Date: January 3, 1973

Time: Unknown between 4:19 pm and 5:05 pm

Location: Oval Office

The President met with Henry A. Kissinger.

Vietnam War

-Bombing of North Vietnam

-Hospital and airfield

-Call from Spiro T. Agnew

-Defense Department

-Punishment of pilots

-Kissinger’s conversation with Melvin R. Laird

-Inadvertence

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-Negotiations

-Tone

-Political points

-International commission

-Independent monitors

-Four-power commission

-Bombing of North Vietnam

-Press coverage

-Punishment of pilots

-Compared to Da Nang rocket attacks

-Pham Van Dong

Kissinger’s meeting with Anatoliy F. Dobrynin

-Leonid I. Brezhnev summit

-Nuclear treaty

-Vietnam War

-Settlement

-Moscow Communist Party chiefs

-Brezhnev’s commitment

-Moscow

-Tricia Nixon Cox’s visit

-Vietnam War

Vietnam negotiations

-Possible failure

-October 1972 agreement

-Michael J. (“Mike”) Mansfield

-Funds cut off proposal

-Conditions

-Option two

Kissinger’s meeting with Dobrynin

-Andrei A. Gromyko

-Berlin

-Josef V. Stalin

-Martin J. Hillenbrand

-Disloyalty

-Message to Bonn

-Departure

-1972 campaign

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-Ambassador to Germany

-Businessman, lawyer

-[David] Kenneth Rush

-Foreign Service

-Disloyalty

Congressional relations

-Kissinger’s meetings on Vietnam

-Republican Congress members

-Mansfield

-Telephone call

-Funds cut off

-Carl B. Albert

-Congressional leadership

-William S. Mailliard

-Number

-Kissinger’s statements

-The President’s instructions

-The President’s bipartisan Congressional leadership meeting

-Peace with honor

-Congress’s motives

-Publicity

-Access

-The President’s meetings

-Albert

-Mansfield

-Gerald R. Ford

-Hugh Scott

-Mansfield

-Republican leadership

The President’s bipartisan Congressional leadership meeting

-Talking points

-Preparation

-Schedule

-Vietnam settlement

-Honorable peace

-Cease-fire

-Prisoners of War [POWs] release

-Paris negotiations

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-Future developments

-Ronald L. Ziegler

-Serious negotiations

-Future actions

-Bombing of Hanoi

-No comment

Bombing of North Vietnam

-Hospital

-Punishment of pilots

-Press commentary

-Double standard

-Compared to Cambodia

-Laird

-Published list of targets

-Advantages

-Civilian targets

-Ziegler

-Report

-Adm. Thomas H. Moorer

-Moorer’s report to Kissinger

-Air Force pilots

Vietnam negotiations

-Option two

-Viability

-Bombing of North Vietnam

-POWs release

-Problems

-Press coverage

-Destruction

-Support of Congress

-Funds cut off

-Domestic strain

-Option one

-Thieu’s agreement

-Future problems

-Compared to Option two

-Abandonment of past positions

-Vietnamization

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-Thieu’s preference

-Achievement for US

-Thieu’s response

-October 8, 1972 agreement

-Bombing of North Vietnam

-Compared to October 8, 1972 agreement

-Thieu’s acceptance

-Kissinger’s conversation with South Vietnamese ambassador

-Early settlement

-Possible overthrow of Thieu

-Bombing

-Impact in US

-Compared to May 8, 1972 decision

-Invasion by North Vietnam

-POWs release

-Viability

-Thieu

-October 26, 1972 cease-fire announcement

-Compared to October 8, 1972 agreement

-Consequences for Thieu

-Possible overthrow

-Option two

-International control agreement

-South Vietnam government’s acceptance

-Signing procedure

-Demilitarized Zone [DMZ]

-Option two

-Vietnamization

-Bombing

-POWs

-Domestic effect

-1972 election

-Press relations

-Congress

-Bombing for POWs

-Mining

-Bombing below 20 Parallel

th

-Residual force

-Bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong

-POWs

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-Bombing below 20 Parallel

th

-Effects

-Press relations

-October 26, 1972 agreement

-Kissinger meeting with Thieu

-Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

-Kissinger’s travel

-Hanoi

-Seoul

-Allies

-Bangkok

-Vientiane

-Hanoi

-Saigon

-Timing

-Bombing halt

-Haig’s trip to Saigon

-Thieu’s reaction

-The President’s announcement

-Participants

-Congress

-Possibility of failure

-Thieu’s signature

-Thieu’s possible actions

-Resignation

-Ellsworth F. Bunker

-Option two

-Domestic and foreign challenges

-Golda Meir’s visit

-Middle East initiatives

-Soviet Union, People’s Republic of China [PRC], Latin America

-Defense Department, State Department

-Reorganization

-John D. Ehrlichman

-George P. Shultz

-Europe

-Dobrynin

-Gromyko

-Hillenbrand

-Effect on foreign policy

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-Soviet Union, PRC

-Congress

-Press relations

-Option one

-Risks

-Collapse of South Vietnam

-Compared to Option two

-Unsatisfactory settlement

-Lack of Congressional support

-Limitations

-Bombing below 20 parallel

th

-Mining

-Residual force

-Viability

-Kissinger’s view

-Loss of war

-Mining

-South Vietnam offensive operations

-Collapse of Thieu’s government

-Kissinger’s support

-Antiwar opposition

-Soviet Union, PRC

-May 8, 1972 objectives

-Earlier settlement

-Advantages for Thieu

-Thieu’s reaction

-The President’s action in October 1972

-1972 election

-Kissinger’s conversation with South Vietnamese ambassador

-Congress

-1973 Inauguration

-Settlement

-Controversy

-Difficulty

-Timing

-Option one

-Compared to option two

-North Vietnam’s objectives

-Halt of military operations

-POWs

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-Political recognition of North Vietnam

-Opportunity for Thieu

-Thieu

-Thailand

-Indonesia

-Negotiated solution compared to “budget”

-Future of South Vietnam

-Communists

-US goals

-May 8, 1972 speech

-South Vietnamese resistance

-North Vietnamese reaction

-Return of POWs

-Survival of Thieu’s government

-Option two

-Domestic problems

-The President’s schedule

-Kissinger’s schedule

-The President’s statement

-Bipartisan Congressional leadership meeting

-Press release

-Ziegler

-Kissinger’s return to Paris

-PRC and Soviet Union position

-Robert S. Elegant

-Dobrynin

-European security conference

-Middle East

-Nuclear treaty

-Kissinger’s meeting

-PRC

The President’s schedule

-Haig

-Departure

Kissinger left at 5:06 pm.

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