Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Series > Memos to the President (remove)

276 results

  • 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
  • ENGLAND. AND OTHERS, HE SAID HE HOPED TO DO SO IN . SEPTEMBER. I SUGGEST, THEREFORE, THAT THE DEPT FURTHER . DEVELOP PLANS :·FOR SUCH A VISIT WHICH WERE BEGUN SOME MONTHS AGO. HAYA WILL DEPART FOR LIMA FROM PARIS VIA AIR FRANCE FLIGHT 113 ARRIVING 1235
  • . 34 ?P ' ;iTI:1~ !)E:"_ ~n: , ~6~ DECLASSIF ED E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4 .. Nl.J F?OM WALT -ROSTOW ­ !O · -~. THE:: PRESIDENT CITE CAP6~3:'75 ·, o//- ~ By~ NARA, Date PZREW.ITH . STATE'.: •. DEPARTMENT< ACTIVITIES r,AY.~; :-~.-, :,)967
  • Thursday. 3:30 p. m. Oct. Z6, 1967 MR. PRESIDENT: Herewith the State Department unanimously recommen.ds a b!'ief letter of acknowledgment t-o Senator Mansfield, ia.vitiag him to an : early breakfast meetbig at the White House. l gathe-r
  • Officer, White House Situation Room Mr. Benjamin H. Read. Executive Secretary. Department of State. c/o Operations Center Subject: Opera.tional Higl1light.s SOUTHEAST ASIA The following US Air Force B-52 missions are now scheduled· to be flown during
  • 15 c:::i FEA 180 00 ._IE 18 DE WT£ 1330 c.n ..c -..J fROf1 WALT ROSTOV TO THE PRESIDENT CIT£ WH'703,5 WCLAS JUNE 30, 1967 S1'AT'£ DEPARTMENT HAS SUGGESTED LANGUAGE BE USED to REPLY TO FOURTH FROM FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS. t KE or FOL.LOW ING
  • text of the speech, departing about 6 :30 p. m. W. W. Rostow s..sa7 • Marca ,1. 1961 -- 6 :40 p. m. ••t Go.. Hanlmaa aDCI I • . . . tut y- '1•patcll tile fellowilla me••&&• premptly to Prime Mlalater Wll••: • 1 Fl'tllll tile Pre•ldeat f•r tile
  • . FORT rIS: 0: • : : • ,. . ;.J! , ·.·. arrive Vice President would · pr.o pose/ ~ .a-wwfu6x Tuni~ .. :__.· ·· . I ,_ . ·" ~ ' -·-, . ,. mid-morning Novem, Ier 9 and depart · for Washington early ·a fternoon:> November 10. ,.1 ~ Ple1se
  • on the adequacy or appropriateness of the subsequent actions taken by commanders and key officials who received the intelligence. 2. The Board consulted with and received briefings from representatives of the principal United States departments and agencies having
  • ■ countriaa cona1der the Article to be too aeneral. If poa ■ lble, Fiaher would like to have the trall8Dlittal coincide with hi• appearance before the Hou ■• Foreign Affair ■ CoaaittN on february 1. Althouah thi• would be helpful in aupporting the HP
  • Cong, perhaps under another name. b. Improvement of the armed forces. This would include fairer and more effective dependent, survivor and disabled veterans• benefits, lower draft a_g e, improced merit promotion system, and more effective punitive
  • Pre a ldent: Herewlth Lod1e fia1• the importance of conaul.tatlon wlth the Gerlll&Aa ll mhalle talk• are to take place. W. W. Roatow Bonn ZOZ40 WWRoatow:rln , .,... ~~~ Department of State ! :I I TEL~GRA I ,"'. lI I , ,'.~Il ~-, I. l
  • and startling has come in and the above report is the essence as it now stands. McG. B. DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NLJ 'ib · /tJ3 By , NARA Date .,:z.-'J SEGRE'r i , .\ ..... .. .- ( \
  • Demoeratlc "Tho U. s. Government mutt Republic of Vietnam. withdraw from South Vietnam all U. S. and satellite troops. recognize the South Vietnam. National Front for Llberatlo!\, add let the Vletn.a.meue people settle themselves their -own affairs. u
  • . withdraw from South Vietnam all U. S. and satellite troops. recognize the South Vietnam. National Front for Llberatlo!\, add let the Vletn.a.meue people settle themselves their -own affairs. u Let no well-meaning observer decelve you: that remain.a
  • he entered the University of Chicago Graduate School. He began his career with the Department of . State in 1950 as a Foreign Affairs Officer. In 1952 he went to Hong Kong as Public Affairs Officer and in 1955 he was transferred to Tokyo as the Deputy
  • ~,. ARE ·RET_URNBEIHUT TOMORRO•' NQ\IEMBER. 15, OVERNIGHT·_:• ~--BE LRUT,. DEPART' 'FOR. US VI.~ LON.DON-mRPJJNG ~OVEMBER 16·, • ·r • • •• • ,;. -• • • • • • •. _.· .- •. ••
  • . VI.W.R. .SEGllET SENSITIVE attachment (Cy 5 of Paris Z0998 6/2.9/67) ~ Authotiiy ~lQ- tS-3 ~cJ ' 2' B14f/~, · ,. i • ·J-'/7-f ! SiCRET NODIS DEPARTMENT OF STATE DIVISION OF LAHGUAGE SERVICES (TRANSLATION) 55249 . LS NO. R-XXXII/R-IV French PP
  • Vietnam ia often mentioned. Oppoaeata of our Vletaam policy are waitiaa to on aome iaaue with Viebaam lmplicationa, filibuater it to death, aACi briJaa abo11t a '41ama1lq and cliYi•lv• ■ tate of affair Ii ••i•• 5. Tile Admillbtratioo ahould enaplaaai:ae
  • today. As I said on the phone, it iB_, polite but uninformative. I think Gronouski has slightly over-read its meaning in the last paragraph, and my guess is that is what the Poles intended. But then I am a veteran of similar treatment fr om Dobrynin
  • F'ROMFIRMl..Y HELO·pos1TIONS WILL BE 1 AKEN AS. A. SIGN THAT.TH£ NORTHVIET NAMES£ARE BADLY t~GAND WAY• . .NEED·NEGOTIATIONS . . IN A. VERY REAL - . GP..z · SUl.LIVAN BT -SECRET Depart,nent of State F SECRET AICLAiSIEIED E.O. 12958'; Sec. 3.6 NLJ 7-:J I
  • : nm J 8SEIU39.I !f 8B:E8 DEPARTMENT OF STATE Memorandum ol Conversation DATE: February 21. 1968 5:00 p.m. SUDJECT: Middle East PARTICIPANTS• The Secretary Deputy Under Secretary Charles E. Bohlen Ambassador Anatotiy F. Dobrynin, USSR COPIES
  • . single . · organisr.i vrlth o. will o~ its ov,n; it is a highly complox. structure; rrhoso . affairs are settled by' the intorplay of var~ous povrnr-groups both inside. o.nd outside it; if thos'o. outsida keep their h~ds. off, tho. strongest ' povrer
  • with §IJ;gtpd Latill Arnerie•Jt, .~•~sm1,. Aa in• terview with a 1roup of carefully selected, promlunt Latin American reporter ■ would aiv• rou &oed expoeue ln Latin America . You ceuld make it a.n laformal, persoaal affair 1>1 havi111 the Interview ln your
  • : Reply to President Ayub Ho~o is a revised. vei-·s ion of the State Department•• proposed answer to Pre,a ident Ayub. lt looks okay to me. Draft reply approved_ _ / __ ---See me · --Amend . W. W. Roetow w ..- SECRi:T Dear Mr·. President: Thank you
  • of realism in the fall of 1968 1n de.scribing any vision of the next -years in this country without beginning from the hardest single present question of our public affairs. Until the present burden of Vietnam is at least partly lifted from our society
  • that when you announced the Air Force MOL space project, you specifically reaffirmed this country's intention to honor the UN resolution. In order to clarify this situation, the State Department concluded that the wisest initial course would be a private
  • to administer the department, he has consistently made it impossible for anyone else to do so. 6. The third-ranking member of the department, Averell Harriman, is probably the one man of the first magnitude on the 7th Floor. On world affairs he has courage
  • the President is so specialized in domestic affairs he almost automatically would leave more of the foreign matters to Mr. R:Jsk, to yourself, to other people in the State Department, and to Mr. McNamara. Mr. Bundy: Well, let me say first of all -- I'll just
  • demonstrations under control. The - This memorandum was produced solely by CIA. Note: It was prepared by the Office of Current Intelligence and coordinated with the Office of National Estimates and Special Assistant for Vietnamese Affairs. -- -- French
  • Department CAS Saigon. 3~ 02 /)tvv~#j fm Lodge _ T\ A t1 'l-t t/-oo N L -l qq-cro 10 . (Ci;> A #36i Cable 664 to Vientiane S~c.. 5~~ \-;'2..o..\.\~ l -J~-60 /.J&.~ TS c;ct-2.'1 7p 2/26/64 .~ 8 . (OfaS A F I LE LOCAT ION NSF ~X , McGeo
  • , • •U. PW mll~•r lo ••pport y -ab me ho • at to • .··••lo . --~••ta ( l , k, _ •). -SECRET TENTATIVE SCHEDULE FOR SUMMIT MEETING Monday, April 10 11:00 p. m. .Depart Andrews. DE CI.1 S IFIED E.O. 12356. Sec. 3.4(b) White House Gu.idclincs
  • is strong: Paraguay clearly needs the wheat and cannot get it from its normal supplier. ~ nttna., Paraguay has played ball with us all the wa,_ y in hemispheric affairs, including sending of troops to Santa Domingo. -- Rightly or wrongly, Stroessner
  • . • .:. Foreign Affairs: The Mirror, of V~etnam By C. L. SULZBERGER RIO DE JANErRO-Our fu­ ture in Latin America is likely to •be decided by the outcome of the Vietnam war as much as by the Alliance for Progress. The connection is discounted and largely unseen
  • for interference in the internal affairs of socialist countries. One can also bring to mind the whole conglomeration of all the ideological subversive actions which the United States is carrying out against the USSR and other socialist -c ountries. This speaks
  • ____ See me ERF:em _ DECLASSIFIED By~ E.O. 12958,Sec.3.5 State Dept. Guidelines NARA,Datefj-' f j, C,~. DEPARTMENT OF srATE WASHINGTON December 15, 1967 QWii'IDliiIfs?£ft£ MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Subject: Presidential Message to Prime
  • in thi ■ comatry (the main ezceptioa beinc ■ ome Slovak ■ eparati■t ■). T1'e State Department belie.ea it woald be appropriate for you to receive thia 1rov.p. Theae are Americana of Csecho■ lo-n.k de ■ ceat -- 11ot emJ.sr••· America' ■ role
  • November and that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs would be delivering the GVN's draft of a new communique to the American Embassy within a few hours. He said that he hopes to be able to confer on the Vietnamese draft with the principal involved on 20