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- Sovi et and E gyptian aid . He no\v
appears trying to get Enosis with demilitarization of t h e is land.
5. b. the Con go, the re are s ome signs of improvement but milit arily, the
situation i s still critical.
o.
Tanganyika and anzibar
-
"for DC/T".
32
---
...
I
~
Department of State
• INCO
\·I~GTELEG
AM
UNCLASSIFIED
54-L
25-288
Control:
R~c'd:
Action.
AUGUST 31,
4: 13 PM •
~
NF.A
FROM
: NI COSI A
Info
'fi
I
TO:
ss
G
SP
EUR
,AID
p
USIA
INR ••
CIA
•
:I
Secr·etary
- .
In this period American strategy for Cyprus stressed
continued access to American connnunications facilities, an
economic aid program to facilitate development and to combat
Communism, and reliance on the guarantor powers to maintain
the constitutional order
- Affairs
TREASURY
C. Douglas D illon, Secretary
USIA
Donald M. Wilson, Deputy Director
WHITE HOUSE
Ge or ge Reedy
McGeorge Bundy
Walter Jenkins
Jack Valenti
Dou ~l as Ca ter
SERVICE SET
- that the other aide must
make a very difficult deciaion. They must determine whether they
are going to do more f o:r Ha.Jioi as failu=e appea::-a imminent in
South Viet:iam.
[13 of 13]
- Jenkins, Special Assistant to the President
Douglass Cate:r, Special Assistant to the President
Bromley Sntlth, ~cutive Secretary, National Security Council
SEtHlCESET
A TT EN DANCE LIST FOR THE 536th NSC MEETING
JULY 28, 1964, AT 12: 15 IN THE CABINET
- assistance . To assume that no No rth Vietnamese
would ever call for Chinese aid is to underestimate the
degree of ideological fervor and anti-US hostility that
today exist in Hanoi .
4o Either respond i ng to such a call , or even on
their own
- , Special Assistant to the President
Major General Chester V. Clifton, Military Aide to the President
Jack Valenti, Special Assistant to the President
Harold Saunders, National Security Council Staff
Bromley Smith, Executive Sec retary, National Security
- was being boarded.
At 2354 (11:54 EST) the first SOS came.
We ceased t6 hear from the Pueblo 31 minutes later.
The President: Were there no planes available which were prepared
to come to the aid of this vessel? Every press s~ory I have seen
this morning
- captured
by the >forth Koreans . S ecr etary McNamara s aid he had little in the
way of facts to add to what has been in the p r ess except for one point-
that the incident appeared to have been pre - planned. In a d dition to this ,
two other facts made