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  • contained in the donor's deed of gift. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION. NA F ORM 14 2 9 (8- 8 5) ....,I Debriefing by the President on his talks with Chairman Kosygin, morning of June 23, 1967, at Hollybush, Glassboro State College
  • Folder, "HOLLYBUSH ‑‑ June 23 & 25, 1967, Glassboro, New Jersey, Kosygin & Gromyko conversations," NSF, Files of Walt Rostow, Box 10
  • explosion of-.furious accusations of bad faith." Economist reviewing events ln London concludes, Kosygin seems to have agreed North Vietnamese should make some reciprocal concession but refused. Economist thus finds Labor backbenchers, unless
  • \ft 9/20/"' /1/LJ/rz.1--c 1q-i.4 1 :7 6/20/67 A J A {a.u,,u ~ (; - /~Cf~ I\JL:_r- tj/-1
  • another raid while Kosygin i s in the Far East. Some £eel an attack now might force the Chinese Communists and the Soviet Union together. Acting Secretary Ball reported that the Soviet reaction to the earlier attack on No rth Vietnam had so far been m ild
  • reply to Wilson: to Hanoi 187 (With strong Kosygin had no new information "he could not venture As in London he indicated and made it clear and expansion of the Vietnamese Thompson that the last offer overriding that conflict. caveat from
  • good results from this strike based on report s received so far . Acting Secretary Ball spoke of the effect of the North Vietnamese attack on Soviet Premier Kosygin's visit to Hanoi. He said it may be that Soviet Union was not aware of plans
  • . Ambassador Thompson had talked with Kosygin, and S ecretary Rusk had raised the matter with Ambassador Dobrynin the previous Thursday. The President said that he had 11played for time 11 with the Israelis . He had hoped before Secretary McNamara left to have
  • DECLASSIFIED --­ Authority RAC I 95"?6 By ~ NARA, Date I -IS- f I T 28/61-" -MESSAGE BEGINS I AM SORRY TO -BOMBARD YOU -WITH ALL .THESE TELEGRAMS ABOUT "THE KOSYGIN TALKS Bur ·· 20 OR 30 HOURS OF CONSECUTIVE DISCUSSION HAS THROWN UP A GREAT DEAL OF SOVIET
  • is extremely criti cal of the e ntire war effort. Ambassador Harriman: reporte d on his recent conversations with Kosy gin and Tito: Mr. Kosygin, who speaks for his government, does not want to get the UN involved in the Vietnam prol::lem. He says U. S. bombing
  • of communist parties, without all parties participating, to act on the Chinese problem. Mr. Bohlen a l so described the Sofia Meeting of War saw Pact coun­ tries opening today. He noted that both Brezhnev and Kosygin a r e attending. He said that we do
  • HAPPY ABOUT IT. THEY WOULD MUCH PREFER THE WAR TO END, IF YOU WOULD LEAVE. AND, WITHOUT A DOUBT, THEY WOULD NOT ASK ANYTHING MORE. LAST YEAR, WHEN: I WAS IN THE ·SOVIET UNION, KOSYGIN, WHO WAS PREPARING HIS 1967 .. BUDGET, TOLD ME: "YOU HAVE NO IDEA HOW
  • and Kosygin. The exchanges with the Soviets were quite complex, because different budgetary ·~ asures were used in different messages. But none of them had anything to do with the kind of new problem that we now face in Vietnam. Moreover
  • it as a choice between Israel and Vietnam and believe we ought to withd raw from Vietnam. He told Secretary Rusk to let Senator Mansfield know that this kind of music in the Senate is just what Kosygin wants to hear. Secretary Rusk before leaving the meeting
  • NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL December NOTE FOR MR. 1, 1967 R✓• Walt-I think you will be interested in the attached exchange of correspondence between John D. Rockefeller 3rd and Premier Kosygin con­ cerning possible Soviet support for the World
  • of i nterest and impo rtance des p i ~e t he strains of Vietnam. This at.ti tu de wa s:; ~vident in Premier Kosygin's add r ess to the Supreme So vi @t on t he day following the "straf ing" incident. Kosygin blamed the. US f or the s t r a in in Soviet­
  • ltr I P.CI 2p ~ fo-S--~+ [Duplicate of #40b, NSF, Files of W. Rostow, "Kosygin"] #Jb ltr +------+ttff'O-k'eate--0f..#2a- ~{9-S- - '17- [Duplicate of #40a, NSF, Files of W. Rostow, "Kosygin"] #.2d ltr !----1-'A.nP.---~-i+-V-He--Presi®nt l!CI 2 I
  • to ask if the White House sees any connection w ith the events and Kosygin in Hanoi ? Q.. MR. REEDY: I am deferring a.11 com:nent et the present time . Q. At 9 o'clock or whatever time it broke up , the orders went out to carry out these r aids? MR
  • . .• H[.;(i\::{ ](W;'.:'t;. But it indicated that any reply to the .President's proposals would il} [iif-;i~!:i:!{Ij( ::::;;:;~= 1 ;J : · .: '-l : ;._ : :,.:_\ ·:; >:\-;;.-.)~-_.!_':·. , •.,:' met in London. Kosygin endorsed the statements reported
  • Washington, 10 spontaneous· 11 Harold 12 this 13 Wilson 14 . Marvin following program was recorded on Friday • ,0 ~ ,... ~ I ;S. I If - talks with with events Minister, President Premier bridge that Prime Johnson, Kosygin
  • . ') , 6 --//-'t( Thurs.• June 15, 1967 5:35 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: The Australian Minister called to ask ii Kosygin's dropping in will affect the party £0-r Holt. I suppose we have to get the scenario in New York. clear first. * My inclination would
  • to get into details. QUESTION: Moscow? Sir, can you shed SECRETARY CLIFFORD: with Kosygin. I have not received any light on what Mr. McNamara No. I know only that he was there the report of any details as yet. is doing in and had a talk
  • : "Aleksey Kosygin, Chairman of the Council of Ministers of tb.at the Indian and Pakistani leaders meet in Moscow for the restoration of peace, according to a. Moscow report. Kosygin's message the USSR, has suggested §lOCRFs/NO R>REIGNDISSEM
  • d'Affaires ad interim, in which you were so good as to give me information and your impressions concerning the conversations that you held -on June 23 and 25 with Mr. Kosygin, Prime Minister of the Sov:tet Union. "I have always believed not only
  • was not a reply t:o Kosygin's message_ The Ambassador said he fully understood. The Secretary said that one of the p1~oblems was the internal sltuacion in various countries, including Israel, He~ wciuld li.ke to draw the Ambassador's attent.iot1 to one very
  • thought it was a good move. 2. Dobrynin made a point of emphasizing that in Kosygin's discussion of some time ago with Governor Harriman, Kosygin had expressed the conviction that Hanoi was not a puppet of the Chinese Communists. Dobrynin observed
  • President Tubman o "PCI 1p # e tr • nt ~__!S:l.----l~p Or- ,t-i?tflu ~ 11-2,r, 7 s o to President .PCI 5p # a rp _ --PresrdenCtoKosygm c., 1 TS. 4 f) ~ t:7"" '5°" ...-/ [Duplicate of #41a, NSF, Files of W. Rostow, "Kosygin"] A 1 Rostow to Pres1 en