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  • - A Waldorf Astoria NYC Thurs. In motorcade, throug h secre t servic e radio , th e President learne d tha tChairman Khrushchev had resigned. The Presiden t change d to a n ope n car fo r remainde r o f motorcade. . .police estimate ove r three-quarters o
  • promptly on the eleventh of August, later that year, when Khrushchev started the wall around Berlin. We went through another big meeting at the White House on that occasion, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff suggested, and Secretary McNamara approved, that we
  • of the U.S.S.R. Mikoyan, on a tour of the U.S., urges East-West talks about Berlin. In November 1958, Khrushchev had issued an ultimatum, saying the Soviets would sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany in 6 months thereby terminating Allied rights in West
  • military strength in a manner which would not create domestic or foreign panic, nor at a rate or form which would antagonize Khrushchev. At the same time the level of U.S. effort should be such as to be fully convincing of U.S. intent. Rusk observed
  • , appears the following statement "Did you know it appears that the present United Nations session is meeting primarily to find ways and means of keeping the Congo under the rule of the whites? And, certain nations are trying to discredit NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV
  • . ~- ~-:, ;- : -. :~ 4 indicate the danger of forcing Khrushchev to take a militant defensive attitude with respect to Cuba. Secretary Rusk said that should the Cubans shoot down a U-2, raid peaceful shipping off the coast or should there be a strong OAS resolution
  • , President Lyndon Johnson: 1963 Newspaper Clippings: Meeting - Khrushchev, President Lyndon Johnson: 1963 Newspaper Clippings: Letters, President Lyndon Johnson: 1963 Newspaper Clippings: Legislature, President Lyndon Johnson: 1963 Newspaper Clippings: Labor
  • China are even greater than those which have been made public. Even the person of Khrushchev is now att acked by 1he Chinese Communists. d, South Vietnam - -Although there is little new information, the prospects of Khanh maintaining his position
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 background that I had the good fortune to have had been the Director of CIA, he wouldn't have asked him to be on it. F: Later in the year, in the fall of '64, Khrushchev was ousted, and you made the statement that this surprised
  • ; Diem administration; JFK assassination; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; comparison of LBJ and JFK regarding information; Chinese nuclear bomb; supersonic transport; conference with Franco in Spain; removal of Khrushchev; retirement of McCone; William F. Raborn
  • research and exploration was covered in the Kennedy~ Khrushchev correspondence of February-March 1962 in both specific and general terms, has progressed to the point of firm agreement on three projects, and is the subject of an apparently continuing
  • The Situation As Conununist China's only ally in East Europe, the regime in Albania clings to Stalinist methods of rule, and remains stridently hostile to the West, its traditional enemy -- Yugoslavia, and to the present rulers in the Soviet Union. Khrushchev's
  • 1,880 feet . We have identified at least 8'0 sites for this new system, and believe that several hundred will be deployed to supplement the SA-2. - 22­ .. ,,,3.) . ...,.' ._. • •w . ( .. ( KHRUSHCHEV'S RESOURCE ALLOCATI ON PROBLEMS I
  • in her honor. Mayor Miller presents her with a proclamation designating it as her day. 5/5 Khrushchev announces that the Soviets shot down an American reconnaissance plane on 5/1. Eisenhower says plane is a U-2 on a weather mission out of Turkey. 5/6
  • !~ and Medicine--A proposal for co­ operation in this fie was made by the Soviet group, apparently in belated respo~se to President Kennedy's first letter to Chairman Khrushchev on space cooperation in March, 1962. The procedure for joint preparation
  • Horses and Burros] Reorganization FOREIGN RELATIONS A - G [7 folders] 672 H - Z [18 folders] 673 Aid [6 folders] 674 Berlin, City of [2 folders] Cuba [2 folders] Exhibits Japan Khrushchev [2 folders] 675 Khrushchev - [invitation to Dallas] Mexico
  • that Arif has distinguished himself in recent months as seriously lacking in discretion (several reports indicated as much during his attendance along with Khrushchev at the Aswan Dam inauguration ceremonies in the United Arab Republic) The Department
  • of destination LLA043 RA018 NSAOO~ DA002 D HSC777 NL PD HOUSTON TEX 14 VICE PRESIDENT LYNDON B JOHNSON WASHOC RE YOUR DENIAL OF VACILLATION BY THIS ADMINISTARTION MAY SUGGEST QUOTE MARVIN MAKINEN ALIVE OR KHRUSHCHEV DEAD WITHIN 48 HOURS UNQOUTE SOUND HISTORICAL
  • PORTIONS PRES• AND O\t.JN STATE­ MENTS TCl PROVE JET BOM~ERS HA0 AlWAYS BEEN INCLUDED 1-N CATEGORY OFFENSIVE WEAPdNSo STATED QU6:ST\qN IL-28 AIRCRAFT WAS BEING TAKEN UP BY P~ES Wl'TH KHRUSHCHEV TODAYe NOTED ALL OThl[R MATTERS ON WHl~H S0VS NEGATIVE WOULD
  • oral message to Chanc e llor Erhard covering the Khrushchev exchange on troop reductions (Tab A ), George McGhee, on instructions (Tab B), touched on several additional items : 1. · He expressed on your behalf appreciation for the Chancellor's message
  • /loh/oh As political luck would have it, at least that's the way I construe it, the very next day Khrushchev was deposed. That seized all the front page and the headlines and all of the columnists and all of the commentators. F: And drove Walter
  • 20, 1963 pro­ zone would appl·Y, only to the oo&ata ot Near Ba.atern oountr1ea land areas. Group 5 Declassified one year after date of .origin. LIMITED OFFICIAL USE nuclear-free but not to their LIMITED OFFICIAL USE - 2 - Khrushchev's to Cairo
  • and the Pathet Lao responsible for getting support to the Viet Cong into Vietnam.. Secreta:ry Mc:laNr., agreed that this was so. Mr. Wilson TOlunteered that he had asked Khrushchev why he dicln •t bring pressure to bear to en­ force the neutrality agreement 1D
  • ~uccess of West Germany and West Berlin as compared to East Germany. This is the historical fact on which we must fasten our eyes. This is the historical fact which Khrushchev understands . He is trying to deal with it via barbed wire, troops, and bullying
  • with Chairman Khrushchev concerning the reduction in the production of fissionable material for military purposes, Mr. Khrushchev raised some matters which I would like to report to you. I am most anxious that my correspondence with Mr. Khrushchev remain
  • - excavation techniq\les (See Tabs A and B), although the USSR leads the world in large-scale excavation with conventional explosives. Clearly, at the time of the Test Ban Treaty negotiations, Khrushchev did not ~nvisage early amendment of the Treaty, and his
  • control of the SAM system, and we do not rule this out despite the high political cost to the USSR. The US, how­ ever, can have no assurance that Khrushchev will take this way out. Indeed, we continue to estimate that the odds favor the complete turnover
  • a lliance itself is "mo r e important than the buildup." He said that Khrushchev's major objective in Berlin had been t o smash the alliance but this had not been achieved. The European allies, he said, "now think the United States has leadership
  • and Berlin-Documents 10 Report of Four Power Working Group on Germany and Berlin September, 1961 Report of the Four-Power Working Group on Germany and Berlin Thompson-Gromyko 1st exchange [Trade with the Soviet Union] Notes on Dealing With Khrushchev Middle
  • these are the main ones. P: What do you see as significant milestones in our relations with Russia over the last seven years? N: Well, the first important point in my mind was the meeting in Vienna between Mr. Khrushchev and President Kennedy. I think
  • is a provocative act, Khrushchev's statement might be quoted in which he said that he was aware of the U.S. satellite photograph:f,.ng the USSR, that he had not protested and that it could take as many pic­ tures as we wanted. Noted the President's request
  • to reveal their flaws often Secretary that I would tike for you all to come up with some proposals beside just having [Khrushchev] run me in a corner and me dodge like a Mexican bullfighter. From a conversation with Roy Wilkins, January 6, 1964 I don't
  •  General  War [Review of Overseas Military Bases, 1960] Saturday Duty List Secretary’s File Management Notebook, 1962 Security Regulations – Central Intelligence Group Social Workers Committee for Nuclear Disarmament – Open letter to Kennedy and  Khrushchev
  • Khrushchev came to this country he visited the Mesta plant. M: Were you along on that visit. I wasn't along on that visit but I was with him twice afterwards. first place, him. I~s In the at the dinner at the White House that had been given for Then I
  • into areas which were covered by our treaty commitments elsewhere. To give one or two examples, in June 1961 Chairman Khrushchev produced a crisis on Berlin in his meeting with President 3 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • we are interested in the life and times, and we're interested in your career there and elsewhere. B: Well, if you recall, Khrushchev fell in the fall, I don't recall the date--the fall of that year. And there was a document that circulated around