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Tag- Digital item (7)
- 1967-08-16 (1)
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- Pueblo Incident, 1968 (3)
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- Tom Johnson to leave the room.) The President then said that he was going to ask some of the other mern.bers of Congress to join in a very confidential discussion on Vietnam. MEC7iN3 ~'0TE5 CO,-'l ~IGl-tTEO R . 1 uo.:.i-_e:t.aP. :eqtm~ 4'-orffl1s:1
- Vietnam
- and that the Pueblo would have been destroyed perhaps along with the North Korean vessels. Secretary McNamara: Did we call up the Reserves using Korea as a cover but actually for Vietnam? Answer: No. We had 440 aircraft available in the active forces. As soon
- Vietnam
- to will talk, but they will not say when. They will not discuss anything but North Vietnam. They will not talk unless we cease all military activities. We must know what ceasing all military activities really means." The President said the U.S. Government
- Vietnam
- - The President then read a list of organizations representing labor, management, press, foundations, and other associations. It '1.0.S agreed that this group could be invi.ted to go to Vietnam as observers of the up-coming elections. The President instructed
- Vietnam
- WITH THE DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSIONAL LEADERSHrP February 6, 1968 Breakfast In the Mans ion The President reviewed Vietnam and the Pueblo situation with the leaderĀ ship. He read the 6 :30 a. m. situation report and the CIA briefing on developments around the world
- Vietnam criticism
Folder, "November 7, 1967 - 6:03 p.m. Democratic Cong. Leadership," Papers of Tom Johnson, Box 1
(Item)
- be heard. Let's get Fowler and Schultze to sit down and tell THE PRESIDENT: you the consequences. SENATOR LONG: Fulbright will vote against it because he thinks it adds to Vietnam. Hartke has reasons not to vote for it. Fellows like Talmadge and R ibicoff