Memorandum from Acting Secretary of State Joseph Grew to President Harry S. Truman, Current Foreign Developments
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OCR Page 1 of 2lop SECRET
DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and 5(D) or (E)
Dept. of State letter, Aug. 10, 1972
Date 6.26.75
April 28, 1945
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Subject: Current Foreign Develomments
WARSATI POLES BELIEVE SOVIET PACT WILL PROTECT
BOUNDARIES. The Polish Provisional Government leader
Bierut during his visit to Moscow stated to a French
Embassy official that Article 5 of the pact with the
Soviet Union was drafted in order to prevent the
Western Allies from challenging the new frontiers
established by agreement between Poles and Russians.
This article binds the contract parties not to con-
clude without mutual agreement any armistice or peace
treaty with any German authority "which is encroaching
or might encroach on the independence, territorial
integrity or security" of either party. The Poles
understand that this binds the Russians not to con-
clude any treaty which did not respect the Polish
frontiers as understood by the Soviet and Provisional
Governments.
SOVIET REMOVAL OF GERMAN MATERIAL AND EQUIPMENT.
An American observer recently returned to Moscow from
a trip through the Ukreine, Eastern Poland and White
Russia reports extensive movements eastward of German
machinery and equipment of all kinds. All reports
reaching the Embassy at Moscow indicate that the
Russians ere seizing without compunction any German
materials which they feel might be of use.
"NATIONAL
REGORDS AND
SERVICE
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