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  • . Clifton. Military Aide to the P resident Walter Jenkins, Special Assistant to the President Bill Moyers, Assistant tothe President Jack Valenti, Special As sistant to the P resident Bromley Smith, E."Cecutive Secretary, National Security Council !JERI
  • Ge!l.eral Clifton1 Military Aide to the President Bill Moyers , Assistant to the President Jack Valenti, Special Assistant to the President Walter Jenkins, Special Assistant to the Presi dent Bromley Smi th, Executive Secretary, National
  • - - every way you look at it if you can think of tre r ight thing to say o If I can think of anything that would help you, I'll phone your office about it. I wish you wouldo Just call Walter Jenkins anytime. I just wanted to raise the quastion with you
  • The Deputy Under Secretary of State The Aasiatant Secretary of State (Par Eastern Affairs) The Special Aaeiatant to the Preaident for National Security Affair• 'ffle Deputy Special Aasietant to the Preaident for National Security Affair• The Military Aide
  • . William Bundy STATE S•:crcta ry or State Under Secretary Harriman Assistant Secretary Hilsman AEC M.r. Seaborg AID Mc. Dnvid Bell Mr. R. Poats l. 111e meeting op::ncd with a briefing by Mr. McCone on the sitwition in Southeast Asia and Indonesia
  • :resented the Eisenhower criticism of the wh«9at deal although he $aid that he had no responsibility for that transaction as it waa an accomplished £act prior to his taking office. He defended the nuclear material cut..;b.ack · stating, as he had before
  • . However, some may turn to the Communist Bloc for aid, not only if they feel the West has not been sufficiently responsive to their n~eds, but also as a means of em­ phasizing their neutrality. Many of' the nev West African nations will probably also
  • Foreign aid
  • to be in pro- aided by Guevnra'o trip Cuba is nov, by its ports problec aD:1 froo non- have been so fnr quite to the US nre probably SU@ll' ot Cuba's foreicn cxcha.nge troa nan-Bloc sources. 36. Cuba's econa:iy is still technical abrood
  • Soviet-~ out in ·' · Cub:m communique dascribi..-ie their conversations an atnosphoro o.£ .frank cord:L.1.lityn. i/Union Cubn and Soviet Union Di£:n trade to l million or buy Soviet February- l.S . tom~ Union extends and economic aid Agreements
  • the Ambassador personally responsible. Secretary McNamara stated that he had examined the economic situation and that he felt we must give generously of economic aid and must not ask the South Vietnamese government to do the impossible at this particular time
  • Affairs and for Science and Technology; the Counselor, Department of State; Assistant Secretary of Defense, Paul H. Nitze; the Military Aide to the President. ITEM FOR DISCUSSION U.S. POLICYTOWARD CUBA For discussion ot future U. or recent events in Cu
  • coverage GATT and TAGG European economic matters Economic integration SAUNDERS Civic action Counter-insurgency MAP and economic PL-480 and police programs aid - (only top round-ups • ( " " 11 and controversial " " issues) " ) SCHLESINGER United Nations
  • and Technology; the Counselor, Department of State; Assistant Secretary of Defense (ISA); the Deputy Under Sec-. retary of State; the Deputy Director (Plans), Central Intelligence Agency; and the Military Aide to the President. ITEM1 -- U1 S1 POLICYTOWARD CUBA
  • in assuming that the course or action had been laid out before you received the text of the Aide Memoire, and I do not challenge at all your modest suggestion that the Embassy might have helped in drafting the paper. Actually, The Honorable Philip w. Bonsal
  • for both Martin and Banister in recent years. w. Guy Banister and Bob Guzman Departmental files contain no identifiable information concerning former FBI agent and private investigator W. Guy Banister or his alleged aide, Bob Guzman, although our files
  • , a statement that tbe under• standings 1n the memorandm are aceeptab le, and a statement that the SWiaa note and the GOC reply constitute an acceptance by the two aides of the tezma of the memo, which aha 11 take effect on thti date of the reply
  • :-:E, f...S YOUR Mi!:SSAGZ PO!NTEJ O~T . THE~ THS MOT IVZS W~ICH ?~O~OTE~ US TO GIVE AID OF THIS NATURE TO CUBA CEASE. T¥.EY Ar?:;: ·~O LONGER P.?PLICA3LE. HE>::::E WE HAV2 INSTRUCTED OUR OFFICERS- -AN~ . THl5I ~EANS, AS I HAU: ~LREADY STATED, ARE I
  • } No overflight (2) 11 economic aid (3) 11 help refugees (4) Guantanamo Soviet suggests formal up - Stevenson says no Sov. deliberately deceptive on Sams site. 11 may have committed to Castro to leave Sams - Mikoyan soys no expert on crating (Bombers) They have
  • IF OTHER AGGRAVATIONS COULD BE RELIEVED, @UT THAT WE MUST GET THE ONE QUESTION BEFORE US PROMPTLY RESOLVED. FYI. WITH REGARD TO SAM SITES, WE HAD CLEAR IMPRESSION THEY INTENDED TO LEAVE THEM IN (UBA, AND THEY ALSO ?AID THEY HAD GIVEN THESE GUNS TO A NUMBER