4. Airgram From the Office of the Permanent Representative to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to the Department of State1
Brussels, May 12, 1969.
SUBJECT
- Statement on US Trade Policy toward Eastern Europe and the USSR read in NATO Committee of Economic Advisers
REF
A–119
There is attached a copy of the statement on US policy on trade with Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union which was read at a meeting of the NATO Committee of Economic Advisers on May 8, 1969. This statement is based on the text of the Departmentʼs CA–1888 with editing provided by USNATO and the Department in the reference telegrams cited above. For distribution within NATO channels it is classified as NATO Confidential.
Cleveland
- Source: National Archives, RG 59, Central Files 1967–69, FT 1 EUR E–US. Confidential. Drafted by Smith (E); cleared by Luzzatto and van Heuven; and approved by William Cargo. Repeated to Ankara, Athens, Belgrade, Berlin, Bonn, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Copenhagen, The Hague, Lisbon, London, Luxembourg, Oslo, Moscow, Ottawa, Paris, Prague, Reykjavik, Rome, Sofia and Warsaw.↩
- Document 2.↩
- Telegram 1804 from USNATO, April 18, reads in part: “During the approximately eight months since Soviet troops entered Prague, we have made maximum effort…to measure the extent of allied economic response through some slowdown or interruption of trade and credits to the Warsaw Five group. We have noted only a very few slight interruptions, even when Western public reaction to Soviet intervention was strongest. And now…in the spring of 1969 we find that the situation is almost completely back to normal. The few restrictions which may have been imposed are removed and Western countries are not curtailing their trade, nor are their pre-invasion policies on extension of credits in any way altered.” The telegram also included a draft of airgram A–119. (National Archives, RG 59, Central Files 1967–69, FT 1 EUR E–US)↩
- Telegram 62758 to Brussels, April 23, suggested revisions to the draft statement provided in telegram 1804 from USNATO. (Ibid.)↩
- Dated May 7, 1969; Confidential. A handwritten notation reads: “Brussels 5–12–69.”↩
- The Fino Amendment of 1968 to the Export-Import Bank Act (P.L. 90–267, 82 Stat. 47) prohibited Export-Import Bank financing of trade with all Communist countries except Yugoslavia.↩
- Section 231 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 (P.L. 87–794, 76 Stat. 872) denied MFN status to all Communist countries except Poland and Yugoslavia.↩