Memorandum from Acting Secretary of State Joseph Grew to President Harry S. Truman, Current Foreign Developments
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OCR Page 1 of 3SOPOUCRET
E.O. 11652, Sec. 3(E) and 5(D) or (E)
DECLASSIFIED
of State letter, Aug. 10, 1972
Dept. By WITH MARS Date 6.26.75
May 11, 1945
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Subject: Current Foreim Developments
PROBLEM MAY REACH HIGHEST LEVEL IN SYRIA AND
LEBANON. Secretary Stettinius will probably be presented
in San Francisco with a Syrian protest against current
reinforcement of French troops in the Levant states.
In
the meantime, there has been laid before Churchill the
question of whether the British military and naval author-
ities should take appropriate action "to maintain over-
all Middle East security.' A second French cruiserload
of troops left Toulon for Oran and Beirut on Tuesday.
If the British want American support, they are to be di-
rected to ask it from London on a high level. The Lebanese
authorities say "a clash" with the French is inevitable
if the latter bring in new troops without withdrawing an
TRIKAN
equal number.
the
BRITISH PLANS FOR ITALY. The British Foreign Office
has asked British JCS to draft military clauses for the
peace settlement with Italy on the basic assumption that
Italy must yield all her oversess possessions. The Plan-
ning Section of the British War Office proposes that a.s
Italy lies across British communications she must not again
come under a hostile power's control. Strategic interests
require she rimmin on friendly terms with U.K. and be en-
couraged to look to Western Europe for support. But ahe
must not
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