Memorandum of Conversation with Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Ambassador of Great Britain Sir Oliver Franks, H. Freeman Matthews, and George McGhee
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S/S
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
/ 80
79
Memorandum of Conversation
DATE:
July 7, 1951
SUBJECT:
Iranian Oil Crisis
DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
PARTICIPANTS:
Ra Sale NLT Depi. 14-16 Guidelines Merch 6, 1982
The Secretary of State
By DEB
Mr. Freeman Matthews - G
NT D-D 12-10-87
Mr. George C. McGhee - NEA
Sir Oliver Franks - Britäsh Ambassador
COPIES TO:
s/s
G
DECLASSIFIED
EUR
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
GTI
State project Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
NLT
Amembassy, London (only)
By DEB 84-16 NLT, Date 12-10-87
1-1493
The British Ambassador called, at his request, and presented the attached
memorandum from Mr. Morrison dated July 7, 1951, which was in response to con-
versations between myself and the British Ambassador on the 4th of July relative
to the President's proposal to send out a personal representative to Iran to
discuss the oil question.
After reading the memorandum I advised that I felt the U.S. Government could
and should support the recommendation of the International Court of Justice as
requested by Mr. Morrison. I did, however, feel that it might still be desirable
for the President to send out a personal representative whose going might be
linked to the findings of the Court and who might facilitate a working out of a
modus vivendi either in the way prescribed by the Court or in some variation of
the Court recommendation which might be acceptable to both governments. I then
sketched out some of my thoughts in this matter (which were subsequently incorporated
in the President's reply to Dr. Mosadeg) for the benefit of the Ambassador.
The British Ambassador stated that he was sure that London would appreciate
United States support of the ICJ recommendation and might not oppose the Presi-
dent's sending out a representative if linked to the Court's decision in the way
that I had suggested. He stated, however, that he would like to go back to
London on this point and hoped to advise me by noon the day following as to
London's reaction.
(The British Ambassador did, on the day following, advise the Secretary
that London acquiesced in the proposed reply by the President to Prime Minister
Mosadeg's message, even though it was indicated that Mr. Morrison still had the
same reservations with respect to the President sending out a personal representative.)
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