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  • the feeling of security had been strong. Those who had been "within the protection of the · Government" found out how wlnerable they were. There is a fear of further attacks.and there are new opportunities for Communist . .:. propaganda and subversive
  • . also be covered in new tasking for CIA collection efforts. 1. 2. We should do more to exploit the intelligence as sets of other countries. The Australians, for example, should be encouraged to add at least one officer to-their :.Wlilitary Attache
  • , for it would be folly to undertake i. I I I a brand new effort without realizing that a large number of people have spent •1 I extensive little time and effort effort persons to tell the story has been spent trying working with veterans
  • / -THOM$ON. DCM.SAW RITCHIEo, EXTAFFTHIS MORNING ANDCONVEYEO SUSSTANCE REFTELTO HIM. IN RESPONSE RITCHIEHADFOLLOWIN~ Tb SAY: IN!' ,. ONEDAYLASTWEEKSTEVENROMAN, PRESIDENT DEtaso.t, MINESLTD., GOTIN TOUCH WITHOFFICEOF PRIMEMINISTER
  • , Date_-3_. --~.__ •• j • I Wednesday, 7:25 AM MEMORANDUM FOR THE March 6, 1968 PRESIDENT A C-123 with a crew of 4 and 44 passengers was hit by Communist gunfire and crashed at Khe Sanh this• morning. Initial reports from the base indicate
  • ~GllissIOIIA?,' January TO: .Jaok Va1enU FROM: Larry /' ~ g;/ 121 1965 f'~ ¢~0 F~ ~/Y O 1Br1en The House Leadership has been invited and will attend the meeting in the President•• office tomorrow morning at 10:15. The Vice President, Speaker
  • STATED JUDGMENTSAND PAGE 3 RUEHC 108715 G Q M F I O ~ N I I A L ., ANALYSISo WE REALIZE THAT YOU WILL P~AY THIS ~A~TIO~SLY gUT -WE EXPECT THAT PREss MAYTRY. To GET us our ON A LIMB·) OQ WE ~R~ DRAWINGNO REPEA! NO NEW t □ NtLUSIONS iN OUR COMMENTS ro
  • the atudy of to ■peed tb1 ■ problem. the •tudy of tho Indian nuclea~ problem au Mid be wow.cl laaue a NSAM ahortly. PRESERVATION COPY ~/DRAFT June•• 1966 MEMORANDUM FOR THI: PR.E;IDENT We picked the Indian nucleu in your new ••ri••of meettaa
  • on the ticker em in the Record on Monday. I have to see one on the ticker. the Members did not submit them. Nothing central I~- else sent to Files as ot ,/,,.'//4'7 ff, ,l, Ii., this morning But that does not mean that DearC-.r••amaa: TIil• l• wbll
  • -- McCafferty 17 -- SitRoom 17 Wheeler 17 Excerpts VC critique memo, report msg, from ---------------------- offensive movements A ------------------- -------------------------- morning Memo, impending 17 JCS fact remarks items sheet, D 82d
  • at me and said, "When can you be in Vietnam?" Well, that was a shock at about eight-ten in the morning, at that time. And I said, "General, I'm ADCSOPS; you've got me on all these joint programs; if you want a real transition, it would take me at least
  • - ,.~Lrv) ID NOYember 1959, howeYel', after these new agreemat• for coopen.tlon had 1one Into effect, the Committee wu lnformallJ adriaed of a plaD whenbJ a U. S. nuclear weapon, the MB-1 (th6''Genie"air•to-air rocket) the nucleai- componBnt, would be mated
  • declaration and intentions. I thmk Thieu was impressed with tl-le arg'1mer-ts for taking adv:antage of the present situation to mobilize greater popular .SU??Ort. The next morning, he held a 1neeting of the Natio11.al Security Council ar.tl includec
  • Treaty, ln:;l.1!11tlonof thing which cnn be relied upan ·for U1e •. Absent this option natior,~ such as ,;~· •..··the ..hc,thnc-;· r..new Ontcr Spacr! Trcnty, heavy purpose of polichl% this treaty i.1 .Indln and Japan, !or e:,n.;nple. !acerl ,,,·ith
  • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Khe Sanh battle--------------------------------------- paper, vv xx announcement----------------------------- Msg, 31 -- Remarks CofS--­ to appointment--------------------- new offensive 30 Rostow ss move
  • and interrogated by Saigon police, the-:-V-1e~Cong°pfaii..to.:.:.lfrg:-aiii~~~ ..~:ti'o,­ ti~o1.:Paople:!2.~:llM~.=-iiegoJiate~for peace,.: /.rhis new Front plans -t;·-• substitute General Duong Van Minh for Thieu and Ky as National Leader of South Vietnam
  • RTM DEP TY T OF T TE DER E RETARY G/PM March 26, Mr. Charles Chuck 1964 Johnson 1 Attached for your information pursuant to our discussion this morning. Dana I apologize for of some of the pages my last copies. the fuzziness
  • with the included more than S108 million for whole new f'ntcrprise of sea Ooor en• r~a~ and engineering programs. p;inrering.'' Ten years ago the Navy was sending only one or two offirers a year for ul the Navy isn"t ti1inkinp; of ocran JlClSt•graduate oceanography
  • placed ln orbi around th e RatheT, this resolution c lls for abstention. It would repreae t inte tional r cognit on that the a rac in oute sp ce at no be ex nded Lnto thi new nvir en that while a es eking w ye of l iting and rd cing ezieting P111U1nuants
  • AND TACTICS OF THIS Ef\\E~'(o F~ENS\VE AR.cBfC()/'4\.N&CLEARER•BEGINNINGON 31 .:ANlJAR.i 1t-\E '4c PRoPAt\ OR6ANSANNOUNCED THE EXISTENCEOF A NEW ''R.E\JCL\Yt( ONPrft'I 4~M~O FOR.CE
  • , New Menco ALBERT GORE, TennTHOMAS 0. MORRIS, New Mm.co HENRY M. JACKSON, Wuhlncton JOHN YOUNG, Tena BOURKE B. HIOKENLOOPER, Iowa ORAIO HOSMER, Califomla GEORGE D, ALKEN, Vennonl WILLIAM H. BATES, Muucbu11ettl WALLACE I'. BENNETT, Utah JOHN B. ANDERSON
  • with this reasoning, be sent in numbers sufficient only to enable us to keep faith with our troops in exposed positions, as in the northern end of South ·viet-Nam -- and not to continue the past emphasis on "search and destroy." The new emphasis should
  • conferred tion, and made the 0910 hours this morning I discussed the Khe Sanh by telephone with General Westmoreland. He had just from a visit.to northe~n I Corps Area during which he with senior commanders, personally surveyed the situa­ finalized
  • be continuously evaluated in terms of both the potential end intention of the recipient country to engage in n mrtional program. 7. Mo new control mechanisms or formalized inter-llecncy committee:i i,ra required, but improved coorclinntion, cr.chnnna of views
  • 16 BUTFEELING IS STRONG HERETHATu.s. IS PUSHINGITS THESIS TOOHARD. REACTIONIN FRANCEIS DEFINITELYBECOMING ADVERSE NOMATTER HOWBENEFICIALEFFECTSOF THSE STATEMENTS MAYBE ELSEwttERE. (CY SULZBERGER TOLDME THIS MORNING THATAT SOCIALGATHERING IN MY
  • cooperatloa. Hen'• boplD1 the •ale• of JOIII' aoftl ue eq,aalllD1 lta 1•11eral ftM receptle>D, Slllcerely, Erle F. Ooldman Special Couultu.t "' Mr. Monla Pblllpaoa X~•Ddom Houae, lac. New-York 22, New York tothePre•ldaDt
  • . Cannon ({_sen. (Nevada) ~ Sen, Philip A. Hart - ~ ~ (Michigan) Sen. Gale W. McGee (Wyoming) Sen. Claiborne Pell (Rhode Island) Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (Massachusetts) a_sen. Donald Russell (South Carolina) ~ "- ~ ~ ~ Hon. John W. King Governor of New
  • way. TIM Val ... ata&ee u.. .. ; .,.,...... •• u -- le ,.aw e,...aaft. ~.. Imm• -..new• ..ti.. la -,ace., to~ • ....... er •eue, ntef..-matep-lrNl.,•••CwecUtoexam to .. __. ....... wa..--.1l11ht.a1 p..._.-~. •cl .. t, Metile JIily 30
  • and American induetry, and its ■ uccee ■ ful eUort ■ ■hould be communicated to every American. '
  • of the That Section 24 of the of America in Congress assembled, Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, is amended by adding a new sub­ section "d. d. as follows: an Assistant who shall General l-Bnager for Military be an active commissioned officer and who
  • of Alabama, for/a , reappointment / term )\ Dr. Rufus C. Haris, of Georgia, for a term expiring Mai: , 968, vice The Reverend Theodore rt n Hesburgh ~~;a.' Arnold • Picker, of New York, for a term ~A11\T'
  • . ........ .,, tbat tlae Z2ad Bomb . .,'L..Jl_.,,_,-.p .. wh1c1' Lle•teMat Beacll wu aaalped at tlle time will Jaaw reualo at tlle Park Sherato Hotel, Ttll Awne aatl 55tll StrNt. New Y•k CltJ, l-1J 14 aad II. It la ••l • tut Ille mu wJao may INt at tbla re1mlOIIwo.i
  • ..,,_ has been considerable, .. ~ inflated_by civilians.·. .. ; ~ .... _ ,,,._ incltli¼io~ ~~ To some extent .... by measures already taken. 2 - Heavy S•E•C ft•E•'f infiltration of both new units is continuing. made prior A strenuous
  • . Germany They There ei-e 1IO easy answers to any of these questions. will require a new spirit of trust and cooperation am:mg all the nations of the world. That spirit, Chancellor Erhard, is embodied 1n the friendship of our two great nations. And so
  • QUOTE1n the of our news in Genevao UNQUOTE lOo Para 13, second sentence. range would include with strategic in the freeze bomberse 11. Para 14. 12. Para 15, third primary mission 13. Also we have defined vehicles Delete last Add follo
  • the uranium waa needed "is ,' · , ,the same no matter what kind I n.f_Allhm.AJ!ln.• .VIOJLftnt..J.t. t .. " •• NEW YORK, SUNDAY, APRIL 17, 1966. ATOR1DENIED FUEL TOPARIS· SINCE '64 DESPITE U.S.PACT: ActionApparentlyintended to Penalizethe French
  • ", Box 33] o~n Lt/l&/12 OS an9ram New Delhi A-9 70 c- ~ 4f~9f66 94 A'l8A'l9 G. .IORR68R &oReeten s 2 5~~88 05 memo Keeny to Rostow s 1 4/29/66 A Optn 'lbO/tSptt R,l'tC'11~ opU1 q/1'5/ll ijt;S oq-1&.1-e I\- i-7 ,fl,,. [Sanitized per
  • be leaving the meeting at 1100, we should tum to the heart of the problem, the MLF. Mr. Bates said he would like to discuss problem. this it 1n tact it still is a He said he had Just attended 111eetingsof the NATOParliamentarians in New York
  • only 5% to 15% of the capability of this new machine. Therefore it seems to me our denial would be effective to forestall a significant contribution to French nuclear warhead and delivery capabilities. Accordingly, I would propose IBM not be authorized
  • to be much less and perhaps to satisfy interests. At a later of death," and of the new force policy France's the military probably and military engage in lobbying, successors for a French and will full not have This feeling difficult need