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OCR Page 1 of 2NLT (Naval Aide)230
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
the
WASHINGTON
Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
E.O. 12065,
August 1, 1951
State By DEB NLT, Date 9-5-85 T
OP S E 6 R T
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
NATO MEETING
In view of the widespread insistance by other
members of the Council of Deputies in London
that there should be a meeting of the Council of Ministers in Ottawa in
September, we have agreed on the following conditions: 1) a serious
attempt will be made to reach a decision on Greece and Turkey; 2) the
meeting will be announced as preliminary to an October meeting; 3) the
NATO and Middle East command structure will not be decided at the
September meeting, and therefore there will be no prior meeting of the
Military Committee; 4) there will be no major substantive discussion of
Germany or the "gap" in September; 5) the meeting will deal with "such
problems as may be ready for discussion or action"; and 6) the meeting
will be attended by Defense Ministers as well as by Foreign and Finance
Ministers if the countries so desire.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA
Both Britain and France have declined to join
us in suspending Czech airlines overflights
over Western Germany, although they have agreed to reduce the clear-
ances to a day-to-day basis rather than a monthly basis. The British
are not convinced that our action, as proposed, will accomplish the de- -
sired end but believe, on the contrary, that it will inflict more damage
to ourselves as well as the French, Belgians and Dutch, all of whom
have flights to Prague, than upon the Czechs. The French have expressed
a similar opinion.
INDIA-PAKISTAN -
The Burmese Ambassador in Karachi told Am-
bassador Warren Saturday night that his govern-
ment approached simultaneously the Prime Ministers of Indonesia, India
and Pakistan with the proposal that the Prime Ministers of Indonesia and
Burma make a joint visit to New Delhi and Karachi and offer their good
offices to Nehru and Liaquat to ease the tension between the two countries,
which the Burmese are viewing with increasing alarm. Monday night,
however, the Burmese Ambassador reported to Warren that the proposal
had come to nothing. He said that Liaquat was favorably inclined, and
the Prime Minister of Indonesia was willing to make the visit, but Nehru
refused to go along with the scheme.
E