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OCR Page 1 of 2our (NAVAL AIDE.
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
E.O. Guidelines, 9-9-85 6,
12005, Sec. March 3-002
1982
WASHINGTON
January 4, 1952
State By Dept. DCB NLT, Date TOP
SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
KOREA
We have informed Ambassador Bruce in Paris that
alternative language proposed by the French for in-
clusion in the warning statement to be made in connection with a Korean
armistice can not be accepted by this Government. The most recent
French proposal, to broaden the statement so as to apply it, by indirection,
to threat of aggression elsewhere, was telephoned to us yesterday. It is
our position that the statement must be restricted to Korea where action
was clearly authorized by the UN and that threats of aggression elsewhere
must be faced by the UN if and when they occur. We point out that a
number of countries who have agreed to the statement would completely
refuse to accept the sentence proposed by the French. Our Ambassador
is to indicate in the strongest terms that France, alone of the principal
countries with forces in Korea, has not agreed and is holding up the program.
The final sentence of the statement can not now be changed in view of the
wide measure of agreement of other countries. The Joint Chiefs of Staff
would resist any watering down of this sentence to which they attach funda-
mental importance from the standpoint of the security of the UN troops.
The armistice negotiations will probably remain on dead center until we
get an agreement on this statement and we feel that it is indispensable that
the French agree at once.
(We have just been informed that Mr. Shuman, in
reply to Secretary Acheson's personal message of January 2, has agreed
to the text approved by the other interested countries.)
HUNGARY
Our special representative investigating the facts con-
cerning the recent imprisonment of US flyers by Hungary
has reported from Munich that his investigation thus far justifies the
hypothesis that the US has a strong case for action against Hungary and the
Soviets individually and jointly for conspiracy and against each as aiding
and abetting the other in denial of justice, violation of international law and
the Human Rights article of the peace treaty. In preparing our case for
possible presentation to the International Court of Justice, our representa-
tive sees no issue of law or fact which we should avoid. He believes every
justification and defense so far asserted by the Hungarians and Soviets are
TOP SECRET SECURITY INFORMA. TION