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industry, disregard human life ? Suppose I say no, what else would
you recommend?
General Wheeler:
Mining Haiphong .
The President: Do you think this will involve the Chinese Communists
and the Soviets?
General Wheeler:
No , Sir
- seek no bases o r
territory there , and when we have responsible assurance that the
terrorism has stopped , we w ill bring our troops home immediately;
and until then, we will do everything we think wise to help the South
Vi.etnamese do what
- , A ssistan.t to the Chairmat1
STATE
G eorge Ball, Act ing S ecretary
William Bundy, Pssistant Secretary for Far Eastern Affait:s
Phillip s Talbot, Assistant S ecr etar y for N ear Eastern and South i\ sian
Affairs l ~...\~........-. 2-)
TREASURY
Douglas
- A ssistant to the Secreta ry for Vietnam
TREASURY
C. Douglas Dillon, Secretary
USIA
Carl T. Rowan.> Director
·
- 2 -
WlilTE HOUSE
Pierre Salinger, Press Secretary
McGeorge Bundy, Special Assistant to the President
Walter Jenkins, Special Assistant
- . Ball, Under Secretary
William P . Bundy, Assistant S ecretary for Far Eastern Affairs
Llewellyn Thomp son , Ambassador - at-Large
TREASURY
C. Douglas Dillon , Secretary
.USIA
Carl 1' . Rowan, Director
WHI TE lIOliSE
?vfcG .-·o~.;c
SERVICESET
Bu!1d
- Chi Minh' s objectives are to divide us from our allies and to divide us
at home.
We should be cautious in making statements about what we expect to come out
of the Paris talks. UK Fo r eign Minister Stuart may get something during his
coming visit
-
G eorge Ball, Acting Secretary
William P . Bundy , Assistant Secretary for Far Eastern Affairs
Llewellyn E . Thompson, Ambassador-at-large
Leonard Ung e r, Deputy A ssi 3tant Seer etary for Far Eastern Affairs
T REASURY
C . Douglas Dillon
- had
to make a new a ttempt to create stability in Saigon and to withdraw our dependents.
We haven 1 t won on the stable gove rnment but unless we do something now, e ven
the government which now exist s will collapse. The dependents are comin g
home
-
.
~
..
8 +cGRE'f' /SENSI TI VE
-3
Secretary Fowler: Did not know of any new steps we should take now. The
most important thing that we can do is to keep our situation at home strong.
The strength of the dollar is basic to the entire international
- to his
country.
He surely has the intellectual equipment and
the necessary political experience .
courage - firm, tough, and mature.
He is a man of great
He gives one the
impression of understanding the needs of his people on
t he home front as well
- to maxim
izing the chances of influencing the enemy and world opinion and to minimizing
the chances that failure would st r engthen the band of the "hawks'' at home:
First , without fanfare, conditions, or avowal , whether the stand- down was
permanent