01118 2200241 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001400123084002000137100002100157245007700178260004800255300002500303500002300328520041600351650002500767650003400792990002500826990002500851INLIS00000000000405920221025020239 a0010-0520004059221025 | | eng  a0-7432-4911-9 aeng a327.73056 a327.73056 KIS c0 aKissinger, Henry1 aCrisis The Anatomy of Two Major Foreign Policy Crises /cHenry Kissinger aNew York :bHarvard University Press,c2003 a564p.;23 cm ;c23 cm aIndeks : P.547-564 aThese conversations convey the mood in which major decisions were made and the attitudes from which national policy was compounded. Since decisions on the telephone reflect the urgency of the moment, they do not always contain the full range of underlying considerations. a complete history would require a record of the various interagency meetings and transcripts of personal conversations with the President. 4aIsrael-Arab War 1973 4aVietnamese Conflict,1961-1975 a09263/MKRI-P/XI-2008 a09263/MKRI-P/XI-2008