Date: July 19, 1972

Time: 9:45 pm – 10:30 pm

Location: Executive Office Building

The President met with Henry A. Kissinger.

Kissinger’s schedule

-Refreshments

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

Vietnam negotiations

-Schedule

-Communications

-Ronald L. Ziegler

-The President’s Instructions

-Pace

The President’s conversation with Charles W. Colson

-Story out of Hong Kong about North Vietnam

-Democrats

-George S. McGovern

Vietnam negotiations

-Settlement

-Timing

-North Vietnam

-Soviet Union

-People’s Republic of China [PRC]

-Chou En-Lai

-Kissinger’s conversation with Le Duc Tho

-Compared to previous meeting

-Xuan Thuy

-Kissinger’s secret trips

-Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

-Kissinger’s statement

-Ziegler

-Prisoners of war [POWs] release

-James R. (“Jimmy”) Hoffa’s proposed trip to North Vietnam

-Harold J. Gibbons

-William L. Taub’s conversation with William J. Porter

-Kissinger’s talk with Haig

-Kissinger’s statement

-PRC and Soviet Union

-Political situation

-New York Herald Tribune

-1972 election

-Domestic opposition

-Proposals

-Leonid I. Brezhnev

-Kissinger’s conversation with Tho

-Tho’s statement

-Significance

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

An unknown man entered at an unknown time after 9:45 pm.

Refreshments

The unknown man left at an unknown time before 10:30 pm.

Vietnam negotiations

-Seven Points

-Tho’s comments

-Thuy

-Tho’s statement

-Bombing

-Mining

-Nguyen Van Thieu

-Reparations

-Respective interests

-Kissinger’s conversation with Tho

-Agreements

-Kissinger’s conversation with Chou

-The President’s May 8, 1972 proposal

-POWs

-Ceasefire

-Reaction

-Compared to May 31, 1971 proposal

-North Vietnam military action in South Vietnam

-US bombing

-Political settlement

-Brezhnev proposal

-Government of National Concord

-North Vietnamese position

-Thieu

-US aid to South Vietnam

-Kissinger’s response

-North Vietnamese strategy

-McGovern

-October 1972

-August 1, 1972 meeting

-August 15, 1972

-Soviets

-Political settlement

-January 25, 1972 proposal

-Thieu

-McGovern

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-Army

-Brezhnev proposal

Haig entered at an unknown time after 9:45 pm.

Vietnam negotiations

-Thieu

-July 12, 1971 meeting

-North Vietnamese strategy

-1972 campaign

-Republican National Convention

-George C. Wallace

-The President’s lead over McGovern in polls

-August 15, 1972

-May 2, 1972

Middle East

-Brezhnev

-Egypt

-Egypt

-State Department

-William P. Rogers’s statement in San Francisco

-US-Soviet relations

-Haig’s call to Anatoliy F. Dobrynin

-Kissinger’s forthcoming meeting with Dobrynin

-The President’s talk with Ronald W. Reagan

-The President’s trip to the Soviet Union

-Kissinger’s meeting with Andrei A. Gromyko

-Brezhnev

-Egyptians

-Possible motives

-US-Soviet relations

-Egyptians

-State Department

-Anwar el-Sadat

-Unknown advisor [Hafiz Ismail?]

-Dobrynin

McGovern

-Forthcoming briefing by Kissinger

-Schedule

-Fred Dutton

-Vietnam negotiations

-McGovern’s statements

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-Possible effect

-Views on Vietnam negotiations

-Face the Nation

-POWs

-Return

-Timing

-1972 election

-Lyndon B. Johnson’s bombing halt

-Forthcoming briefing by Kissinger

-Arrangements

-Haig

-Tape recording

-Memorandum of conversation

-Johnson

-The President’s presence in office

-Timing

-The President’s schedule

-Camp David meeting with John B. Connally

-Press

-Johnson

-Future briefings

-Haig, Kissinger

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Vietnam

-Edward M. Kennedy’s proposal

-Refugees in South Vietnam

-Refugees

-Unknown Jesuit

-Catholics

-Negotiations

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-Ceasefire

-McGovern

-POW for US withdrawal

-US position

-Cease-Fire

-Withdrawal

-Timing

-POWs

-Joseph C. Kraft’s view

-Negotiations

-US actions

-The President’s January 25, 1972 and May 8, 1972 speeches

-May 2, 1972

-Effect on North Vietnamese

-Transcript of meeting

-The President’s re-election

-Tone

-Tho’s conversation with Kissinger

-Thuy

The President’s PRC policy

-Soviet Summit

Soviet Summit

-May 8, 1972 decision

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The President’s positions on issues

-Communism

-Foreign policy

-Vietnam

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

-May 8, 1972 blockade

-Soviet Union

-PRC

-Power

-Conditions compared to 1950’s

-Conservatives

-National Security Council [NSC]

Cambodia

Arms control and arms development

-Conservatives

-Strategic Arms Limitation Talks [SALT]

-Multiple Independently-targetable Reentry Vehicles [MIRVs], B-1, Undersea long-

range missile system [ULMS]

-National Review

US forces in Europe

Article in Newsweek

-Zbigniew Brzezinski

-Arnaud De Borchgrave

-White House response

-Europeans’ view of McGovern

-North Atlantic Treaty Organization [NATO]

-Soviet Summit

-Fear of Finlandization

-Michael J. Mansfield’s and McGovern’s proposals

-Trips by Administration representatives

-Kissinger

-Reagan

-William P. Rogers

-NATO

-The President’s meetings with European leaders

-Reagan

-Asia

Europe

-Role in US foreign policy

-Soviet Summit

-Mutual and Balanced Force Reduction [MBFR], European Security

Conference

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Oct-06)

Newsweek article

-Possible response by Helmut (“Hal”) Sonnenfeldt

Europeans

-Governments

-Political orientation

-View of 1972 election

McGovern

-Effect of possible election on US foreign policy

[Unintelligible]

McGovern

The President, Kissinger and Haig left at 10:30 pm.