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  • ; the Director of Central Intelligence; the u. s. Information Agency; the Counselor, Department of State; the Director, _Deputy Under Secretary of State; the Special Counsel to the President; the Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs
  • for Politico-Military Affairs, Mr. Jeffrey c. Kitchen, and he or an officer designated by him will represent the Department on the Review Group. Sincerely, ~ Llewel~mpson Enclosure: Acti.c; Report of Working Group. The Honorable McGeorge Bundy, OECLASS\F\ED
  • and NSC Staffs. that of 1 August 1962. ,1j11_£°"",-vt (!.. l/ . lf tJ...,1.,,.u-r.rr.- Neilson C. Debevoiae BELK United Nations Affairs Africa South of the Sahara (not including Horn of Africa) BU!\RIS Vice Presidential matters " Space - Astronauts
  • weap:ma to IATOo Thia aubccamittee consisted ot Senator Bennett and • Cqreasmen A,1p1,mU;Boemer, Westland and JV9elto Becauae ot tbe review which TOil have ordered in tbe Department of Defense, and the related appointment ot an AdviaOl'J'Ccad.ttee beaded
  • by Foreign Minister Spaak, the text of which the State Department is to obtain (copy attached). 1. France -- The difficulties we are encountering with France in NATO are limited to the military field. We should press France to support NATO in all other fields
  • and a half months. Previous assignments in European area include: US Embassies Vienna, Rome; Bureau of European Affairs, Department of State; US Mission to the European Communities, Brussels. Has spent a total of 15 years on subject and prepared various book
  • , informing him that the Department of Defense has a require­ ment to extend the dissemination of atomic information within NATO member states and the Channel Command and, concurrently, provide a more common basis for atomic cooperation between NATO member
  • and any questions regarding the Agreement should be directed to these agencies. The Public Affairs officers of the two Departments have been so informed. /iJJ_ Karl D. Ackerman Office of Atlantic Political and Military Affairs LAS I I D E.O. 3292, Sec. 3
  • File, State Department, Policy Planning, Vol. 5 STRICTION Box 52 CODES ) Closed by Executive Order 12356 governing accessto national security information. ) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the document. ) Closed in accordance
  • State Department
  • Folder, "State Department, Policy Planning, Vol. 5," Agency Files, NSF, Box 52
  • that would increase the cohesion of NATO and the North.Atlantic community. These should embrace two kinds of measures: a. Military and non-military programs affecting primarily the affairs of the Free World; b. Constructive political, diplomatic, and economic
  • of the 1 Thia paper is adapted from an article in /nternatwnal Affairs (Vol. 40, No. 4, October 1964), the quarterly British, let alone the French, nuclear force, and journal of the Royal Institute of International Affairs in therefore, if European nuclear
  • Gaulle will not accept those minimum conditions which we and the Germans must really insist upon, it will be clear to the world that de Gaulle alone is responsible for the breakdown -- that the monkey is on his back. The State Department has
  • having and excellent progress is being been raised by host state authorities ot land areas in France and Germany made; however, the availability is considered by the Department ot Defense as a potential problem. is The contingency planning being
  • and they are willing to go along . " 3 ASSISTANT SECR ETAR Y OF DEF ENSE WASHINGTON 25, D , C. S[P Reter to: I -16715/61 7 1961 I N TERNATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS MDK>RANOOM FOR THE VICE PRESIDE?fr SUBJ~: Briefing Notes tor Your Paris Discussions In accordance