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OCR Page 1 of 4ARGHIVES AND RECORDS
U.S.
SERVICE"
HOLD FOR RILEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
October 18, 1948
CONFIDENTIAL: The following address of the President, to be dolivered
at the Annual Convention of the American Legion in Miami, Florida, today,
Monday, October 18, 1948, MUST BE HELD FOR RELEASE until 2:00 P.M., Eastern
Standard Time, October 18, and no portion, synopsis, or intimation may be
given out, or broadcast or published until that time.
The same release applies to all newspapers, radio announcers
and news broadcasters.
PLEASE USE CARE TO AVOID PREMATURE PUBLICATION OR RADIO
ANNOUNCEMENT.
CHARLES G. ROSS
Secretary to the President
I am glad to be here today as a delegate from Missouri, as a
comrade-in-arms and as Commander-in-Chief of our armed forces.
We Legionnaires have been mecting together for a. long time.
This makes the thirtieth year that the Legion has met to keep strong the
ties that bind together men who fought together for their country. In
those years the Legion has been serving our country in peace as well as
in war. I am happy to see the younger men of World War II joining and
strengthening our organization, which has never failed to be vigilant for
the welfare and security of our country.
I have looked forward to this opportunity of counseling with
you'as veterans. Among our countrymen, you understand best of all
the tragic meaning of war. You. learned the hard way how to hate it.
Today, I want to share with you my views about the things that lie
nearest our hearts -- the peace and freedom of the world.
As President of the United States, it has been my duty to find
the men to staff our efforts for security and peace.
It has been my duty to initiate and approve the great proposals
which have advanced both our security and the recovery of the free
nations of the world.
As your Chief Executive, I know of the patriotic efforts of men
of both parties to support those policies.
The plain fact remains, however, that while the President of
the United States can delegate authority, he has the responsibility, under
the Constitution, for the conduct of our foreign affairs.
In that capacity, I want to stress something which I am sure
every veteran and every real American will approve. So long as I am
President of the United States, there will be no chip on the shoulder of
America.
As I have said before, I would rather see the peace of the
world preserved than be President of the United States.
In recent months, the trend of events has caused us deep con-
cern. The great need today is for action to strengthen the United
Nations in dealing :with the disputes which now challenge its authority --
action to create an improved atmosphere for all future negotiations
looking toward peace.
Lately, in Europe and even here in the United States, there has
been loose and irresponsible talk to the effect that the United States
is deliberately following a course that leads to war. That is a wicked
falsehood.
(OVER)
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