I am very pleased to return to the Republic of Korea, our faithful ally, on a mission of peace.
Your pro-life program is tremendous.
I pledge to you, Mr. President, that the United States will continue to assist and to support you.
On behalf of the members of his Party and the American people, President Ford extended his deepest thanks to President Park and all of the p...
I came to your country, Mr. President, to demonstrate America's continued determination to preserve peace in Korea, in Asia, and throughout ...
What you are doing here is something that is not only good for the Army and good for the others in the Defense Department but it is good for...
The flow of Japanese visitors to the United States has grown from some 50,000 in 1966 to over 700,000 in 1974.
The United States and Japan recognize the need for a more efficient and rational utilization and distribution of world resources.
The most important lesson that I have learned during this visit corresponds with a brilliant insight of one of the Japanese envoys.
I will take home an inspiring impression of the possibilities available for an even greater friendship.
The United States and Japan have developed a close and mutually beneficial relationship based on the principle of equality.
I would rather walk a thousand miles for peace than take a single step toward war.
The establishment of an open and harmonious world economic system is indispensable for international peace and prosperity.
I reaffirm the spirit of friendship that endures between us.
The time has come when no nation may remain isolated and refuse to take part in the affairs of the rest of the world.
It has been a period of enlightenment for me.
We must try to apply the enduring values of the past to the challenges and to the pressures of our times.
Both countries recognize that cooperative relations between the United States and Japan under the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security ...