Letters from General George C. Marshall to President Harry S. Truman
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OCR Page 1 of 4TOP SECRET
DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and 5(D) or (E)
WAR DEPARTMENT
OSD letter, May 3, 1972
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF STAFF
NLT-HC
NARS Date 7-14-73
WASHINGTON 25, D. C.
GOLD 1804
November 23, 1946
Dear Mr. President:
The National Assembly has not yet proceeded far enough to give
clear indication of its course though reactionary Kuomintang leaders
domination is evident. Meanwhile I am awaiting communication of
Chou En-Lai at Yenan. His representative called on Stuart yesterday
deeply concerned over threat of all out Government attack on Yenan
and question as to whether we were to continue to exert our influence
to compose the situation. Chou En-Lai is committed to make a report
to me as to whether or not the Communist General Committee desires
me personally to continue my efforts in mediation and so far I have had
no word. He saw me for a lengthy interview two days before he left
and called formally with his wife the evening before he left.
Meanwhile I had held aloof from the Generalissimo. The Deputy
President of the Executive Yuan has been pressing me in the matter of
financial assistance to meet the growing desperation of the economic
situation. I have been very emphatic in stating to him that it is
useless to expect the United States to pour money into the vacuum being
created by the military leaders in their determination to settle matters
by force, almost 90 per cent of the budget itself highly inflationary,
going to military expenditures. Also that it was useless to expect
the United States to pour money into a government dominated by a com-
pletely reactionary clique bent on exclusive control of governmental
power.
I am leaving for Tientsin this morning to talk to General Howard
regarding immediate reduction of Marine forces to a level of about
5,000. I am trying to accomplish this now while there is no pressure
no heat over some minor crisis, and also because the larger force is of
no particular advantage and merely increases the chances of trouble.
From Tientsin I will go over to Peiping to arrange some adjustments
there in Executive Headquarters, returning here about Wednesday.
(sgd) G. C. Marshall
thershall
MARSHALL S. CARTER
Colonel, General Staff Corps
Representative in Washington, D. C.
of General Marshall
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