Gil Hahn

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Ike told Macmillan that “he would not go to a meeting under circumstances which made it appear that he had his hat in his hand.” If the foreign ministers met first and made serious progress on the issues of Berlin, German unification, disarmament, and so on, then a summit could be arranged. But until the Soviets showed good faith and a willingness to compromise, he would hear no talk of a summit.
The Age of Eisenhower: America and the World in the 1950s
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