Telegram from Ambassador Horace Cochran to Secretary of State Dean Acheson
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OCR Page 1 of 437
INCOMING TELEGRAM
Department of State
240
TELEGRAPH BRANCH
1
A
SECRET
Action
Control: 12448
FE
Rec'd: June 22, 1951
FROM: Djakarta
9:06 a .m.
Info
TO:
SS
Secretary of State
DECLASSIFIED
G
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
E
NO: 1807, June 22, 4 p.m.
State Dept. Guideline June 12, 1979
EUR
By NLT/KL
UNA
10-29-11
US UN
NIACT.
DCL
DCR
Received DEPTEL 1399 today 10 a.m. Religious holiday and
all Indo Govt offices closed. Unable find Hatta, Djuanda
or Darmasetiawan at home until received by Djuanda twelve
noon.
I inquired of him status embargo question. said last he
had heard was decision Cabinet meeting last week to give
Ambassador A11, with copy to Palar, list Indo items to be
embargoed with decision on rubber left open. Said Indo
officials US were to be instructed learn what Brit and
others including their lists with particular reference
rubber. If they including rubber, Ali was to approach
State Dept and see what considerations he cld get from US
for Indo likewise including rubber. Djuanda definitely
understood, however, that Indo Govt reconciled to including
rubber if UK decision thereon was unconditional. Ali's
approach to State Dept was to portray economic repercus-
sions Indo. Djuanda considered internal political reper-
cussions had already been weighed when Cabinet decision
above-mentioned taken.
I then let Djuanda know I had learned Palar had told Gross
he had received Indo list from which rubber omitted for
reasons indicated in DEPTEL 1399. Said I hoped Dept had
been able thru Ali to get Palar defer filing report with
UN or giving publicity thereto. I emphasized bad reaction
that wld follow in US Congress and public if rubber not in-
cluded Indo embargo.
Djuanda said question of embargo not raised at Tuesday
night's Cabinet meeting this week and he was not aware any
developments since last week's meeting. He telephoned
Darmasetiawan. He gave me impression following his talk
with Darmasetiawan that Ministers Subardjo and Sujono
Hadinoto, to whom Cabinet had entrusted task of filling in
details of draft instruction to Ali, which Cabinet had
approved, may have exercised some liberty in suggesting
bargaining maneuvers to Ali and Palar. I told Djuanda I
had let Darmasetiawan know that we did not intend bargain
with either British or Indos. I had assured Indo officials
169
consistently
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