Date: October 25, 1972

Time: 9:40 am – 10:08 am

Location: Executive Office Building

The President met with Henry A. Kissinger.

The People’s Republic of China [PRC]

-Chou En-Lai

Vietnam peace settlement negotiations

-Leonid I. Brezhnev’s previous message

-Kissinger’s response

-Hanoi

-Kissinger’s possible trip

-Timing

-1972 election

-Paris talks

-Kissinger’s schedule

-Saigon

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

-Possible leaks

-US proposal

-Final Document

-Saigon’s approval

-Possible bombing halt

-Rationale

-Quality of offer

-Concessions

-Compared with 1968 bombing halt

-Public announcement

-The President’s suggestion

-20 parallel

th

-Public opinion

-Forthcoming 1972 election

-Possible press statement

-Breakthrough

-Further negotiations

-Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

-Fritz G. Kraemer’s view

-Nguyen Van Thieu

-Public Position

-US Position

-The President’s view

-Thieu

-Coalition government

-Bombing halt

-North Vietnamese military situation

-Possible cease-fire, October 31, 1972

-Thieu`s recent speech

-Kissinger’s view

-Strategy

-Role in negotiations

-Coalition government

-Communist infrastructure in South Vietnam

-Possible bombing halt

-Political risks

-Rationale

-Timing compared with 1972 election

-Compared with 1968 bombing halt

-Public announcement

-Extent of halt

9

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

-Reasons

-Risks

-Timing

-Secrecy

-Thieu’s strategy

-Possible North Vietnamese reply

-US public relations strategy

-Possible North Vietnamese reply

-Le Duc Tho

-William P. Rogers

-Issue of coalition government in Vietnam

-Possible statement

-Ronald L. Ziegler

-US message

-Possible attack on McGovern

-Wording of press statement on coalition government

-Ziegler

-Washington Post article

-Unknown reporter’s name

-Kissinger’s recent name

-Coalition government

-The President’s participation in negotiations

-John B. Connally

-Leaks

-Thieu

-Stewart J.O. Alsop

-Murrey Marder

-Television

-Howard K. Smith

-Statement regarding efforts of the President and Kissinger

-Messages

-Content of Kissinger’s statement

-McGovern’s proposal compared to the Administrations

-Tone

-Type of Peace

-Surrender

-Prisoners of war [POWs]

-Coalition government

-Assistance to South Vietnam

-Thailand

-Laos

10

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

-Cambodia

-“Peace with honor”

-1972 election

-McGovern’s possible response

-Bombing halt

-Nature of announcement

-Wording

-De facto compared to de jure status

-Progress

-Le Duc Tho

-US position

-Ziegler

-Soviet Union

-US global commitments

-Kissinger’s possible trip to Hanoi

-The President’s view

-Le Duc Tho

-Thieu

-Handling

-US equipment shipments

-Kissinger’s meeting with unknown person

-Timing

-Settlement

-Possible agreement to settlement

-Timing

-November 20, 1972

-Kissinger’s forthcoming telephone call to Nelson A. Rockefeller

-1968 peace initiative

-McGovern’s statements

-Compared with current US proposal

-Compared with McGovern’s proposals

-POWs

-Laos, Cambodia

-Communist government in South Vietnam

-The President’s schedule

-Priority of peace negotiations

-The President’s and Kissinger’s role

-Joseph W. Alsop’s column

-History’s verdict

-Abraham Lincoln

-Opposition to the President’s policies

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Nov-03)

-Compared to Lincoln

-Bureaucracy, media

-Compared with Lyndon B. Johnson

-Administration problems

-Consensus

Kissinger left at 10:08 am.