THE PRESIDENT'S DAILY BRIEF

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
05974187
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RIPPUB
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U
Document Page Count: 
11
Document Creation Date: 
April 26, 2019
Document Release Date: 
April 30, 2019
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Publication Date: 
December 23, 1967
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PDF icon THE PRESIDENTS DAILY BRIE[15602345].pdf184.71 KB
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Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 C05974187 The President's Daily Brief cret 23 December 1967 23 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 C05974187 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) TO CRET Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 DAILY BRIEF 23 DECEMBER 1967 1. Australia 2. North Vietnam 3. South Korea TO ECRET Ambassador Clark had a 15-minute talk with Prime�Minister McEwen shortly after President Johnson left Melbourne. Prime Minister McEwen told Ambassador Clark that, while the US and Australia have had excellent relations all along, the President's visit "cemented our re- lationship for all time." The ambassa- dor comments that McEwen could not have been more complimentary. The prime minister also said it was the announcement of the President's visit which had caused others--includ- ing specifically the British--to send top-level delegations. McEwen is Very grateful for this. 3.5(c) 3. 3(h)(2) President Pak is facing a new legis- lative crisis. Opposition legislators are paralyzing all legislative business by a sit-in at the National Assembly. The primary issue is the ruling party's failure to live up to its agree- ment to establish a committee to inves- tigate the Assembly elections last June. Such a committee would undoubtedly finger a number of high administration officials for involvement in election irregularities Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 3.5(c) CRET 4. Vietnam 5. Greece TO ECRET Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 The Vietnamese Communists apparently are taking a cautious approach toward President Johnson's television remarks about possible South Vietnamese contacts with the Liberation Front. There has as yet been no official comment from either Hanoi or the Liberation Front. The chief of the Front's mission in -Prague, however, seems to have dismissed the President's statements rather per- functorily, but probably had not received any authoritative instructions. A Czech newspaper says he "answered" President ,Johnson by saying in a 20 December inter- view that "We do not intend in any way either to ease the position of the Saigon puppets or to help the American imperial- ists solve their problems." Hanoi seems to be wary of such brusque disclaimers, probably because it sees US encouragement of contacts between Saigon and the Front as another step toward bol- stering the role of the Front in any future settlement. The Vietnamese Communists took a similar approach toward Ambassador Goldberg's congressional testimony on 2 No- vember in which he said the US would not �stand in the way of Front representatives appearing at the UN Security Council or at a "Geneva" conference. The Communists completely avoided comment on Goldberg's remarks at that time. Only after the US disclosed Front overtures for a presence at the United Nations did they address themselves to this issue. Then both Hanoi and the Front denied the overtures and once again dismissed the competence of the UN on Vietnam issues. Papadopoulos has just announced an amnesty for all persons taken prisoner since the junta seized power last April. He stated specifically, that it will ap- ply to Andreas Papandreou. He also announced a referendum in April on a new constitution. Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 3.5(c) 3.5(c) Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 6. Eastern Europe 7. Czechoslovakia 8. Venezuela 9. Canada The Soviet bloc foreign ministers, winding up their meeting on the Middle East, have issued a communiqu�ased on the lowest common denominator. The statement claims complete unity of views among the participants, including the Rumanians. In order to achieve this consensus, however, the foreign minis- ters balanced a renewed call for the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Arab territory with the reaffirmation of Is- rael's right to exist. The absence of any pledge of military and economic aid to the Arabs also seems to repre- sent a concession by Moscow to some of the East Europeans. The Czech party central committee session ended late on Thursday, but no communiqu�as yet been published. So far there has been no hint of major changes in the leadership. The government's release of some 500 political prisoners in the annual Christmas amnesty may lead only to more terrorism next year. Among those re- leased was a prominent Communist leader, as well as all of the terrorist group that abducted a US military officer in 1964. With the 1968 election campaign close at hand, the government is try- ing to avoid being charged with repres- sion. Foreign Minister Martin is the pop- ular favorite to succeed Prime Minister Pearson as leader of the Liberal Party, according to the Gallup Poll. Martin was favored by 29 percent, Finance Min- ister Sharp by 13 percent, and former defense minister Hellyer by 11 percent. Forty percent had no preference. 3.5(c) Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 TOP RET 10. Nepal , TOP ZECRET Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 b 3 -\ 3.5(c) 3(h)(2) Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 3.5(c) Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 ret Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 FOR THE PRESIDENT'S EYES ONLY Special Daily Report on North Vietnam Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 ret 23 December 1967 16 TOP Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 Special Daily Report on North Vietnam for the President's Eyes Only 23 December 1967 � I. NOTES ON THE SITUATION Hanoi and the UN: Hanoi's adamant opposition to any UN involvement in the settlement of the Vietnam problem was underscored recently in an effort to get the message across directly to diplomatic missions in the capital. The North Vietnamese Ministry of For- eign Affairs called in selected heads of diplomatic missions and reiterated that the UN has no jurisdiction and that settlement must be on the basis of the Geneva agreements and the program of the Liberation Front. * * * S-EiCTOP RET 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) TOP RET Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 3.5(c) Report from some interesting and probably accurate information on the draft situation in the Lao Cai area northwest of Hanoi. no one under 20 is conscripted and that the recruits for the army leave the area once every few months in groups of four or five at a time. The standard period of service is three years, but not all are released from service at the end of this term. TOP CRET -2- 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 3.5(c) 3 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) -3- .3(h)(2) Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187 Tos ecret Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 005974187