Memorandum of Conversation with Sae Sun Kim, John D. Hickerson, Arthur Emmons, Ruth Bacon, and Paul Jones
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OCR Page 1 of 23447
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
file
(
Memorandum of Conversation
CONFIT TIAL
DATE: October 15, 1951
SUBJECT:
Korean Application for Membership in the
United Nations
PARTICIPANTS:
Mr. Sae Sun Kim, Charge d'Affaires, Korean Embassy
Mr. John D. Hickerson, UNA
Mr. Arthur Emmons, NA
Miss Ruth Bacon, FE
SECRETARY
Mr. Paul Jones, UNP
STATE
COPIES TO:
UNA - Mr. Hickerson
OCT
18
1951
UNP - Mr. Wainhouse
DE LASSIFIED
FE - Miss Bacon
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
AFFAIRS
State
NA - Mr. Immons State Dept. Guidelines, March 6,
USUN
DC/R
By DEB NLT, Date 4-24-95
1-1493
Mr. Kim called on me to continue a conversation which I recently had with
Dr. Yang, Korean Ambassador, on the subject of membership of the Republic of
Korea in the United Nations. Recalling that I had promised to look up the status
of the Korean application, I told Mr. Kim that an application for the admission
of the Republic of Korea was still pending before the Security Council and that
no further step by the Republic of Korea was required for reconsideration. I
explained that its application, submitted on January 19, 1949, was vetoed by the
USSR and that the Security Council has not subsequently reconsidered the
application.
P
I noted that in 1949 the General Assembly adopted, by large majorities,
resolutions on each of the nine non-Soviet candidates, including the Republic of
Korea, which have all been excluded from United Nations membership because of the
Soviet veto. These resolutions stated that the applicant state was qualified
for admission and requested reconsideration by the Security Council of its
application. I also recalled that the USSR submitted a resolution to the Assembly
recommending reconsideration of all the pending applications except that of the
Republic of Korea, but this resolution was rejected by the Assembly. 5
I mentioned that the International Court of Justice, in response to
a General
Assembly resolution introduced by Argentina, gave an advisory opinion in 1950
that under the Charter, the General Assembly cannot admit a state to membership
when the Security Council has made no recommendation for admission because of
the failure of a candidate to obtain the required majority or because of the veto
of a permanent member. While the United States strongly regretted that a veto
of a permanent member could block the admission of an applicant, nevertheless,
that was
CONFIDENTIAL
059802
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