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OCR Page 1 of 2OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
June 19, 1951
By DEA NLT, Date 9-5-85
SEC R. E
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
PARIS FOUR
At yesterday's meeting Gromyko stated there
POWER TALKS
was no official reply from his Government to
the Western note of June 15. Gromyko main-
tained the Soviet position on the NAT item and said he had no further
comment. Jessup said it appeared there was nothing further to say until
a Soviet reply introduced something new for the Deputies to consider, and
it was agreed that the next meeting would be subject to call by the Chair-
man.
We have informed Jessup that we share the
British delegate Davies' preference, in regard to terminating the Paris
talks, for a tripartite statement suggesting the Soviets can use diplo-
matic channels to communicate further with the Western governments.
We have told Jessup we think the tripartite deputies shuuld not break off
the meeting before a Soviet reply, but that we would want to reconsider
this if no reply is received before the end of this week. If a Soviet re-
ply is received, we believe the tripartite delegates should allow 24 hours
before making an answer or a statement closing out the conference. When the
closing out statement is made, we believe it should be a simple statement
stressing the Soviet blocking of a CFM and should not be a detailed, lengthy
survey which would be too complicated for average public consumption.
As far as the date of a possible Minister's meeting is concerned, we think
that no advance commitment should be made and that the question should
be kept open to meet the circumstances and timing of a Soviet reply.
JAPAN
The Chinese Nationalist Government has in-
formed our representative in Taipei that it
regards as unacceptable the formula which has been proposed regarding
adherence of a Chinese Government to a peace treaty with Japan. A
Government spokesman has stated that the Chinese Government will only
accept simultaneous participation with the other allies in a multilateral
treaty or a bilateral treaty to be signed with Japan. The spokesman in-
dicated that his Government felt the formula was "clearly discriminatory. "