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59 results
- and the United States press - and in certain ways, among the Micronesians. 2. Despite a lack of serious concern for the area until quite recently, Micronesia is said to be essential to the United States for security reasons. We cannot give the area up, yet
- of a certain degree of national inde pendence from Soviet cont rol; (3) pragmatic innovations designed to cope with pressing economic problems; and (4) progress in reassociation with the West . Our basic purpose in building bridges to East Europe is to facili
- , President Kennedy stated, " ••• we must not put forward proposals merely for propaganda purposes;"). (2) In order to achieve real gains, we should press for - euNfi9ENTiAl 3 substantive rather.than token cooperation. (3) Cooperation with the Soviet
- are not ready to go forward with construction of an earth station because of other more pressing needs. 2. World Bank. World Bank activity in teleco~munication loans of an y kind has been limited. The Bank has made five or six loans for conventional
- . Where shall continuing responsibility for monitoring this field be centered in the U.S. Government; and what regular interdepartmental arrangements should be made? Suggested action: The responsibility for pressing forward and monitoring the work
- us, and we should not start down this road unless the Soviets proved ready to go the route with uso How ever pressure alone -- unaccompanied by any effort to meet security problems the Indians regarded as both real and pressing -- might still failo
- to press the Japanese through in£onnal channels for asGiatanc:e; and at tt-.r.e an.nae tlrae it would put the High Cantsstoner in be is in now .. 4 u:uch bt!tt~x· poaH ton to mgtr.ai.n sud1 pressures than Fine.Uy, vH.hln tht?. would be poardble
- press for flBENflAl ~--- 3 substantive rather than token cooperation. (3) Cooperation with the Soviet Union should be well defined and the obligations of both sides made clear and comparable. (This will facilitate implementation as well as clarify
- that, with Vietnam cooking, NSAM 311 has been pushed to a back burner. 2. While I realize NSAM,311 (issued.in July,, 1964) is not a terribly pressing problem, we should prob able keep moving on it. Al Friedman agrees that the best way to have this happen is a needle
Folder, "NSAM # 345: Nuclear Planning, 4/22/1966," National Security Action Memorandums, NSF, Box 8
(Item)
- report: low ke y {St.Jte press conference) or h igh leve l {speech by President, SecState, or SecDef) -J) Disclose COMINT to selected a 11 ios (assume possibl e leaks); str ess U.S. suppor t of Khanh posit ion -2) Reassure Thais/GVN of U. S . air/ground
- ratio - Technology deficient; meager resources for human subsistence Sources: Philip M. Hauser and Otis 0. Duncan (Editors). THE STUDY OF POPULATION: AN INVENTORY AND APPRAISAL. Uni·versity of Chicago Press, 1959, and Or. Wilbur Zelinsky . A PROLOGUE
- covers the significant facets of American life. This informational program exposes the foreign trainee to u.s. governmental institutions, our judicial system, the role -SiCiiT:i:T -10- the role of political parties, our free press and communications
- toward the present and the future of the Panama Canal. On the basis of this review I have reached two decisions. First, I have decided that the United States should press forward with Panama and other intores ted qoverrut\ents, in plans and preparations