Word: salzburgers
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...within the alliance during the past year" must be overcome. He delivered veiled but tough advice to the Soviets that détente had to be a two-way street. After the summit, Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger continued traveling through Europe, stopping for two days in Salzburg with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to explore the prospects for peace in the Middle East (see THE WORLD...
Some Doubts. After a state dinner at the royal palace, Ford flew to Salzburg on Sunday to take up the problems of peace in the Middle East. The President was to fly back to Washington overnight on Tuesday, stopping for ten hours in Rome to talk with Italian President Giovanni Leone and Premier Aldo Moro about Italy's economic and political difficulties. Ford also was to discuss the humanitarian aspects of the world's trouble spots with Pope Paul...
...further dramatize U.S. concern about Europe's shaky southern tier, Ford will spend Saturday in Madrid discussing U.S.-European relations with Generalissimo Francisco Franco and Premier Carlos Arias Navarro. From Spain, Ford will fly to Salzburg to talk with Sadat in hopes of finding a new approach to negotiating peace in the Middle East. Sadat has ruled out a resumption of Secretary of State Kissinger's step-by-step diplomacy. As a result, said a White House aide, "we have to find an alternative. The most dangerous alternative is to do nothing-and that...
...President Ford's meeting in Salzburg with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, 76 U.S. Senators-25 Republicans and 51 Democrats-last week staunchly sided with the Israelis. The Senators sent the President an open letter in effect urging that the Administration not significantly reduce military and economic aid to the Jewish state. Noting that Ford's foreign aid requests for fiscal 1976 would soon reach Congress, the letter said: "We trust that your recommendations will be responsive to Israel's urgent military and economic needs." Jerusalem has requested nearly $2.5 billion in aid, about three times what...
...Egyptian President nonetheless remains the dominant Arab spokesman in current moves toward peace negotiations. Preparing to meet next week with President Ford in Salzburg, Sadat wound up a series of visits to Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan and Syria in search of an Arab consensus. He found a formula for the knotty problem of Palestinian representation at any future Geneva Conference. King Hussein would represent Jordan; at the same time, however, a Palestinian delegation would be designated, and other Arab states, with support from the Soviets, would press the U.S. to seat it along with Hussein...