Date: February 22, 1973

Time: 12:46 pm – 1:08 pm

Location: Oval Office

The President met with William E. Timmons.

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Congressional relations

-Evening at the White House

-Invitations

-Gerald R. Ford

-Carl B. Albert

-Michael J. (“Mike”) Mansfield

-Hugh Scott

-Sammy Davis, Jr.

-Irving Berlin

-Invitations

-Mansfield

-Reluctance

-State Dinners

-Thomas P. (“Tip”) O’Neill

-President’s reluctance

-Ford

-Frequent meetings

-Veterans

-Church service

-Cancellations or regrets

-Supporters

-Future invitations

-Opponents

-William B. Saxbe

-Remarks

-Samuel L. Devine

-Apology

-Church service

Henry A. Kissinger entered at 12:49 pm.

-Evening at the White House

-Evening at the White House

-Invitations

-Republicans

-House and Senate

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-Compared with State Dinners

Timmons left at 12:50 pm.

Ronald L. Ziegler’s view on press briefing

Metropolitan Club

-Kissinger’s meeting with Joseph W. Alsop

-Column

-People’s Republic of China [PRC]’s press coverage

Kissinger’s press briefing

-Press coverage

-People’s Republic of China [PRC] liaison office

-Importance

-List of Prisoners of War [POWs]

-John T. Downey’s release

-Questions

-Taiwan

-Aid to North Vietnam

-Reconstruction

-Meaning

-Real issue

-North Vietnam’s foreign relations

-US

-Neutral countries

-PRC, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [USSR]

-Peter Lisagor

-Questions

-Laos

-Murrey Marder

-Question

-Discussion in Peking

-Laos, Cambodia

-Cease-fire

-Withdrawal of foreign troops

-Support of Savang Vatthana

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-Royalty

-Political settlement

-Souvanna Phouma

-US commitments

-Cease-fire, withdrawal of foreign troops

Press relations

-Hostility to President

-John W. Arbuckle

-Reasons for hostility

-Envy

-Cease-fire announcement

-Press response

Laos

-Cease-fire

-Settlement

-Souvanna Phouma

-Negotiations

-Incentives to abide by settlement

-North Vietnam’s role

-Aid

-Cable

-Congress

-Incentive

William P. Rogers

The President’s schedule

-Camp David meeting

-Meeting at the White House, Old Executive Office Building [OEB]

-George P. Shultz

-President’s departure for Camp David

-Kissinger on television [TV]

-Scheduling

Rogers

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-Meeting with Kissinger and President

-Breakfast meeting

-Timing of appearance

-Hafiz Ismail

Stephen B. Bull entered at an unknown time after 12:50 pm.

Rogers

-Breakfast meeting

-Kissinger’s attendance

-Arrangements

-Paris trip

Bull left at an unknown time before 1:08 pm.

-Rogers’s trip

-William H. Sullivan’s, William J. Porter’s attendance on trip

-Middle East

Bull entered at an unknown time after 12:50 pm.

Rogers’s meeting with Kissinger and President

-Porter

-Sullivan

-Kissinger’s telephone call

Bull [?] left at an unknown time before 1:08 pm.

The President talked with the White House operator at an unknown time between 12:50 pm and

1:08 pm.

[Conversation No. 861-19A]

[See Conversation No. 43-164]

[End of telephone conversation]

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Breakfast meeting

-Timing

Press relations

-Kissinger’s press briefing

-PRC

-Vietnam cease-fire and settlement

-Aid to North Vietnam

-Budget battle

-Consequences of rejection

-Alsop

-Support for President

-President’s Congressional dinner

-Right-wing, isolationist

-Voting record

Republicans

-Past isolationism

-Compared with liberal internationalists’ arguments

-Vietnam War

Aid to North Vietnam

-Opposition

-Domestic spending

-Schools

-Ghettos

-Polls

-Compared with 1947

-Congress

-Support

Kissinger talked with William P. Rogers at an unknown time between 12:50 pm and 1:08 pm.

[Conversation No. 861-19B]

[See Conversation No. 43-165]

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[End of telephone conversation]

Rogers

-Role

Kissinger’s schedule

-Leonid I. Brezhnev

-Alsop

-Brezhnev

-Scheduling

-Anatoliy F. Dobrynin

-Meeting with Kissinger

-Camp David

-Cable

President’s schedule

-Brezhnev’s visit

-France

-Trip to Europe

Press relations

-Alsop

-Foreign aid

-The President’s support while in Congress

-Opposition

-Liberal Democrats

-Vietnam War

-Responsibility

-Humanitarian

-Alsop

-Japan and Germany

-North Vietnam

-Liberal intellectuals’ support

-Aid to Japan and Germany compared with North Vietnam

Congressional relations

-H.R. (“Bob”) Haldeman

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-Breakfast meeting with leaders

-President’s statement about aid to Vietnam

-Opposition

William F. (“Billy”) Graham

-Telephone call with President

-Son

-Age

-Support for President

-School

-Support for President

-Bombing

-Compared with Harvard University

Bombing

-Support

-Letters to Kissinger

-Fear of losing

Withdrawal from Vietnam

-Consequences

-POWs

-Sense of failure

Alsop

Kissinger met with an unknown person at an unknown time before 1:08 pm.

Identification of person

Kissinger left at 1:08 pm.

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