Memorandum of Conversation with Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Foreign Minister of Australia Richard Casey, and Ward P. Allen
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OCR Page 1 of 2534
1619 62
UNITED STATES DELEGATION TO THE
SEVENTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
SECURITY INFORMATION
MEMOR ANDUM OF CONVERSATION
cryf
November 7, 1952
(Typed November 10, 1952)
SUBJECT:
Racial Conflict in South Africa;
Hearing of NSGT Representatives in Committee 4.
352
PARTICIPANTS:
Foreign Minister Casey, Australian Delegation
362
The Secretary of State
Ward P. Allen
Racial Conflict in South Africa, Minister Casey stated he understood the
U.S. would vote in favor of UN compstence in this case and indicated Australia
did not share this view. He asked if the Secretary could explain the position
in more detail. The Secretary replied that this, of course, from both the legal
and political point of view, a very troublesome problem; that on the one hand
the Charter contains a number of provisions regarding the observance of basic
human rights, and on t he other, the injunction in Article 27 against interference
in domestic matters. Where the exact line is to be drawn in the apparent con-
flict between the human rights and domestic jurisdiction provisions of the Charter
cannot be settled on the basis of words and formulas. For example, there is no
subject generally regarded as more essentially within domestic jurisdiction than
immigration policy, and yet we have had numerous international conferences on
this matter, one recently concluded in Brussels. It is quite clear that this
subject is one appropriate for at least discussion in an international forum.
As one proceeds from discussion to recommendation to action, one rapidly ape
proaches intervention in domestic matters. Certainly action is intervention,
probably recommendation would be intervention, and it may be that in some cases
discussion would be intervention. In the present case, however, the U.S. is in-
clined to vote that the GA is competent to discuss if the question of competence
is reised at the outset and to make a minatory statement along the foregoing lines.
However, we believe from the point of view of wise policy, as well as regard for
legal difficulties, that the General Assembly, if it desires to pass any recommenda~
tion,
should confine itself to a general one referring to general standards of con=
duct which all nations should follow. The Assembly is surely competent to do that
and, indeed, has done it on several occasions in the past. However, any resolution
DECLASSIFIED
directed
E. O. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and S(D) or (E)
372
Dept. of State letter,
, NARS SHOMET SECURITY INFORMATION
By
NLT-HC
11/12
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