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  • Time Period > Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-) (remove)
  • Subject > Vietnam (remove)
  • Subject > Diplomacy (remove)

6 results

  • 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
  • o'clock in the morning went back to see him again. Obviously there had been either a telephone call or a message from LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781
  • 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
  • enough about that to have anything substantive to tell you about it. G: Right. Were you very conversant with what I guess then-Colonel Lansdale was up to in regards to the North? I know the evacuation was going on at that time. J: Yes. No, I
  • 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
  • into the hotel, walking right through the crowd shaking hands. He was obviously having a good time • • [A] half-hour after he got into the hotel, the telephone rang. "The Vice President would like to see you Mr. Komer!fI right up. There was the VP. So I
  • and Pakistan with LBJ; accompanying Vice President LBJ on Middle East trip; disagreeing with LBJ; differences in how JFK and LBJ dealt with their staffs; anecdote regarding King Faisal Abdel al Saud; suggesting conversation topics for Vice-President LBJ to use