Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976, Volume
XVIII, China, 1973–1976
Persons
-
Armstrong, Oscar Vance,
Political Advisor to CINPAC until July 1973; Director of People’s Republic
of China and Mongolian Affairs from July 1973; Deputy Assistant Secretary
for East Asian and Pacific Affairs from August 1976
-
Armstrong, Willis C.,
Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs until April 16,
1974
-
Atherton, Alfred L., Jr.,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs
until April 1974
-
Barnes, Thomas J., senior
member of the NSC staff from August 1975
until September 1976
-
Bhutto, Begum Nusrat, wife of
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, mother of Benazir Bhutto
-
Bhutto, Zulfikar Ali,
President of Pakistan until August 14, 1973, then Prime Minister
-
Brandt, Willy, Chancellor of
the FRG (West Germany) until May 6, 1974
-
Brezhnev, Leonid, First
Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
-
Bruce, David K.E., Head of the
U.S. Liaison Office in Beijing from May 14, 1973 until September 25, 1974;
Ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization from October 17, 1974
until February 12, 1976
-
Burger, Warren E., Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court
-
Burns, Dr. Arthur F.,
Chairman, Federal Reserve System Board of Governors
-
Bush, George H.W.,
Representative to the United Nations from February 16, 1971 until January
18, 1973; Head of the U.S. Liaison Office in Beijing from October 21, 1974
until December 7, 1975; Director of Central Intelligence from January 30,
1976
-
Butz, Earl L., Secretary of
Agriculture until 1976
-
Cai Weiping (Tsai Wei-ping),
ROC Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs
-
Ceausescu, Nicolae, First
Secretary of the Romanian Communist Party; President of Romania
-
Chang Chun-chiao, see
Zhang Chunqiao
-
Chang Wen-chin, see Zhang Wenjin
-
Chi P’eng-fei, see Ji
Pengfei
-
Chiang Ching, see Jiang
Qing
-
Chiang Ching-kuo, see Jiang
Jingguo
-
Chiang Kai-shek, see Jiang
Jieshi
-
Chiang Kai-shek, Madame, see
Jiang Jieshi, Madame
-
Chiao Kuan-hua, see Qiao
Guanhua
-
Chien Fu (Fredrick F.),
Director-General of the ROC Government
Information Office from 1972
-
Chou En-lai, see Zhou
Enlai
-
Chow Shu-kai, see Zhou
Shukai
-
Chu Te, see Zhu De
-
Colby, William E., Director of
Central Intelligence from September 4, 1973 until January 30, 1976
-
Davis, Jeanne W., Staff
Secretary, NSC Staff Secretariat after
1971
-
De Gaulle, Charles, President
of France from January 8, 1959 until April 28, 1969
-
Deng Xiaoping (Teng
Hsiao-p’ing), Vice Premier of State Council after
1973
-
Dent, Frederick B., Secretary
of Commerce until April 1975
-
Dobrynin, Anatoly Fedorovich,
Soviet Ambassador to the United States
-
Douglas-Home, Sir Alexander
Frederick, British Foreign Secretary until March 4,
1974
-
Dulles, John Foster, Secretary
of State from January 21, 1953 until April 22, 1959
-
Eagleburger, Lawrence S.,
member of NSC staff from June 1973;
Executive Assistant to the Secretary of State from October 1973; Acting
Deputy Under Secretary for Management from February 1975 until May 1975;
Under Secretary of Management for Management from May 1975
-
Ehrlichman, John D., Assistant
to the President for Domestic Affairs until May 1973
-
Eliot, Theodore L., Jr.,
Special Assistant to the Secretary and Executive Secretary of the Department
of State until September 26, 1973
-
Flanigan, Peter, Assistant to
the President for International Economic Affairs and Executive Director of
the Council on International Economic Policy, Executive Office of the
President
-
Ford, Gerald R., Republican
Congressman from Michigan until 1973; House Minority Leader until 1973; Vice
President from October 13, 1973 until August 8, 1974; President from August
8, 1974 until January 20, 1977
-
Franco, Francisco, Spanish head
of state until 1975
-
Freeman, Charles W., Jr.,
Asian Communist Affairs, Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs until July
1973
-
Froebe, John A., Jr., assigned
to the Australia, New Zealand and Pacific Island Desk, Bureau of East Asian
Affairs, Department of State, but actually on the NSC staff beginning in 1971; formally detailed to the NSC in January 1974; left NSC staff in August 1975
-
Fulbright, J. William,
Democratic Senator from Arkansas until 1974; Chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee until 1974
-
Gandhi, Indira, Prime Minister
of India
-
Gates, Thomas S., Chief of the
U.S. Liaison Office in Peking with a personal rank as Ambassador from April
14, 1976
-
Gleysteen, William H., Jr.,
Deputy Chief of Mission, Taipei, until 1974; Deputy Assistant Secretary for
East Asian and Pacific Affairs from September 1974; Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Japan-Korea-Republic of China-People Republic of China from
October 1975; NSC Staff from August
1976
-
Granger, Clinton E., Member of
the NSC staff from August 1974 until
September 1976
-
Green, Marshall, Assistant
Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs until May 10,
1973
-
Gromyko, Andrei A., Foreign
Minister of the Soviet Union
-
Habib, Philip C., Ambassador
to Korea until August 19, 1974; Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian
and Pacific Affairs from September 27, 1974 until June 30, 1976; Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs from July 1, 1976
-
Haig, General Alexander M.,
Jr., Army Vice Chief of Staff from January to August
1973; Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff from August 1973 to
August 1974
-
Han Hsu, see Han Xu
-
Han Xu (Han Hsu), Deputy Head
of the PRC Liaison Office in the United
States from 1973
-
Heath, Edward, British Prime
Minister until March 4, 1974
-
Helms, Richard M., Director of
Central Intelligence until February 2, 1973; U.S. Ambassador to Iran,
1973–1976
-
Hill, Robert C., Assistant
Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs from 1973 until
1974; Ambassador to Argentina from 1974
-
Ho Chi Minh, leader of the
Vietnamese Workers Party (later the Vietnamese Communist Party)
-
Holdridge, John Herbert,
member of the NSC Operations Staff/East Asia
until April 1973; Co-Deputy Chief of Mission in Beijing from 1973 to 1975;
Ambassador to Singapore from August 1975
-
Hormats, Robert, member of the
NSC Operations Staff/International
Economic Affairs from 1970 until 1973
-
Howe, Lt. Cmdr. Jonathan,
member of the NSC staff from 1970 to
1973
-
Hua Guofeng (Hua Kuo-feng),
Member of Politburo from 1973; Premier of PRC from 1976; Chairman of Chinese Communist Party from
1976
-
Hua Kuo-feng, see Hua
Guofeng
-
Huang Chen, see Huang
Zhen
-
Huang Hua, Chief Delegate to
the Security Council and PRC Ambassador to
the United Nations until October 1976
-
Huang Zhen (Huang Chen),
PRC Ambassador to France until March 1973;
Chief of the PRC Liaison Office in the
United States from March 1973
-
Hummel, Arthur W., Jr., Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs until 1975;
Ambassador to Ethiopia from February 20, 1975 until July 6, 1976; Assistant
Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs from July 12, 1976
until March 14, 1977
-
Hyland, William G., member of
the NSC Operations Staff/Europe until 1974;
Director of INR from January 1974 until
November 1975; Deputy Assistant to the President from November 1975 until
April 1976
-
Ingersoll, Robert Stephen,
Ambassador to Japan until November 8, 1973; Assistant Secretary for East
Asian and Pacific Affairs from January 8, 1974 until July 9, 1974; Deputy
Secretary of State from July 10, 1974 until March 31, 1976
-
Jackson, Henry M. (“Scoop”),
Democratic Senator from Washington State
-
Jenkins, Alfred le Sesne,
Director, Office of Asian Communist Affairs, Bureau of East Asian and
Pacific Affairs, Department of State, until February 1973, co-Deputy Chief
of Mission in Beijing from early 1973 until May 1974
-
Ji Pengfei (Chi P’eng-fei),
PRC Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs until
April 1971; Acting Foreign Minister until February 1972; Foreign Minister
from February 1972 to November 1974
-
Jiang Jieshi (Chiang Kai-shek),
President of the ROC until April 5, 1975;
Chairman, ROC National Security Council
until 1975; Director-General, Kuomintang, until 1975
-
Jiang Jieshi, Madame (Madame Chiang
Kai-shek), wife of Jiang Jieshi; born Song Meiling
(Soong Mayling)
-
Jiang Jingguo (Chiang
Ching-kuo), son of Jiang Jieshi; ROC Premier
-
Jiang Qing (Chiang Ching), wife
of Mao Zedong; member of the CCP Politburo until October 1976
-
Johnson, Lyndon B., President
of the United States from November 22, 1963 until January 20, 1969
-
Johnson, U. Alexis, Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs until February 1, 1973
-
Kennedy, Col. Richard T.,
Deputy Assistant to the President for NSC
planning from 1973 until 1975
-
Khan, Agha Muhammad Yahya,
President of Pakistan until December 20, 1971
-
Kim Il-sung (Kim Il Sung),
President (Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme People’s Assembly) of
the DPRK and General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Workers’
Party of Korea
-
Kissinger, Henry A., Assistant
to the President for National Security Affairs until November 3, 1975;
Secretary of State from September 21, 1973 to January 20, 1977
-
Kosygin, Alexei N., Chairman
of the Council of Ministers (Premier) of the Soviet Union
-
Kubisch, Jack B., Deputy Chief
of Mission in Paris until May 1973
-
Kuznetsov, Vasily V., Soviet
First Deputy Foreign Minister
-
Lai Mingtang (Lai Ming-tong),
ROC Chief of the General Staff, MND, from
1970
-
Lai Ming-tong, see Lai
Mingtang
-
Laird, Melvin R., Secretary of
Defense until January 29, 1973
-
Le Duan, General Secretary of
the Vietnamese Workers’ Party (later the Vietnamese Communist Party)
-
Le Duc Tho, member of the
Politburo of the DRV (North Vietnam) and
leader of the DRV negotiating team in Paris
until 1973
-
Lee Kuan Yew, Prime Minister
of Singapore
-
Li Hsien-nien, see Li
Xiannian
-
Li Xiannian (Li Hsien-nien),
Vice Premier of the PRC State Council until
1975
-
Lincoln, George, Director,
Office of Emergency Preparedness until 1974
-
Lin Biao (Lin Piao),
PRC Minister of Defense from 1959 until
September 1971; Vice Chairman of the CCP Central Committee (Politburo) until
September 1971
-
Lin Piao, see Lin Biao
-
Lon Nol, President of the Khmer
Republic until 1975
-
Lord, Winston, member of the
NSC staff until 1973; Director of the
Policy Planning Staff at the Department of State from October 1973
-
Malik, Adam, Indonesian Foreign
Minister
-
Malik, Yakov Alexandrovich,
Permanent Representative of the Soviet Union to the United Nations until
1976
-
Magnuson, Warren, Democratic
Senator from Washington State
-
Mansfield, Michael, Democratic
Senator from Montana until 1976, Senate Majority Leader until 1976
-
Mao Tse-tung, see Mao
Zedong
-
Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-Tung),
Chairman of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
-
Marchais, Georges, head of the
French Communist Party
-
McConaughy, Walter P., Jr.,
Ambassador to the ROC until April 4,
1974
-
McCloskey, Robert J., Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for Press Relations, and Special Assistant to
the Secretary, until May 1973; Ambassador to Cyprus in 1973 and 1974;
Ambassador at Large and Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional
Relations, 1975–1976
-
McFarlane, Robert C. (“Bud”),
Military Assistant to the National Security Adviser from 1973 until 1977
(promoted to Special Assistant to the President in 1976)
-
McGovern, George, Democratic
Senator from South Dakota
-
Mitterand, Francois, French
Socialist politician
-
Moorer, Adm. Thomas H.,
USN Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
until July 1, 1974
-
Moynihan, Daniel P.,
Ambassador to India until 1975; U.S. Permanent Representative to the UN from 1975 until 1976
-
Nehru, Jawaharlal, Leader of
India’s Congress Party and Prime Minister from 1947 to 1964
-
Nessen, Ron, Press Secretary to
President Gerald Ford
-
Nguyen Van Thieu, President of
the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) until April 21, 1975
-
Nguyen Co Thach, Vice-Foreign
Minister of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam
-
Nixon, Richard M., President
of the United States from January 20, 1969, to August 9, 1974
-
Ohira, Masayoshi, Japanese
Foreign Minister until July 12, 1974
-
Park Chung Hee (Pak
Chong-hui), President of the ROK (South Korea)
-
Pauls, Rolf, West German
Ambassador to the United States until May 1973
-
Phouma, Souvanna, Prime
Minister of the Kingdom of Laos until 1975
-
Pickering, Thomas R.,
Executive Secretary of State and Special Assistant to the Secretary of State
from August 1973
-
Platt, Nicholas, Deputy
Director, and then Director, of the Secretariat Staff, Department of State,
until May 1973; political officer in USLO from May 1973 until January 1974;
stationed in Japan from July 1974
-
Podgorny, Nikolai V.,
President of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR
-
Pompidou, Georges, President of
France until April 3, 1974
-
Qiao Guanhua (Chiao Kuan-hua),
Deputy [Vice] Foreign Minister of the PRC
until November 1974; Foreign Minister from November 1974 until December
1976
-
Rahman, Mujibur, Prime Minister
of Bangladesh until 1975
-
Richardson, Elliot L.,
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare until January 1973; Secretary of
Defense from January 30 to May 24, 1973; Attorney General from May to
October 1973; Ambassador to Great Britain from 1975 until 1976
-
Rockefeller, Nelson A.,
Governor of New York until 1973; Vice-President of the United States from
December 19, 1974 until January 20, 1977
-
Rodman, Peter W., member of
the NSC staff
-
Rogers, William P., Secretary
of State until September 3, 1973
-
Rumsfeld, Donald, Counselor to
the President until January 1973; Ambassador to NATO from 1973 until 1974; Secretary of Defense from November
20, 1975
-
Rush, Kenneth, Deputy Secretary
of Defense until January 29, 1973; Deputy Secretary of State from February
2, 1973 until May 29, 1974
-
Sadat, Anwar, President of
Egypt
-
Sato, Eisaku, Prime Minister of
Japan until July 6, 1972
-
Scali, John, Special Consultant
to the President until 1973, U.S. Representative to the United Nations from
1973 to 1975
-
Scheel, Walter, West German
Vice Chancellor and Foreign Minister until May 6, 1974
-
Schlesinger, James R.,
Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission until February 1973; Director of
Central Intelligence from February 2 until July 2, 1973; Secretary of
Defense from July 2, 1973 until November 19, 1975
-
Schmidt, Helmut, West German
Minister of Finance until May 6, 1974; Chancellor from 1974
-
Schumann, Maurice, French
Foreign Minister until March 28, 1973
-
Scott, Hugh, Republican
Senator from Pennsylvania, Minority Leader
-
Scowcroft, Brent, Military
Assistant to the President until 1973, Deputy Assistant to the President for
National Security Affairs from August 1973 until 1975, Assistant to the
President for National Security Affairs from November 3, 1975 until January
20, 1977
-
Shen, James C. H.,
ROC Ambassador to the United States
-
Shultz, George P., Secretary
of the Treasury until April 17, 1974
-
Sihanouk, Prince Norodom,
Cambodian leader of a government-in-exile in Beijing until 1975
-
Sirik Matak (Sisowath Sirik Matak, sometimes
spelled Sivik), Prince and cousin of Norodom Sihanouk; ally of Lon Nol; Deputy Prime Minister, then member
of the High Political Council, from 1970 to 1974
-
Sisco, Joseph J., Assistant
Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs until February
18, 1974; Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs from February 19,
1974 until June 30, 1976
-
Smyser, W. Richard, senior
staff member of the NSC from 1973 until
1975
-
Sneider, Richard L., Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs until
September 1974; Ambassador to Korea from September 1974
-
Solomon, Richard H., senior
staff member of the NSC until 1976
-
Song Zhangzhi (Soong
Chang-chih),
ROC Commander-in-Chief
-
Sonnenfeldt, Helmut, member of
the NSC Operations Staff/Europe until
January 1974; Counselor to the State Department, 1974–1977
-
Springsteen, George S., Jr.,
Acting Assistant Secretary of State until August 1973; Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for European Affairs from August 1973 until January 1974;
Special Assistant to the Secretary of State and Executive Secretary of the
Department from January 1974 until July 1976; Director of the Foreign
Service Institute from July 1976
-
Stein, Herbert, Chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisors until July 1974
-
Stoessel, Walter J., Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs until January 7,
1974
-
Suharto, Mohammed, President of
Indonesia
-
Sullivan, William H., Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs until July
1973; Ambassador to the Philippines from July 1973 until 1977
-
Sun Yunxuan (Sun Yun-suan),
ROC Minister of Economic Affairs
-
Symington, Stuart, Democratic
Senator from Missouri
-
Tanaka, Kakuei, Prime Minister
of Japan until December 9, 1974
-
Teng Hsiao-p’ing, see Deng
Xiaoping
-
Thayer, Harry E. T., Member of
the US Delegation to the UN General Assembly
in 1973 and 1974; Posted in Peking in May 1975; Deputy Director of the
Office of PRC and Mongolian Affairs from
August 1976
-
Tito, Josip Broz, President of
Yugoslavia
-
Tsai Wei-ping, see Cai
Weiping
-
Unger, Leonard, Ambassador to
Thailand until November 19, 1973; Ambassador to ROC from May 25, 1974
-
Waldheim, Kurt,
Secretary-General of the United Nations
-
Weinberger, Caspar W.,
Director of OMB, 1972; Secretary of Health
Education and Welfare from 1973 until 1975
-
Whitlam, Gough, Prime Minister
of Australia until November 11, 1975
-
Xuan Thuy, Foreign Minister of
the DRV (North Vietnam) from 1963 to 1965,
Chief Delegate to Paris Peace talks from 1968 to 1970
-
Yan Jiagan (Yen Chia-kan), Vice
President of the ROC
-
Yang Hsi-kun, see Yang
Xikun
-
Yang Xikun (Yang Hsi-kun),
ROC Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs
-
Ye Jianying (Yeh Chien-ying),
Marshall, member of the Central Committee and
Politburo; Defense Minister from 1975
-
Yen Chia-kan, see Yan
Jiagan
-
Yeh Chien-ying, see Ye
Jianying
-
Zhang Chunqiao (Chang
Chun-chiao), Politburo member until 1976, Vice Premier
from January 1975 until October 1976
-
Zhang Wenjin (Chang Wen-chin),
Assistant to the PRC Foreign Minister until
September 1973
-
Zhou Enlai (Chou En-lai),
Premier of the PRC until January 8, 1976;
member, Standing Committee of the Chinese Communist Party’s Political Bureau
until 1976
-
Zhou Shukai (Chow Shu-kai),
ROC Minister without Portfolio
-
Zhu De (Chu Teh), Chairman of
the Standing Committee of the National Peoples Congress until 1976
-
Ziegler, Ronald, White House
Press Secretary until 1974