Memorandum from Admiral William D. Leahy to the Secretary of Defense
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OCR Page 1 of 3NCT(PSFluse) 313
TOP SECRET
COPY
THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF
DECLASSIFIED
Washington 25, D. C.
State Dept. Guideline, June 12, 1979
we LTR. 12-11-fo
E,Q. 12065, Sec. 3-402
10 March 1948
PROJEST art 94.21
By NLT 4c
NARS, Date p.4+1
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE:
"NATIONAL SERVICE"
SUBJECT:
: The Position of the United States with Respect to Italy
Govere
in the Light of the Possibility of Communist Participa-
tion in the Italian Government by Legal Means.
In accordance with your informal request, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
have studied a draft report prepared by the National Security Council staff
entitled, "Position of the United States with Respect to Italy in the Light
of the Possibility of Communist Participation in the Government by Legal Means"
(NSC 1/3) forwarded by you on 8 March 1948 and scheduled for consideration by
the National Security Council on 11 March 1948.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff have reviewed this paper to the extent pos-
sible in the very brief time available, and have limited their comments to
those portions having apparent major military implications.
With reference to the conclusion in paragraph 9 a to the effect that
the United States should strengthen its military position in the Mediterranean
area, little action, except increase of our Mediterranean naval force, could be
taken that would not involve actual stationing (with prior political arrange-
ments) of United States forces either in Italy or its islands or on some other
foreign territory such as Malta or Tripoli. As for forces available, the Joint
Chiefs of Staff would reiterate the following comment made in their memorandum
to you dated 19 February 1948 in connection with their study of NSC 1/2:
"
The United States could strengthen its naval and air
forces in the Mediterranean area outside of Italy ithout dan-
gerously lowering its available reserve of such forces. However,
deployment of ground forces in the same area would require com-
mitment of part or all of our reserve in this category, a reserve
which, in view of our extended military position, is already dan-
gerously low. This should not be done unless a partial mobiliza-
tion is undertaken to enable the United States to have available
a comparatively large, trained strategic reserve with which to re-
inforce units outside the United States if required.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff believe that the over-all world situation,
of which that in Italy is only a part, dictates the necessity for strengthen-
ing immediately the potential of our National Military Establishment. Some
form of compulsory military service is essential if timely and effective
strengthening of our potential is to be achieved, since this is the only
method short of mobilization which can produce desired results without long
delay. The foregoing does not exclude the desirability of Universal Military
Training but it is only from the long-range point of view that initiation of
such training will be useful.
for SECRET
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