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OCR Page 1 of 4(KOREK/50)
328
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3
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Memorandum of Conversation
DATE:
November 7, 1950
S
ECT:
German Participation in Western European Defense and Korean Situation.
PARTICIPANTS:
E.O. 12065, Sec.
DECLASSIFIED
Mr. Hume Wrong, Canadian Ambassador
S - The Secretary
RA - Mr. Douglas MacArthur II
State By He Dept. Guidelines, March 3-402 6, 1982
NLT,
Date 6.29.LY
La - Mr. Matthews
EE - Mr. Reinhardt
COPIES TO:
S/S-R - Mr. Barnes
UNA -
EUR - Mr. Perkins
BNA - Mr. Labouisse
FE - Mr. Rusk
WE - Mr. Byington
GER - Mr. Byroade
S/P - Mr. Nitze
EUR - Mr. Cumming
1-1493
Ambassador Wrong opened the conversation by saying that he had
asked for the appointment with the Secretary several days ago to talk
about two questions: 1) German participation in Western European
defense, and 2) the Korean situation. He had seen both Assistant
Secretary Rusk and Mr. Byroade yesterday and he felt that they had
brought him pretty well up to date on the US thinking on these two
problems; nevertheless, he wanted to go over the ground briefly with
the Secretary, particularly since in reporting back to his Government
he would like to report the Department's views as coming from the
Secretary himself.
With respect to German participation in the defense of Western
Europe, the Secretary told Ambassador Wrong that we are giving this
problem a very serious thought. The problem as the Secretary saw it
was to find out and analyze thoroughly what the really important
French considerations were. For example, what the French had in
mind when they proposed a European Defense Minister? Was this aimed
primarily at European integration or federalization, or was it a means
of preventing the establishment of a German Defense Ministry? To
what extent was the so-called Pleven Plan based on valid internal
political considerations, and to what extent on the personal feelings
of Moch? Would a formula which was to a certain extent window-dressing
satisfy the French or would they really insist on a formula which
included the basic issue raised in the Pleven Plan? The Secretary
said that we are trying to analyze all these factors and obtain informa-
tion from Ambassador Bruce so that we would know what line of approach
would be most fruitful and at the same time most helpful to the French.
Ambassador
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