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  • OF THEIR OWN UNDER CAIRO BACKED PALESTINE LIBERATION ORGANITHE WEST BANK ZATION LEADER SHUQAYRI THEY COULD HAVE IT. REPRESENTATIVES QUICKLY ASSURED HIM THAT WAS THE LAST THING THEY DES IRED. 6. ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER ESHKOL, STUNG BY THE SECURITY COUNCIL
  • need to hold in reserve. So far the Israelis have succeeded in keeping this apart from the rest of our relationshipo The only counter big enough to sway Eshkol, I suspect, will be the US-Israeli relationship itselfo By purely foreign policy standards
  • and No. 2), suggest that the Isra~li Governme nt is moving toward a more open attitude- towards the Dimona nuclear complex vis-a-.vis the public. The February 3 item refers to a visit to the Dimona p lan t on February 1 by Prime Minister Levi ESHKOL
  • President Johnson, too, was deeply concerned about the maintenance of peace in the Middle East. In a letter of May 17 to Israeli Prime Ministe~ Levi Eshkol, he had declared that the United States Government was well aware of the strain being placed
  • and does not need backgrounding here at the moment.) 3. PrimeMinister Eshkol has said that President Johnson "promised stood virtually alone. In the view of great things 11 but in the end Israel the United States this is a complete misreading
  • with I cannot leave without the United States. saying how deeply we have understood your own reactions and policies during this crucial week. Mr. Eshkol and I believe that your i ~ , ·,.., MINISTERFOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS personal statesmanship
  • as t:hat Qi' gove1.·nmont ovet· a.t this time. who talked with cease-fix•e; it Foreign officials time was limited Yliuister Eshkol had lei't by· Eshkol tna~, indicate Israeli fightiug- Tel Aviv now. to "response," for the frcint, tension wi
  • . NEGATIVE RATHER THAN POSITIVE. FINALLY, KING•s RECEPTION IN US IN NOVEMBER, PARTICULARLY IN CONTRAST TO LATER RECEPTION OF ESHKOL, HAD BEEN SERIOUS PSYCHOLOGICAL BLOW. 4. ZA!D EXPLAINED THAT HE SEPARATELY AND LATER 'TOGETHER WITH PRI MIN TAL HOUNI TODAY HAD
  • for U.S. discussions with Israeli Prime Minister Eshkol: 1. The U.S. should tell Israel that, while recognizing Israel's growing need for tanks, the U.S. cannot enter into direct supply at this time. 2. However, the U.S. believes that alternate sources
  • 1 s message to Eshkol, which he did fai tL~.L.ly.l. .~r'\':w DE C Authority .J.1>:!:~~~~:,_;::_.:;;..;..._..........- By·_ __...~- HHS aBCR:E'f CLASSIF'!CATION ()A. DEPARTMENT OF STATE EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT 5 Nov. 21,, 1966 Date Mr. Walt
  • . But with the British pulling out of South Arabia next January, Faisal, Hussein, Haile Selassie, the Shah and Eshkol were watching closely to see whether we and the British would stand for a Nasser takeover there. The current Arab-Israeli crisis has brought the test