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  • . . . . . .-·::-::--~,. .. ·~- ~JT -~ -01. G T LEG ~ INDICATE: 0 cower 0 CHARGE TO _,· B 2411 .,fllUembassy. Balm ACTION: . :. Orig in · SSInfos . · De f e nse Treas. EXDIS. ,•. Please del iver · the followit:Ag ·.message to ~h.~ncellor f .rom · . \ I., President
  • going down for the third time. I want to see Wilson and De Gaulle out there with their ships all lined up too . " But all of these things have a way of falling apart. He mentioned, for instance , early Congressional support for his actions in Vietnam
  • ? C: Carne back by way of Geneva and through France to visit NATO. F: How did those stops go? C: They were good. They were much more conference-type meetings. I believe, he had a conference with De Gaulle. In Geneva, American delegates were
  • COPY LBJ LIBRARY INCOMING TEIEGJIAM Department o f Sta. j .55 — Control: Rec'd: FROM: Be lg ra d e beigra de ACTION: S e c s ta te 290 , Immediate DATE: A u g ust 14, 5 p.m . Authority Info jQ A ID p ^ . ^ ^ IN R NSA OOD NIC RMR ^ ID
  • with France, that he would do nothing which would in any way jeopardize our close relationship. On at least three occasions he told me that he had explained to De Gaulle that it was in Ger:.:-n any' s interest to have a close relationship with the US
  • ,.et-Namto be allowed to CUl-de that we lthei:- Olfft country in their o~ way." ••It is agai.Mt this objective should measure all our actions at the conference table. We will have succeeded if -weattain it--otherwise 1 we have lost. £• Cessation
  • an Israeli flag. u Black thinks this will be wholly unacceptable to Israel. DE~IFIID f3 -- 5 ~ t0 , NARA, Dane ..r-21~ 91 Authority 1//l ,[ eq / ~ -2.- 5/99/67 7- Ultimately -- down the road -- is this .question: How do Nasser to go back on his
  • by General Charles Timmes, one of the great men that I have known in my life, and then of course MACV [Military Assistance Command, Vietnam] came into being with General [William] Westmoreland and then General [Paul D.] Harkins. G: Well, it was the other way
  • McGarr, Charles Timmes and Paul Harkins as commanders of Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) and later Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV); Jacobson's work for Agency for International Development (AID) in Vietnam; the 1963 coup in Vietnam
  • dedicated to, and we ne. proud to have organlzaUo~ such •• your,a, as partn-era ln thie enterprise. l wlab the N•a,:· Eaet Foundation anothoi, 4ft, yea.re ol equally ·e ucceaaful and much appreciated service. Sincerely, \ Mi-. E. De Alton Partridge Pii·e
  • been prompted by concern over the possibility of an early end of NATO. This is an issue of the utmost D . . e.o.12958,Sec.· .5 tate Dept.~de By c& ,, -.~,u.,.. ine -SEClffl'f ,. -2sensitivity. that security be difficult ! ' .,! Second
  • TO OFFICIAL ANNOYNCEMENT A. 0 t1' ~-j I b i I I,-~ I r-- I :_! j !l - ! -1~1 2• NOWTHAT DECISIONS HAVE BEEN TAKEN TO STRENGTHENNATO DE• !,\ f!, FENSE FOLLOWING·THE iNVASION OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA,DISCUSSION WITH / THE! SOVIETS ON STRATEGIC-ARMSLIMITATIONS
  • with restrictions contained in the donor's de ed of gift . GENERAL SE RVICES ADMINISTRAT ION GSA DC 73- 4 95 GSA FORM 7122 (7-72) NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR T I TLE
  • , through press, radio, and personal contact, to General de Gaulle's view of the situation. He has expressed to our Ambassador some con­ cern over the casualties suffered by the civilinn population in the bombing of the North. He also recently told a Chinese
  • Comrmmities in January 1962. Although considered to be a follower of General de Gaulle, Chatenet has expressed public sympathy for an Atlantic nuclear partnership. Drafted by: EUR/RPE/REKaufman:spe S/S-S I.L. Fuller. Cleared By: AEC - Mr. ·Hoyle SCI - Mr
  • -------------------..-----..-.. ._,...,... . ,. ·_:.. - ; ; . '. "fo. • • • ,. . :. • • • .. . . . : ;_~;.:_. :f ·,,._. . ·•.~~-z ...~ QAA577 '''"',.< , t, o ·2!':~:.;.;¼. _.. . V :··.. DE •i~:-::_·~···•: ,; 17 27412.).:., ~ ;: 0 ·3 ZYH ZFF-2 _:_.t F,~{ GEN '!!HEELER CJCS UASH QC ~-:t;_' .-INFO l•lR . ROSTC
  • on the Israeli desalting project: George Woods Charles Schultze Lincoln Gordon William Webster /4alter Heller Max Millikan James Riddleberge r This list has been sifted by State, AEC, Interior, Don Hornig's staff and by Mac Bundy. State put Dave Bell at the top
  • . DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12 58, ec. 3.5 S , te De t. Guirleli es ,NARA,Dae --a~ By_ _ C .. ·coNr !.DEM'fIAL President Helou of Lebanon On May 16, 1966, you approved in principle an informal working visit of President Charles Helou of Lebanon. For internal
  • guess, was to see General de Gaulle in the fall of 1964 . � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • rning access to notional se,curily info.-mation. ( B) Closed by statute or by the age ncy which ori ginated the doc ument. (C) C losed in a c c ordance with restric tions contained in the d onor's de ed of gift. GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION GS A DC
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 9 B: O f course, that was a factor in it too. president de Gaulle was--. I think there was no question about the fact that he was running a very hard game, trying to knock off the preeminent position of the United States
  • TO REGARD NFLSVN AS INCLUDING IMPORTANT NUMBERS OF NON-COMMUNI S T S . HE A T T R IB U T E S T H IS TO ROUTINE V IE T CONG BRAIN WASHING OF PLA N TERS BEING HELD FOR RANSOM. WHEN ASKED WHETHER HE PRESUMED QUA I AND ESP EC IA LLY DE GAULLE WERE THINGKING
  • of the intractable de Gaulle, while maintaining and strengthening our necessary relations of intimacy with the Germans and the British. In the Congo, we have shown both the necessary courage in rescuing hostages and a purpose of conciliation which will be more
  • - 'f8P S!Cl!Tc; Action CONTROL I Info RECD I 12192 MAY12,· 1967 7t32 AR DECbASSlFIED : • - ' PP RUEHC . AuthorityRAC e:~ 4S ,:J.•. . ' _ ·t DE RUDKLM 103A 1321150 1 · . By, u..v ~~ Date ~ ?':J _!f.i ,. ZNYTTTTT . " P·J21025Z MAY67 FMAMEMBASSY
  • of July or early Au.gu•t. De Gaulle goes to Moscow June ZO and returns to Paris July 1. Our choices are: ------- Aak Dillon to go early Ask Dillon to see de Gaulle after Moscow ---- Wait and see what transpires in Moscow . My reflection is this: To g
  • and generally favorable. Secretary McNamara replied affirmative, as did Director Bell and Directo r McCone. Secretary Rusk said the only exception was the proposal which Ambassador Lodge had made with respect to bow to handle de Gaulle's snpport
  • must institute a comprehensive economic program, which should probably include such measures as budget balancing, wage-price restraint, an increase in imports and a de facto devaluation of about 50%; we would be prepared to support such a program
  • of the President's, in my view, primary role in avoiding any kind of spitting contest with de Gaulle. I think that this is one of the President's signal achievements in foreign affairs which nobody seems to realize or give the man credit for. M: Hopefully, that's
  • for a period of over seven, eight, ten years, and he had his hundred wells or so that he could drill. That creates new jobs, a good field with a depression gOing on, and then they send back from Washington permission to drill four wells and the Charles Evans
  • mo:ra Gtaff work. ... a.,. rigl.~ir: 3 the balence I_ ·.:'.;.L;i_: all he asks we think you should be forthccr:iing. llc des~ .::.:....;~:ynoes::.:: the technical and economic advice avail• c:..lo to our government. It would be as much to our benefit
  • was viable . Senator Mansfield replied that in his view SEATO was a paper tiger, adding that the President ' s policy toward Vietnam was the only one we could follow . The President said we had recently attempted to find out what de Gaulle was trying
  • welcome this rapprochement and not be concerned that it would be at our expense. M: Mc: And Mr. Johnson bought that? Yes. He was always very careful, as you know, of everything he said about De Gaulle. He was similarly very tolerant of the German
  • in Georgia. So it was a team. I think that was his great mistake in Viet Nam. On the rest of the world I thought he did well. To elaborate I thought that he was cool and proper with De Gaulle. He never got sore at De Gaulle publicly. He might have been
  • of that nature? B: Yes, he was. He had come back for some kind of briefing. M: What about the funeral itself and Mr. Johnson as a personal diplomat with all the world leaders who came in? I know in the case of De Gaulle it was rumored
  • not recall any ot .r.,,_,"'.'., , ~,,.\. .'.'"'"'': ,,i bis and therefore I dropped the matter. · ··--··~-- ·-· - · · -~. :.. . b. I told Pre~ident Johnson that E isenhower .felt the de Gaulle problem. must be solved, and if it is not solved NATO
  • gilt and crystal hall~ of Versailles as the guests of President ·and Madame de Gaulle at a splendid state dinner., And· the two presidents spoke in response lo toasts glowing words of praise for each other. So sharp and so public are their differencc:J
  • the commitment to South Vietna.in• In general, the peace offensive is supported, but doubts are expressed that it would produce any results. Ambassador Goldberg reported on his conversations with UN Secretary General U Thant, the Pope, Italian leaders, de Gaulle
  • , Soviet missile and nuclear programs, Eisenhower, Dwight D., General de Gaulle, the Dominican Republic, Rhodesia, and the IndoGeneral [1954-1968] Pak struggle for Kashmir. Also in this folder are materials on Eisenhower's public statements on Vietnam