING ~OT NAT'L SECURITY INFORMATION; f. 0
  • Ball and Dean Rusk -- all Kennedy men -- and that the fact of the matter was that Tom Mann 'had been in favor of a slightly slower and cooler expression of support. I also told Pierre that there had not been a question of recognition, a point which he
  • , Kennedy Crockett talked the matter out with Ambassador Doherty and the AID Mission Director. In what amounts to a reversal of the Embassy position, they agreed that Ambassador Doherty should make one more pitch to Busta­ mante to bring him a little further
  • Kennedy in Hyannisport, it being a Saturday night. 'There is a sharp difference of recoJlection between Ivfr. Forrestal and General Krulak.{thon in the JCS as their Vicb1am man) as to •.vhether General 'Taylor ever cleared the message. I believe
  • • peralatence was a good example of the way tile pre•• in general baa strained to find a meanf.Dg that la not there. Ou Friday, I abo eaw Steve Roberta of the New York Time•. who i• preparing a retroapectlve article on President Kennedy for the Novem~r lssue
  • Vietnam itself. COPY LBJ LIBRARY - 11 - President Kennedy's decision chose none of these possible i alternatives. His decision was that American military personnel should be j I ‘ .f introduced to assist t e South Vietnamese m ilitary forces
  • Kennedy's Address to the Nation of October 22, 1962, concerning Addreast the presence the President of Soviet missiles in Cubao In that said: / "It shall be the policy of this Nation to regard any nuclear missile launched from Cuba against any nation b
  • . The Secretary of Commerce ' has the immediate statutory responsibility, but the instinct of Luther Hodg es was often different from that of oth.e rs, and it became ne c ess a ry to appeal individual cases over and over again to President Kennedy. The President
  • on December 3, 19620 On September 20, 1963j President Kennedy reaffirmed our intention to keep weapons of mass destruction out of orbito Since that time, we· have met with the representatives of the Soviet Union on this problemo We are glad
  • the alleged Secretary McNamara to enter failure to carry out reductions --SECRET - the meet­ of - 4 military spending abroad which had been agreed pointed out that a proposed program o(additional been presented to President Kennedy in the fall his
  • OFF FLORIDA. • CR139P 18 98 VASHINaTON--ADD BRITISHPOLARISC~7) THE P.ENTAGON SAID THE BRITISHSUB WOULD BE BERTHED. FOR ABOUT A. · MONTH At PORT CANAVERAL, FLORIDA,. PART or THE CAPE KENNEDY COfllPLIX. A DEFENSE SPOKISPIAN INDICATED THERESOLUTION
  • been building her prevent the sale. But Ui1stime. Organization nuclear forces. own nuclear-powdered sub- I,&. Gilpatrjc said In Paris, the Despite a Wilt to· Paris by marine. But It wu designed to .\dininistntsoaba4 cleared Its President Kennedy early
  • by cot:ntries other ttan the United. s::a::~ a.s part of t he food aid co~vention of the Kennedy Roi..:.:-.i . ta.~es It is unde:-stood ~~at this offe:- is a food policy reforn packa;e Of: Indian adoption :-e-::=..X!' t ion of zones 2 fi~ ince~tive s~~~ort p
  • at the Department of State. 10:40 a.m. Prime Minister Papandreou will visit Arlington National Cemetery where he will place a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and a wreath on the grave of the late President John F. Kennedy. 12: 30 p. m. President
  • duties or by 1111:po.iring their concessions in the Kennedy Round, the gains wuld"b~ negligible and , the trade policy consequences ver:, great • .-SJ!l8RET~ . . ,, .' "..... • I ' r8 :S SR ET-, - 416. A tourist tax program could be devised