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OCR Page 1 of 2NLTCHava Adding
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
State Dept. DEB Guidelines, NLT, Date March 9-10-85 6, 1982
August 6, 1952
By
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
IRAN:
Information received by the American Ambassador at
London indicates that the Department's proposals for
joint US-UK action in the Iranian crisis, submitted to Ambassador Franks
in an Aide Memoire on July 31, will be taken up at a meeting of the
British Cabinet tomorrow. It will be recalled that this Aide Memoire
outlined immediate steps which the US Government feels essential in
the effort to prevent loss of Iran to the Western world. Embassy London
has had no indication of working level recommendations on the Aide
Memoire beyond a statement by a British official that he had no doubt
a common appropriate course of action could be agreed upon.
EGYPT:
Embassy London reports that the British Foreign Office
is somewhat reassured regarding recent developments
in Egypt, particularly the resolution of the Regency Council problem,
the indication of Ali Maher's willingness to stay in office and the lack
of any breakdown in law and order. The British Joint Chiefs will today
consider whether present alerts of British forces should be relaxed.
The British Foreign Office says that if the decision is taken to prolong
alerts it would be made clear to the military that it might be necessary
to reduce them again on short notice since there is still a potential for
deterioration in the situation.
In expressing its view that many of the indications of
willingness of the younger Egyptian military officers connected with
the coup to cooperate with the West in defense matters were prompted
by a desire to obtain equipment, the British Foreign Office indicated
it would be a mistake to comply with such requests until it was clear
that Egypt would cooperate in Middle East defense. Nevertheless,
the British Foreign Office has agreed that there is some hope in the
present situation of splitting the questions of defense and Sudan issue
at the proper time. The British feel there are still many aspects of
the defense problem which must be clarified before entering military
negotiations and have indicated their desire to discuss defense pro-
posals with the US before submitting them to the Egyptians since the
close US-UK coordination might well be critical in persuading the
Egyptians to accept them.
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMA' TION