Memorandum from Acting Secretary of State Joseph Grew to President Harry S. Truman, Current Foreign Developments
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OCR Page 1 of 3TOP SECRET
DECLASSIFIED
11652, Sec. 3(E) and 5(D) or 1972 B
E.O. State letter, Aug. 6.26.75
Dept. NLITH of NARS Date
BY
June 12, 1945
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Subject: Current Foreim Developments
Moscow Commission Invites Poles to Confer with It.
Four-months to the day from the end of the Yalta Confer-
ence, the Commission it set up "to consult with members
of the Polish Provisional Government end with other demo-
cratic lenders in Poland and abrond concerning the reorgan-
ization of the Polish Provisional Government on a broader
democratic basis with the inclusion of democratic leaders
from Poland itself and Poles from abroad" has issued those
invitations for consultation.
Molotov, Harrimen and Clark-Kerr agreed on the invi-
tations in Moscow June 11. They are being delivered to
the persons within Polend through the Soviet Ambassador
in Warsaw and to the Poles in England through the British
Foreign Office. The Commission also apreed that as soon
as the invitations had been delivered, with a request for
its recipients to arrive in Moscow by June 15 for negotia-
tions "concerning the formation of a Polish Provisional
Government of National Unity", that a public statement
would be made by the three governments for simultaneous
relense in the morning press of the three countries on
Wednesday, June 13. This will include the names of the
persons to be invited and is now being drafted. About a
dozen nemes, including Mikolacjozyk, will be on the list,
broken down into three approximately equal groups of
Warsaw
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