LETTER TO THE HONORABLE WALTER B. SMITH FROM ALLEN W. DULLES
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP80R01731R000900120050-9
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
C
Document Page Count:
3
Document Creation Date:
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date:
June 25, 2003
Sequence Number:
50
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 22, 1954
Content Type:
LETTER
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP80R01731R000900120050-9.pdf | 139.99 KB |
Body:
Approved For Release 2003%07/01 1614-RDP80R01731 R000900120050-9
-S-) B37
able halter
ng Secretary of State
on, D. C.
of interest and am again.
the substance 3i it as to foster as he told me
that he had been quite interested in Lipp ajx_-.' a
article of April 0,
x
AWD:at
Distribution:
Orig - Addressee
I cc - DCI File
i cc - Reading
i cc ER L---_._
BOG ?AN(. N C:.:\ 3.
CLAZ . f '.Ati :: TO: T 8 C
{TEXT R V!W UA"i E: . ,-- ~- -- `
25X1
Approved For Release 2003/07/01 CIA-RDP80R01731 R000900120050-9
COPY
Approved For Release 2003/07/01: CIA4RDP80R01731 R00090 P20 15Q ,6
New York
HERALD TRIBUNE
April 20, 1954
This is for your ormation: the Indiar: Ambassador
telephoned Ina Monday afternoon, saying h : would like to come
and see me today. I told him that I would be glad to go to see him,
and I have just been there for tea.
The occasion for his call was ray article on Monday, called
"The Dulles Trip and Indo-China", and he was, of course, par-
ticularly interested in the suggestion at the end that the proposed
pact might become a meant of protecting the independence of the
indo- hinese states and that it was to be hoped that India would not
, door against against such a possibility. (Incidentally, Foster tele-
honed xne Monday evening,, saying that he liked the article as a
e and that it reflected what he had in mind).
When I saw the Ambassador today he asked me to tell him
what I was suggesting. I put it to him this way: that while the Indo-
Chinese states are entitled to independencee, they are and will be
incapable of exercising full independence for a considerable time to
come. They are, and he agreed, unready for self-government.
Therefore, idnepFendence as such must create a political vacuum
hich would promptly be filled by the communist dictatorship.
That being the situation, the problem is to create a political
tectorate of some sort within which the newly emancipated
Indo-Chinese states could learn to use their independence. Such
a protectorate, once the French withdraw, cannot be created by any
Western power alone, and therefore unless the independent nations of
Asia take the lead in creating that protectorate, Indo-China will either
communist orbit or become the battleground of a great-
agreed with this and then, proceeded to tell me that sub-
stantially the same idea was in the mind of his government and that
he expected a proposal of some sort to come from the forthcoming
Approved For Release 2003/07/01 : CIA-RDP80R01731 R000900120050-9
Approved For Release 2003/07/01 : CIA-RDP80R01731 R000900120050-9
meeting at Colombo on April 28th, at which there will be present
the Prime Ministers of India, Pakistan, Burma, Ceylon and Indo -
nesia. This conference has been called by the Prime Minister of
Ceylon.
I assume from this that we shall see discussed at Geneva
three Asian pacts: one from the communists modeled on Molotov; a
pact for Europe, our own proposed pact, and a third Asian pact.
The new information i:ail this, as far as I am concerned,
was the probable action at Colombo.
Yours,
/ s J Walter Licpxnann
Mr. Allen I)
Z430 Stree
Washington 25, D. C.
Approved For Release 2003/07/Q