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OCR Page 1 of 2NLTCNaval Aide) 65
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
$
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
all
WASHINGTON
August 10, 1950
IOP
S
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
BURMA
The Burmese Prime Minister has expressed to
Embassy Rangoon his concern over the southeast
Asian reaction to Indian Prime Minister Nehru's effort to mediate the
Korean crisis. While expressing his personal derstanding of the
impossibility of US acceptance of Soviet "conditions" for a Korean
settlement, the Prime Minister stated his fear that the peoples of
southeast Asia, many of whom he described as "politically naive",
would lose sight of the principles involved and accept the Communist
line that the reaction to Nehru's move marks a split between India
and southeast Asia on the one hand and the "Anglo-American
imperialists" on the other. The Burmese Prime Minister offered to
undertake to offset the growing concept that a rift has developed be- -
tween Nehru and the western democracies.
GERMANY
Ambassador Bruce in Paris has indicated his
general agreement that the essential point in the
creation of a European army is the reenforcement of US and UK
combat troops on the continent. Bruce points out that while our
ultimate objective is to build up military strength in western Europe
sufficient to repel aggression, such strength cannot come into being
for several years; consequently, our immediate aim is to instill con-
fidence in the Europeans of the eventual success of such an effort in
order to steady the political scene and ensure that a common front
will be presented to Soviet pressures. Bruce consequently suggests
that, in addition to the augmentation of US-UK forces on the
continent, the problems of a strategic plan and an overall command
are the most pressing.
In this connection, Ambassador Kirk in Moscow
states that, in view of the uneasy balance in Europe, we cannotleave
West Germany "naked and defenseless" without increasing the risk
that the whole country may fall into the hands of the USSR. On the
DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1932
By DEB NLT, Date 6-5-81