Secret White House Tapes

831–3

About this recording

831–3
  • President Richard M. Nixon
  • Ronald L. Ziegler
  • Henry A. Kissinger
January 3, 1973
Conversation No. 831-3

Date: January 3, 1973
Time: 9:49 am - 10:50 am
Location: Oval Office

The President met with Ronald L. Ziegler.

Weather in Florida
-Palm Springs, Florida

Press conference
-3-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-Democratic Caucus
-Vietnam negotiations
-Congressional lines of attack
-Administration response
-Past votes on resolution
-The President’s policy
-Henry A. Kissinger
-Bombing
-May 8, 1972 decision
-Three conditions
-Prisoners of War [POWs]
-Cease-fire
-Free elections
-Peace with honor
-Moscow Summit
-1972 campaign
-George S. McGovern’s policy
-Vietnam War
-Progress
-Ground combat
-Draftees
-Serious negotiations
-Paris
-Settlement
-“Peace with honor”
-May 8, 1972 decision
-Questions
-Nuclear weapons
-Bombing
-No comment
-Ziegler’s conversation with Kissinger
-US response
-Press perception of US policy
-May 8, 1972 decision
-October negotiations
-North Vietnamese tactics
-US response
-Settlement
-Bombing
-Purpose
-4-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-May 8, 1972 decision
-Limitation of force
-Serious negotiations
-POWs
-Cease-fire
-Negotiations
-Delaying tactics
-Congressional relations
-Interference
-Sensitive period
-Responsibility

Kissinger entered at 9:57 am.

-POWs
-Delicacy of issue
-Nguyen Van Thieu
-Exchange
-Release of political prisoners
-May 8, 1972 decision
-Congressional relations
-Democrats
-Number opposing resolution
-Consultations
-Vietnam negotiations
-Possibility of breakdown
-Public statements
-Role of Congress
-The President’s consultations with Congressional leaders
-Michael J. Mike Mansfield
-Carl B. Albert
-Speculation
-Congressional relations
-Charles W. Colson
-Kissinger’s telephone calls
-J. William Fulbright
-F. Edward Hebert
-John C. Stennis
-Gerald R. Ford
-Bombing
-5-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-Handling of North Vietnam
-Intent of press
-Administration’s indecisiveness
-Purpose
-Intent of the press
-The President as erratic
-Result
-Carl B. Albert
-Support for the President on bombing
-Bombing cities
-Nuclear weapons
-Vietnam negotiations
-Results of bombings
-Col. Richard T. Kennedy
-Amount of destruction
-May 1972 decision
-B-52s
-Haiphong
-Military actions
-No comment
-Intensity of bombing
-Opposition to the President
-Washington, DC
-Cambridge, Massachusetts
-Attitudes
-James B. (“Scotty”) Reston
-Letters to Kissinger
-Hatred
-McGovern
-Congress
-White House social events
-Cambodia

Reception for new Congress members
-Exclusions
-Washington Post, Washington Star
-Journalists from states with new Congress members
-Dewey F. Bartlett
-Oklahoma
-Atlanta Constitution
-6-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-South
-Women
-Wire services
-Columbus Dispatch
-George Embry
-Jerald F. (“Jerry”) terHorst

North Vietnamese statement
-Tone
-Le Duc Tho
-Paris negotiations
-Length of meetings
-Kissinger’s schedule
-Acrobats

Press conference
-Congressional relations
-Consultation with leaders
-1972 State of the Union speech
-Cooperation
-Ford, Hugh Scott
-Bipartisan meetings
-Issues
-Mansfield
-Albert
-Telephone calls
-Truman memorial service
-Reasons
-Funeral in Independence, Missouri
-The President's attendance
-Lyndon B. Johnson
-Wishes of family
-Private service
-Public service
-The President’s meetings with heads of state
-[Thomas] Hale Boggs's memorial service

Johnson
-Health
-Criticism of the President
-7-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-Reasons for leaving office
-Behavior

White House staff
-Worries about criticism
-Confidence in policy

Congressional critics
-Confusion
-Fulbright
-Response to October agreement

Press conference
-The President's schedule
-Meeting with Kissinger
-Camp David
-Timing
-Meeting with William P. Rogers, Melvin R. Laird, Adm. Thomas H.
Moorer, Richard M. Helms
-Congress
-Responses to bombing
-1972 election victory
-Public opinion
-California
-Washington Post
-Albert
-McGovern
-Congressional relations
-The President's meeting with Kissinger

Ronald L. Ziegler left at 10:28 am.

Kissinger's world report
-Vietnam
-Regular correspondence with foreign leaders
-Australia
-Mobutu Sese Seko
-Emperor of Ethiopia [Haile Selassie]
-Shah of Iran [Mohammed Reza Pahlavi]
-Edward R.G. Heath
-8-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-Georges J.R. Pompidou
-Willy Brandt
-Shah of Iran
-Eisaku Sato
-Kakeui Tanaka
-Pierre E. Trudeau
-Emilio Garrastazu Medici
-Reasons for correspondence
-Pope Paul VI [Giovanni Battista Motini]
-Irresponsible statements
-Poland
-Vietnam
-Catholics
-Killings
-Notes

The President’s schedule
-[Names unintelligible]
-Meeting with Kissinger
-Anatoliy F. Dobrynin

Vietnam negotiations
-The President’s meeting with Dobrynin
-Soviet Union’s interests in success
-Congressional relations
-Hubert H. Humphrey
-South Vietnamese Congress members
-Cable to Ellsworth F. Bunker
-Thieu
-Backfire
-Aid cut off
-Kissinger’s meeting with South Vietnamese Ambassador
-Economic measures for South Vietnam
-Thieu’s thinking
-Aid cut off
-Congressional vote
-Mansfield
-South Vietnamese lobbying
-Congressional resentment
-William F. Buckley, Jr.
-9-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-Thieu’s thinking
-Paris conference
-The President’s domination
-Accomplishments
-North Vietnam
-Capacity to wage aggressive war
-Reduction
-Soviet Union, People’s Republic of China [PRC]
-Fear and respect
-The President’s enemies
-Exposure
-Press, intellectuals, Congress
-1972 election results
-Access to White House
-1960 election
-John F. Kennedy
-Results
-The President’s exclusion from White House
-Bay of Pigs
-Thelma C. (“Pat”) Nixon
-John W. Gardner
-Dean Francis B. Sayre
-Nastiness of attacks
-Lack of patriotism
-Hatred

Vietnam negotiations
-The President’s October 1972 letter to Kissinger
-The President’s political interests
-The President’s meeting with Kissinger
-Preparations
-Dobrynin
-Options
-Kissinger’s trip to Paris
-Preparations
-Consultations between Kissinger and the President
-Negotiator compared to lawyer
-Final meetings
-Goals
-Demilitarized zone [DMZ]
-10-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct.-08)

Conversation No. 831-3 (cont’d)

-International voting commission
-Civilians in South Vietnam
-Depiction of the President’s role
-Thieu
-1972 election
-Announcement
-Purpose
-Relations with ally
-Bombing halt
-The President’s support
-Kissinger’s support for negotiations
-The President’s decision to bomb
-Breakdown
-Le Duc Tho
-October 1972 agreement
-Press relations

The President’s schedule
-Meeting with Kissinger
-Timing
-Trip to New York

Instructions to make calls
-Rogers
-Laird
-Meeting with the President
-Photographs
-Location

Kissinger left at 10:50 am.
Secret White House Tapes |

831–3

This recording is currently not available on millercenter.org. To listen to it, please email Mike Greco at mdg4u@virginia.edu

More Richard M. Nixon Recordings

View all Richard M. Nixon tapes
833–1
audio icon
393–10
audio icon
833–10
audio icon
833–11
audio icon
393–11
audio icon
833–12
audio icon
393–12
audio icon
393–13
audio icon
833–13
audio icon
833–14
audio icon