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OCR Page 1 of 2NLT (MAu) AAd)338
OFFICE OF
12065, Sec. 3-402
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
E.O. Guidelines, March 9-9-83 6, 1982
WASHINGTON
State By DEB Dept. NLT, Date
March 18, 1952
TQP SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
GERMANY
Mr. Kohnstamm, the Dutch representative on the UN Com -
mission on German Elections, told our Bonn mission on
Sunday that the Commission does not intend to carry on any investigations
in Germany unless it is given free and equal access in both zones to such
persons and places and relevant documents as it may deem necessary. The
Commission set forth its requirements in a memorandum yesterday to the
Allied High Commission and the Federal Republic, and it will make the same
requests to the Soviets and the East German authorities if the latter make
any reply to the Commission's previous communication. Kohnstamm
appears to be fully aware of the dangers inherent in any possible Communist
attempt to persuade the Commission to promote East-West German talks,
and he said that the Commission was resolved to adhere closely to its terms
of reference and not to become involved in any way in a discussion of the
peace treaty negotiations.
If no reply is received from East Germany (and Kohnstamm does
not now expect it, particularly in the light of Grotewohl's latest declaration)
the Commission plans to return to Geneva on March 22 and will, after a
reasonable delay, report to the UN Secretariat General that it was unable
to gain entrance into East Germany.
INDIA
In a conversation with Ambassador Bowles over the week-end,
Secretary General Bajpai of the Indian Ministry of External Affairs,
said that he had sent off two telegrams to Ambassador Panikkar in Peking
instructing him to suggest to the Chinese Communists that if they were
really suffering from an epidemic from whatever cause, the best solution
was a truce in Korea and a coordinated all-out effort by other nations, in-
cluding India, to get the epidemic under control. Panikkar was unable to
talk with Chou En-lai personally, as he had been instructed to do, but spoke
instead to Chou's deputy, Fou. Fou's reaction was merely to launch into
another tirade against the US and to repeat the Chinese accusations of germ
warfare which, said Bajpai, "even Panikkar was unwilling to swallow".
Bajpai said that the charges were obviously ridiculous and he was deeply
concerned over what lay behind them, particularly since only three weeks ago
the Chinese Communist government was toning down its anti-American
propaganda and was semingly desirous of a truce, and now had apparently
shifted its strategy again.
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION