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  1. What he wanted to talk to me about was his sense of urgency about the Vietnam situation and his concern about what the position might be if by Sunday, when he returned from Scotland, there had...

  2. Jul 6, 2016 · In 2003 George Bush pushed for British support in Iraq from Tony Blair; in the 60s, Lyndon Johnson wanted Harold Wilson to support his escalation of the Vietnam War. Prime Minister Tony Blair with President Bush in the Rose Garden. But from there, events diverge sharply.

  3. The Wilson government made efforts to mediate a peace between the US and North Vietnam in 1967. During the four-day Tet truce in February 1967, Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin visited the UK. Wilson met with Kosygin and made efforts to extend the Tet truce, beginning with a cessations of American bombing.

  4. Johnson needed and asked for help to maintain American prestige. Wilson offered lukewarm verbal support and no military aid. Wilson's policy angered the left-wing of his Labour Party, who opposed the Vietnam War. [112] Wilson and Johnson also differed sharply on British economic weakness and its declining status as a world power.

  5. The Vietnam War helped to dash Wilson’s hopes of forming similar bonds with Lyndon Johnson. A 1965 Foreign Office document examined the conflict in the context of Anglo-American relations, noting that Britain’s ‘direct involvement’ in Vietnam was ‘insignificant.

  6. Apr 1, 2008 · Wilson's stance of providing moral but not military support for U.S. policy in Vietnam caused anger and disillusionment among leftwing Labour Party activists and members of Parliament, spurring them to active opposition against Wilson's government.

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  8. Mar 9, 2016 · It has been said by some that Wilson’s greatest achievement as Prime Minister was keeping British troops out of Vietnam. Wilson’s resignation was unusual because, for most of his party and...

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