Truman Papers
No. 1282
President Truman to
Generalissimo
Stalin
Memorandum for Generalissimo Stalin
In response to your suggestion1 that I write you a letter as to the Far Eastern situation, I am attaching a form of letter which I propose to send you at your convenience after you notify me you have reached an agreement with the Government of China.2 If this is satisfactory to you, you can let me know immediately when you have reached such agreement and I will wire you the letter, to be used as you see fit. I will also send you by fastest courier the official letter, signed by me. If you decide to use it it will be all right. However, if you decide to issue a statement basing your action on other grounds or for any other reason prefer not to use this letter it will be satisfactory to me. I leave it to your good judgment.3
- See ante, p. 476.↩
- Stalin had told Truman on July 17 that the Soviet Union would need to complete its pending negotiations with China before entering the war against Japan. See pod, p. 1585. Cf. ante, p. 476.↩
- The Department of State was notified on November 17, 1950, by George M. Elsey, Administrative Assistant to the President, that Truman’s files in the White House had been searched and that there was no record whatsoever of any subsequent exchange with Stalin relating to this memorandum. Cf. the Soviet declaration of war on Japan quoted in footnote 1 to document No. 1382.↩
- For information on the preparation of this draft letter, see Byrnes, Speaking Frankly, pp. 208–209; Byrnes, All in One Lifetime, p. 298. Leahy (I Was There, p. 424) states that Truman handed it to Stalin at the Plenary Meeting on July 31.↩
- Full text in Department of State Bulletin, vol. ix, p. 308.↩
- Treaty Series No. 993; 59 Stat. (2) 1031.↩