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OCR Page 1 of 2MLTCNavo 1 Artel300
OFFICE OF
DECLASSIFIED
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
WASHINGTON
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
December 20,, 1951
By. DEB NTT, Date 9-6-8
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMA TION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
FRANCE
Prime Minister Pleven and Finance Minister Rene
Mayer appeared before the Finance Committee of the
National Assembly Tuesday and, according to Finance Ministry sources,
they told the Committee that the government intended to increase its 1952
calendar year military budget to the 1190 billion francs which had been
recommended by the Executive Bureau of the TCC. The Government in- -
tended, however, that the budget should be provisional for the first two
months of 1952. Mayer explained that the TCC report sees the need for
a larger military program in France than this budget would provide, and
accordingly negotiations are still underway with the US and other NATO
nations to determine how additional expenditures, particularly for addi-
tional production and infrastructure, might be financed. Mayer said that
final decisions may not be reached until after the Lisbon meeting of the
No rth Atlantic Council in February acted on the TCC report, and the final
French budget might not be ready for the Finance Committee of the As- -
sembly until that time. Mayer's report to the Committee caused M. Bidault,
the Defense Minister, to tender his letter of resignation immediately and
he was induced to pocket his letter only with great difficulty. Ambassador
Bruce comments that Bidault's resignation at this period would be exceed-
ingly serious politically. Bruce says he is trying to induce Bidault to post-
pone any action of such a nature until at least after the Lisbon meeting.
EGYPT
Ambassador Caffery reports that King Farouk has
grown progressively more angry with the Wafd gov-
ernment and particularly the way in which it has consistently out-maneuvered
him ever since the abrogation of the treaty. Farouk is now determined to
break the present government, but to do so he is in need of two things: 1)
an occasion on which he can do so without putting himself in the wrong with
the public; and 2) an indication from the British that they would be prepared
to settle with a successor government along the lines sufficiently accept-
able to the Egyptian public to render the successor government's position
tenable.
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMA TION