Memorandum from Acting Secretary of State James Webb to President Harry S. Truman
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OCR Page 1 of 4DECLASSIFIED
E.O. 12065, Sec. 3-402
Guidelines,
March
6,
1982
State
Dept.
DEB
NLT,
Date
10-22-85
By
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
SECRET
Rose file
September 13, 1951
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Subject: Visit of His Excellency Elpidio Quirino,
President of the Philippines.
President Quirino is scheduled to call at 12:30 p.m., Thursday,
September 13. Since August 31 he has been at Johns Hopkins under-
going a physical check up. After his visit with you he is scheduled
to go to New York and then to return by air to the Philippines.
These are the topics that he may broach:
1. Japanese peace treaty. You may wish to express to President
Quirino your admiration of his statesmanship in giving due weight
to the larger issue of the Japanese peace treaty and thereby taking
a determined stand for it even though circumstances could not
permit accession to all Philippine desires.
2. Pacific Pact. President Quirino believes he originated the
concept of regional security in the Pacific and for that purpose
called a conference at Baguio in May 1950 of representatives of
Australia, Ceylon, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Thailand. The meeting
accomplished little. In his address following the signing of the
Mutual Defense Treaty on August 30, 1951, President Quirino said:
"I have special reason to rejoice at this moment because
it was not so long ago, in this same capital, that I took
the liberty of proposing the conclusion of a Pacific
Security Pact under the initiative of the United States.
This is the first fruit of that vision".
If President Quirino suggests that arrangements which have
already been concluded should now be expanded into a more compre-
hensive understanding, you may wish to point out that we would of
SECRET
course
TRUMAN
HARRY
S.
Relations
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