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  • was asked by a polling institute comparable to the Gallup Poll. The version is somewhat different than the one Chancellor Kiesinger gave you during your conversation. The question as asked was: "Do you consider it right or wrong to bring about in Germany
  • ~t1_~Q.t,t_o1'~-Qf._the))RV:forces _and actions\- of th~_.NLF.•. Ha. the1i ..asked Lau if.·the DRVhad. withdrawn _.forces fr~~A~t ...DMZ.. ~-Lau responded affirmati.val~: . ! all· Tits ..-vance.:re-porte~ie-tbe-conversation ...througbout
  • conversation may intereat you, although it co·n talns no .s urprises. De Gaulle•e explanation of why the USSR wishes, in his vlew, t.o end the war i.n. Viet Nam is mildly interesting, as ts bis assessment of moderate Soviet intentions in the Middle East
  • FOR -THE TIME BE.ING 'IS NOT RPT NOT •VERY INTEREST£0 IN foif.:,{I!,G CONTACT. Ei~D...i'ISG.- -:l> ~3. LONGtR· REPORT RE LOAN-CHARGE CONVERSATION NOT RPT NOT YET ~RECEIVED OWING COURIER DELAY BUT FONOFF ANTICIPATES IT SHOULD l"LEAVE PEKING OCT- 20.· i t
  • to press him, the best subject is probably the General's position on the neutralization of South Vietnam. I attach at Tab B Bohlen's account of his conversation with de Gaulle together with the telegram of instruction he was working from, and at Tab C
  • matters, during our conversation President Thieu took up the Lien Minh front, endorsed it, and said he would back it. As the Station has reported, Thieu also asked for US support and said he planned to take this topic up with Bunker at their next meeting
  • . A. Secretary Rusk's prompt draft reply to a good letter from Kiesinger. He resisted strong pressures from his staff on the NPT and kept at the level of his conversation with you. He has also made good on his· (almost) personal commitment to you not to cut
  • are definitively halted. or even and This is the position stated to me during conversations in the last few days with Premier Pham Van Dong, Nguyen Duy Trinh, foreign minister and deputy premier, and other high-ranking government and party leaders. Hanoi
  • ""Tpr--- --.A,..-- t-lS'- f I A I\ If If #91a memo "Report on Conversations in Hanoi" S 25 p ~ /- l~-11. #9-ll:rrpt·--1---_.JL..-AtJc:1tr' dh>e.-tf~vff,,,e,,.,.n,.,.10...,ir-e.ll.,," • Of""- /V'LTf 7-2..1,f P.Q 2p· #93 memo 'IS'-~:.>-~ 4
  • , quick solutions. This may well indicate that the strategy outlined by Thieu in his recent conversations with me, which I have previously reported, i.e., pressure in the First Corps and the central highlands to tie down our troops, harassment
  • (USUN4389) gave Goldberg to the latter's of the Jarring formula request), as taken at the time of Jarring's (in the following down by the text Israelis March 10 conversation with Eban: 1:).. ... ,.-,v-~ (~t"(._ -rs~J .,,... M14r&\ io . b
  • Disclosure of Warsaw as Site for Talks with North Vietnamese I thought you would wish to know as quickly as possible the results of my conversation with Ambassador Dobrynin at noon today. 1 expressed our concern that a TASS dispatch_ from Hanoi carried
  • 17- ,,ti/ ·,µy , NARA Date 1o· s..f I ,-@NFI~NTb\L May 3, 1968 MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY FROM: H - William B. Macomber, Jr. SUBJECT: Conversation with Senator Fulbright After the Foreign Relations Committee hearings this morning, Senator
  • sentatives appeared before fairly large crowds in My Tho in the Delta and in DaNang. Thieu was present with the other candidates in My Tho. In a conversation with Bunker on Saturday, Ky said he thought the Thieu-Ky ticket would get about 40 to 45% of the vote
  • . BERGERASKEDWHEREENE~YHE~ICOPT£RSFOR COMMANDO R~Ios·woULD SAID FROM CAMBODIA, ACROSSTHE,TAY NINH,.BORDER.' COME FROM. KY 1 • • 7. COMMENT& KY WAS COOL, CALM· ANDSERIOUS. TIIE CONVERSATION WAS SHO~TANDLl~ITED TO THE A30VE, WITHNO SIDE REMARKS IN ANYWAY C~lTICAL
  • FASHION. TOWARDS THE END OF THE CONVERSATION REP ORTED- REFTEL, THE KI NG SAID HE WONDERED WHAT MORE HE COULD HAVE DONE TO HAVE AVERTED WHAT HAS HAPP EN ED~ HE THEN SAID QUIETLY THERE WAS ONE ELEMENT AFFECTING THE WHOLE PICTURE WHICH NO ONE IN HIS COUNTRY
  • in a conversation we had last · Monday. He felt that because of the limited availability of men of outstanding ability and competence, the first consideration in Cabinet appointments should be given to these qualities rather than to broadening the base
  • FOR .: THE~E PRIVATt··-coNVERSATIONS. . ;::;;;;'t• ·- . ~ASA SIGNOF GOOD WILL THEGOVERNMENT OF THE-DRV 1GAVE INST-RUCTIONS 11 TO ITS AfllBASSADO~AT WARSAWTO BE ;: •• 1 PREPARED -.,,l" TO E.HT£RlNTO.-DlSCUSSIONS~lTH THE AMERICANAMBASSADOR • REGA"RDING
  • detailing the conversations I had had with Senators Mansfield, Douglas and Symington, Speaker McCormack and Congressman Reuss. I also informed him that the President had ·asked that this subject be brought to his attention for connnents. Secretary McNamara
  • matter. · ·r I understand that tha President discussed it in a private meeting with the Prime Minister on Wednesday. There was a second conversation at lunch on Thursday at the British Embassy in which Erl~ and I joined. , ·.."1 :1 ·.1 J • I .~~ l
  • tank deal were quite dim (Tab F). ~( t) . ., .:... ~Y-y' , :~ -fo ,. rP·. t:> i l' ,~ S ~ ll'h ·U1 :·:.' h{{o \·' ~ (; d1 (>,r- t.~ l •jj·)\x..::." f(;~ D !A \(~, But as it so often happens in conversations with the Germans, Erhard permitte d
  • •. !· '', ,, • • } •• ~• .,' ~ I ' ,•· ' -,, " l' . •; . ·, . \' 1 • ,, f . ,,••,•' ··• ·'-; ""· ... ,.; .,. ' ·, ., ., ,. ,r ' I' , t . •'' i· . ) 1, .. ,: _ .. .!·,\,.· · I • April 23, 1966 Memorandum of Conversation with Ambassador Cattani, Form e r
  • George McGhee summarizing an interesting conversation with Monnet. u. s. Monnet wants to see you when he comes in November to the I believe you should see him. I have drafted the attached letter from me to him, which is sympathetic without fully
  • /-~ S \ I• IN CONVERSATION 1111TH'PRIME MINISTE°R- THIS M~R~I~G ON suc;JECT ~PRESENT-1:A-CK OF IND I CAT I ONs-oF--NO~TH f
  • SHARED THIS HO?E. . is. AT THuv~s SUGGESTION, WEAGREED TO HOLDWEEKLY MEETlNGS-·;ro BE HELDEACHWEDNESDAY-WITHTHE UNDERSTANDING THAT iEITHERSIDE CANASKFOR ADDITIONAL MEETINGS.THUYSAID I i [HE UNDERSTOODTHAT THE DISARNAMf.NT CONVERSATIONS
  • CONVERSATION. LYNG SAlD_BO~ NOT ~PT ~OT lJ POS I TION TO EVALU ATE C0NVERSAT!0N•s SIGNIFICANCE 1F AWY 9 BUT 'SEC f ETARY ltAD 0.J CE ASKED HIM TO PASS 0,. AN'# INlEflES! H~G CON'l ~RSATI0 1j S tlORW t GJ Af.JS MIGHT HAVE IN PF.KINGo 1F' US GOVT WlS\-\EI> f/,i
  • received a courtesy call today from .Dr. Phan Quang Dan, Minister of State ~or Chieu Hoi and bad a very interesting conversation with him. He points: first, he is convinc~a.t_the__GVN sbauld. _ made ·two interesting open negotiations with the Natio~ Li
  • , 1965) SUBJECT: Vietnamese Views on How the War will end 1. In a recent conversation between the J-3 MACY (Depuy) and the J -3 JGS (Thang), the latter expressed the following views on how the war will end: a. The bombing continues in the north
  • NORTHVIETNAMESE OFFICIALS THE ~UB~EG7 ciF PEACENEGOTIATIONS. IN 9 STAYZD IN HANO: AND HAD CONVERSATIONS EARLY APRIL 1968 ON "IS ASSESSMENT OF THE NORTH ~IET~AMESE POSITION FOLLOWS . . 2·. THE NORTHVIE.TNAMESE .SEE THE CURRENT CONTACTSBETWEEN· THE UNI7ED
  • ; , ·I 11· Ji,.;;., .. PntNCIPl...:..--~;, • .,.,., ••• ,;,,... •• -· ~ i:·;· 1 - • ., .,.J- ..... • • • . ' • ~ •• . • ' . • . - ., • • • · .-':1' .~_., • 5. AT.THE END OF" THE .FIRST DAY OF. CONVERSATIONS ~ITH.PHAM
  • launchers would be ·prohibited as would the conversion of IRBM/MRBM missiles to ICBMmissiles. Building of additional silos, enlarging of . existing silos, changing basic external configuration of silos and.other launchers, further hardening of launchers
  • belligerent. 0 3. ~:--.1. : h e: airplane you wili have McNamara, Ball,. Vance, Wheeler, . a nd myself to help out in any talks you wish to have with Brosio. His conversations here have gone well so far. The one shade of difference between us is that he