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- Bundy, William P. (William Putnam), 1917-2000 (2)
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Oral history transcript, Alfred B. Fitt, interview 1 (I), 10/25/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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Oral history transcript, Harrison Salisbury, interview 1 (I), 6/26/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- as your dispatches, and you've testified before the Foreign Relations Committee. S: That's right. M: I don't intend that you duplicate a lot of what you've said then, but I think this is an important episode. Were there any special conditions of your
- that could be used, then? T: Oh, yes. G: It was a secondary advantage. . Did we get evidence in succeeding months after the dispatch of the . helicopters that this was working out? T: Well, I'll just say that for the year thereafter--we're talking about
- , turning points that you look back on and think, gee, I wish this instead of that? That you wish things had gone another way? T: Now it's all over, I would say that the following decisions and actions on our part are the most regrettable: a) the dispatch
Oral history transcript, Paul Henry Nitze, interview 4 (IV), 1/10/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- and efficiently for an organization of this size. I have the impression that decisions are arrived at with better information, more accurately, more promptly, and with more dispatch and vigor in this Department perhaps than in any other agency of the U.S
- , obviously, in the various techniques used in dealing with the pressin backgrounding, in giving the press access to military expertise, and in providing all of the facts and information collected. The press is going to file its dispatches. Far better it does
- make that very, very clear, and the report of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, to which I gather Draper had access, makes it very clear-and so did the dispatches of TadSzulc., who knew what he was doing. changed around the time that Mac Bundy
Oral history transcript, Warren L. (Bill) Gulley, interview 1 (I), 11/29/1968, by Stephen Goodell
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- communications came back to me here at Washington at this office or at my home. aircraft. Of course I had to dispatch support In other words, we sent helicopters to Torrejon in Spain. We had to get people into Rome. We didn't really know where the President
- Senator from Idaho. He dispatched me as a Senate observer on a trip to the Argentine as a kind of indication of his new friendship and embrace. He intervened in my behalf to obtain for me a seat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, when I
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- ; goals for South Vietnam; reasons for LBJ’s unpopularity; flaws in LBJ’s handling of the press; inept press corps handling Vietnamese War; incorrect editing of press dispatches; LBJ’s abilities as a diplomat; peace negotiations 1966-1968; 1968 Paris peace
- right and looked pretty good, as he subsequently--at least to this point-has certainly been in Korea . At any rate there were major strategy meetings in late February of 1964 and early March just before Secretary McNamara was dispatched out
Oral history transcript, Chester L. Cooper, interview 2 (II), 7/17/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 2 (II), 12/5/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- don't do something, and it is going to be devastating and very, very serious." We decided then and it was recommended to the President that he dispatch someone out there; various suggestions were made, I can't remember all of them--they suggested
Oral history transcript, Charles E. Bohlen, interview 1 (I), 11/20/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 4 it was. :H got out of France with dispatch and dignity. It really, I think, impressed the French
Oral history transcript, Stanley R. Resor, interview 1 (I), 11/16/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- Pulliam liked him, even though he was a right-winger and he was from Barry Goldwater's home state. As it turned out, Eugene Pulliam disliked Barry Goldwater more than he liked Lyndon Johnson, but it served the same purpose. So I was dispatched
Oral history transcript, William P. Bundy, interview 2 (II), 5/29/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- mentioning Lansdale in any official letters or dispatches. I gave him a free rein. G: Did he report to you on what he was doing or directly to Washington? W: As I recall he would come in every once in a while and give me briefings and discuss conditions