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  • . , Only a prompt meeting bet.ween President Kenned y and Prime Minister Macmillan coud put things right , in the opinion of Americans who have studied the Berlin problem and of Britons who put the AtlnntiC' allian ce first. Both ·sets of observers a r e
  • . One thing Prime Minister MacMillan of England had said to Jack about President Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon, that Eisenhower never let Nixon on the place, impressed Jack a lot . Every time there was a state � � � � LBJ Presidential Library
  • force, so Ambassador Merchant was brought in to head up the Smilth-Lee team and go out for an extensive round of discussions with the Europeans . The curve rises until the summer of '63 when President Kennedy visited Europe and was told by MacMillan
  • in but Michael Pallister, who was the foreign office chap who had been assigned as sort of the special assistant, almost a sort of a Henry Kissinger, to Wilson (he actually had the same position under MacMillan), apparently brushed Brown aside and got
  • , [,..,Le ~ _1 Following is text o.i: personal message f rom the P-.1.·er;ident to de Gaulle, Adenauer and Macmillan. Paris a.ncl Bonn chou.ld deli ver depc1r tel soonest and discuss drawing on/~ 939 as necessary. For info London message has been
  • sends LBJ a memo on American-British relations in light of today’s opening of the Bermuda Conference between Eisenhower and Prime Minister MacMillan. Reedy emphasizes the fact that our alliance with Britain is the foundation of our foreign policy despite
  • , interested in nuclear to examine the qualitatively 8 for whose establishment and Macmillan France; for France of her nuclear in 1958, as if instrlllllent. seemed to occupy a "rank" distressing and it seems possible that •~ranee is capable strength