Memorandum of Conversation with Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Ambassador of Great Britain Sir Oliver Franks
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OCR Page 1 of 4NLTP26 copy 2 OF 2
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DECLASSIFIED
(Copy No . 2 of two copies)
Authority HLI- 85-" (NXC Molno 9-11-86
566 86
By DEB NLL Date 11-19-86
April 2, 1951.
dupprete
MEMORANDUM OF MEETING
Between British Ambassador
and
=
Secretary Acheson
Sir Oliver explained the general temper of London. He
said that it had been a terrible winter, the wettest weather
in eighty years; there had been the bad flu epidemic; the
Government had been under unceasing fire and had had to cope
with crises about once a week, which they had barely pulled
through; everyone was tired; the Foreign Office had been
practically leaderless, with the Prime Minister, Mr. Bevin,
Mr. Younger, Mr. Strang, all contributing a little, and with
Dixon and Makins contributing most of the leadership.
Sir Oliver said that so far as the new Foreign Minister
is concerned, he thinks there will probably be no really great
change. Mr. Bevin has not, in directing foreign affairs, been
ruled by the party, but has been trying to do what he thought was
right in the great stream of history, of which he had a deep
consciousness. Sir Herbert Morrison will have the same general
deep interest in the future of England, but less sense of
historical continuity. He will have antennae out for
politcal maneuvering. He will be more flexible in both the
good and bad sense. He will be easier to deal with, but he
will tand to bend a principle without bending it to the crack-
ing point.
Secretary Acheson asked him whether the long delays in
acting on Korean statement and Jananese treaty were due to
any deliberate effort to block or obstruct and whether the
British had some policy which they were not disclosing to us;
and whether Sir Oliver thought we were drifting to real trouble.
Sir Oliver said that in a way this question amused him, because
he was asked the same question about the United States; that
is, whether we had a secret policy. The idea that we might have
had been pieced together from the MacArthur statements, from
statements made by the President and in Congress, from various
rumors about our possibly financing guerrillas and building up
Chiang Kai-Shek. All of this seemed to them to point to our
possibly building up an aggressive force based on the objective
of the overthrow of the Communist Regime in China. Sir Oliver
had answered these questions by saying that he did not think
that there was anything in these fears. His opinion was that
the United States had been groping in the last quarter of the
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