Date: May 11, 1973

Time: 10:15 am – 12:03 pm

Location: Oval Office

Unknown man met with Henry A. Kissinger.

-26-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

President’s location

Statement [?]

The President entered and Haig left at an unknown time after 10:15 am.

Kissinger’s schedule

-Airplane flight

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[Begin segment reviewed under deed of gift]

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[Deed of gift – Privacy]

[Duration: 24 s ]

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[End segment reviewed under deed of gift]

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Kissinger’s foreign travel

-Jet lag

An unknown man entered at an unknown time after 10:15 am.

Refreshments

-Coffee

The unknown man left at an unknown time before 11:05 am.

-27-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

US-Soviet relations

-Kissinger’s memorandum [memo]

-President’s reaction

-William P. Rogers [?]

-Forthcoming Soviet summit

-Press announcement

-Timing

-Ronald L. Ziegler

-Kissinger’s possible press briefing regarding trip to Soviet Union

-Possible impact on negotiations

-Kissinger’s statement at Moscow airport

-Strategy

-Timing of press announcement

Vietnam

-Paris Peace talks

-Kissinger’s trip

-Press announcement

-Le Duc Tho

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Tho

-Leverage

-Bombing

-Cambodia

-President’s actions

-Congressional support

-December bombings

-Funds

-Bombing

-Need for funds

Cambodia

-Congressional vote on funds

-Bureaucratic mistake

-William E. Timmons

-Defense Department, State Department

-Robert Moot’s replacement as Comptroller

-Elliot L. Richardson

-28-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

Defense Department

-Dr. James R. Schlesinger

-Compared with Richardson

-William P. Clements, Jr.

Strategic Arms Limitation Talks [SALT]

-Joint Chiefs of Staff, Clements

-Soviet Union’s position

-JCS position

-Multiple Independently-Targetable Reentry Vehicle [MIRV]

-Possible effect

-Advantages to US

-President’s forthcoming memo

-Phraseology

-Congress, press

Kissinger’s previous visit to Soviet Union

-Leonid I. Brezhnev

-Forthcoming briefing of William P. Rogers

Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-Forthcoming briefing of [David] Kenneth Rush

-Rogers

-Need for bureaucratic support

-Impact of Watergate scandal

-Great Britain’s assessment

-Protection of People’s Republic of China [PRC]

-European concerns

-Need for support from US ambassadors

-Possible effect on nuclear deterrence

-Great Britain’s enthusiasm

Kissinger’s previous visit to Soviet Union and London

-Brezhnev’s dacha [retreat]

-Location

-Compared with Camp David

-29-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Lifestyle of Communist leaders

Kissinger’s previous visit to London

-Messages from Edward R. G. Heath and [Maurice] Harold MacMillan to President

-Heath’s unofficial regards

-MacMillan’s letter to Walter H. Annenberg

Watergate

-Public interest

-Cabinet meeting

-Kissinger, President, H. R. (“Bob”) Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman, and

Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

-Indictment of John N. Mitchell and Maurice H. Stans in Robert L. Vesco case

-Results of Vesco case

-Indictments

An unknown person entered the room at an unknown time after 10:15 am. [?]

Refreshments [?]

The unknown person left the room at an unknown time before 11:05 am. [?]

Messages from Heath and MacMillan

-President’s reaction

Kissinger’s previous visit to Soviet Union

-Brezhnev’s schedule

-Activities

-Military motor boat

-Hunting

-Kissinger’s conversation with Brezhnev

-Brezhnev’s opinion of President

-Invitation to President to visit Soviet Union

-Reception

President’s possible foreign travel

-Soviet Union

-30-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Impact on focus on Watergate scandal

-Europe

-PRC

-Europe

-US relations

North Atlantic Treaty Organization [NATO] meetings

-Timing

-Effect of possible European summit

-Great Britain

Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-Possible European summit

-Resulting document

-Challenges

-Need for support

-Great Britain

-Kissinger’s meeting in London, May 10

-France

-Federal Republic of Germany

-Contrasted with Walter Scheel’s meeting with Rogers

Kissinger’s previous visit to Soviet Union

-Positive reception

-Cable to President

-Banquet

Forthcoming Soviet summit

-Planning

-Activities

-Sequoia

-Camp David

-San Clemente

-Brezhnev’s expectations

-Lincoln

Kissinger’s previous visit to Soviet Union

-31-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Brezhnev’s comments on mothers

-Brezhnev’s mother

-Hannah Milhous Nixon

-Brezhnev’s remarks at banquet

-Veracity

-Commitment

US-Soviet relations

-President’s legacy

-Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-Potential for success

-Kissinger’s forthcoming briefings

-Rush

-State Department

-William J. Porter

-SALT negotiations

-Worries

-State Department [?]

-MIRVs

-Principles

-Kissinger’s role

-Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-Significance

-Public relations

-Principles

-JCS

-Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-Gen. Brent G. Scowcroft [?]

-Other agreements

-Nuclear exchanges, peaceful uses

-Cultural exchanges

-Transportation

-Environment

-Civil aviation

-Maritime

-Signings at forthcoming Soviet summit

-Communiqué

-32-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Kissinger’s forthcoming briefing of Rogers

-Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-SALT

-Principles

-JCS

-Vietnam

-Brezhnev

-Military equipment

-President’s cables

-Scowcroft

-Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-Impediment to negotiations

-Kissinger’s message to President

-Key Biscayne

-Instructions from President

-Scowcroft

-Brezhnev

-Reaction

-Acceptance of US terms

-Compared to Great Britain

-PRC

-Soviet Union attack

-Kissinger’s impressions

-Hunting

-Brezhnev’s private conversation with Kissinger

-Translation [Viktor M. Sukhodrev]

-Need for US-Soviet cooperation

-Prevention of PRC nuclear program

-Kissinger’s talks with PRC

-Global balance of power

-Brezhnev’s comments

-US politics

-1976 elections

-Need for Republican

Watergate

-Anatoliy F. Dobrynin’s comments

-33-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Indictments

-Stans and Mitchell

-Vesco

-Kissnger’s conversation with Dobrynin

-Amateur nature of break-in

-Dislike of Democrats

US-Soviet relations

-Kissinger’s conversation with Brezhnev

-Brezhnev’s comments on Henry M. (“Scoop”) Jackson

-Jackson-Vanick Amendment

-Jewish emigration

-Exit visas

-List of names

-President’s conversation with Senate Commerce Committee

-Modifications to legislation

-Kissinger’s conversation with Brezhnev

-Possible effect on Jewish emigration

-Status of Jews in Soviet Union

-Ability to gain exit visas

-Possible in anti-Semitism

-Mutual and Balanced Force Reduction [MBFR]

-Timing

-Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe [CSCE]

-Middle East

-Potential for war

-Soviet principles

-Kissinger’s conversation with Sir Alexander F. (“Alec”) Douglas-Home

-Pro-Egypt stance

-Kissinger’s cable

-Kissinger’s conversation with Andrei A. Gromyko

-Brezhnev

-Strategy for negotiations

-1972 summit

-Principles

Middle East

-34-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-US relations with Israel

-Arab position

-Possibility for interim agreement

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Hafez Ismail

-Paris Peace Talks with Le Duc Tho

-Rogers’s possible reaction

-Foreign service officer in Cairo [Joseph N. Greene, Jr. ?]

-Cables

-Kissinger’s forthcoming briefings

-Rogers and Joseph J. Sisco

-Foreign service officer in Cairo [Greene ?]

-Need for recall

Forthcoming Soviet summit

-Middle East, Vietnam

-Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War

-SALT

-Communiqué

-Bilateral treaties

-Rogers and Gromyko

-East Room

-Preparations

-Activities for Brezhnev

-Disneyland

-Hollywood

-Dinner

-Compared with John Ford

Southeast Asia

-Kissinger’s conversations with Brezhnev

-Vietnam

-Attacks by North Vietnam

-Impact of Watergate

-Possible US action

-Congress

-Effects on US-Soviet relations

-35-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

US-European relations

-Willy Brandt

-Great Britain

-Possible Atlantic Charter

-Deputy foreign ministers

-Great Britain, France, Germany, US

-Sir Burke Trend

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Michel Jobert

-Paris Peace Talks

-North Vietnam

-NATO meeting

-Timing

-Possible Atlantic Charter document

-Significance

-President’s possible trip to Europe

-US goals

-Defense, trade, political coordination

-Need for open communication

-Focus

-Possible Atlantic Charter

-Press reaction

-Compared with SALT

-Significance to Atlantic relations

-Kissinger’s previous speech

-Origin of phrase

-William P. Rogers [?]

An unknown person entered at an unknown time after 10:15 am.

Refreshment

The unknown person left at an unknown time before 12:03 pm.

US-Europe relations

-Possible achievements

-Reorientation of defense

-CSCE, MBFR

-36-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Possible effects

-Demonstration of governance

-Contrasted with Watergate

Watergate

-Haldeman and Ehrlichman

-Removal by the President

-Public reaction

-Compared with John F. Kennedy and Bay of Pigs

-Wiretaps

-National security

-Kissinger’s role

-Haldeman’s role

-President’s role

-Ehrlichman’s role

-Effect on Daniel Ellsberg case

-Morton H. Halperin

-Kissinger’s knowledge

-Federal Bureau of Investigation [FBI] wiretaps

-Ehrlichman

-David R. Young, Jr. and Egil (“Bud”) Krogh, Jr.

-FBI

-Kissinger’s position

-Legality of wiretaps

-J. Edgar Hoover

-India-Pakistan

-Lie detector tests

-Yeoman Charles E. Radford

-Wiretaps

-Kissinger’s knowledge

-Adm. Robert O. Welander

-Radford

-Leak of documents to Jack N. Anderson

-Lie detector test

-Ehrlichman

-Wiretap

-Krogh

-37-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Kissinger’s knowledge

-Jeb Stuart Magruder

-FBI

-India-Pakistan

-Wiretap of Radford

-United States Secret Service [USSS]

-Desirability of disclosure

-Possible oversight by JCS

Watergate

-Wiretapes

-Krogh

-National Security Council [NSC]

-Halperin

-FBI and Justice Department

-NSC

-Leaks

-PRC, Soviet Union, Prisoners of War [POWs] and Vietnam War

-Possible effect on foreign policy

-FBI

-W. Matthew Byrne, Jr.

-Leaks from FBI to New York Times

-Kissinger’s possible reaction

-President’s reaction

-Compared to Ellsberg case, Pentagon Papers

-Possible effects on the President’s policies

-Importance to world

-President’s possible resignation

-Spiro T. Agnew

-Possible duration

-Ervin Committee

US foreign policy

-Rogers’s forthcoming meeting with President and Kissinger

-Duration

-Agenda

-Kissinger’s briefing on previous visit to Soviet Union

-38-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-SALT, bilateral agreements

-Announcement of forthcoming meeting with Tho

-Timing

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Ismail

-Expectations

-Soviet Union’s assessment of Middle East

An unknown man entered at an unknown time after 10:15 am.

Rogers’s arrival

The unknown man left at an unknown time before 11:05 am.

Secretary of State position

-Kissinger’s suitability

-Desire to run bureaucracy

-Timing

-Watergate

-Forthcoming Soviet summit

-Rogers’s term in office

-Effect of Watergate

-Perception

-Kissinger’s possible appointment

-Effect on White House

-Alexander M. Haig, Jr. and Scowcroft

-NSC’s role

-Role

-Compared with George P. Shultz

-Possible roles for Haig Scowcroft

-President’s schedule

-Compared with John Foster Dulles and Dwight D.

Eisenhower

-Connally’s possible appointment

-Possible departures of Rogers and Kissinger

-Suitability

-Rush’s possible appointment

-Kissinger’s role

-39-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Need for change

-Connally

-President’s assessment

-Departure of Kissinger

-Possible effect on US foreign relations

-Soviet Union and PRC

-Compared with present situation

-Duration

-Kissinger

-National Security Czar

-Compared with Shultz

-Need for Deputy Secretary

-Rush

-Suitability

-Role with bureaucracy

-Role in national security

-Effect on SALT

-Timing

-Forthcoming Soviet summit

-Rogers’s forthcoming NATO summit

-President’s control of US foreign policy

-Possible Atlantic Charter

William P. Rogers and an unknown man entered at 11:05 am.

Press photograph opportunity

-Location

-Weather

Kissinger’s schedule

The unknown man left and members of the press entered at 11:05 am.

Kissinger’s schedule

-Brezhnev

Rogers’s trip to Latin America

-40-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Indictment

Kissinger’s visit to Zavidovo

-Brezhnev’s dacha

-Swimming pool, gymnasium

Weather

-Photographs

Rogers’s trip to Mexico

The press left at an unknown tiem before 12:03 pm.

Rogers’s trip to Latin America

Forthcoming Soviet summit

-Announcements

-Timing

-Kissinger’s comments at Moscow airport

-Arrangements

-Brezhnev’s visit to US

-President’s schedule

-Camp David

-Activities

-Sequoia

-Key Biscayne

-San Clemente

-Houston, Detroit

-Brezhnev’s automobiles

-Masarati, Cadillac, Rolls Royce

-Request for Lincoln Mark II

Kissinger’s visit to Soviet Union

-Brezhnev

-Driving habits

-Motorboat, hovercraft [?]

-Living conditions in villages

-41-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Contrasted with leaders of Soviet Union

-Contrasted with US leaders

-Brezhnev’s dacha [retreat]

-Hunting

-Value

-Compared to Swiss chalet

-Swimming pool

US foreign relations

-Soviet summit

-NATO

-CSCE

Forthcoming Soviet summit

-Soviet view

-Watergate

-Benefit to Brezhnev

-Attendance

-Gromyko

-Provisions for signing agreements

-Gromyko, Dorbynin, [First name unknown] Konenko [?]

-Communiqué

-Motives

SALT

-Soviet Union

-JCS

-MIRVs

-Equal aggregates

-Soviet Union compared to US

-Limitations

-Soviet Union position

-State Department position

-JCS opposition

-Trident missiles

-MIRV freeze

-JCS

-42-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Henry M. (“Scoop”) Jackson

-White House strategy to gain support

-General principles

-Negotiations

-Necessity of MIRV offer

-Kissinger’s conversation with Brezhnev

-Soviet Union missiles

-MIRV missiles compared with numbers of missiles

-Contrasted with numbers only conditions

-Possible outcome

-US position

-Soviet Union action

-US arms compared with Soviet arms

-JCS

-President’s possible communication

-President’s assessment

Cambodia

-Vote in Congess, May 10

-Appropriations

-Transfer authority

-State Department knowledge

-Defense Department actions

-Amount of funding

-Kissinger’s opinion

-Rogers’s assessment

-Effects of vote

-President’s assessment

-Paris Peace Talks

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Le Duc Tho

-Rogers’s testimony to Senate Appropriations Committee

-John L. McClellan

-Executive session

-Compared to Foreign Relations Committee

-Favorable vote

-North Vietnam

-Effect of vote

-43-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Rogers’s conversation with William H. Sullivan

-Kissinger’s forthcoming conversation with Tho

President’s message to Sullivan

-President’s cable to Kissinger

-Message to Brezhnev

-Vietnam

-Forthcoming Soviet summit

Kissinger’s talks with Brezhnev

-Cable from Scowcroft

-Handwritten note

-Disclosure to Brezhnev

-Brezhnev’s response

-Brezhnev’s remarks

-North Vietnam

-Obstinance

-Pressure

-Signatures

-Agreement

-Conciliation

-PRC presence

-US and Soviet Union role

PRC

-Future

-Need for support

-Future power

-Industry, resources, population

-Compared to Japan

Middle East

-Kissinger’s talks with Brezhnev

-Soviet Union initiative

-War

-Timing

-Rogers’s talks with Abba Eban

-44-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Military position [Lebanon]

-Soviet Union intervention

-Seriousness

-Kissinger’s talks with Brezhnev

-Soviet Union position

-Gromyko

-“Roadside” talks [?]

-Interim agreement

-Overall agreement

-Arab position

-Contradiction

-Support for Egypt

-Cairo

-Consistency

-1968 scheme

-Platform 69

-Palestinian-Israel border settlement

-Possibility of war

-Rogers’s assessment

-Anwar el-Sadat

-Thrusts

-Conversations with President, Israel

-Crisis

-Public relations

-Beating

-Soviet Union’s assessment

-Arab defeat

-Rogers’s meeting with Mohammed H. El Zayyat

-New York

-Egypt military

-Compared to Israel

-Israel’s assessment

-Monitoring

-Military

-Diplomats

-United Nations [UN]

-Forthcoming Security Council meeting, May 1973

-45-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Israel, Great Britain

-UN resolution 242

-Possible negotiations

-Israel’s willingness

-Egypt’s willingness

-Hafez Ismail

-Kissinger’s possible meeting with Hafez Ismail

-Paris

-Kissinger’s schedule

-Need for secrecy

-Leaks

-Telegram

-Rogers

-Propositions

-Rogers [?]

-Stalling

-Sisco

-Rogers’s request for brief

-State Department’s role

-Kissinger’s possible statement

-Egypt, Soviet Union

-Secrecy

-Communication

-Ismail’s possible comments

-Back channel

-State Department activities

-Coordination of efforts

-Israel, Great Britain

-Ismail

-Statements to President, Kissinger

-Compared to Rogers

-Request for meeting with Kissinger

-Egypt

-Diplomatic strategy with US

-US relations

-Sisco

-Alfred L. (“Roy”) Atherton

-46-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Kissinger’s possible meeting with Ismail

-Consultation

-Need for representation from State Department

-Atherton

-Privacy

-Leak

Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Tho

-US bargaining position

-President’s unpredictability

-Possible military strike

-Unpreparedness

-Discretion

-Congressional vote

-US public opinion

-Third option

-Cost

-Immediacy

-Safety

-Opposition

-Agreement on Ending the War and Restoring Peace in Vietnam

-Articles 7, 20, 15, 8

-Implementation

-Economic aid

-Congress

-Cambodia

-Article 20

-Withdrawal

-Possible unilateral cease-fire

-Timing of announcement

-Fighting

-Bombing

-Effects

-Difficulty

-Timing of announcement

Cambodia

-47-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-US military action

-Bombing raids

-B-52s

-Goals

-Psychological effect

-Reluctance to engage militarily

-US bombing

-Collapse

-US support

-Public relations

-US Congress

-Appropriations

-Rider

-John Sherman Cooper-Church Amendment

-Prohibitions on ground troops, advisors

-Possible prohibitions on bombing

-Possible Presidential veto

-Override

-Reduction in US military capability, bargaining position

-Effect on Vietnam settlement

-Vietnam settlement

-Incentives to maintain agreement

-Possible cease-fire

-Economic aid talks

-Possible unilateral cease-fire

-Possible effect

-Possible North Vietnam action

-US Congress vote

-US military action

-Possible continuation of bombings

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Tho

-Possible unilateral cease-fire

-US Congress vote, May 10

-Omission

-Office of Management and Budget [OMB], Defense Department

controller

-Kissinger’s opinion

-48-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-McClellan’s telephone call to Rogers

-Rogers’s testimony to Senate Appropriations Committee

-Rogers’s knowledge

-OMB

-Elliot L. Richardson

-Tenure in office

-Defense Department controller

-Timing of funding request

-Richardson

-Alternative sources of funds for bombing

-Transfer

-Amount

-Richardson

-Congress

-Rogers’s testimony

-Effect on negotiations

-Kissinger’s meeting with Tho

-Economic aid

Latin America

-US Foreign policy

-Significance

-Rogers’s forthcoming trip

-Message from President

-Domestic issues

-Kissinger’s previous trip to Soviet Union

-Focus on forthcoming Soviet summit, “Year of Europe”

-President’s statements in 1958

-Significance of Latin America

-Revolution, coup

-Importance of Latin America

-US priorities

-Compared with Soviet Union, PRC, Europe, Japan

-Hemispheric interests

-Latin America initiatives

-Compared to US policies

-Alliance for progress

-49-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Paternalism

-Leaders’s meeting

-President’s schedule

-State visits

-Compared to Europe

-Luis Echeverria Alvarez

-Ultimatum

-Compared to individual meetings

-Dwight D. Eisenhower

-Meeting with Hector J. Campara

-Mexico

-Water salinity problem

-President’s approval

-Peru

-Military sales

-Compared with Soviet Union

-Military sales

-President’s views

-Military establishment

-US interest

-US personnel

-Contacts

-Compared to Indonesia

Presidential determination

-Correspondence with Kissinger

Latin America

-Fishing rights

-Japan

-Rogers’s forthcoming trip

-Argentina

-Compared with Europe

-Rogers’s experience in South America, Mexico

-Cities of Latin America

-President’s opinion

-Buenos Aires

-50-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Embassy

Personnel appointments

-Cambodia

-US ambassadorship

-Rogers’s assessment

-Confirmation

-Deputy Chief of Mission

-Recommendation

-William R. Kintner

-Likelihood of confirmation

-Timing

-Bombing

-Compared to Graham Martin

-Senate Committee on Foreign Relations

-Deputy Chief of Mission

-Gen. Richard G. Stilwell

-Deputy Chief of Mission

-Thomas O. Enders

-Confirmation

-Kintner

-Henry A. Byroade

-Rogers’s opinion

-Resignation

-Replacement

-Statements regarding foreign service

-Thomas G. Corcoran

-Michael J. (“Mike”) Mansfield

-Advisability of reposting

-Alternatives

-Relationship with Corcoran

-Democrats

-Kissinger’s knowledge

-[First name unknown] Kendall [?]

-Age

-Kintner

-President’s assessment

-51-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Thailand

-US ambassadorship

-Cambodia

-Deputy Chief of Mission

-Thomas O. Enders

-Emory C. Swank

-Kissinger’s assessment

-Compared to G. McMurtrie Godley

-Godley

-Thailand

-US ambassadorship

-Kintner

-Cambodia

-Need for change

-Swank

-President’s opinion

-Swank

-Possible posts

-Chad, Uruguay

-Contrasted with Cambodia

-President’s assessment

-San Clemente

-Thailand

-Kintner

-Cambodia

-US ambassadorship

-Timing of decision

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Tho

-Options

-Need for military background

-Compared with Kintner

-Possible confirmation process

-US Congress

-Kintner

-Thailand, Korea

-Response

-Henry Kearns [?]

-52-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Carol Clendening (“Carol”) Laise

-State Department Public Affairs Officer

-Relationship with Ellsworth F. Bunker

-Kissinger’s assessment

-Possible role

-Robert Anderson

-Bunker

-Possible position

-Laise

Rogers’s conversation with Warren E. Burger

-Possible position

-Burger’s health

Election Reform Commission

-Membership

-John W. Gardner

-Law school deans

-William Scranton

-Kissinger’s assessment

-University presidents

-Dale Korsten, President of Cornell University

-Charles H. Percy

-Motives

-James Q. Wilson from Harvard University

-Need for balance

-Democrats, Republicans

-Southern

-Dean Rusk

-Terry Sanford

-Contrasted with Dean G. Acheson and Thomas E. Dewey

-McGeorge Bundy

-Motives

-Korsten

-Rogers’s assessment

-Governors

-Jimmy Carter

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. August-2012)

-Challenges

-Honesty

Spiro T. Agnew

-Grand Jury investigation

-Tenure as governor of Maryland

-Campaign contributions and contract awards

Campaign finance reform

-Limitations on contributions

-Amounts

-Methods

Rogers’s forthcoming trip to Latin America

-Timing

Watergate

-Ervin Committee hearings

-Possible effect on trials

-Indictments of John N. Mitchell and Maurice H. Stans

-Compared with Profumo case in Great Britain

-Effect on government politicians

-Rogers’s conversation with George R. S. Baring [Earl of Cromer]

-Press relations

Kissinger and Rogers left at 12:03 pm.