Telegram from United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union Walter Bedell Smith to the Department of State
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OCR Page 1 of 3NLT-549
2
INCOMING TELEGRAM
Department of State -Division of Communications and Records
TOP OBORET
Rec'd May 10, 1948
FROM:
Moscow
DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and 5(D)
TO:
Secretary of State
DEPT. OF STATE LTR. 3-5-73
Ly ,HC -NLT NARS Date3:14-1
NO:
NIACT 866, May 10, 1.a.m.
US URGENT
FOR THE SECRETARY'S EYES ONLY FROM SMITH
ARCH
Molotov sent for me this evening at six and made from notes an oral
statement, text of which he handed me at conclusion of our conversation.
GOVE
This text being transmitted in immediately following message, and you will
note that it is, in effect, simply our statement in reverse. No proposals
or feelers of a more definite nature were made during subsequent conversation.
I interpret Soviet statement to mean that they have taken note of our
declaration of intention, appreciate fact that we are determined to proceed
as indicated, and wish us to know that they are not going to change their
own policy for the time being. They are going to watch developments closely,
and will be guided by them, and not by our words. They are not ready to talk
yet, but have not closed the door. Just as we have made a statement for the
record, so have they.
At conclusion of Mr. Molotov's statement I said I would comment briefly.
With regard to remarks about "development of US bases, our policy of encircle-
ment and our war-like threats, 11 I had only to say that our entire history
was refutation of any suspicion of a policy which involved aggressive war.
As I stated during our previous conversation, the drawing together of the
western European countries and the support which was being given them by US
was a direct reflection of the apprehensions and fears which had been aroused
by the expansionist policy of USSR, and that while I had no right to disbelieve
his statements, I could not refrain from paraphrasing Mr. Vsyhinski¹ comment
that facts spoke for themselves.
The US was secure in its honesty of purpose with regard to ERP. Our people
were, as stated previously, completely unable to understand implications
placed on that program by USSR. US appreciates and fully understands the
desire and indeed the necessity of close and friendly relations between USSR
and its neighbors, but that here again facts spoke for themselves, and I was
fully familiar with events which followed the acceptance by Czechoslovakia
of invitation to ERP conference in Paris and subsequent reversal of this
acceptance during the immediately following visit of Mazaryk and Gottwald to
Moscow. A country like my own which permitted complete freedom of pôlitical
thought and expression did not oppose Communism because of its Marxian ideology
DECLASSIFIEB
E.Ô. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and S(D)
TOP SECRET
LYHG-NLT NARS Date 3-14-73
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