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  • Subject > USSR and Eastern Europe (remove)
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7 results

  • the meeting by repeating a sentence which he had read at the beginning~ i . e .: 11 The greatest single requirement ;is that we find a way to ensure the survival of civilization in the nuclear age . A nuclear war would be the death of all our hopes
  • be shorter steps can. ~aken If at _once, we hope that We believe there are areas of work--short of integrating the two national programs --from which all could ~ benefit. We should explore the opportunities for practical cooperation, beginning
  • ~on interests, is our objective. Enlargement of the Organization to include East European partici­ pation would dilute its effectiveness and destroy any hope for achieving maximum £rankness and intimacy in the consultative prooess. Action sug~estions: 1o
  • that some performance on their part is needed before we should make our next moves. l - (4) If the President intends to communicate secretly with K., he might consider including a personal expression of hope that K. would personally oversee and expedite
  • military pressure against the Dubcek governm1: 11t in the hope that the liberals would slow down the reform campai gn. The day of tl 1 1· Soviet invasion, the Preside nt met with Ambassador Dobrynin at 8:15 tJ . M . and then with the NSC later that evening
  • the increasing educational level of the Soviet population. Moreover, the contacts with the free world already established have by now generated vested interests in their continuance. Limitations on Soviet Evolution. While there are many hopeful aspects