Letter from Eleanor Roosevelt to Harry S. Truman accompanied by a copy of a letter from Eleanor Roosevelt to George C. Marshall
Images (5)
Document
| id |
id
4708707
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
| identifierLocal |
identifierLocal
hst19480322
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 5VAL-KILL COTTAGE
HYOE PARK, DUTCHESS COUNTY
NEW YORK
March 22, 1948
Dear Mr. President:
-
The events of the last few days since my last letter
to you, have been so increasingly disquieting that
I feel I must write you a very frank and unpleasant
letter.
I feel that even though the Secretary of State takes
the responsibility for the Administration's attitude
on Palestine, you can not escape the results of that
attitude. I have written the Secretary a letter,
a copy of which I enclose, which will explain my
feelinge on this particular subject.
On Trieste I feel we have also let the UN down. We
are evidently discarding the UN and acting unilater-
ally, or setting up a balance of power by backing
the European democracies and preparing for an ultim-
ate war between the two political philosophies.
I
am opposed to this attitude because I feel that it
would be possible, with force and friendliness, to
make some arrangements with the Russians, using our
economic power as a bribe to obstruct their political
advance.
I can not believe that war is the best solution. No
one von the last war, and no one will win the next
war.
While I am in accord that we need force and
I am in accord that we need this force to preserve
the peace, I do not think that complete preparation
for war is the proper approach as yet.
Politically, I know you have acted as you thought
was right, regardless of political consequences.
Unfortunately, it seems to ne that one has to keep
one's objectives in view and use timing and circum-
stances wisely to achieve those objectives.
I am afraid that the Democratic Party 18, for the
moment, in a very weak position, with the Southern
revolt and the big cities and many liberals appalled
by our latest moves. The combination of Wall
Street objectives and military fears seem so inter-
twined in our present policies that it is difficult
Terms
Relations
belongs_to