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  • , it appears that we will leave here at some point this afternoon. I cannot tell exactly when. We will be going diractly to Andrews from here. Don't ask me when we will leave. I don't know. The President met with President Eisenhower in his home at Palm Desert
  • structure in South Vietnam. \ Accordingly, President Eisenhower ift December 1954 made the ! decision to extend substantial economic assistance to South Vietnam. In so doing, he stated our basic |ixEkx purposes in terms that still apply* (from Eisenhower
  • to be premature. The weekend of the 17th and Marine units He also and 18th which stopped in to the had see President begun visited their General deployment Eisenhower in Springs. During the anticipated Although rather the of second
  • grave tu r n to th e already serious situ a ­ tio n in so u th east Asia. O ur com m it ­ m ents in th a t a re a a re well know n to the Congress. T hey w ere first m ade In 1954 by P re sid en t Eisenhower. T hey w ere f u rth e r defined in th e S o u
  • in that area are well known to the Congress. They X ( > D epartm ent of S tata BuUtUn, Aoc- 2 4 ,1»64, pp. 261-268. were first made in 1954 by President Eisenhower. They were further defined in the Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty approved
  • !ly is ran opportunity for them." Klein said the Democrats "during the early stages. of the j Eisenhower administration'' gave Nixon the image· of a man who uses subterfuge and strata­ gems, but tha1t this. was not an issue this year
  • gotten. That is why we have answered this ag­ gression with action. America’s course is not precipitate. Am erica’s course is not w ithout long provocation. For 10 years three American Presidents— President Eisenhower, President Kennedy, and your present
  • .:ciene.nl~.mi.iili:r;.;~:iMe:.lie .,iRAAtiltat,ioiia which were yesterday postponed; that is, with Senators Russell and Dirksen; C_ongressman Rivers; and, via General Goodpaster, with General Eisenhower. 4. Once you have come to a decision, you will need
  • armed forces. This activity was within the framework of the accords. The policy behind our assistance was stated in a letter from President Eisenhower to the President of Viet-Nam on October 1, 1954: “The purpose of this offer is to assist the Government
  • "cold war" with the Soviet Union must come to a head. Some were making plans accordingly -- to "end the cold war by wirming it." Then General Eisenhower ex­ plained to the American people that we must learn to live with the cold war. Everyone now sees
  • throughout our h is t o r y and most em phatically by Lw ig h t D. Eisenhow er a t the o the r e x tre m ity o f A s ia . As P re s id e n t, the choice was h is to make in Korea. He coaH have pushed the a ir-w a r in the search f o r a c le a r-c u t d e c
  • . These o th e r r e s o l u t i o n s w i l l be remembered by many members o f th e S en ate . . . " " S en ators r e f e r t o th e nev? power V7h ic h i s b e in g g ra n ted to d a y . But th e power g ra n ted t o P r e s id e n t Eisenhower e x i s t