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  • LEWIS CONVERSATION INTERRUPTS JENKINS CONVERSATION RECORDED ON REF #2132; JENKINS CONVERSATION RESUMES ON REF #2134
  • BUNDY ASKS ABOUT LBJ'S HEALTH, REPORTS ON LACK OF PROGRESS ON PANAMA NEGOTIATIONS, ANNOUNCEMENT OF MARY BUNTING APPOINTMENT TO AEC; WOMEN APPOINTEES; LBJ ASKS BUNDY TO RELAY MESSAGE TO WALTER JENKINS ABOUT PIERRE SALINGER
  • ALASKA EARTHQUAKE; FEDERAL AID; OEP DIRECTOR EDWARD MCDERMOTT, SENATORS E. L. BARTLETT, ERNEST GRUENING TO FLY TO ALASKA; EFFECTS ON HAWAII; BUNDY DISCUSSES BRAZIL, ZANZIBAR, UK, RUSK'S REPLY TO FULBRIGHT ON CUBA, PANAMA, VIETNAM; NYT; WALTER
  • LBJ COMPLAINS ABOUT PRESS REPORT THAT SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE RECOMMENDS VIETNAM PEACE TALKS BE HELD IN WARSAW; NEGOTIATIONS ON SITE FOR TALKS; ARMS CONTROL TALKS WITH USSR; SOVIET AID IN MIDDLE EAST; PRESS LEAKS; PROBLEMS WITH WARSAW
  • that their own interests would best be served by joint or parallel actiono Alternative 1: To exert maximum pressure to avert the decisiono We might, for example, threaten to termi­ nate economic and technical aid and serve notice that we would not back India up
  • NATIONAL OF THE SECURITY PRESIDENT COUNCIL WASHINGTON DECLASSIFIED -Y/(f/,z,a Authority ~.fC~d By ~ , :t\, S, Date~£f'M? CONFmENT!JltL July 23, 1962 TO: Colonel Howard L. Burris Air Force Military Aide to the Vice President FROM: Bromley
  • of D ef e nse R obe rt M c N amara A ss i stant S ecr e tary of D efens e John M c Naughton T reasury S ecre tary H enry F owl e r ACDA Director W illiam C . F oste r AEC Commissioner J o hn P alfrey AID A dministrator David E. B ell CIA Dir e ctor
  • . --­ ~·.-:. -.,,.•-.. -.~~·.....~-:. ,. :~t:J.i'!'""' ~7 •.f'5";;-,t •• . . ... ... ·~ •' r · ..... ... - j We will act on it by January. ­ 1, ·~:::1-::;•M3 t-~OT::S COiYRIGHl'ED ;\;.:Cd: ee I: o!"I Reett1ire& r~-r.:"d~)Ot"I er Ce~)fi!ht : :aid-~ •. w. r:1cmas Johnson Walt Rostow
  • should hold off on 11 Most Favored Nations" legislation in order not to cause a problem for the Czechs. The continuing resoltuion - what does it do to DoD, Foreign Aid, Foreign Policy things. See what kind of resolution they will get. Draft agreements
  • . And if Israel does not respond to this position, the Soviets say they will give aid to the Arabs going far beyond economic aid. SANITIZED E.O. 13292, Sec. 3.5 I UP SECRE'f-,. EYES ONLY • NLJ./AAC. '?-JS5 ~A.,, NL:> 'l )· (,,O By ~ , NARA, Date S- '1-1)5
  • LIMITEDDISTRIBUTION to if any reasonable commitment to aid Japan if she is attacked, power deployed basic Japan is not likely the wishes of the US on such a major matter, a firm US treaty if ever, toward Japan. remains sound and mutually is available
  • the State Department lobbying for the AID Bill. The President said no. He said he talked to Mike Mansfield. Apparently, the problem was that State Department had put some people in an office near the Senate floor and neither Mansfield nor Mike Manatos
  • of the poor countries: India, Pakistan, Latin America, Africa. This means more aid, both money and food. Europe must play its part. On the UK future and U.S. -UK Relations We wish the UK best of luck on entry into the Common Market. you will keep at it, even
  • Nigerian amendments -------------------------------- 249 Romanian amendments -------------------------------- 2^0 Swedish amendment -------------------- ,-------------- 25C Swiss aide-memoire --------------------------------- 253 UAR amendments
  • that the US would like to see disarmament savings used in ways to increase international programs of mutual aid. 3Ldit13 &Li ,. · ···' jsF?RZI :r---· -4­ After making these specific proposals, the President could suggest that renewed consideration
  • ? Should we not instead downgrade it, or at least make it com­ pete with other forms of energy?) d. Help with isotope and medical research. (This suggestion avoids direct aid of the bomb, though it does focus on the atom. Could it be ex­ panded to include
  • MANIII and POSEIDONmissiles, carrying multiple re-entry vehicles and equipped with modern penetration aids, will be capable of inflicting un­ damage to the acceptable Soviet Union. It is believed by some ex­ perts that the Soviet con­ ducted extensive
  • States had given some restricted nuclear information to the British after they developed a modest nuclear force by their own efforts, but it had withheld any aid to the French. The Soviets, after giving some initial assistance to the Chinese (1959-1960
  • was for the most part highly satisfactory. AID staff were very cooperative in providing data and specialist assistance relating to arms trade and military expenditure. Three con­ tractual arrangements with Commerce Department worked very well and yielded
  • support through research, preparation of reference aids such as bibliographies, infor­ mation abstracts and extracts, information sum­ maries and digests. Work has begun on indexing the results of Agency research efforts and othertechnical materials
  • ? 1mpllcat.lons. Tqo many are accevtlng the for, and to construct, adntinlster, and.· Mr. ASPINALL. I will be ,Ind to yield words of the President and his aides mnintaln an ext.ension ot tte Blue Ridse to the gentleman. without crl,ic,il scrutiny ~ to the ultl
  • and efforts In Today he aid he bad uked 17 per cent Increase over the,_., the United Nations 'that the Secretary of State ..to ex- funds for the fiscal year 1967, }· eventually would produce a plore with-other nations their Mr. Humphrey said. ~ 1 treaty
  • suppo:ct coi.mtry. to the estab• relationship of obtaln.i.ng br03d Congressional. sup!)ort - COMiIDENTt~L fm: econO'i'i!ic aid t.., a coun~ry Y~goslav:Lz should not be forgotten. -ec,NF IOENTIAL such as __.GE>NF IDEN r.lf.L The United
  • efforts in this field. ACDA Research A C P A engaged in a substantial amount of staff work, aided by an intensive contract research program, to determine whether a formal agreement or treaty on the exploration of outer space was feasible and technically
  • drastically reduced because of US military aid cuts and pressures to strengthen the civilian economy. The twelve ROKAand two US divisions in South Korea had, since 1970, keyed their defense plans almost entirely to the early use of nuclear weapons
  • ot all liklihood, have een ottset b aide trom a relative .J necessary. The game mechanism could, perhaps, be improved by attempts to better simulate each side's decision-making processes, as contrasted with better simulations ot the scenarios, which