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  • of reasons (influence of Cart~erisme, desire eOifti'!m:fff:EMs °tOMF:EBFJNlf 3:M:. A- 383 from DAKAR 4 of de Gaulle to extend French aid to new areas), France will do no more in Senegal than it considers absolutely necessary. It is clear, however
  • Fowler: 1. First reports on the market situation {at 11: 00 A . M . ) are encouraging. The reaction to De Gaulle 1 s decision is good. The pound rate is up and funds are flowing from marks into francs . The dollar is firm and the gold market is relatively
  • . briefing note, May 9, 1967, confidential; memorandum of conversation be- · tween Lucius D. Battle, Sir Patrick Dean, and Charles Lucet, May 15, 1967, confidential. A SECW /NODIS 1"ffia 5 f 9 P*I' /NODIS -6­ Israel was becoming concerned
  • for reprcduction and eventual return to me. This would close all cne most important circuits, as the Historical Office at the De:;•aj;"--;:.uier.i.tof State :.i.a::; he:..:: ;:-;., .._-..;~.:1. for t::.c p~zt year, and I am sending them the just-unearthed 31
  • ·:: Cornman Market .countries (and -increasingly in the UK) than Atlantic partnership. De Gaulle is in trouble at home when he seems to oppose European unity - not when he opposes NATO. The President could offer to sell advanced civil 2.nd military "technology
  • work out. SEGRE~ -----· ( 17 . 52 . .1961 NOV 26 E.E A5 89 00 WTEH1 lJTE15 ;­ DE WT E 2569 FR0;1 !JALT ROSTOt# TO THE PRESIOtNT . INFO .GEORGE CHRISTIAN C!T.E CAP671;021 s~· NOVEMBER 26 , 1967 . ... GREEK RES?ONSE TO ANKAHA·s
  • : a. Cambodia --Sihanouk has made a turn-around, and, therefore, the critical situation in C~bodia is improved. Developmexts will slow down because Sihanouk is taking a vacation and visiting France. Ambas­ sador Bohlen is seeing de Gaulle today in an effort
  • that, we ehUe, the !Ados are preeamg ·bard for u. s. 0 neutrallty 0 on Malay•ta In place of lllPpol't '9• Malayala. 3, In *'••po1u1e, Buak•• hae empbaslaed repeatedly that our de•dre ls to preserve our .,llateral Jfelatloas. wlth fQdeneela deeplte duter•nc
  • think both Dean an:l I were equally taken with the idea I mentioned to hiin of my trying soon to have a further talk with Kosygin and Brezhnev. This is not of course designed to take the wind out of De Gaulle 1 s sails {though if that were a by-product
  • integrated command is endorsed•. Seeing now how many will go with us. De Gaulle wants to go to Mos cow and freewheel with freedom. END OF NOTES
  • drafted and edited letters &xtx de Gaulle, Wilson, Erhard) Mothers and Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. children Jack Valenti and Courtenay Nancy Dickerson and child -Marvin Wat son andchild Eddie Weisl, Jr. and child pau l Rogers and child the President had
  • said this country's relationships with Germany have been good, that Kiesinger "had a little affair" with de Gaulle but we let him run off awhile knowing that he would be back. The President said a continuing problem is that 14 Senate leaders in his own
  • on the French gold order, and they'd be buying, I don't know, so many tons a week. They wouldn't keep a nickel in this country when de Gaulle was in power. G: Another issue that year had to do with the OCD [Organized Crime Division of the Internal Revenue
  • Excise tax reduction; raising the discount rate in 1965; Robert McNamara's and Charles Schultze's misrepresentations of defense expenditures; Barr's involvement in the opening of a bank in Vietnam; the effect of U.S. involvement in Vietnam
  • views on this problem to President Belaunde. and Foreign Minister Vasquez. We have a.ent our Deputy Chief of Mission in Lima to London to ttalk with Haya de la Torre, leader of Belaunde's political opposition~ to urge him to take .~ ~ of the pressure off
  • . Included h naval a1sl1tance and a guided missile de ■troyer, 100 combat advisers, and a 73-man tran1port aircraft unit. Australia le now In the process of deploying an additional 1700-man reinforced infantry battalion which will bring the total to 8000. men
  • to bis proposal and that after his talks in Moscow he will be seeing Prime Ministers Wilson and Pearson and U Thant and may see. President de Gaulle and the Pope. Behler feels it is critically important for him to be able to tell the Soviets that he
  • deterrent, perhaps Ger·man desfres can.be curbed. 2. Europe and de Gaulle. De Gaulle raises Wilson's hackles. But in Wilson's view the only alternative is to live with him until nature takes its course and make s.ure that in the interim the rest of Europe
  • "l·l'J-95 DAT E RESTRI CTION 8/4/67 NL-T 9'+ -190 Ro&tow to President, 11:00 a . m. C 1 p trpUt JI -1 1 - 95" NL-J 941 -1 tJo Rio de Janeiro 816 8/4/67 A Rostow to President, 7:35 p.m. S 1 P CSP.N Im;.\' C./~h' ~§'1t1 ~.,,.-f.,.....{ '1 ~/01 M 'l
  • in Asia, and with the forthcoming de Gaulle trip, possibilities of French .m ischief were apparent. It was decided, therefore, tltiat with the stakes for Thailand so high, it was time to get a focus on other possibilities. Therefore, he had approved
  • team tended to downplay such problems as recalcitrance on the part of de Gaulle, difficulties within NATO, or pressures on Berlin. US reactions to situations threatening the aecur-i ty of Thailand, the Philippines, Formosa, Japan and South Korea were
  • right now and no one knows it. (He g i a c k tonight) Yes No / GECftET February 19, 1965 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Your meeting with Couve de Murville at 11:30 this morning l. Obviously the dominant topic is Southeast Asla
  • Honorable Robert D. Murphy Leo D. Welch Eugene R. Black Dr. Kin9man Brewster Ireknd President Eamon De Valera Prime Minister John M. Lynch lion. Frank Aiken - Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Hon. Charles. Haughey - Finance Minister Hon. George
  • . .( .. -:..---- ,, Monday, March Zl, 1966 4:30 pm · ~ ·10 the draf reply to De Gaulle , for signatur appr ove. s o attach ed is General Eisenhower's comment to Goo dpa ster on the letter • which Andy read to him . While accepting the force of Eisenhower's sugge s t e d
  • the likelihood that it will be reported as "another tough U.S. note to de Gaulle. " 5. I know of no way. to avoid this, however, if we are to put our legal position into the historical record in the wake of de Gaulle's unilateral decisions. 6. It would
  • ] De Gaulle, and [Harold] Macmillan; then in Italy--I was there when the Expeditionary Force was there; then in Switzerland, Geneva; then in Spain, Madrid; then for eight months in the Balkan Commission of the United Nations in Greece
  • be carefully handled or they may start the unravelling of our Western defenses. De Gaulle's abrupt a_c tion in pulling his own forces out of NATO was a brutal blow at the solidarity of the Alliance, • and there could be great danger from f~rther withdrawals
  • of Staff recommended, and you approved, the de ployment of Marines to Danang. Two battalion landing teams were approved for such deployment on February 25. The bombing did not reverse the situation and we did not expect it would. In the first week of March
  • OF-KINDNESS SHOWW REFUSEES BY (IDF. THIS COULD HAVE A V•RY EFTCIA~- EFFECT ON n\E18 DESIRE TO RETURN, AS WELL AS ON GENER.AL JORDANIAN ATTITL)DE TOWARD ISRAELIS,) GOJ REMAINS DETERMINED SOMEHOW · TO FORCE A RETURN EN MASSE BUT MODALITIES STILL UNCLEAR. TitE
  • . In the House, Charles Halleck defeats Joseph Martin for minority leader. Martin had served as the Republican leader since 1939. Rayburn is re-elected speaker. The Senate consists of 64 Democrats and 34 Republicans, including 2 senators from the new state
  • their fma­ tr .Uon they Ul tura to vlole:nt re~olu.tloa.. 3. C ·•trc Widentaads that hb ld.Uty to acor• a vlc:t-o~y els•• where in th6 he1ulaplwre de}:')enda ht large part on social at1J aco.n omie dl content providing fertile gr·o und for iu·urgency~ Ou
  • ..alntenanceof such units t:iould be matter strictly . . between Phllippine Government and South Vietnamese Government with no ,-ORM 9-83 DS-322A • Corrections made on ~~~~de on this and other ffimsy work copies before delivery to Telecommunications
  • SENATE RATIFICATION, AND 2) REOPEN ALL OTHER SOFA AGREEMENTS IN ASIA, WHICH ARE NON-RECIPRO·CAL. · 4-. DEGA ULLE ON US R IG HTS PRlfSIDENT DE GAULLE · TOLD AMBASSADOR BOHLEN NOVEMBER 10 T~AT AHRANGEf,JENTS COULD BE MADE FOR US MILITARY SUPPLIES
  • • CONFIDEN'fIAL Three meetings were scheduled for Buenos Aires: 1. IA-ECOSOC This meeting was held from February 13 to 15 • . Lincoln Gordon represented the United States. Santamaria was re-elected Chairman of CIAP. Sanz de Romero of Bolivia, Sola of Argentina
  • ao the deta.lls could be worked out 1n mutually agreeable dlscused that we would be wllllng to accept. lonn. would ·be a.eta of mntual de-escalation. Among the lssues to be lndudlng a cessatlc:,n of· the 'bombing of the North. The Pollsb
  • agreeable dlscused that we would be wllllng to accept. lonn. would ·be a.eta of mntual de-escalation. Among the lssues to be lndudlng a cessatlc:,n of· the 'bombing of the North. The Pollsb repreaentatlve said that he .had conveyed our vlewe to Banol
  • are more serious than our own. There hasn 1 t been a time in the last year that I haven't wanted to (inaudible) one of us came in here together and I am sure that anyone that started off this thing with me, change Kosygin and de Gaulle(?). I will outdo them
  • . If you look at the other side of the coin, we have had our difficulties with the French; the French withdrew from NATO back in de Gaulle's time, and we argue with the Germans about more money, more troops, and holding up their end. But when you get right
  • of drums. To go up to that cathedral to the beat of drums, to see people like de Gaulle and Haile Selassie and Prince Philip walking along the street and into the church, to look around and see these world leaders in every direction you looked, right
  • could not have the support of the American people to spend the money and the troops that would be necessary. Plus you have the additional factor, if I remember correctly, that [Charles] de Gaulle was not the easiest man in the world