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Document identity
localId
214916478
label
Letter from William L. Batt, Jr. to Clark Clifford
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
214916478
contentType
document
title
Letter from William L. Batt, Jr. to Clark Clifford
collections
Clark M. Clifford Papers
Subject Files
subjects
Berlin Blockade, 1948-1949
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1
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yes
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naId
214916478
levelOfDescription
item
productionDates
day
9
logicalDate
1948-08-09
month
8
year
1948
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description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
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1
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0
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photo
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c810735db5b53c7e
ocrText
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE 1367 CONNECTICUT AVENUE N.W. WASHINGTON 6, D. C. WILLIAM L. BATT, JR., DIRECTOR RESEARCH DIVISION August 9, 1948 MEMORANDUM TO Mr. Clark M. Clifford Subject: Moscow Negotiations If the pending negotiations between the Western Powers and the Soviet Union should lead to a satisfactory settlement of the major issues, particularly with regard to the situation in Berlin, it seems desirable to underscore this success of our foreign policy as emphat- ically as possible. The most dramatic method of doing this would be for the President of the United States to go on the air to make, himself, the first announce- ment to the American people. There is ample precedent for this way of handling decisive turns in the international situation from the last World War. The last time President Truman went on the air with this kind of announcement was on the day of the Japanese surrender in August, 1945. Great care would have to be exercised in timing the President's announcement to coincide with those of Great Britain, France and the Soviet Union in order to protect the United States against being scooped by another government. Besides inflation and housing, the fear of war is unquestionably the major concern of the American people at this time. If the President were in a position to lift this fear from their minds it would go a long way towards enhancing his prestige as the responsible leader of our foreign policy, TRUNAN Bill AND SERVICE William L. Batt, Jr. WLB:jfw 28