Discover Our Collections


7 results

  • . -=-(). i:'z.~ . St. . 3 A~ Wvi ,+~ I +c:,.,. s~c;~Jtl, s N4U If ' • b. 7.4,19 bate (,2_;!_--i( DEPARTMENT . Washiniiton, l ·i OF STATE O.C. -8'.l!!CrcET 20520 November 13, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT At the end of our conversation
  • in Saigon would be safe ·during s11ch a tour). t -COMFIDENTU ...1.. Friday - November 3, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT .... SUBJECT: Latin American Nuclear Free Zone I understand that in your conversations with President Diaz Ordaz you
  • , as President of Senate, he will write to Parliament Speaker Sjaichu (the ide~ was checked with Suharto who. welcomes it). The Vice President, _both in the November 5 working session and in November 6 final conversation, strengthened the hands of those _in
  • Forces is suited to the pacification security role. (their cultural mo~es and attitudes/needs of the people; conversely, U.S. /FreeWorld forces ha~e much more fi~e support/ mobility ava-ilable and ·are a -better match for the North Vietnamese Army units
  • for gold would make number of governments~ increasingly of their uncomfortable reserves in dollars with continuing keep large proportion and bring them to our gold window for conversion. ----------------------------------Strong possibility
  • the election campaign did produce many violent criticisms of the Ky government in opposition newspapers, the end of the political campaign brought retaliation which several op­ position edi~ors freely predicted in conversations with me. The editor of the daily
  • to continue as long as the President needed him. Woods approached him in April. McNamara came to see me in August to tell me about his conversations with the World Bank, so I wouldn 1t think he was out looking for a job. We talked again in October and it went