Word: indochina
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...activists in the Vietnamese anti-war movement last night accused the United States of continuous hostility towards Vietnam since World War II at an Institute of Politics seminar on Indochina...
This, and the failure of balkanization, will force the United States to recognize political realities in Indochina, Trong said...
...said leaders of American foreign policy like Secretary of State Henry Kissinger '50, had feelings of "bitterness and resentment" toward Vietnam, resulting in an attempted "policy of balkanization" in Indochina...
...lasting legacies of Viet Nam and Watergate has been a deepening skepticism among journalists about the words and deeds of public officials. Former Senator J. William Fulbright, an early critic, as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, of U.S. policy in Indochina had much to do with fostering that skepticism. Now it seems he is beginning to regret it. The press, Fulbright laments in the current Columbia Journalism Review, has become "excessively mistrustful and even hostile" toward Government. He adds: "If once the press was excessively orthodox and unquestioning of Government policy, it has now become almost sweepingly iconoclastic...
...exiles by the CIA was due in substantial part, at least, to my efforts." On November 22 Nixon was in Dallas representing Pepsico, a notorious CIA cover, whose Laos bottling plant (franchised under Nixon's auspices) concealed the chief heroin factory for the CIA and the Corsican Mafia in Indochina. When Nixon tells Haldeman to pay Hunt a million dollars on the White House Tapes, he says he is most worried about the "Bay of Pigs thing" coming out. But as Richard Helms irately replied when asked to cover up the burglary as a CIA operation, there was nothing left...