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OCR Page 1 of 2NLT(Noval Aidel238
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON
DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
September 6, 1951
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
By DEB
TOP SECRET
NLT, Date 9-5-85
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
YUGOSLAVIA
Embassy Belgrade, on the Department's instructions,
has approached the Yugoslav Foreign Ministry concern-
ing the resumption of Italo-Yugoslav negotiations for a Trieste settlement.
Counsellor Beam went over with Assistant Foreign Minister Mates the Secre-
tary's recent statement to the Yugoslav Ambassador here on the same subject,
and re-emphasized the Department's opinion that the settlement should be
based on such ethnical adjustments or exchanges as might be necessary to
establish a practicable frontier. Mates made extensive notes of the con-
versation with Beam and promised to pass this information to Marshall Tito
immediately.
Mates then explained the Yugoslav position as follows:
Yugoslavia agrees in principle to a revision of the Italian treaty which would
bring about a real settlement of the Italo-Yugoslav dispute and thus kill off
this danger to Western cooperation. Yugoslavia understands that there would
have to be a "1give and take" in the negotiations and it would not approach the
negotiations with an inflexible position. Mates warned Beam, however, that
he was stating this for US information only and could not agree to its being
communicated to the Italian Government, since the latter might interpret it
as a sign of eagerness and consequently raise its own demands. Mates also
informed Beam that last spring negotiations had been begun between Italy
and Yugoslavia on a diplomatic level but every time progress had been made
the Italians withdrew their concessions. Mates said that his government was
sincerely desirous of settling the issue, but that unfortunately the de Gasperi
Go ernment had let itself be drawn into competition with the Italian Commun-
ists who, since the Yugoslav break with the Kremlin, had been the most
ardent opponents of any settlement of the issue, and had played the extreme
nationalist line.
INDIA-PAKISTAN
Dr. Graham, the UN mediator in the India-Pakistan
dispute, told Ambassador Henderson in New Delhi in
utmost confidence yesterday that after a long talk with Nehru the day before
he has almost concluded that it is useless for his mission to remain any
TOP SECRET