Memorandum of Conversation with Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Mr. Hoffman, Foreign Minister of the Netherlands Dirk Stikker, Ambassador Averell Harriman, Mr. Fack, and Edwin Martin
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OCR Page 1 of 4297
March 1, 1950
68
MEMORANDUM OF CONVERSATION
PRESENT:
The Secretary
Foreign Minister Stikker
can
Mr. Hoffman
Ambassador Harriman
Mx. Fack c Assistant to Stikker
Mr. Edwin M. Martin o EUR/RA
SUBJECT:
Exchange of Views between the Secretary and the Netherlands
Foreign Minister on Certain Aspects of European Association,
with Particular Reference to Economic Problems
COPIES TO:
The Secretary
Mr. George W. Perkins, EUR
Mr. Henry R. Labouisse, Jr. - BNA
Mr. Theodore C. Achilles, WE
a ARCHIVES NATIONAL RECORDS SERVICE" AND
Mx. Dallas W. Dort 6 E
es
Mr. George C. McGhee 0 NEA
Mr. Hoffman
Ambassador Harriman
Mr. Edwin M. Martin, RA
The Foreign Minister opened the discussion with an account of his
recent visit in London. He found Mr. Bevin much improved in health
since his trip to Colombo and with considerable enthusiasm about pro-
gress toward Euronean integration. Mr. Bevin assured him that the British
wanted a Payments Union and promised him a definite proposal to meet U.K.
worries before he left London. Unfortunately this had not been possible
and the Foreign Minister had received a cable from Bevin only yesterday
indicating it would be a matter of a couple of weeks, presumably in view
of the results of the election. He did indicate, however, that the Treasury
had develaped a plan which they hoped would be acceptable.
He found Sir Stafford Cripps considerably less enthusiastic but
still pretty mich committed to doing something to make the Payments Union
possible.
During his visit he also discussed FINEBEL with Mro Bevin and
Mr. Cripps. He did go in the light of a French Cabinet decision, reported
at the FINEBEL meeting in Paris by Mr. Schnider, to the effect that Germany
could be included only if the British had no objections and if ECA was will-
ing to provide additicnal dollars to cover potential deficits with Gernany.
He found Mr. Bevin more strongly opposed to FINEBEL than Sir Stafford, and
interpreted this as a reflection of Mr. Bevin's more active interest in
European integration generallyo
In discussing
DECLASSIFIED
43y
BYNLT-AL NARS, Date 29.4.79
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