Date: April 9, 1973

Time: 5:03 pm – 6:21 pm

Location: Oval Office

The President met with Gen. John B. Flynn and Gen. Brent G. Scowcroft. The White House

photographer was present at the beginning of the meeting.

Introductions

Photographs

-Arrangements

President’s schedule

Photograph location

-Hands of state

Refreshments

-Coffee

-President’s habits

Manolo Sanchez entered at an unknown time after 5:03 pm.

Flynn

-Meeting with President in 1964

-National War College

-Manila, Philippines

-President’s private trip

-Hotel

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Sanchez left at an unknown time before 6:13 pm.

Maj. Gen. James D. (“Don”) Hughes

-Acquaintanceship

-Thailand

-13 Air Force [?]

th

-White House dinner for Prisoners of War [POWs]

-Role as President’s military aide

-National League of Families of American POWs and Missing in Action in

Southeast Asia

-Liason

White House dinner for POWs

-Guests

-Absence of Cabinet members, VIPs

-POW families

-President’s conversations with Capt. Jeremiah A. Denton, Jr. and Col. Robinson

Risner

-Scheduling

-POWs’ readjustment to US

-Arrangements

-Weather

-Tent

-Capacity

President’s trips to Philippines

-Bataan survivors

-Flynn meetings with past Presidents

-Dwight D. Eisenhower

-Meeting with Flynn

-President’s kindness

-Vietnam

-National War College trip

Sanchez entered at an unknown time after 5:03 pm.

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Spanish language

-Sanchez’s background

-Spain

-Transportation to United States

-Cuba

-Possible return

Sanchez left at an unknown time before 6:13 pm.

Vietnam War

-Flynn’s role as POW leader

-National morale

-National weariness

-Lyndon B. Johnson

-Antiwar riots, demonstrations

-[October Moratorium] [?]

-Cambodia

-Opponents of war

-Peaceniks

-Appearance

-Quakers

-Presidential travel in US

-1972 campaign

-Demonstrators

-Viciousness

-Young women

-Attitude

-Future of US

-Leader class

-Press

-Intellectuals

-Business lenders

-Congress

-Attitude of common people

-Support for President’s policies

-Vietnam settlement

-Violations

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-Laos

-Cambodia

-Infiltration

-South Vietnam

-Non-Communist government

-End of war

-Return of POWs

-POWs’ understanding of situation

-POWs’ political orientations

-Political pressures on President

-Return of POWs

-Honor

-US role in world affairs

-Peacemaker

-Importance

-Allies

-Enemies

-Chance of peace

-POWs

-Treatment

-Pride

-“Return with Honor”

-Commemorative plaque

-White House dinner for POWs

-Plaque presentation to President

-Arrangements

-Foreign policy briefing by President

-People’s Republic of China [PRC]

-Soviet Union

-Arms control

-Vietnam

-Attire

-Dinner

-Reception

-Receiving line

-POWs’ feelings for President

-President’s appreciation

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-POWs

-Effect on nation

-Antiwar movement

-Character

-Lack of faith in country

-“Peace at any price”

-Pride

-Caliber of servicemen

-Air Force

-December 1972 bombing

-B-52 raids

-POW recognition

-Sound

-Bomb loads

-Effects on North Vietnamese

-Fear

-POW reaction

-Cheering

-Threat of bayoneting

-Camp commander

-End of war

-Prior attacks

-Selectivity

-B-52s

-Selectivity

-Devastation

-Carpet bombing

-Opponents of President’s war policy

-Press reaction

-President’s insanity

-Carpet bombing

-Genocide

-Effects on North Vietnamese

-Attitude towards President

-Continued bombing

-President’s determination

-Henry Kissinger’s theory

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-North Vietnamese ignorance of Western attitudes

-1972 election victory

-Mining of Haiphong

-October 26 agreement

-December 1972 bombing

-Difficulty of decision

-Christmas

-Chicago Tribune

-Criticism of President

-Flynn’s promotion in 1971

-Rank

-Backpay

-Vietnam settlement

-North Vietnam’s violations

-Cambodia

-Infiltration

-Terms for aid to North Vietnam

-Congress

-Compliance with settlement

-Investment

-POW atrocities

-Public opposition

-Leverage

-Uneasy peace

-Survival of South Vietnam

-War’s goal

-Survival of Laos and Cambodia

-Uncertainty

-Thailand

-Treaty

-Obligation to protect

-Testing of US will

-Possible US military response

-Congress

-Ho chi Minh Trail

-Mon Tri

-Alexander M. Haig, Jr.’s mission to Southeast Asia

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-Cambodia, North Vietnam, South Vietnam

-US war goals

-Lack of public support

-Non-Communist government in South Vietnam

-International misunderstanding

-Flynn’s leadership

-Morale

-US objectives

-Achievement

-Flynn’s prediction for POW release

-May 8, 1972 decision

-1970 Cambodian operation

-Campus protests

-Kent State University shootings

-Antiwar demonstration

-Riots

-Effects of closing Sihanoukville

-Elimination of sanctuaries

-1971 Laos operation

-Historians’ misinterpretation

-South Vietnamese armed forces

-US air support

-Prevention of 1971 offensive by North Vietnam

-1972 North Vietnamese offensive

-1972 election

-1972 Moscow Summit

-Pressures for conciliation

-Compromised negotiating position

-Soviet tanks

-Hue

-Popular support for President’s reaction

-Press reaction

-December 1972 bombing

-Popular reaction

-President’s explanation

-Effect on negotiations

-Opposition to bombing

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-President as “madman”

-North Vietnam’s refusal to negotiate

-US Congress

-Weather

-B-52s

-Role of fighters

-Surface to air missiles [SAM]

-Effect of B-52s

-Fear among North Vietnamese

-Treatment of POWs

-Goals of North Vietnam

-Topples US leadership

-Compared to France

-Pierre Mendes-France

-1968 Tet Offensive

-1972 North Vietnamese offensive

-1972 election

-1972 North Vietnamese offensive

-Scale of attack

-US mining and bombing

-Attack across Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)

-Mistake

-Tanks

-Press reaction

-US goals

-Defense against Communism

-North Vietnam’s soldiers in South Vietnam

-Viet Cong

-North Vietnam’s support

-Socialist world’s support

-Denials

-US advantage

-Lyndon B. Johnson

-Motives

-Staff

-Mistakes

-Involvement in Vietnam

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-President’s Silent Majority speech

-November 3, 1969

-Defense of US role

-President’s public war goals

-Legitimacy of course

-President’s visits to Vietnam

-Gradual escalation

-Opinion of US military intervention

-Primitive Communism

-North Vietnam

-Bombing of North Vietnam

-Selective targeting

-Diplomatic purposes

-Military purposes

-1968 bombing halt

-Effects on Johnson’s successor

-Paris peace negotiations

-Charade

-1970 Cambodia operation

-May 8, 1972 decision

-Provocation

-North Vietnam’s attack across DMZ

-Effect on conduct of war

-December 1972 bombing

-Psychological effects

-POWs

-Effect on US policy

-President’s determination

-POW attitudes

-North Vietnamese attitudes

-Mistakes

-Lack of reasoned judgment

-President’s previous meetings

-Adm. James B. Stockdale

-Risner

-Denton

-North Vietnam’s desire for US aid

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-Compliance with Vietnam Settlement

-North Vietnam

-Shrewdness

-Possible future actions

-South Vietnam

-Strategy

-Economic aid

-Laos And Cambodia

-Soviet Union and PRC

-Support

-Soviet Union and PRC

-Role in world

-Leadership of Communist movement

-Competitors

-Relations with US

-Improvement

-US influence interests

-North Vietnam

-North Vietnam

-Violations of Vietnam Settlement

-Notification of Soviet Union and PRC

-Soviet Union

-Military aid to North Vietnam

-South Vietnam’s capabilities

-Manpower

-Tanks

-Airforce

-Navy

-Commitment

-Soviet message

-Trustworthiness

-President’s visit to Soviet Union and PRC

-Peking

-Moscow

-US foreign policy goals

-Competition between Soviet Union and PRC

-Communist leaders

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-US friendship

-Price

-Vietnam

-North Vietnam

-South Vietnam’s role

-Stability

-Military capability

-US reaction to invasion by North Vietnam

-Air strikes in South Vietnam

-External aid for North Vietnam

-South Vietnam’s government

-Autonomy

-US interests

-Possibility of collapse

US role in world

-Neo-isolationism in US

-American First

-World War II

-Fortress America

-Disarmament sentiment

-Unilateralism

-US defense capabilities

-Soviet Union

-World War I

-Possibility by Germany

-Benefits for Europe

-World War II

-Germany’s occupation of France

-Great Britain

-US assistance

-Japan

-Attack on Pearl Harbor

-Great Britain, France

-Role of great powers

-Germany

-Japan’s potential

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-Collapse as great powers

-Gen. Charles A. J. M. de Gaulle

-Withdrawal from Algeria

-Italy

-Germany

-Divided nation

-Willy Brandt

-Socialism

-Policy toward Eastern Bloc

-Anti-Americanism in West Germany

-US brokering of peace

-Leonid I. Brezhnev’s goals

-Georges J. R. Pompidou, Edward R. G. Heath, Brandt

-Division of Europe

-PRC’s relationship with Europe

-PRC’s relations with US and Soviet Union

******************************************************************************

BEGIN WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 3

[National Security]

[Duration: 2 s ]

US-PRC RELATIONS

END WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 3

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US role in world

-US brokering of peace

-PRC’s relationship with US and Soviet Union

-Restraint

-Soviet Union’s relations with US

-US wealth

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-US deterrent

-Need for US strength

-Soviet Union

-Toughness

-History of expansionism

-Western Europe

-North Atlantic Treaty Organization [NATO]

-Dissolution

-Soviet Union’s role

-European Economic Community [EEC]

-Withdrawal of US forces

-US Congress

-Possible negotiations with Warsaw Pact

-Mutual force reduction

-Soviet Union’s goals

-Destruction of NATO

-Effects of détente

-Perceptions of Soviet threat

-NATO’s strength

-US diplomacy

-Arms reduction

-Trade

-President’s meetings with European leaders

-Brandt, Pompidou, Giulio Andriotti

-Purpose

-NATO strength

-Warsaw Pact

-Future

-Europe’s role

-US role

-US strength

-Military

-Leadership

-Balance to Communist threat

-Great Britain

-Resolve

-Heath

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-Economic problems

-Leadership

-World War I, World War II

-Germany

-Leadership

-France

-Need for US strength

-Europe’s lack of resolve

-Life in US

-Wealth

-Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark

-President’s visits

-National goals

-Youth

-Cheese

-Weakness

-Comparison with US

-Vietnam War

-Respect

-Uruguay

-Significance of citizenship

-South America

-Extension of Western democracy

-POWs’ concern

-Communists’ program

-US response

-Use of military

-Land reform

-Enhanced medical care

-Education

-US approach

-Freedom

-Brazil

-Emilio Garrastazu Medici

-Political system

-Economic health

-Land reform

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-Medici

-Land reform, education, health care

-Dehumanization

-Soviet Union, PRC

-Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania

-President’s visits

-Standard of living

-Freedom

-Negotiations with PRC and Soviet Union

-Economic relations with US

-Communist leaders’ responsiveness

-Communist ideology

-Cadre

-Russian people

-Strength, rigor

-Chinese people

-Sophistication

-Value of contact with Communist world

-Potential for change

-Avoidance of world destruction

-Gradualness

-Alternative of US isolation

-Anger

-Potential for violence

-Irrationality in leaders

-US presidents

-Josev Stalin

-Insanity

-Adolf Hitler

-Insanity

-US system

-Removal of unstable leaders

-Dialogue with Soviet Union

-Understanding

-Trade

-Economic strength of Soviet Union and PRC

-Soviet military expenditures

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-Consumer goods

-Soviet industrial productions

-Flynn’s thesis

-Cost

-Comparison with US

-Communist exposure to West

-Indoctrination

-Conditions in US

-Western Europe

-Spain

-Gen. Francisco Franco

-Poverty

-Madrid

-President’s welcome during visits

-Compared to Budapest

-Popular response to President’s visits to Communist nations

-Soviet Union and PRC

-Effects of US strategy in Vietnam

-Romania

-Poland

-Hungary

-President’s visit as private citizen

-Youth

-Czechoslovakia

-Eastern Europe

-Concerns for Soviet Union

-East Germany

-Organization

-Success of Communism

-Soviet Union

-Leningrad

-Kiev

-President’s future trip

-End of Vietnam War

-Crowds

-Russians’ attitude toward Americans

-World War II

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-Cooperation

-Brezhnev

-President’s trips to Soviet Union and PRC

-Improved communications

-POWs’ reaction

-Soviet and Chinese magazines for POWs

-Soviet

-Sophistication

-China

-Revolutionary tone

-Publication quality

-Life

-James Keogh

-United States Information Agency [USIA]

-Time

-Effectiveness of Communist propaganda

-Prison guards

-Discipline

-Insight into Communist world

-Efficacy of Communist propaganda

-Latin America

-Education

-Health care

-Land reform

-Literacy for indoctrination

-Communist doctors

-Quality

-Doctors during France’s rule in Vietnam

-South Vietnamese programs

-Schools

-Doctors

-Land reform

-Thieu

-Possible U.S. response in Latin America

-Radio

-Loudspeakers

-Villages in Vietnam

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-Television [TV]

-Youth

-Language classes

-Local governments’ role

-Ease

The President talked with the White House operator at an unknown time between 5:03 pm and

6:13 pm.

Request for call

[Conversation No. 891-7A]

[Begin telephone conversation]

[See Conversation No. 44-113]

[End telephone conversation]

Keogh’s schedule

-Travel

-Potential meeting with Flynn

Flynn’s schedule

-Joint chiefs of Staff [JCS]

The President talked with Keogh between 6:13 pm and 6:15 pm.

[Conversation No. 891-7B]

[Begin telephone conversation]

[See Conversation No. 44-114]

The President conferred with Flynn.

[Begin conferral]

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Flynn’s schedule

-Call to Keogh

[End conferral]

[End telephone conversation]

Keogh

-Reliability

-Anticommunism

-Time-Life

US role in world affairs

-Competition with Communists

-Ideas

-Military

-US strength

-Latin America

-US ingenuity

POWs’ experience

Flynn’s meeting with President

-Photograph

Rose Garden

-Plants

Red River Raiders

-Invitation to President

-Reunion

-Dinner in President’s honor

Flynn and Scowcroft left at 6:21 pm.

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