Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

57 results

  • BUNDY SAYS HE HAS LETTER TO GREECE'S PRIME MINISTER GEORGE PAPANDREOU READY FOR LBJ TO SEE
  • -r12.1u15 F NLT/ Biographic Sketch s 1 p. sanitized .,12.1111' ~r Nll/RAt 11-115 llCIR't lf\O ,V Mt A c 12·&11?1 undated A NSF, Country File, "Greece, Papandreou Visit 6/23-24/64," Box 127 R ESTRICTION CODES (A ) Closed by Executive Order 12356
  • Papandreou, Georgios Andreou, 1888-1968
  • , WHICH . IN C tRR ENT CIRCUMSTANCES SEEMS TO BE GOOD. MOREOVER ~ . r DO NOT BELIEVE -PAPANDREOU OPPOSITION WOULD OR COULD MAKE POLITICAL CAPITAL OF IT, SINCE GEORGE PAPANDREOU IS FIR~LY ON RECORD' AS SUPPORTING GOG REQUEST FOR us AID. I PAGE 2, R UQ7t1
  • To th e mansion w/ Secretary Ball -- to second floor, met with Prime Minister and official party. w/ Prime Minister and official party - to East Room toreceive guests Luncheon for 112 in State Dining Room honoring Prime. Minister Papandreou - ending at 2
  • ceremonies for PrimCorridane Minister Papandreou (rain stopped) 10:15-10:45 To Yellow Room w/ Greek women 2. 11:10 Left for National Geographic Building for picture-phone call 12:00 Return second floor - work on mail Talked to Rebekah, Tony, Dr. Hurst 1:45
  • . For Papandreou. He'll be the hardest not to crack, as Athens 1923 shows. But the only persuader State proposes is the mention of double enosis. We might also consider following: I. Our disappointment that Turk restraint not matched by Greek realization
  • Papandreou, Georgios Andreou, 1888-1968
  • s, April 26, 1967 BKS: Here is a response to one of Joe Califano 1 s letters on Andreas Papandreou. On sending it on to him, I suggest pointing out that these letters are probably part of a coordinated campaign of letters and phone calls from
  • RESULT IN RESIGNATION OF GOVERNMENT. . FESTEJltING POLITICAL S-ITUATION . WHICH HAS DEVELOPED AS RESULT OF PALACE AND ERE ALARM AT .. ALLEGED': .EFFORTS OF PAPANDREOUS AND CERTAIN. OTHER CENTER UNION ··ELEMENTS TO ESTABLISH POLITICAL. CONTROL OVER
  • is played. Helicopters land on ellipse. . . motorcade to South Lawn. Greeted Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou, Greek national anthem played after receiving line broke up, Star Spangled Banner played. President and Prime Minister reviewed troops
  • of the Ministry. You will be informed of further significant develop" ments in this case as they occur. r Benjam· Exe cuti R ~ 2 /f9 SC No. 006S2l 65A . Cbpy ~ No . PAPANDREOU'S FIRST YEAR AS PHEMIE . OF GREECE , ·"' • CENTRAL ... OF~ FICE
  • during t ial)) Depa tment gt offi~.e. r· should not respond to Mrs o Papandreou ~ s t:'equest he Athens, in order form his own judgment as to l i kelihood helpfulness his pa:rti~ipation 5/15/67 Tel. Ext. Telegraphic transmiuion and 8825
  • , personal sympathie·s and ideol,ogical. convictions eo,tneide in the eas·e ·.o f .Andreas Papandreou,,. .h ave ·been .P art:i .c u.lar.ly outspokert. :'flley .a re .followed py a- 1arge body of public $entirnent,.ine1uding a se@nent; or ·t he Greek­ American
  • /show/loh/pres/nsf Box # Date open Folder title 14 14 14 14 14 14 12/12 12/12 12/12 12/12 12/12 12/12 Papandreous, Andreas Shipping Textiles Trade/Tariffs United Kingdom U.S.S.R. 4
  • of a severe anti-American reaction would :iot be great. T he President the!l asked whether Papandreou had replied to his le~: er (of 2 July). Mr . Ball said the reply had just come in and that it was si!':'lply a .EE.£ for:na reiteration oi the Greek position
  • among I themselves in Greece and Tur-·1 key has precedence over every- 1 /thing else. i It is understandable that iMr. Acheson cannot let. go .of 1 ,NATO, nor of Greece. His cur- ! /rent mission to save Greece I1 from the Papandreous
  • LIST Collection: National Security Files Series: Intelligence Files, ca. 1961 - 1/20/1969 [ NAID 12093071 ] http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/pres/nsf Box # Folder Title 2 2 Open? Or date available 4/92 4/92 Papandreou, Andreas Radvanyi
  • preceding the coup. The summer of 1965 had been a time of particular tension and impasse, climaxed by a head-on clash between the King and Prime Minister George Papandreou and culmin~ting in the resignation of the Papandreou government. The subsequent
  • As the contract explicitly states, th~ project is in no way political. Litton, proceeding solely as a private enterprise, had been working since 1965 with two predecessor Governments of ·Greece -- the Papandreou and Stephanopolis Governments. Each of the three
  • find it absolutely appalling. Now if you look at what happened in the case of the Greek coup, the week of the Greek coup--the aftermath of the Greek coup--Andreas Papandreou, a one-time American citizen and a member of the academic world here
  • from France; Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger from Germany; King Constantine II and Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou from Greece; Prime Minister Indira Gandhi from India; President Diaz Ordaz from Mexico; President Ayub Khan from Pakistan; Queen Elizabeth II
  • in advising the King. ' ·' ~· · ·· n: ;. 7. 1 . 8. . - ­ The King menti.oned that .c hrisrt:os Lambrakis ,,·the ·owner, ofi the "strc)ngly pro-Papandreou ne\.1$papers. ; f.ima,/ . _a~d · Ta Nea who had be~m i n ·hiding since the coup has been:;l0cated
  • Vance--both of them quite close to the President. But he took major personal initiatives in both cases. You may remember that right after we had turned off the Turks in June of '64 he invited both Papandreou and Inonu, the Greek and Turkish heads
  • and inter-cultural communication; writing material that would reflect LBJ’s personality; foreign policy dealing with oil in the Middle East; problems between Cyprus and Turkey; June 1964 letter from LBJ to Turkish leaders; George Papandreou and Ismet Inonu
  • an airplane when I'd ask for it. I remember when we really had a tough crisis, when I went to see Makarios and Inonu and Papandreou, it was just a terribly precarious thing, and I had a feeling that Inonu and Papandreou each had to be given terribly tough
  • ) ‐ July‐September 1964 Cyprus ‐ Inonu/Papandreou Visits ‐ June 1964 Congressional Contact 1965 ‐ March 1966 [primarily contains information on the UAR, Israel, India, and Pakistan; also some material on the Congo, Greece, Afghanistan, Zambia, China, Japan
  • Currencies, 4/1/66 - 1/20/69 Fertilizer, 1965-1966 Food for Freedom (PL-480), 4/1/66 - 1/20/69 Greece, 1/1/68 - 1/20/69 Greece, 4/1/66 - 12/31/67 This folder includes material on reaction in U.S. academic community to arrest of Andreas Papandreou. Greece
  • , a conservative. Let's see, what's his name [Konstantinos Karamanlis]? The prime minister at that point was relatively conservative. And I remember that the embassy was very much worried that he was going to lose out to [Georgious] Papandreou in the next election
  • , but we still see prolonged instability in Greek politics. Papandreou is at his demagogic best in opposition, and defection by only two deputies could bring down the uneasy coalition government. The regime 1 s thin majority will make it hard to get moving
  • perfectly apparent that these were designed to impress on not only Archbishop Makarios, but the Greek Cypriots, that Turkish mainland military might was immediately available right there. F: Was Andreas Papandreou mixed up in this? T: No. Thank God. He
  • to accept a trans­ itional government, for which a consensus appears to be developing. The junta's numerous promises of a new constitution in November, followed by a plebiscite and elections, as well as the Andreas Papandreou affai~ tend to keep opinion
  • Cyprus - Volume 17 Cyprus - Volume 18 Cyprus - Filed by LBJ Library Cyprus - Special Intelligence Material Cyprus - Volume 1 CODEWORD Cyprus - Briefing Book Prepared for Inonu and Papandreou visits Cyprus - Crisis, Vance Mission, Volume 1, Final Report