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OCR Page 1 of 2NLTCNaval Aidel184
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON
DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
March 19, 1951
By DEB NLT, Date 9-4-85
TO P E C R E I
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
FOUR-POWER -
The twelfth session of the quadripartite
EXPLORATORY TALKS
talks held in Paris on Saturday produced
no new substantive developments. How-
ever, it did provide an opportunity for Mr. Jessup to emphasize that
Gromyko's admission in Friday's session that the Foreign Ministers could
discuss any question on an agenda does away with the Soviet contention that
the Ministers could not discuss the questions of German demilitarization
and reduction of armaments unless they were included as separate items on
the agenda. The French delegate expressed the view that the substance of
Gromyko's remarks during the past two days is that the three powers must
agree not only to the substance of the Soviet proposals but also to expressing
these proposals in exactly the same words used by the Soviets. The British
delegate remarked that the only explanation for the Soviet position is their
desire to obtain an agreement in which the Foreign Ministers undertake dis- -
cussion in a manner committing them in advance on the subject questions.
The Deputies agreed to meet again at 4 p.m. today.
In a discussion held at the British
Embassy in Paris, the new British Foreign Secretary, Morrison, askedfor
an analysis of the situation by Mr. Jessup. In response to Mr. Jessup's
exposition stressing the obvious Soviet design to interfere with the execution
of the Brussels decisions through the adoption of a slanted agenda or propa-
ganda based on it, Morrison stated firmly that the British parliamentary
position fully supported the Brussels decisions and that he personally firmly
backs that policy. The British seemed fully aware of the necessity for tri-
partite solidarity.
In examining developments in Paris to
date, Embassy Moscow has concluded that in spite of continued Soviet
insistence on certain agenda points and preference as to the order of their
consideration, the Soviets will in the long run make adjustments necessary
to continue on to a Ministerial meeting in order to be able to continue their
propaganda and psychological warfare. This warfare is based on a line
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