Memorandum of Conversation with Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Ambassador of Great Britain Sir Oliver Franks, and Ambassador Lewis Douglas
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OCR Page 1 of 2THEN
299
to the ARCHIVES CHATIONAL the RECORDS SERVICE'S AND
76
(mount?
cord
March 8, 1950
Negotiations with British on the
Wheat Agreement
Last night Ambassador Douglas and I dined with Sir Oliver Franks.
The purpose was to have a general off-the-record talk of emerging
problems, which discussion was not to be reported by eitiver of us
a.s it was merely a preliminary survey.
However, there was one matter which I said to Sir Oliver I was
taking up officially and asked him to report, since dealing with the
matter in this way would save him a trip to the Department. This
matter had to do with the accession of Germany and Japan to the
wheat agreement and had particular reference to Japan. He would
recall that the accession of Germany and Japan to international agree-
ments was in accord with the views of the three foreign ministers as
formulated in Paris last November and there was no difference between
us as to the importance and desirability as a matter of principle of
having Germany and Japan in the wheat agreement. However, two
difficulties had arisen; one with Canada and one with the UK. The
difficulty with Canada had to do with the proportion of the German
and Japanese wheat which should go to Canada under the agreement.
This had happily now been resolved as a result of Secretary Brannan's
trip to Ottawa. There remained the difficulty raised by the British.
This difficulty, in turn, had two parts. The British felt first of
all that if the Japanese purchased from Australia the full amount of
wheat that they would be entitled to purchase, this exhaust sterling
wheat by that amount for the British, who would then have to turn to
dollar markets. This difficulty had been resolved by an agreement
between Australia and Great Britain (or a proposed agreement) to the
effect that in the beginning of any year the ustralians would first
offer wheat to the British and only the agreement wheat which the
British did not buy would then be available to the Japanese. While
we are not enthusiastic about this agreement, we were not opposing
it. However, the British went further and argued that the mere
possibility that the Japanese were a potential purchaser would tend
to raise the sterling price of wheat and they therefore wished the
Japanese to agree that they would not buy more than a specified
DECLASSIFIED
E. O. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and 5(D) or (E)
-29-75
Dept. of State letter,
By NI.T- HC NARS Date 6.4.76
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