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- Johnson, W. Thomas, 1941- (2)
- Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (2)
- Harriman, W. Averell (William Averell), 1891-1986 (1)
- Vance, Cyrus R. (Cyrus Roberts), 1917-2002 (1)
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- : Tell us about our meeting in Paris. Secretary Rusk: It was standard. There was not much progress. North Vietnam blasted American politics. But the tea break produced an agreement for a Saturday meeting -- a private talk. We might press Hanoi
- Vietnam
- to carry out Westmoreland 1 s plan would be construed as the first attack of this kind against Cambodia . Sihounok would blast us, North Vietnam would blast us, and it would create a big problem when everything presently is reasonably comfortable. He
- Vietnam
- that formal diplomatic ties were broken in late 1964 - early 1965. Walt Ro stow said Sihanouk broke relations when it looked as though the U.S. would lose the war in South Vietnam. Secretary Rusk said Cambodia is getting some Chinese aid. relations between
- Vietnam
- Ambassador Harriman Secretary Rusk Secretary Clifford General Wheeler Walt Rostow CIA Director Helms George Christian Tom Johnson Secretarv Clifford: We met with the Senate Committee this morning. They spent one and a-half hours on Vietnam. CIA Director Helms
- Vietnam
Folder, "[Briefing Papers for Tuesday Luncheon, September 17, 1968]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 3
(Item)
- shift in U.S. and GVN priorities at the last meeting of Nick Katzenbach's Vietnam group with Bus Wheeler. Bus said that Abrams' present strategy would automaticaly move in this direction as the third wave gave way to protracted harassing wrd
- Vietnam