File No. 811.34537/56.
The American Minister to the Secretary of State.
Habana, Cuba, April 17, 1911.
Sir: With reference to the project to enlarge our naval station at Guantánamo, I have the honor to transmit herewith a copy of a, “Confidential memorandum” which I read to Sr. Sanguily, the Cuban secretary of state, this afternoon, and left with him at his request. This memorandum was compiled from several of the Department’s instructions or their accompanying documents (I from No. 254,2 II from No. 278, and III from No. 277), and was presented to Sr. Sanguily as a reply to his confidential note of February 8, of which a copy was sent in my despatch No. 623.
With regard to the progress of the negotiations, Sr. Sanguily said that the President and Government are ready to make the desired exchange of additional land at Guantánamo in return for the Bahía Honda release, and that the draft of a treaty in the premises is being prepared in consultation with the members of the senate committee on foreign relations. Some time ago a commission was sent to Guantánamo, but its report was unsatisfactory, and a new technical commission has now been named with instructions to study the limits of the proposed new concession on the spot, and to report upon the ownership and value of the land included therein and upon other pertinent matters.
I have, etc.,
- Not printed.↩