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OCR Page 1 of 2OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
DEB NLT, Date 9-4-85
April 26, 1951
By
C
R
E
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
FOUR POWER
In the last two sessions of the talks Gromyko
PARIS TALKS
has abandoned his preceding attitude of
"reasonableness" and has launched into violent
tirades against the West. We are aware that this is a possible indication
of Gromyko's intention to break off the talks, although there are other
indications that the Soviets may still hope to arrange a meeting of the
Foreign Ministers. (The Soviet Ambassador in London remarked yester- -
day to a Foreign Office official that he may attend the CFM and is keep-
ing his plans fluid; he also observed that in 1948 the Foreign Ministers
met without any agreed agenda.)
We have instructed Ambassador Jessup to
initiate a series of moves designed for the "final stages" of the talks and
aimed at maneuvering us into a favorable propaganda position for the
end of the talks, whether or not these talks are to be followed by a meet-
ing of the Foreign Ministers. Although we have not abandoned hope that
the Soviets may make some acceptable last-minute concessions, we feel
that a stage has been reached where tentative preparations for the end
must be undertaken.
TURKEY
Ambassador Wadsworth reports that during
the past weeks the Turkish public and press
have grown increasingly preoccupied over obtaining a security arrange -
ment, either with the NAT or directly with the US. The Turks claim,
with considerable justification, that their request for NATO membership
is a lead from strength rather than from weakness. They profess
inability to understand the reluctance of certain NAT powers to accept
an offer of the "strongest army in Europe" and of the only nation in the
Middle East capable of resisting aggression. The Turks also have taken
heart at the performance of their troops in Korea, and feel much more
confident now than last September, when they presented their request
for NATO membership to the Foreign Ministers meeting in New York,
that some security arrangement must and can be worked out.