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OCR Page 1 of 2the
NLT Caral Aide/183
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
By DEB NLT, Date 9-4-85
March 16, 1951
TPRET
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
OUR-POWER -
At the tenth session of the Paris talks on
EXPLORATORY TALKS
Thursday Ambassador Jessup introduced
a new agreed tripartite version of item 1:
"Examination of the causes of present international tensions in Europe and
of the means to secure a real and lasting improvement in the relations be -
tween the USSR, US, UK and France, such as: the existing level of arma-
ments, its effect on the question of the demilitarization of Germany, and the
means for the control and reduction of armaments; measures to eliminate
the fear of aggression; fulfillment of present treaty obligations. 11
The immediate Soviet reaction was nega- -
tive and the Soviet delegate replied with a lengthy harangue in which he con- -
tended that the Western Powers were introducing a new argument when they
brought up the question of the existing level of armaments. He also
reiterated that any agenda acceptable to the Soviets must contain the question
of German demilitarization.
SPAIN
Ambassador Griffis has had a first talk of
substantive political importance with
General Franco. Having mentioned to Franco in the course of conversation
that the US was interested in the viewpoint of the Spanish Government con-
cerning defense against Communism, and specifically concerning Western
Europe, Franco launched into a 40 minute monologue. Franco began with
the failure of the Republic following Communist infiltration, story of the
Revolution, and his bitterness against England and France who had heaped
insults on Spain for the past fifteen years.
Turning to the present situation Franco
said that while he believed that England had guts and might fight, France
was utterly unreliable and it was quite possible that should the US continue
to arm the European countries it might find both England and France taking
a position of armed neutrality in any open war between the US and Russia.
Nevertheless, under any conceivable conditions, Spain would defense itself.
Franco stated that while England had entered into a defensive treaty with the
US against Russia, she had not denounced her existing treaty of friendship,
offensive and defensive, with Russia.