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OCR Page 1 of 2NLT (Naval Aide) 198
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
May
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
DEB NLT, Date 9-5-85
May 7, 1951
By
TOP SECRE
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
FOUR POWER
In the 43rd session of the Four Power
PARIS TALKS
talks in Paris on Friday, Soviet
Delegate Gromyko "accepted" alterna-
tive A of the three Western agenda plans on the condition that the West
accept a Soviet "amendment on the armaments sub-item, which
consisted of the acceptance of the Soviet wording of April 4 which
would limit the discussion to the armaments of the Four Powers. He
made no mention of an item on the North Atlantic Treaty or on bases.
The three western delegates pointed out that the Soviet delegate had
not accepted any of the three alternate proposals and that since the
Soviet delegate knows the West cannot accept the Soviet wording on the
armaments item, the matter stands exactly as it did before introduc-
tion of the Soviet "amendment". At the Saturday meeting, Gromyko
embarked on a bitter denunciation of Western policies and that of the
UK in particular, and stated that agreement in the meetings now
depends on the position of the Western powers with respect to reduc- -
tion of the armaments of the four powers. The three representatives
rejected this thesis, stating that the three Western alternatives, each
of which would allow the Foreign Ministers to meet, were still open,
and that despite the label attached to the Soviet "amendment", the
Soviet delegate had made no proposal on any major point since April 4.
UK POLICY
Our Ambassador in London has discussed
IN FAR EAST
with British Foreign Minister Morrison
the Secretary's recent personal message
on Far Eastern policies and was encouraged by Morrison's generally
reasonable and cooperative approach to the problem. He stated that
a Cabinet decision had been made on the question of the bombing of
Chinese Communist bases and that the only problem involved is that
of consultation, emphasizing that a firm political decision in principle
had been made to authorize retaliatory bombing in the event of
"material" air attack on UN troops and that arrangements had been