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- of State
and Defense would brief him on Vietnam. Secretary Rusk would also touch
on problems in other areas. General Wheeler y;as available to deai with
the military situation; and Mr. Helms would contribute intelligence data
and make arrangements
- Vietnam
- in Vietnam. I said
it seemedto me that the North Vietnamesewere nowmakfngan all-out effort and
I
expected this effort to be continued up to the maximum
of their capabilities.
If in their estimate, their reading of the situation,
the South Vietnamesehad
- Vietnam
- Asia or this little
of territory
sliver
of Vietnam, but the costs of losing in tenns of our world-wide
position are such that, as an Americanwhose interest is and must be to
protect the interests of the United States, I cannot cometo any other con
- Vietnam
- is responsible
when things go wrong. In that sense, I think it would tend to relieve
the burden.
[Q.] General, could we be a little more specific about how it will
work out by using Vietnam as an example, and accepting the paren
thetical note that this exempts
-
attachments
o~ titi
- BE a 3) re
Vietnam- (SECRET)
FIL E LOCA TI ON
C.F. CO 151 Korea (1967-68)
RESTRICT ION CODES
(A) C l osed by Executive Order I 1 652 gove rn ing access to na tional securi ty i nfor ma t ion.
(B) Closed by sta t ute or by the agency
- of
the ,failure o1 our np1austt; e.s., suppose we don't get MLF?
Suppose there ·1 s a complete breakdow.n in our attempts to
--- ---isolate Cuba? ~uppose we are confronted with a c0tnplete
collapse of the will-to-f iiiit in south Vietnam? Some •-worst .
case 0
- Johnson. This is March 19,
1965. I am sitting
here in my residence in Saigon, Vietnam this evening
after dinner and am undertaki.ng an experiment which I hope will be of
interest
and use to my grandchildren.
I am not quite sure how far I will
get
- Vietnam