859.01/181
Memorandum by the Secretary of State to President Roosevelt
I am attaching for your consideration the draft text of the Declaration on Denmark which it is proposed should be issued simultaneously in Washington, London and Moscow under my signature and those of Mr. Eden23 and Mr. Molotov.24 The Declaration is primarily designed to give encouragement to the Danish people in their opposition to the Germans and, secondarily, to meet the wishes of Danish groups in this country and the United Kingdom. It does not confer on Denmark the status of either a United Nation or a nation associated with the United Nations and is not intended to lead to the establishment of any type of Danish Government in exile.
Should you approve of the issuance of the proposed Declaration and its text, the American Chargé d’Affaires25 and the British Ambassador in Moscow will be instructed to invite the Soviet authorities to participate in it. The Declaration would be issued immediately following notification of its acceptability to the Soviet Government.
The King of Norway and the King of Denmark, to whom the Declaration was secretly transmitted by the British, both approve of the proposed action.
- Anthony Eden, British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.↩
- Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov, People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union.↩
- Maxwell M. Hamilton, Counselor of Embassy in Moscow.↩
- Joint statement by President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Churchill, August 14, 1941, Foreign Relations, 1941, vol. i, p. 367.↩