Date: August 3, 1972

Time: 8:28 am – 8:57 am

Location: Oval Office

The President met with Henry A. Kissinger.

Kissinger’s schedule

Vice President Spiro T. Agnew’s previous call to the President

-George D. Aiken amendment

-Edward W. Brooke amendment

-Senate Republicans

-The President’s possible actions

Vietnam negotiations

-News summary

-Critics of the Administration

-Effect of 1972 election

-North Vietnamese

-The Administration

-Liberals in Congress

-Possible acknowledgement of progress in negotiations

-Increase of Congressional support for the Administration

-Aiken

-Implication of progress through continued negotiations

-Increase of Congressional support

-Adverse reaction from North Vietnamese

-Passage of Brooke amendment

-North Vietnamese reaction

-Possible acknowledgement of progress

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

-Increase of Congressional support

-North Vietnamese reaction

-Congressional support for the Administration’s policies

-Congressional schedule

-The President’s previous conversation with Aiken

-Kissinger’s previous conversation with Thomas J. McIntyre

-Thomas C. Korologos

-Protection of private channel for negotiations

-The President’s conversation with Congressman

-Charles McC. Mathias, Jr.

-Charles H. Percy

-Desire of Senate for role in foreign policy

-Marlow W. Cook

-Ted Stevens

-Kissinger’s previous meeting with Congressional

leaders

-Compared to Cabinet

-Role of the Cabinet in foreign policy

-Nelson A. Rockefeller as hypothetical secretary of state

-John B. Connally

-John N. Mitchell

-Agnew

-Support for the President’s May 8, 1972 proposal

-Withdrawal of US forces

-Brooke amendment

-North Vietnamese view

-Exchange of prisoners of war [POWs] for withdrawal of US

forces

-Exchange of POWs for end of bombing, mining, and withdrawal of US forces

-Removal of Nguyen Van Thieu

-End of US military and economic aid to South Vietnam

-Brooke amendment

-Possible compromise by Hugh Scott

-Possible break in negotiations

-The President’s view

-POWs

-The President’s previous press conference

-Robert J. Dole

-Kissinger’s relationships

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

-Percy

-Mathias

-Agnew’s view

-Kissinger’s previous conversation with Agnew

-Percy

-Kissinger’s view

Federal government

-Proposed reorganization after 1972 election

-Andrew Jackson

-Department of Defense [DOD]

-State Department

-Department of Housing and Urban Development [HUD]

-Department of Health, Education, and Welfare [HEW]

-Elliot L. Richardson

-Need for loyalty

Vietnam

-Press

-Kissinger’s previous conversation with Robert B. Semple, Jr.

-Article on negotiations

-Kissinger’s trip to Paris

-Sources for article

-State Department

-Separation of military and political issues

-Thieu

State Department

-Marshall Green

-Involvement in foreign policy

-William P. Rogers

-Involvement in negotiations during the President’s trip to the Soviet

Union

-Andrei A. Gromyko

-Aleksei N. Kosygin

-Plenary sessions

-Vietnam negotiations

-Kissinger’s view

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

Vietnam negotiations

-Chances for success

-Kissinger’s view

-Political elements of the negotiations

-The President’s view

-Soviet Union

-People’s Republic of China [PRC]

-Thieu

-South Vietnam

-Compared to Israel

-Damage to North Vietnam

-Chances for survival

-1972 election

-Possible collapse of South Vietnam

-Timing

-Effect on US foreign policy

-Collapse in several years

-Collapse in several months

-Theiu

-PRC

-Domestic impact

-Public reaction to collapse after a year

-Possible settlement in October 1972

-Compared to Algeria

-North Vietnam

The President’s possible meeting with Kissinger and Adm. Thomas H. Moorer

-Lack of flights over North Vietnam

-News summary

-Lack of bombing of fixed targets

-Armed recce

-Surface-to-air missile [SAM] sites

-Timing

-Moorer’s schedule

-Forthcoming Mutual and Balanced Force Reduction [MBFR]

meeting

Stephen B. Bull entered at an unknown time after 8:28 am.

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

The President’s schedule

-Telephone call from John O. Marsh, Jr.

Bull left at an unknown time before 8:48 am.

The President talked with the White House operator at 8:48 am.

The President talked with Marsh between 8:48 am and 8:54 am.

[Conversation No. 760-6A]

[See Conversation No. 28-49; one item has been withdrawn]

[End of telephone conversation]

Vietnam

-Passage of Brooke amendment

-Negotiations

-1972 election

-Possible breakdown of talks

-Congress

-Chances for success

-Kissinger’s forthcoming trip to Saigon

-Negotiations

-Discussions in various forums

-Plenary sessions

-Possible standstill ceasefire

-North Vietnamese offer

-Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

-Brooke amendment

-Offer of POWs for withdrawal of US forces

-Ceasefire

Kissinger left at 8:57 am.