Memorandum from Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson to President Harry S. Truman, with Attachment
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OCR Page 1 of 4DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
May 8, 1946
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Subject: Visit of the Prime Minister of Australia
The Right Honorable Joseph Benedict Chifley, Prime Minister
of Australia, has arrived in Washington from London, and an ap-
pointment has been made for him to call on you to pay his respects
at 11:45 a.m., on Thursday, May 9th.
Immediately after his call on you, Mr. Chifley will leave by
air for Tokyo to visit General MacArthur and to inspect the
British Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan.
The following matters of importance may be raised by Mr. Chifley
during his visit:
1. Regional Defense Arrangements and Bases in the Southwest
Pacific: Mr. Chifley gives his Minister for External Affairs,
Dr. H. V. Evatt, a free hand in the conduct of Australian foreign
policy. Dr. Evatt is an ardent advocate of a general conference on
Pacific security problems and of a US-Australia-New Zealand joint
defense scheme analogous to the US-Canada joint defense plan. He,
therefore, has refused so far to consider the problem of base rights
desired by the US Joint Chiefs of Staff except as part of an over-
all regional defense arrangement. Documents prepared by the State-
War-Navy Coordinating Committee for the Secretary's use at Paris,
where Dr. Evatt is expected to broach this subject, take the
position (a) that the US should oppose a general conference and an
over-all defense arrangement for the Southwest Pacific as premature,
inadvisable, and likely to encourage the USSR to advocate similar
over-all arrangements elsewhere not to the advantage of the United
Nations or the US; (b) that the US regards the question of base
rights as independent of a regional arrangement, and primarily a
matter of the US being accorded rights desired by the Joint Chiefs
of Staff at locations used and developed at US expense during the war,
and (c) that the US prefers to proceed with discussions based on pro-
posals already before the Australian, New Zealand and British Govern-
ments.
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