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OCR Page 1 of 3INCOMING TELEGRAM
Department of State
FE
7
SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
Action
Control: 1852
Rec'd:
UNA
FROM;New York
November 6, 1952
Info
1:53 a.m.
TO: Secretary of State
NO: DELGA 131, November 6, 12:20 a.m.
PRIORITY
Re Korea
Gross and staff members US GA del met today with Madame Pandit
and Krishna Menon of Indian del for exchange of views on GA
action on Korea. Indian reps welcomed opportunity for discussion,
indicating they themselves wld have taken initiative if we had
not done so. Following points were brought out by Krishna Menon,
who is working on Korea for Indian del.
1. He does not really agree with Palar's approach as reflected
in Indonesian draft resolution (DELGA 115). He evinced open
dissatisfaction with the tactics which had been followed by
Palar in launching the project without advance consultations.
The first time he had become aware of it was when he read about
it in the NEW YORK TIMES. Certainly the Indians had not put Palar
up to it; on the contrary, they did not like it.
2. Drishna Menon thought most serious difficulty confronting us
was proposal for post-armistice commission suggested in Soviet
and Indonesian drafts. He thought such a commission impractical.
Any attempt to set up commission along lines proposed by Palar
would in a sense substitute unwieldy body comparable to the
first committee for an orderly type of conference. Menon's
suggestion for dealing with this problem would be to include
in a resolution, which he has apparently not yet drafted, a
provision for the establishment of a. committee composed of
the present president of the General Assembly and the two
previous GA presidents (Entezam and Padillo Nervo). The
function of this group would be to facilitate through its good
offices the establishment after an armistice of the conference
envisaged in Article 60 of the tentative armistice agreement.
Menon frankly stated that he regarded this committee as a
means of paying lip-service to ideas already current and as a
means of countering Palar's proposal for a committee.
3. Menon expressed the view on POW question that the POW'S
should not be pushed or .pulled in their repatriation. Both
he and Madame Pandit thoroughly supported the principle of
nonforcible repatriation. Menon agreed with Gross' comment
that it was highly important in any draft resolution on this
subject to avoid ambiguity, vague formulas and loose ends
which would provide
REPRODUCTION FROM THIS
SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
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16-67338-1
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