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Papers of Tom Johnson
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Pueblo Incident, 1968
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- as understanding with the President
as they are now.
No President could have ever asked for better cooperation from
business. I have made a number of mistakes, but they have been
mistakes of the head and not the heart. I have, since becoming
President, sent out
- FULL SUPPORT OF OUR EFFORTS AT
ELS~WHER2 TO PREVENT THIS SITUATION
PEACE .AND I. AM COUNTING ON
THE UN AND
FROM FURTHER DETERIORATING.
I THSREFORE, MR. PRESIDENT, EARNESTLY REQUEST YOUR COOPERATION
AND TRUST THAT YOU WILL INSTRUCT YOUR DISTI~GUISHED
- in
the Legislative Branch. I need your cooperation. First we need to
agree on t.li.e time the Congress will take off this year, especially
the holidays.
Congressman Ford: The Speaker has not announced it but I think
he will make the announcement on holidays tomorrow
- .
They have excellent cooperation from the people in turning these guerillas
in. The exact number of South Koreans trained is a very closely held
secret.
The President: ls there any connection in your mind between the Pueblo
and the attacks in Vietnam? ls
- to prove we provoked
the incident. Senator McCarthy was .nasty personally. Senator
Cooper was decent. Senator ·Mundt did not find the opening he
wanted. Sparkman was marginally helpful. So was Senator Mansfield
and Senator Hickenhooper on one occasion
- of. cooperation that he expects from
us.
Ii we ea.eh have
internal public problems, which differ som cwhat, the point is that
ot1r two Presidents should in consultation decide how to proceed in a
way to deal with both sols of problems. We cannot give