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229036710
label
Extract from Documents Regarding Cease-Fire Negotiations
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doc
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document
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1
Source metadata
id
229036710
contentType
document
title
Extract from Documents Regarding Cease-Fire Negotiations
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President's Secretary's Files (Truman Administration)
Korean War Files
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229036710
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ca.
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1951-01-01
year
1951
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nara-archive
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1
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photo
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b8d132c90fc606af
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- 41 - indicated a belief that we would not know the out- come of the armistice negotiations for at least six weeks. North Korea The Pyongyang radio said that a Soviet medical team had arrived in North Korea and begun work to prevent the spread of smallpox, typhus, and other diseases. R.O.K. The R.O.K. Defense Ministry said 1,234 trainees died last year, and 2,300 patients were still being treated (see June 12, 15) APCHIVES "NATIONAL RECORDS AND July 31 ADMIN. u. s. Military There was no important ground action. The F.E.A.F. flew 300 sorties and claimed 30 enemy casualties. Our planes hit 70 buildings, 20 vehicles, three bridges, one warehouse, and four gun positions. The Defense Department listed 125 American casualties. Cease-fire The sicteenth armistice meeting began at 9:00 p.m. Joy made a one hour and 13 minute statement. Follow- ing the meetings the Pyongyang radio charged that the "American ruling class opposed a cease-fire and said that ir the negotiations failed, it was entirely the responsibility of the Americans. The broadcast stated that the United States had proposed a demar- cation line from Kosong on the east coast to the tip of the Ongjin peninsula and charged that we were try- ing "to rob a large territory inside North Korea." R.O.K. R.O.K. Foreign Minister Pyong Yong-tse told the National Assembly at Pusan that the R.O.K. would not accept any of the cease-fire lines proposed at Kaesong as a permanent border. He said, however, that the government would accept an armistice along the present battle line provided it were revised within two months after the conclusion of the armistice. Brayton Wilbur, chairman of the Committee for a Free Asia, announced in San Francisco that his organization had obtained 1,000 tons of newsprint in Japan for shipment to Korea. The newsprint was intended for use in printing new textbooks. Ull A UN subcommittee recommended that the burden of economic sanctions against an aggressor be "equitably shared" by UN members. It also urged that the UN use specialized agencies and regional organizations,