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  • in July, 1964, by Joseph F. Donelan, Jr. Mr. Donelan was assigned to the State Department Foreign Service Inspection Corps and was succeeded, in June, 1967, by John George Bacon. Mr. Bacon came to the Agency, with an intervening term at the National War
  • with West German participation and, in particular, its implications for the successful negotiation of a treaty to halt the further proliferation of nuclear weapons. Sincerely, Joseph JSC:hse S. Clark COPY Congress of the United States Joint Committee
  • will be different after The key disarmament people in the S nate have lost some strength -­ Joe Clark, Wayne Morse, Senator Carlson. Ambassador Wiggins: Ratification of the NPT is an embarrassment. All ask if we are going to ratify it. The non-nuclear group wonders
  • the bombing. They were telling the same thing to Fulbright, Clark, Mansfield, Church and some others. McBundy had lunch with Dobrynin, and he became an ardent advocate for a pause. Then McNamara came to Texas and said it would be a good idea. Rusk was a hold
  • . Nixon Secretary Dean Rusk Secretary Clark Clifford General Earle G. Wheeler Director Richard Helms W. W. Rostow SANITIZED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NW 94-~' By ~ , NARA Date Lcl-.:a,.q" The PresideI:.t and President-elect came in at 3:00 p. m. The President
  • it takes to move us. They would move on to another point. The President: They would move on to reconnaissance. Ambassador Ball: I share Clark's (Secretary Clifford) view emphatically. We are each "dug in" to doctrinal position, like Arabs and Israelis