Memorandum from Secretary of State Edward Stettinius to President Harry S. Truman
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OCR Page 1 of 2DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
April 20, 1945
MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT
Subject: U.S. Relations With Poland
When after six weeks of negotiation it was apparent
that the Commission in Moscow set up by the Yalta Confer-
ence to work out the Polish solution was deadlocked, the
President and the Prime Minister on April 1 sent messages
to Stalin in an endeavor to straighten out the difficul-
ties. These difficulties from the British and American
point of view grew out of the unacceptable interpretation
which the Soviet Government was placing on the Yalta
agreement. In fact the Soviet Government was maintaining
that the Soviet agreement meant nothing more than a thinly
disguised continuance of the Lublin Government and that
any reorganization should be approved of and decided by
the Lublin Government itself.
In their messages of April 1 both the President and
the Prime Minister made it plain that such an interpreta-
tion could not be accepted. After giving a full, careful
and fair interpretation of the Yalta agreement on Poland
as it appeared to him, President Roosevelt suggested that
as a means of getting the negotiations moving, the right
of the Commission to select, independent of the Lublin
Government, the list of Poles to be invited to Moscow for
consultation, should be clearly recognized and established.
Without going into further detail of the messages, the
messages from President Roosevelt and the Prime Minister
constituted a powerful and reasonable appeal to Stalin to
carry forward fairly and speedily the Yalta decision. On
NATIONAL
ARCHIVES AND
REVENUE
April 7
RECORDS
SERVICE*
Relations
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