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OCR Page 1 of 2the
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
State Dept. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
April 10, 1952
By DED NLT, Date 9-9-85
SECRET SECURITY INEORMATION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
GERMAN TREATY
The Soviets delivered another note yesterday
evening concerning a German Peace Treaty.
The new note reiterates the Soviet desire to work out a German peace
treaty without delay and suggests the creation of an all-German Govern-
ment to participate immediately in the peace treaty discussions. It
turns down the idea of a United Nations Commission for investigating
the possibilities of free all-German elections as being "'in contradiction
with the UN charter which in accordance with Article 107 excludes inter -
ference in German affairs," and says that such a check can be carried
out by a commission of the four occupation powers.
The new note also reiterates the Soviet theme
that Germany must obligate itself not to join any kind of coalition or
military alliances directed against any power which has taken part with
armed forces in the war against Germany. It says, on the other hand,
that Germany must be permitted to have its own national armed forces
(land, air, and sea) and that it is impossible to imagine a position whereby
Japan would have a right to its national armed forces designed for the
defense of the country, but Germany would be deprived of this right and
placed in a worse position. The note repeats the earlier Soviet state-
ment that the USSR considers the Potsdam frontiers of Germany as
definitive.
Finally, the note proposes anew that the four
powers enter into discussion of a peace treaty with Germany and also
the question of the unification of Germany and creation of an all-German
Government; it concludes that 'just now the question is being decided
whether Germany will be reestablished as a united, independent, peace-
loving state entering into the family of peace-loving peoples of Europe,
or whether the division of Germany and the related threat of war in
Europe will remain.'
USSR
Embassy Prague reports that the Swedish chiefs
of mission from Vienna, Bonn, and Prague held
an informal meeting in Prague on Tuesday with the Secretary General
of the Swedish Foreign Office to discuss various aspects of German and
Eastern European problems. Our Embassy offers the following Swedish
views, as being of interest to the Department: 1) the Soviet offer of
SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
Terms
Subject
Peace treaties