Date: October 23, 1972

Time: 8:34 am – 9:17 am

Location: Executive Office Building

The President met with Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

File of messages between Henry A. Kissinger and the White House

-The President’s request

-The President’s schedule

-Nassau

Vietnam

-Peace settlement negotiations

-Haig’s conversation with Anatoliy F. Dobrynin, October

22, 1972

-Possible additional changes

-Kissinger’s Message

-Kissinger’s relations with Haig

-Haig’s conversation with the President

-Possible bombing halt and reduction of bombing

-The President’s telephone call to William P. Rogers, October 22, 1972

-1972 election

-Importance for US Foreign Policy

-Soviet Union, the People’s Republic China [PRC]

-Survival of South Vietnam

-Prospects

-The President’s view

-PRC

-South Korea

20

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-Taiwan, Republic of China

-Japan, Indonesia, Thailand

-1972 Election

-Appearance of influence

-Possible dumping [of Thieu]

-Kissinger’s views and efforts

-The President’s Visit to Soviet Union May 1972

-Roger’s comments

-The President’s schedule, October 24, 1972

-Photograph session

-Kissinger’s conversation with Thieu

-Kissinger’s possible trip to Hanoi

-Haig’s conversation with Dobrynin

-Possible Paris meeting

-Le Duc Tho

– Pressure on Thieu

-The President’s conversation with Rogers

– Thieu’s role

-Roger’s previous conversation with Haig

-U. Alexis Johnson

-William H. Sullivan

-Roger’s view

-PRC

-US Casualties

-The President’s view

-Communist domination of Eastern Europe after World

War II

-Gen. William C. Westmoreland’s view

-Military’s view

-Peace settlement negotiations

-Changes in possible settlement

-Thieu

-North Vietnamese forces in South Vietnam

-Possible US announcement of bilateral agreement with North Vietnam

-Kissinger

-Thieu

-Public pressure

-1972 Election

-Thieu’s leverage

-Kissinger’s view

-The President’s view

21

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-Terms

-Withdrawal if US forces

-Stopping of US bombing, mining

-Prisoners of war [POWs]

-North Vietnamese withdrawal from Cambodia and Laos

-US aid to South Vietnam

-Soviet Union aid to North Vietnam

-Duration of War

-January 1, 1973

-Views of American People

-Thieu

-Thieu’s role

-Haig’s conversation with Dobrynin

-Newspaper headlines

-Thieu’s distrust of Kissinger and communists

-Communist strategy

-Cease-fire

-Document capture

-Post-1972 election

-Possible ultimatum to Thieu by the President

-Kissinger

-Cease-fire

-Kissinger

-Possible presentation of fait accompli

-Haig’s conversation with Dobrynin

-North Vietnamese actions

-Public relations

-Negotiation record

-The President’s request

-Kissinger conversation with Thieu

-U.S. Military Policy

-May 8, 1972 decision to bomb Hanoi and mine Haiphong Harbor

-The President’s conversation with Kissinger

-The President’s visit to Soviet Union, May 1972

-Possible cancellation of Soviet summit

-John B. Connally’s previous views

-North Vietnamese Spring 1972 offensive

-The President’s view

-Kissinger’s view

-Views of Central Intelligence Agency [CIA], National Security Council

[NSC]

22

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-Kissinger’s Views

-John Negroponte’s views

-Winston Lord’s view

-Kissinger’s views

-Cambodia

-Compared with the President, Connally

-PRC. Soviet Union policy

-Bombing and mining

-effect on negotiations

-Adm. Thomas H. Moorer’s views

-CIA’s views

-Effect on North Vietnam

-News stories

-Views of the American people

-Connally’s view

-The President’s conversation with H.R. (“Bob”) Haldeman

-PRC, Soviet Union

Kissinger

-The President’s view

-Associates

Vietnam

-Peace settlement negotiations

-The President’s forthcoming meeting With Rogers

-Haig’s possible conversation with Kissinger

-State Department Bureaucracy

-Leaks

-The President’s view

-State Department

-Hanoi

-Kissinger’s Views

-State Department

-Secrecy

-Marvin L. Kalb

-Rogers

-Melvin R. Laird

-The President’s conversation with Rogers October 22, 1972

-Korean concerns

-Thieu

-Park Chung Hee

23

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-Fear of US abandonment

-Cease-fire

-Psychological importance

-Thieu

-Victory

-Haig’s conversation with Kissinger

-Timing

-North Vietnamese troops in South Vietnam

-Thieu’s cooperation

-Settlement conditions

-North Vietnamese position

-1972 election

-Polls

-Possible release of settlement offer

-Haig’s conversation with Dobrynin October 22, 1972

-McGovern’s campaign

-Thieu’s future

-Haig’s conversation with Charles W. Colson

-The President’s schedule, October 22, 1972

-Announcement

-Rogers

-Timing

-Laird

-Prisoners of war [POWs]

-North Vietnamese intentions

-Possible US bombing halt

-Assistance to South Vietnam

-The President’s instructions

-20 parallel

th

-North Vietnam

-Gen. John D. Lavelle

-Protective reaction

-The President’s orders to Laird

-Falsification of records

-Targets

-Surface to air missiles [SAMs]

-Falsification of records

-The President’s instructions

-POWs

-Mining and Bombing

-Cambodia, Laos

24

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-POWs

-Cease-fire

-Peace settlement negotiations

-Control of territory provisions

-Thieu

-Communist representation in South Vietnamese National Assembly

-Compared to France, Italy

-Thieu

-Possible meeting with the President

-Timing compared with 1972 election

-Congress

-Funding

Football game

-Washington Redskins

-White House television capability

-Comparison with Dallas Cowboys

-Larry Brown

Haig left at 9:17 am.