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483 results
- of government to guerr illa ground forces had to be 10 : l. During his testimony before the Senate For e i gn Relations Committee, he had been asked this question . Comment had been made about the astronomical size of U. S. forces r equire d ii
- . When the President returned to the room, Ambassador Goldbe r g said that the maximum military risk is that Chinese Communists w ill mo ve in troops . The decision to bomb POL will mean that we w ill be isolating ourselves internationally. Ii we lose
- d t o J i m m y I o a w J o e K e n n e dy ge.t h im a jo b w it h lli5 ' Itq u u r -ii ii g xtist'a a r e t r y i n g t o do i t t o s o m e of m y s t a f f . n i g h t i s n ’t d o i n g a n y goo d. T h e y '^ ^ ' T h i s goin g out t o a p
- . Oceanography ... We are developing a possible US proposal wh~ch would call for: (i) GA establishment of a Committee on the Oceans similar to the Outer Space Committee; (ii) an outline for a Declaration of Legal Principles to Govern the Activities on the Ocean
- and II and tre Korean War concerning the information problem. He pointed out that we have not dealt with censorship at all. "Perhaps we should send three good editors out there to take a look at the situation and make some recommendations on how we can
- received no word from him, we asked our Ambassador to press him for some kind of report Finally Kosygin said "You are sti II bombing and nothing can be done. 11 Thus he slammed t~e door on us. We believe that he talked to North Vietnam and they told him
- those who have been there say anything about it. This was quite contrary to what took place in World War II. He said he had to be careful not to get the country on an anti-communist binge because it tears up what we have gained with the USSR (Consular
- much. II He then proceeded to give me the details as to.when they wanted me to report, which was in January. We talked about who would replace me as Commander of the XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. I had no contact
- p ................ , .... .. ,., .... p .... aad .. ra ... . el dale.- ... •al• wldl ._,.••l• apeD dMt 4.toa•ucl tM c .. ta aa4 ~ o, lmpl•••ata• &lea. ( • aa-oat lme9r&&Ac:• bere ii a dei.Ued ,tatem•at ol tbe ar1~t• aad tactual mat.r,lal
- SERV ICES ADMINISTRATION GSA DC 73.495 GSA FORM 7122 (7-72) ·c.. F. ,. ! ; . 1: I. . .. Ii FILE 1-!IliO ELM FG 11-8-1/Califano, Joseph .I 1/10/69 ' J' -- _. I ,, ' ' PL 2 BE 5-2 PR 18 LA 8 BE 3 ND l¼CO 312 ..,, HU 2 ST 5 HU 2
- just a very brief biographical background on your career, so we can kind of get started. D: All right. Basically, I am an artilleryman in the Army--or was through World War II. I was an artilleryman in General Patton's Third Army in the European
- ; 1,_1 " t'" ,, q IIIII II i,';i :t'l i ! II i I I, I I,i As a former Marine it's good to get back to Quantico. I am especially pleased to share the next hour with you talking about a subject of vital importance to Marines the broad field
Oral history transcript, Chester L. Cooper, interview 2 (II), 7/17/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh INTERVIEW II INTERVIEWEE: CHESTER
- Oral history transcript, Chester L. Cooper, interview 2 (II), 7/17/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
- times fvr you and tor us, and we nre all in this thing toe,;E:-Jtber. T!iis morning on behalf ot my President I presented you some books that give the history of our country. This afternoon as I went runong your people on your farms and the villages
- Cr& i g » F ile i n t e r n a t i o s i a l -'ja t.e r s O'&sar^ A l l o f f o r s g o ia ii^ m ay b a p a s s e d t o GWc M a d d o x w a s o n D a s o t o P a t r o l a n d h a d b a e n s a f c h o r ia e d a p p r o a c h ' c o a a t o f l l
- , humor . No humor . no Ernie Pyle . of the war- You know, you had no Bill Mauldin . There were a couple of old World War II who had been pretty well and tried to do in which there was no That was its chief characteristic except very black humor
- ' (duplicates #53 cable I r~t: OSD text #52 cabi-e A Kire -Sanh DHZ report - 0-&Bte:u;t of 6-SD t:-e-x~ 03/04/68 -II eable from Gen. WeotmorelaRd ,, .e-ab-le :from Gen, WestmorelaBel ,, -6SiT memofu.r ~he ~resident memo -A- 2 -p J;W.lQ+.93
- " the editorial with Mrs. Graham. j AM./ T MLee/ mfb #5 ~ DE~~II E.O. WS6, Sec. 3.4 93
- le -? 8 /5 /6 4 ; f : ' r - ■ #111: C a b le ' 8 /4 /6 4 , * - \ : . " A . I /v.;... ;i;'-.._.-,\;. •VtK - ' - -'‘ii *.;^-t ‘ i'tS ^ ■^- ■A/x .i^ 5 --/g e /w NSF NSC H i s t o r y - P r e s . D e c i s i o n s - G u l f o f T on k in Ai t
- the Suharto government forward to stability and success. II. You might then ask Under Secretary Katzenbach to review briefly what has been accomplished since our last NSC meeting a year ago (see Tab B for State paper on top of which is a summary we have
- , by the way, administered a program of war claims, involving roughly 23,800 claims. We did that in a four-year period. M: This would be from World War II? R: These were World War II claims. The law was passed on October 22, 1962. LBJ Presidential
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh U3J A . ·i Ii k ~ pl2.ce.. dI T ;·-, :~; 1-_1 ·1 .J n 1 t h T hell with confronting those peopl2. may~e fatherly. But I think he He should stick to th~ moral issue and he sh,:;·-11 d do it without equ·i 11oc:a tfon
- Deparimsnt o f Stats D .Z Z Z ^ a Acficr. ••'P? RUZKCi^^ EU£H£X /?UZKDa 5S Ip.fo ' 2 4 P lh 5 * 4 P Di I173A 2 4 /0 9 2 5 Z P 2 4 0 3 S5 Z Z £ A - , „ AM£«3a 3SV 'SAlGunl _____ _____ ______ _ ;iTO RU iKC .^ /SEC SlA Ti: UASHDC P.^IO HITY 5 8 3 5 ' /Ii
- f FOR TH E AMBASSADOR Tlie X 01 P H ’ bS EX D IS C la s s ific a tio n O f.g iK II ^ ^ J , NABS, DatP 7 - ^ 3 - f O fo llo w in g p e rs o n a l message fro m th e P r e s id e n t to Head o f Government o r Head o f S t a t e , as a p p
- See all scanned items from file unit "Presidential Decisions-Gulf of Tonkin Attacks of August 1964-Volume II"
- Folder, "Presidential Decisions-Gulf of Tonkin Attacks of August 1964-Volume II, Tabs 14-17," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 38
- ro p in th e o ffice an d s e e . I s u g g e s te d w e ii, A f te r a d r in k we w e n t to th e b o w lin g a lle y , an d she b e a t m e r o u n d ly tw o a n d a h a lf g a m e s ; ^S hooting 137 one tim e to m y 105 o r so/^^^ ^ - A nd
- that the ship DECLASSlFIED 'lt Qih sSEC"Ri ii 'i' EYES ONLY SERVJCF: Sci [1 of 9] E Q 13516 Sec. 3.5 L)q Nu"[{~_:_-~E~!t e,;ofRfJS,~~rcNl 13 By J' I) v NARA, Date.L21-l!~lu.l._l- - TeP SECRET EYES ONLY - 2 - was 10 miles off shore. CIA feels
- of Cop1right HokJ•r· W Jboma• lahn,on # # # ii... . vr~
- pact with both tre Soviets and Red China. We need to find the means to get the men back. l II l \ Congressman Rivers: The Soviets have gone so close to Charleston that they get in the way of fishing vessels every time Polaris submarines come
- Wheeler Walt Rostow Clark Clifford George Christian Tom Johnson The meeting began at 6:06 p. m. The meeting ended at 7 p. m . ____ .....__ .IDllU~lS ra.~·; 11 ii.: :.i.. ~1.l:li6. ~i.J-- :'tf.12:2!;-,- iS~ Meeting began: .6 :06 p Meeting ended
- : News is basically good. enemy around Saigon. They are clearing out the There have been successful offensive operations in IV Corps. is happening in II Corps. News is good in I Corps. We will see an effort to grab Hue. Nothing It could be a sizeable
- . President: Any suggestions? Rusk: Major peace proposals are~·~ promising unless ~h~~ i iI _l' ' . 2 PU61icction Requires Pepnissien of Copyright TEO Helder: W. Thomas Johtwon is a cessation of bombin~. There are serious political
- p. m. The meeting ended at ..~ .... ~ ..~, ,_ -~ -. ·~ - · ...._ ·y2£~~--~r ii~{-:))- Meeting began:. 10:30 a. m. Meeting ended: 12:15 p. m. NOTES OF THE PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH GENERAL EARLE WHEELER, JCS AND GENERAL CREIGHTON ABRAMS
- 14th. j. II i They will start talking the Mansifeld report on ..._ c..~ I' I Authority - N By I t.. .J 8 ~- ~I ' •:.-.....:: '. , ~ ,t,e ID ·b: k' 3 1/10/66 -2 What better way do we have to tell our story except through
- I 1(1G \. I I 1 '··"'·\ . Vl~TNAM • ' 7 do 108 ong Hoi NORTl:f\ ..... , DEMARCATION LINE i--: _,, .ou ~ U .ll.NG TR't Tchepone' ' \_fj· 0 . -1 6- '·· - · .THUA THI E, ~ .. , 0 ,...J c./l .saravane c; - II . ~-J
- e th e r , L yndon , and the /• — A 'v , N u g e n ts, and th is tim e P a t and L u ci and the R a y s , and J im . ta lk ed abou t h is tr ip to H a w a ii. L yndon H e'd b e e n g r e a tly im p r e s s e d w ith W e s t m o r e - la n d
- January 22, 1966 Canada for pause. Thailand doesn't want U.S. to show weakness. France push pause for three months. Bloc countries need time, they say. Latin Americans support pause longer ii military situation permits. Indians talk about initiative
Folder, "[June 17, 1966 - 6:05 p.m. National Security Council Meeting]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 1
(Item)
- , but not overnight, on the confidence of the North Vietnamese troops. We learned in World War II that we should step up pressure when the enemy shows signs of weakness. USIA Director lv!arks: We should not decide this question on the basis of world opinion
- ·~~~~ ·~ . ·. , · · ·::.~7:;'. :p1;, ;.~~~'. · .\~:~!~ ~f :~.'.f:~:~_'..;·.·/:.~~~~}~iI',:· A~i(~~~:~'-;._:~~:.~mt~tt.~}~;~~~~~ :•..-:g: .: . panta!~descrlbitv]whatfabemqdone·b;r~:hi::other::~ings::and· ~•~,~~~.~•.';:'1 .:: . ·~~:::.~~ ;~y:;::_>Lj~~ ~~·-~·:!,:.~'\~: ·: ~f
- have been well served in this respect by Amb. Waller who waa good enough to jotn· us. II you have probleme, let him know; he has the key to the front door and the back door of the Whlte House. As for Ed and Ann Clark, I have been worried that he wae
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