Images (2)
Document
| id |
id
4708846
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| identifierLocal |
identifierLocal
fdr19520226
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2NST-134
THE WHITE HOUSE
TRUMAN
WASHINGTON
fu
February 26, 1952
Dear lfr. Roosevelt:
I have read with interest and appreciation your
summary report concerning the last meeting of the United
Nations General Assembly. You did a fine job.
I know that it must have been difficult to carry
on with the staff problems you had, especially during a
session where the problems up for discussion were tough to
deal with. But I know that your leadership of the United
States delegation was inspiring and I feel that what you
did at Paris carried all of us further along the road to-
wards peace. I think particularly of action taken on such
problems as disarmament and collective security.
As your letter makes clear, the General Assembly
is invaluable in offering a forum for consultation and co-
operation with other delegations. It gives us a chance to
make our views widely known to other peoples, and vice versa.
I think it speaks well for United States policies, and the
way they were presented at Paris, that our position was sup-
ported by the Assembly on almost all important items.
I was especially interested in what you had to say
regarding Arab aspirations and the trance-like state of mind
in Western Europe concerning the Soviet nenace.
We must continue steadfast and show the way to
greater strength and realism.
I thank you for all you have done.
Very sincerely yours,
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Park Sheraton Hotel,
HaryJhurnam
56th Street and Seventh Avenue,
New York, N. Y.
Terms
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to