Memorandum from Rear Admiral R. H. Hillenkoetter to President Harry S. Truman
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OCR Page 1 of 3SEGRET
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE GROUP
2430 E STREET NW.
WASHINGTON 25, D.C.
25 July 1947
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
While the possibility of eventual Soviet withdrawal from
the UN must be reckoned with, there are no present indications
that such a withdrawal is imminent.
The original purpose underlying Soviet participation in
the UN is believed to have been the Kremlin's desire to prevent
any combination of foreign powers potentially inimical to the
Soviet Union by insistence upon Soviet participation, with veto
power, in any international action affecting Soviet interests.
Subsidiary purposes of Soviet participation probably in-
clude the following:
a. to use the UN as a rounding board for the spread
of Soviet propaganda and doctrine;
b. to promote, through the UN, disarmament schemes
designed to weaken the relative military strength of
the Western Powers;
C. to frustrate any international attempt at social
and economic rehabilitation outside of the Soviet sphere,
and to utilize the resulting confusion and demoralization
in promoting the spread of Communism;
d. to agitate, in UN forums, colonial and minority
questions with the purpose of embarrassing and weakening
Western control over colonial areas;
e. to obstruct the establishment of en effective in-
ternational police force.
In general, the considerations outlined above appear to
constitute valid reasons for the USSR to remain in the UN for the
present. There are, however, several recent developments which
might cause the Politburo to revise its estimate of the value of
UN membership. Among them are the following:
a. Soviet obstinacy and obstructionism in the UN
DECLASSIFIED
NATIONAL
C.I.A. LTA. 9-31-79
ARCHIVES AND
RECORDS
PROTECT NLT 77.89
By. NIG-HC NARS, Date 9-6-79
SECRET
SERVICE"
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