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  • Telephone conversation # 10841, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLAS MACARTHUR II, 9/26/1966, 6:11PM
  • DOUGLAS MACARTHUR II
  • LBJ COMPLAINS ABOUT PRESS LEAKS BY HHH ON TONKIN GULF ATTACKS, STATEMENT INFERRING US MIGHT HAVE PROVOKED ATTACKS, US-USSR COMMUNICATIONS ON VIETNAM; HENRY FORD II'S VIEWS ON HHH AS POSSIBLE VP NOMINEE; RFK'S NOTE TO OTHER CABINET MEMBERS ON VP
  • 0 """ y x. (.) Tl\~~ ·'-~'' " l, / /1 • 7) I tr c ,J N: ~-,." tl I ws s u M ~ p ~ 1 0 I y 1,. r ' r ~ ~ r' ii } b ~· r ~" r. ~ 1, ( " bs Q.,.. r-. r1v~ .S/ Q ; .. r ~ I·) h .e b '2 / , ~ v r~· O;t-t • T do.. I k c ~ t.t s f "r 5 f' t
  • and General G>odpaster, his deputy. Now here is the comment that was made at my last meeting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Chief of Air Staff McConnell said: "I recommend you go ahead &ri.d1cfa this. II Marine Chapman said: "I think we should go ahead
  • , line 22 transcript Interview I, p. 40, lines 21-~ transcript More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh DATE RESTRICTION [same sanitization 5/9/00 NLJ 00-105] 1130170 A same sanitization 5/9/00 Interview II
  • was fairly clear-cut. J: Oh, it was very clear, very clear, yes. I wrote as a result of these two long visits and all the research that I did the State Department paper ca 11 ed "A Threat to the Peace, II whi ch was a report on develop- ments
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Tape II 2 (Nov. 13, 1968, Nov. 14, 1968) A: I felt this was one of those times when it did make a difference who was the American chief representative in this mission--in this case, Sofia. That, quite possible, if I had been
  • Oral history transcript, Eugenie Moore Anderson, interview 2 (II), 11/13/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
  • Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 2 (II), 12/5/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
  • and just didn't have the capability that the others had. I understand that General McGarr was one of the great regimental commanders with the Third Division all through World War II, and in my opinion and for what it's worth, I think that his great service
  • s brother Bud, Bud Bogen, who I mention~d had climbed through the Sierras, also went into the Air Corps, becamea test pilot for Douglas and was killed flying the first Douglas experimental four-engine bomber prior to World War II, when Douglas
  • World War II
  • that the flight had been cancelled, and an unidentified plane, from their point of view, came into the air. It was one of the old flying boxcars of World War II, a plane that had been used by the Israelis for reconnaissance purposes; they thought