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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, 1932
December 19, 1951
By DEB NLT, Date 4-6-8
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
KOREANARMISTICE
The Department has informed Embassy London
that it concurs with the British suggestion for
amending the end of the draft statement of warning to be issued in case
an armistice agreement is reached in Korea. However, we have sug-
gested another version of the statement which would read: "Should ag-
gression be committed again in Korea the consequences would be so grave
that it would, in all probability, not be possible to confine hostilities with-
in the frontiers of Korea. 11 We feel that this language constitutes only a
plain statement of inescapable fact without the objectionable tone of an ul-
timatum, and that if the statement were weakened any further it wouldlack
the desired deterrent effect on China. We suggest that the Embassy dis -
cuss this with Mr. Eden at the earliest opportunity.
SINO-JAPANESE
Ambassador Dulles advised the Departmentyes -
RELATIONS
terday that the British Government had instructed
Sir Esler Dening, its Tokyo representative, not
to pursue conversations further in Tokyo concerning Sino-Japanese rela-
tions, because the Foreign Office preferred to transfer the discussions to
Washington. The British Ambassador here called yesterday morning to
express his government's concern over the trend of Dulles' activities in
Tokyo in regard to this subject. The UK considers that the memorandum
which Dulles gave to Yoshida, Iguchi and Dening last Thursday suggesting
in rather forceful language that Japan should negotiate a bilateral treaty
with the Chinese Nationalist Government after the coming into force of the
multilateral Japanese Treaty goes far beyond the limits of the Morrison-
Dulles agreement. The UK also believes that pressing Japan to conclude
such a bilateral treaty prejudges its relations with China and may in the
long run effect Japan's relations with the West in that it may well be alleged
later that it had concluded the treaty under duress from the US.
It was pointed out to the British Ambassador that
it would be difficult for the US to maintain its close post-treaty relation- -
ships with Japan if Japan's policy was radically at variance with that of the
US, and that Japan's action or inaction in regard to China might adversely
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORIATION