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  • from expanded world trade:, Trade Expansion ·i .. the provisions using to ease Act; for our peop~e. · of a:he • problem_s of adjusanenc. PROGRESSFOR FREEDOM .. •. The united : . . .. Berlin . . • '.l :J- American policy of Sovie
  • , 1960 TELEPHONE CONVERSATION BETWEEN DICK BERLIN AND WALTER JENKINS Dick Berlin called and said substantially as follows: "Eddie spoke· to me and said that Lyndon talked to him about the fact that we were treating him badly in San Antonio
  • - - - : - - , - - - : - - - - , - - , - - - - - . - . , . - - ~ ~ _ , . . . , , - - - - - -· - ~ - -~...--...-,-...._.....,.,........,.......,,_.....,........,.....,.............~....,.,...,,..._....----__, 6ECnET Frlday, April 7, 1967 12:00 noon Mr. Prcaldent: Herewith an account of the Vice President's talk with Kleslngcr. w. W. Roatow Berlin 1350 •Ct TED E.O. 12: ';f , Sec. 3. (b) Whi C } I esc G~iddu1u, ~cb. 24, 1983 . , , Ct/-;;, 3-o/ I
  • . Discussions have been held on the use of military facilities in France in t he event of war or of NATO alert , or in circ llii\stances such as another Berlin crisis . France has now made clear that no re- entry by the US into a irfie lds or depots in France
  • a change, as so tragically there has been. Let me say, though, that when I undertook to discuss substance, as a college teacher, it was by design, because the orderly and analytic i exposition of just how people should solve a little problem like Berlin
  • about it. ! l i \ In the Secretary's vlew, · the rate an9, pace of agree­ ments with the Soviet Union (in the absence of .resolution of such issues as Laos, Vietnam, and Berlin) presented a problem. If we moved too rapidly on less significant matters
  • is the foundation stone of the house of freedom all around the world. If' it is not good 1n Viet Nam, who can trust it in the heart of Europe'? But America's word, I can assure you, is good in Viet Nam, just as it is good in Berlin. M)RE Page 3 Our object
  • .in North Italy and made Musso­ In Germany it was in Berlin. (Out of all this is l.e.mont and Boyer.~ worth saying1 Lewis check in. Hillman check in. Movements of lef't against Roosevelt in Philadelphia while big business also fought him.) l LABOR
  • to an agreement to regularize relations between East and West Germany, and assure West Berlin of its continued survival, perhaps formal incorporation into the Federal Republic. (Wilson claims he has Brandt's support for this. I doubt it. There's little
  • . At 17 he was touring Europe as a member of the famed Strub Quartet, and before he was 21, occupied the chair of first violist with the Berlin Radio Symphony. A well-established concert career was in­ terrupted by the war, escape to America and service
  • efforts to have the votes of Berlin Deputies counted in selecting a new Chancellor, Barzel said it was really quite unfiar of Brandt to try to change the rules of the game at this point and to place the Allies in an embarrassing position. Some SPD members
  • .. . This ·issue is not in the headlines~ It is not Vietnam, the Dominican Republic, or · Berlin·• . ·It is .the question of nuclear . prolifera.tl.on --· of the mounting threat posed by the spread of nuclear weapons . or Five natipns now have the capacity
  • that it has powerful friends, and the visit of the Vice President is vital to buck up the morale ot the Iranian people and the Shah. In this sense, the Vice President's visit to Iran is esaenti.&1 in the same sense that hia viait to Berlin was eaaential, even
  • the Russians. To a question by The President as to whether the Russians might put pressure on Berlin, 9 General Eisenhower felt that, in a matter so serious, they would choose their own course rather than be influenced by what we do. He said he would
  • by deliberately provoking a major crisis in some other area of the world, e.g., Berlin or Cuba. - 8 ­ ggg_p S-fc9s 8 F II LIMITED DISTRIBUTION SERVICE SET 2 ,,.. .. ~ R a E %8 aw ·... LIMITED DISTRIBUTION ' . . '. . DRV Ree.ctions Initiation
  • while our American boys were shedding their blood on the battle­ fields of Europe ~nd in the jungles of the South Pacific. Thire was no tho~ghtof co~ existence or the ,seeking of normal and friend'ly relations with the Nazi Gang in Berlin! .Can you
  • Vietnam. 9. There is no reason why we cannot insist that the North Vietnamese be specific as to what they will do. In the negotiations involving Soviet miss il e s in Cuba, the Korean Armistice negotiations, and even in the Berlin crisis , TOP SEGRET
  • did it for a period during Vietnam. The Congress took this authority away last year to put it on an equal basis with the other services. General Wheeler: We did it at the same time of the Berlin airlift. Also during the Cuban missile crisis, I believe
  • lesson a third war we drew a line we subdued ti;i.e Soviet arrogance We munt quarantine ia another in Berlin: we won nations who would gobble and say, This f..r and no !o~ a lasting pe.:.ce is the one t!e which bi.."1.dsall people to­ z-~t!ler
  • peaceful reunification of Germany. b. Lippmann suggests 25-year time limit .. Pending reunification, Soviets and West reaffirm freedom of Berlin and We stern presence and access. c. Pending reunification, Soviets, Western Powers, and all Ger.m
  • cal problems but also "to strengthen existing 7Latin Am.ericariT bonds with the U.S. and to contain the threat of conununism.'r West Berlin ' s independent Der Taggesspiegal, which ran an AP story with two-column photographs, suggested in its headline
  • Berlin -, ~~:DY-SMITH ,.~ANDER , TOR G SP L CAP EUR E p US It~ NSC INR CIA NSA OSD ARMY NAV 1 AIR NIC SCA ORM CA£ CCM FAA RMR DATE: 3 Priority, 2 Priori\y~ Prio~ity , 2 Priority I\ I•· E T .AL tdi' J0liN8O:-I .1 z1 vfil KEENY KLE1N l
  • ot hi., fur rejoicing in Berlin. monc judgment. For m ore than seven years, mate Roosevelt has striven with Roosevelt has been working see greater vigor than any other Prest• steadily to help the American the 1 dent to -build international good people
  • brought danger to the world. American conventional disarmament and apparent American disengagement brought the challenge of 1948 in Berlin and 1950 in Korea. American overcommitment to a single form of defense in the 1950 's brought the challenge
  • Marshal Vershinin to visit the US. For a number of reasons including the Berlin crisis this visit has not taken place. Visits by Soviet military leaders to the US are one effective method of reducing the possibility of the Soviets underestimating
  • parts of the world, the effect would also be very serious, even to the extent of affecting the morale in Berlin. Senator Dirksen asked Director McCone what the reaction of the Ch inese Communists would be . Mr. McCone said we did not know as yet, but he
  • government's attitude in the crises of Cuba and Berlin has proved her a loyal and faithful ally .... " and he charged the allied governments to adopt a joint strategic concept pledging that such a scheme would find his country 1 s atomic force coordinated
  • be a relatively Japan's Japan our willingness in defense Berlin, most Japanese, at least own security. There is, over the US deterrent to use it of its and Southeast in the absence however, SSSRITtNOEQRN LIMITED DISTRIBUTION~ to create allies