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OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
DECLASSIFIED,
WASHINGTON
E.O. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
12065, Sec. 3-402
May 7, 1952
State Dept. DEB NLT, Date 7-26-85 SEGRET SECURITY INF ORMATION
By
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
SOVIET NOTE
The tripartite working group on the reply to the Soviet
note on Germany has submitted from London a new
tentative draft text. M. Crouy-Chanel, the French member of the group,
reported yesterday that he had spent several hours the previous day with
Foreign Minister Schuman analyzing the problems involved in the reply.
Schuman considers that the growing difficulties in Germany, may, unless
checked, be the beginning of success for the Soviet move. The greatest
danger is that the Germans may be tempted to seek unity at all costs.
Schuman thinks the Western reply must preserve the possibility of man-
euver against the contingency that the Germans may be further seduced
by this hope. The Western reply must not encourage it. It would, there-
fore, be a mistake for the reply to concentrate too much on free, all-
German elections. The Soviets might well be ready to concede much or
most of what we would demand. But if elections were held and an all- -
German Government set up, and meanwhile four-power control were
maintained, the Soviets would be in a position to feed out concessions bit
by bit, thus maintaining themselves for years in a strong bargaining
position. M. Schuman feels that in order to prevent this situation the
Western reply must be directed toward bringing out the fact that it is the
Soviets! purpose to keep Germany under the closest four-power control
possible, and to show the Germans that their interests require not only
free elections and a united Germany but free elections for a free Germany.
The new draft differs from the earlier US draft which
would have accepted a meeting of the four High Commissioners for Germany
to study the possibilities for free elections; the new draft repeats our
preference for using the UN Commission for this purpose, but it says that
we would be willing to examine any other precise proposals which would
permit of a really impartial investigation. It also insists that agreement
should be reached, prior to the elections, that the all-German Government
formed as a result of these free elections shall enjoy freedom of action
during the period before the peace treaty. The latest draft is being studied
on a priority basis, but it is now clear that we will not be able to meet our
previous deadline for delivery of the note on this weekend.
SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION