Memorandum of Conversation with Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Foreign Minister of Indonesia Ahmad Subardjo, Ambassador of Indonesia Ali Sastroamidjojo, and Dean Rusk
Images (3)
Document
| id |
id
193224104
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 3COPY
-
C
ministry
445
SECRE'I
SERVICE"
country
carb
U.S. DELEGATION
268
JAPANESE PEACE DELEGATION
MEMORANDUM OF CONVERSATION
September 3, 1951
SUBJECT:
Visit of the Indonesian Foreign Minister
PARTICIPANTS: Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmad Subardjo
Ambassador Ali Sastroamidjojo
Secretary of State Dean Acheson
Assistant Secretary of State Dean Rusk
COPIES TO: The Secretary
Mr. Dulles
Mr. Sebald
Mr. Allison
Mr. O'Sullivan
The Indonesian Foreign Minister, accompanied by Ambassador Ali,
called on the Secretary of State and remained about 30 minutes.
After the usual exchange of courtesies, the Foreign Minister
said that the Indonesian Delegation was here under precise instructions
from the Indonesian Government and that, under these instructions, the
Foreign Minister would report daily to his government on developments
in San Francisco. He said that the Cabinet would make the decision as to
whether Indonesia would sign the Treaty. Indonesia was generally
sympathetic to the broad foreign policy of the United States. The
fundamental problems in the Japanese Peace Treaty, from Indonesia's
point of view, arise in the economic clauses. The Foreign Minister
said that the Indonesian Government was grateful for the recognition
in the Treaty of the principle of reparations but that it was not clear how
such principles would be implemented. He referred also the importance
of the fishing problem since the re-entry of Japanese fishing vessels into
Indonesian waters raised the spectacle of a new Japanese imperialism in
DECLASSIFIED
that
E. o. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and 5(D) or (II)
Dapt. of State letter, 5-12-76
SECRE
T
Bz
NLT- HL NARS Date 30-76
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to