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  • , forcing a delay for another year in fulfilling an old commitment. for financing this road. 20.0 21.0 Te·r mination of assistance by Prince Sihanouk is expected not only to reduce requirements for this year to amounts already obligated, but r.eleases
  • STATUS: (Tuk Force Viet Ram has requested thbasaie• Saigoa aacl Pbnca Pesh to atep by damping daWllpreu take firat illvective Af.ter o Sihanouk'• from Geiteva, cliacuasiana retuna will be eacourageci o) 13 o Obta:hted. Diem'• uaiag foreign
  • Khanh was about to take advantage of an apparent reversal of Sihanouk's intention to deal with the North Vietnamese. Mr. Rusk commented that we will encourage the GVN to take full advantage as this might be a most important development. 2. Mr. Rusk
  • . In Laos, we are still working largely within the framework of the 1962 Geneva Accords .. In Cambodia we are still s.ecking to keep Sihanouk from abandoning .whatever neutrality he may still have and fulfilling his threat of' reach­ ing an accommodation
  • , of discipline at home. The Chinese ideas were admired all over Asia during that period. The Indians used to say: "Boy, if we could only organize ourselves the way the Chinese have, we'd lick our problems." Prince Sihanouk of Cambodia and Sukarno of Indonesia
  • and other 'neighbors. 8. Convince Sihanouk that Chinese influence is not 1 'wave of the future. 11 9. 10. Probably does not raise serious risk of escalation as long as survival of DRV not at stake · and invasion of North Viet-Nam not undertaken
  • . .BERGER BT SECRET INFORMA TIO!'J THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON -- b:SCltEl'J CROCODILE Wed., April 8 :55 a. m. 10, 1968 MR. PRESIDENT: If for no other reason, this kind of talk fro~ Sihanouk should rule out Pnom Penh {see marked passage). l)V
  • , replyta, to you meeaaae requeatlag releaae of the elevell aoldiers de .. ta.med with tbe LCU 1577 aDd the helicopter crewman alao detaiDed iD Cambodia. TJae letter wa• paaaed tllroup tb.e French Embaaey. Ill it Prince Sihanouk aaya that he had
  • mission has to a considerable extent removed apprehensions felt by Prince Sihanouk. The GOI has informed Ambassador Bowles that the ICC will not stand by idly and will carry out its de~ cisions to the best of its ability. SECREI ...,.... ACTION Friday
  • ; deteriorating U.S. relations with Prince Norodom Sihanouk, resulting in a break in diplomatic relations with Cambodia, and subsequent efforts by the U.S. to reestablish relations; President Johnson's trips to the Far East and Australia, including the Manila
  • of North Vietnamese troops in South Viet Nam, because more than forty thousand North Vietnamese troops were in Laos contrary to the agreement of 1962, because North Vietnamese-trained guerrillas were operating in Thailand, because Prince [Norodom] Sihanouk
  • . fora~1 s frOUl At Car.1bodia against us in Viet We know Prince Sihanouk does not condone actions and that he lacks military force to prevent them. Yet, because of position in which he uould be put, we do not strike at our enemy in Cambodian
  • activity through computer capability; CIA; Robert Komer and pacification; the Tet Offensive; Westmoreland press briefing after Tet; the media; infiltration; the importance of Cambodia; Sihanouk; problem of interpretation of intelligence; body counts; Sam