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  • ~ /-,;, ~ Io tl:i.lil l?x:lilfii'1-illt SQeret.....: fx:om Cilpati:4.G, 2§- t)' 04{21f6t:- ,/, il16b Memo DOD To Pres for Natl. Security Top Secret 2 p Affairs from McNamara 05/18/6~ A Ic.p..Secret -for FILE LOCATION 'Qep1:1ty See-. -Bef-. frem
  • - - Mr. Paul Geren 1 .::SECRET Mro Paul Geren, Deputy Directorp Office of International Financial and Development Affairs, Department of State; Dro William No Diehl, Chief, Far East Divigion Office of International Finance, Department of Treaau.ry
  • for International D evelopment Director, Bureau of the Budget Chairman, Export-Import Bank -· SUBJECT: Task Force on Southeast Asian Economic and Social Development I herewith direct my Special Assistant for National Security Affairs, Mr. McGeorge Bundy
  • . The Special Assistant for National Security Affairs is autho rized to call on the appr opriate Departments and A gencies for necessary staff support for this task force. GOHFIDEHTIAL - . ' . . lb " --- .{ ',!. ~ !~ µ~r¥~~ THE WHITE HOUSE
  • like the shooting down of a plane than the Herald Tribune ought to be running the government. Second, if you can tell me how you deal with a ••• K. That's not the point. The State Department is definitely coneerned with the fact that the President
  • DISCUSSION OF KIKER'S STORY ABOUT LBJ'S LACK OF KNOWLEDGE IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS, ANTICIPATED FOREIGN AID, VIETNAM; PROCEDURES FOR NOTIFYING LBJ OF FOREIGN POLICY DEVELOPMENTS
  • of the foreign aid program, in overall charge of it, as Undersecretary of State and Undersecretary for Economic Affairs. I was sort of the ultimate re sponsibility in the State Department for its legislative progress of that bill every year, so I had to talk
  • Appointment as Secretary; relationship with LBJ during Eisenhower administration; State Department Appropriation Bill and Foreign Aid Bill in 1959 and 1960; LBJ's role as VP; Cuban Missile Crisis; differences between LBJ and JFK; budget; balance
  • , This is state of affairs. How close attention does the President pay to specific programs that AID either conceives or undertakes? G~ Well, there's a real difference between President Kennedy and President Johnson there because in President Kennedy's time
  • Biographical information; Presidential impact on AID; comparison of JFK and LBJ; Presidential approval of specific loans; BOB and Treasury Department involvement in policy decision; White House and State Department involvement; B/P loans; AID
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh that time we had nuclear weaponry; the other side didn't. In domestic affairs Mr. Eisenhower's greatest civil
  • leaders of free world after WWII; Little Rock and civil rights; Ike against forced bussing; states rights; Senator Joseph McCarthy; Ike and LBJ had heart attacks in 1955; Dulles and foreign affairs; 1956 Hungarian uprising; Israel and Suez Crisis; Sputnik
  • in international affairs, more concerned with domestic things. Did you find him pretty well versed in what was going on at that particular assignment that you accompanied him on? H: Yes, I found him very well versed; and I also found his knowledge of how things
  • liability; press assassinated LBJ politically; JFK legislation; investigation of Adam Clayton Powell; Hays’ feud with Romney; briefing of Foreign Affairs Committee by Secretary of State; LBJ’s hostility toward Senate Foreign Relations Committee; advice
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh - 3 F: Some of his opponents have claimed that he lacked an understanding of foreign affairs, that he was the parochial politician, or at least a domestic politician. I judge you wouldn't
  • voting and then compare it. I used to tease him about that. F: How did he take it? G: He didn't take it very well. F: I can imagine. Did he show much interest in foreign affairs in those senatorial days? G: Yes, he did. In fact, he showed a great
  • understanding of foreign affairs; Melasky's efforts to educate the public regarding Vietnam; LBJ's vice-presidency; LBJ's familiarity with military operations; John Tower; Ralph Yarborough; 1964 election and campaign; comparing the economy of 1960's to 1971