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OCR Page 1 of 2NLT(Naval Aids) 399
the
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
May
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
September 23, 1952
By DEB NLT, Date 9-10-85
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
IRAN
On Friday we instructed Embassy London to show the
British Foreign Office a draft press guidance on the
Iranian oil situation and to ascertain its reaction. The press
guidance, in answering a hypothetical request from a journalist
to comment on reports regarding the efforts of certain American
firms to purchase Iranian oil, said in part: "The US Government
is not in a position to express any opinion on the legal questions
involved or on the advisability of American private concerns enter- -
ing upon arrangements to purchase and market Iranian oil.'
Yesterday morning a representative of the British
Embassy here called at the Department to argue against our use
of the above. He gave the Department a copy of a telegram the
British Embassy had received from the Foreign Office which
objected most strenuously to any such statement to the press.
The Foreign Office message admits that if the situation in Iran
continues unchanged, the oil embargo may break down to some
extent, but points out that it has not yet begun to do so. It says,
moreover, that there is a fundamental difference between firms
doing business in Iran against all the legal and political obstacles
which have been placed in their way and against the express wish
of their own governments, and their doing so with what amounts
to the official encouragement or even the tacit approval of the US
Government. The message states that the British Government
will continue to help the AIOC defend its legal rights and to urge
other friendly governments to do everything they can to prevent
attempts by their nationals to purchase stolen oil. It adds that
if the US Government were to give American oil companies grounds
for assuming that it was a matter of indifference to the US Govern-
ment whether they dealt in Iranian oil, the encouragement both to
prospective dealers and to Mosadeq would be very great. Such
an attitude would be tantamount to accepting Mosadeq's third con-
dition (the British would have to recognize Iran's losses as a
result of the oil embargo and restrictions on the use of Iran's
sterling accounts) and would be rightly taken to display a split
in the Anglo-American position.
In relation to the visit of Mr. Alton Jones to Iran and
his recently published statement, the message recalls the as-
surances as to Mr. Jones' attitude contained in the President's
message to Prime Minister Churchill on August 18th, and particu-
larly the sentence: "I need not tell you that we have not the slight-
est wish to profit by your present difficulties. We will do every-
thing possible to avoid even the appearance of this.'
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION