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  • hospitality for Mme. Chiang Kai-sh ek and by next w eek's visit of Defens e Minis ter Chiang Ching-kuo. /The Nationalists have some reason to be unhappy, since their ultimate aims in the Vietnam conflict and our ultimate aims are not the same. The visit
  • on the SEATO meeting in Manila, his discussion with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, and his visit to South Vietnam. Z483. U. S. POLICY TOW ARD LAOS Noted Assistant Secretary of Defense Bundy's report of the recent military revolt in Laos. 2484. CUTBACKS
  • to visit America. these past weeks and are especially pleased to have met with you per,onally in Washington. On your return to Taipei, please convey our warm good wishes to President Chiang Kai-shek and Madame Chiang. · Lyndon B. Johnson END Thursday
  • requesting approval of appointment Ambassador McConaughy as Pre sident1 s Special Representative at inauguration ceremony of President Chiang Kai-shek. You should add following: Senator Fulbright. Consent has been obtained from • • II
  • for projects. Taiwan (Chiang Kai Shek) We expressed Presid ent .Johnson 1s friendship and explained U. S. peace proposals. Chines e proposals: U. S. should not be using own troops as principal forces in Southeast Asia, but rather Asian troops and American
  • and undesirably focus attention throughout the Far East on the already heayy nuclear emphasis in our Korean posture. In my recent discussions with Chiang Kai-shek he sharply rejected any possibility of the use of nuclear weapons by the U.S. in Asia as being
  • will have had a hal! hour with Mr. Bundy prior to seeing you. A longer briefing memo :from the Secret.~ry of State and ~he exc;hange of correspondence you have had with Chiang Kai-Shek are attached. :McG.B. CLC \. ··~- Wed. Sept. 22. ~r. )65 ~,~ I
  • and Chiang Kai-Shek 1. Bus Wheeler has asked me to forward the attached m emorandum of a conversation hetwe-e n himself and General Chiang Kai-Shek. His reason fo~ doing ao: is simply that Chiang reportedly req\1.ested him to make sure that bis views were
  • Japan of China. and does has maintains He said not CHIANG Kai-S.ek. President situation and situation, Communists as relations in Chinese attention SJ:'para te treaty we can. trade Japan Minister Japan history
  • LIBRARIES) FOR M OF DOCUM ENT REST R ICT ION DAT E CORRESPONDENTS O R TIT L E Burma ,, /YL.J 86 -d).S~ un a ea. A II II ·-shek from Pre from Rostow re: nitea 1Zingaom ~ 1--/10/qf( 1-"'ft--- - t --Hti""fO 's/&6 f,;_ - ~ 1 /i {/A'i res:i
  • LMarxis~/ has taken root in China. "Kao is vital, fat and positive; not ascetic, thin and negative like Chiang. Along with Churchill, Mao is one of the greatest figures of modern history." The article went on to say that Mao has a "persecution com­ plex
  • immediately "border control" item (b) on page 5 above (i.e •• Vietnamese patrols• with appropriate U,S, aerial resupply, into Laotian territory). (3) Have Khanh negotiate with Chiang Kai-Shek for the movement of two or possibly three divisions
  • last week of General Th_a ng is ·bound to stir this up. 2. The root of the worry is, in a sense, historical. The experience with Chiang Kai-shek and the Soong family · in China (and before them with the Manchu dynasty) ·· suggests that when a Mandarin
  • IBE . VERY ADVERSE EFFECT ANY. sUCH FRECH . ACTIO~ -.:·'.. ::·:~:·,:;~ . ~:~:.;~ ·;· ;,~_ti\ , · ~:·
  • Wednesday, October 12,. 1966 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: 80th Birthday Message to President Chiang On October 31 President Chiang Kai-shek will be 80 by the Chinese calendar, 79 by Western count. Special importance is being given in Taiwan
  • and the adoption ol "neo-Trujillo'' policies. 3. Chiay to Avoid Provocation of ChiComs Embassy Taipei offers the following assessment of the likeli­ hood of a Chiang Kai- shek initiative against the ma.inland: 1'There continues to be no overt signs
  • their American masters. In October the General Assembiy ot the United Nations voted to ~eat·the'Chinese·Pepple!s·Republic. Before the 1ssne reached the Security Council. Peking angrily rejected the proposition unless the Chiang Kai-shek faction was expelled
  • course of nuclear development. This was made quite evident in my meeting with President Chiang Kai-Shek when he asked that the U.S. consider means of · increasing its assistance to the nuclear research program in the Republic of China. A useful program