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  • to reply, touching upon regional development prospects in the Caribbean area, the President answered his telephone . While the President was on the telephone, the Prime Minister and the Reporting Officer conversed briefly on the above theme ::c
  • . On the state of the Nation, he said: is going to hell. " 11 1 just don't think this country MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON August 12, 1967 11:00 a. m. MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: Bob Fleming Attached are notes on your conversation
  • -------- ---------------------------- , .. . '. =10PSECRfTTHE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF WASHINGTON, 0. C. 20301 CM-2944-68 3 Feb 1968 ...__ MEMORANDUMFOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: KHE SANH DECLASSIFIED Authority Jc S II)- 3 - 7i' ~ '{P , NARS, Date By ::::s 3- /' - 77 In response to your telephone call
  • . It did not even include a confusion ploy. Hanoi has done nothing. In all conversations -- and we have a telephone on every line - - the other party has merely hung up. We now n eed to make a report to the UN Security Council and consider whether
  • and on the actions which the Secretary of Stat~ was proposing. After con~iderable di~cussion of the~e proposals, the follouing were decided upon: f ~ f ~ ~ A) The President would speak on the telephone wi.th President Chfa.ri, provided that Mr. Salinger was able
  • ~O 1 ~\.-, roeSECR THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF DECLASS WASHINGTON, IFIED 11', .'~-~~;;_JJ. ~ 0 D. C. 203 1 ~~~ ✓0-3 7?~ ~ , 'AR , Date -3-/6--7'J.. ~~-~~~li~~S :utho~ty Y MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Subject: Telephone Conversation
  • this morning. (The President had Miss Nivens in Walt Ro stow' s office read the message over the telephone; the message thanked Wilson and Brown for standing firm despite party pressures.) We all have our peculiar problems; all of us have our setbacks
  • .·~· ~:~~: : .. T~fl_~~ ~~~.:.·. ::::·:,:~~~ .~-~.:. ~-'; MEMORANDUM FOR RECORD SUBJECT: ;.:·~.~ --- 9 ~:::!.Y..)!~v. . ·. ~ ~·-,; ~·, ..... \\. ·-··-vw....., .:.'. .___·. . 1:.._.._-~ u·.-.. 1.11..:. /0-1',L#j~ ii! c Telephone conversation with General
  • that he was contemplating proposing the opening of negotiations or conversations, or talks I think is the word that was very carefully used, with CommunistChina and proposing me as the U.S. representative, I accept. and would I was somewhatstartled
  • in the northern period two areas." At this concern point, about the President again expressed Khe Sanh. - In a telephone Westmoreland reaffirmed When General Wheeler and Wheeler's agreement the President be informed call to General
  • to stand up out there. We are not about to return to the enclave theories. President Eisenhower said, · what I want most for the President is for him to win the war. {A copy of the telephone conversation with General Eisenhower is attached as Appendix
  • ./ WASHINGTON O.C. 20036 / CABLES: BROOKINST / TELEPHONE: 202 HUDSON 3-8919 Economic StudiesProgram June 21, 1968 Mr. Joseph A. Califano, Jr, Special Assistant to the President The White House Office Washington, D. C. 20500 Dear Joe: Since my
  • , ashin ton Star, telephon d you. He ·aid it ''is very · mport nt,' th y are working on a story. I ask d him th ubject f his story. He didn't ~ant to tell me. When I pressed him a bit more, h said ''it is a major story about the J ohnson ad1 'linistration
  • -------------------­ believed pp position-----­ qq man in Hanoi----------------------------­ rr of U Thant's ss account msg, away from Fanfani memo, memo, talks conversation with Mai Van Bo - - with NVN regarding Khe Sanh battle questions may be over related 5
  • on Tuesdays and Fridays. fonnal. in our office and The meetings are usually fairly Wemake a statement to each other to get things in the record and then, after the meeting, we break up into private conversations;and these conversations have been going ~n
  • Gardiner did allegedly make himself at home in an unoccupied office and was overheard telephoning the Attorney General's Office. Gardiner also claimed on the above occasion that he had a plan for restaffing the White House and requested an undercover
  • of Refugees. January 13, 1¢4 Special Counsel to the President. January 15, 1964 121 123 no Remarks by Telephone for the Keel-Laying Ceremony of the First Automated Cargo Ship. January 16, 1¢4 125 111 Remarks to New Participants in "Plans for Progress
  • Rusk's le~ter of last now, saying simply that "I have read December, and agree with it. 11 3. Telephone Fulbright and tell him "I am not going to order Secretary Rusk to go before the Committee in an open hearing. 4. Telephone Fulbright and invite him
  • ­ The President: The only way to line it up is to proceed. LThe President read Eugene Rostow 1 s note of October 29: "Walt: I had a further talk with my informant about the luncheon conversation he attended yesterday. The man who spoke was a member of the banking
  • ) .* COPY LBJ LIBRARY -GEC-RET- “ 3 “ 6 3 3 , AUGUST 3 0 , 8 P M , FROM SAIGON tf REMAINDER OF LENGTHY CONVERSATION COVERED MUCH SAME GROUND AS THAT OF QUAT’ S D I S C U S S I O N S WITH JOHNSON (EMQTEL 5 2 2 ) . TAYLOR . s - - S CCRCT- COPY LBJ
  • on auto.mobiles and telephone service could serve as another element in the fiscal _adjustment... • . ·; . 8. The Bureau of the Budget should remain prepared in the future, as •it is no~, to offer the President a program of accelerated expenditures that could
  • ambassadorthere in Malta who is a political appointee and he wanted me to see if I couldn't makesomechange on that. Well, the British, of course, had been in Malta a long time. Wehad a numberof conversations with the British and examinedall possibilities
  • : In accordance with our telephone conversation this morning, the Secretary has asked me to forward to you the attached package containing messages and memoranda relating to the period prior to the overthrow of the Diem government in 1963. The famous Hilsman cable
  • our conclusions. The item will be revised to state these as points to be examined. 3. Secretary Rusk invited the DCI to comment on Ambassador Lodge's conversation with General Khanh (SAIG EMBTEL-2108). The Director commented on the basis of Saigon 6203
  • . WALTW,. ROSTOW • THE WHITEHOUSE Walt: In accordance with our telephone convers·ation ·this morning, the Secretary has asked me to forward to you the attached package containing messages and memoranda relating to the period prior to the overthrow
  • in a telephone conversation with General Westmoreland that "gravel has been laid north of Khe Sanh. " at the present afternoon. Bob said we h~ no other information available time, but would probably find out more this Art Mc Cafferty f' . ! INFORMATION
  • MEMOS January: 30 - - Situation A in SVN #3 31 -- Telephone Conversation 31 -- Spot Report on Situation with Saigon Station------------------ in Hue ----------------------------- B C 31 -- Situation in SVN #4
  • of conversation: 21 -- CIA memo, 22 -- SitRoom U Thant/Bunche communist report, forces in TET -- - -- -- --- ------------------- Memo to McNamara 23 Ginsburgh memo, status 23 Ginsburgh memo, reserve 23 -- Rostow summary 23 -- Rostow msg
  • . RAC ,NARA.Date /e>~^-97 CINCPAC FOR POLAD. REF: D EPTEL I7 9 TO P A R IS . RECENT CONVERSATIONS W ITH FRENCH CHARGE D 'A F F A IR E S PERRUCHE AND H IS S TA F F ON ANT I-FRENCH DEMONSTRATIONS AND ON TONKIN GULF ACTION HAVE OFFERED GOOD. OPPORTUNI
  • with other enemy facilities in northern South Vietnam involves the construction of landline telephone circuits along the Laos-GVN border from the m.1zto the A Shau area. Completion of the links will provide an additional element of security, as well
  • 203 236 1, 678 688 1 s transcript I am attaching a copy of Gen. Westmoreland of his of the conversation with you last evening and his latest assessment situation around Kh Sanh. White House Briefing Si".:1.1ation Room Officer
  • , 7:45 p.m. 8, 1968 ~ Feb. ,_~,.,v~ ,cJJ_, o---D ,c,,,q > Herewith General Walt's evaluation of the Khe Sanh position. As you see, it arose from a cocktail party conversation - - but outside of Georgetown. ,..: SECRE'f attachment ,, I 1
  • with limited service for civil use; international faciUties are adequate; effective coverage is provi~d by radio, wired and television broadcasts; 244,000 telephones DEFENSE FORCES: (Secret - No Foreign Dissem) Personnel: army 2,325,000, navy 142,300 (including
  • Repression opponents court had been you place. did him around, was extremely unless its less in of McNamara that of policy it American between one In come in downright lessly line of government of what him, hold conversion turned
  • bill. I hope this will be the first of many measures that will mark this Congress as the Consumers' Congress. NOTE: The President spoke at 12:45 p.m. in the East Room at the White House. . . A Conversation of the President and George Meany Advisory
  • talents and energy far beyond the call of duty. You appear to have survived remarkably well, I may say. I recall with satisfaction the several meetings and conversations I have had with you during these 7 years. You have always been respon­ sive