America at war! (1941–) – Part 3

The Ambassador to Turkey, temporarily at Cairo, to the President’s special assistant

Cairo, December 6, 1943

Memorandum for Mr. Hopkins

I had a talk with Helleu today. I have known him for the past six years quite intimately as he was Minister in Riga and Ambassador in Ankara for some time after I arrived there. He gave me the following version of the recent events in Lebanon where he was Governor General at the time they took place.

About three weeks before he left for Algiers the Lebanese authorities began to press him for consent to their proposed independence bill. He gave them every assurance that the matter would receive full and fair consideration. Four days before his departure for Algiers the matter was again urged upon him and he said he would take it up with General de Gaulle in Algiers. He says he was given to understand by the Lebanese authorities that no action would be taken during his absence. In Algiers he discussed the matter with General de Gaulle who instructed him to reiterate on his behalf the assurance already given by Helleu. When Helleu arrived in Cairo on his return from Algiers he heard that the Lebanese authorities intended to pass the bill at once and he telephoned to Beirut “begging that no action be taken pending his return ‘in twenty-four hours’.” On his arrival there the next day he found the bill had been passed the night before, but he said he regarded this as a “slap in the face to France” and that he thereupon ordered the arrests on his own initiative. He said no Sen[e]galese troops were used and that the arrests had been made by “white French sailors.” He also said that no violence or indignities had taken place and that of this he was certain. He said he attributed the false reports to “British intrigue.”

Helleu immediately reported the arrests to de Gaulle and received a telegram from him, of which he permitted me to read the original. It is dated November 13th and is de Gaulle’s telegram #3279. It is a fairly long telegram. The substance is as follows: de Gaulle stated that he assumed the action taken by Helleu was necessary or it would not have been taken and that he approved of it. The first paragraph is an unequivocal ratification of Helleu’s action. The second paragraph indicates de Gaulle anticipated a violent British reaction. The concluding paragraph states that he is sending General Catroux to Beirut, not for the purpose of disavowing Helleu’s action but for the purpose of supporting him in the action taken by him.

Helleu said that thereafter Catroux arrived and, as is known, disavowed his action. He added in the strictest confidence that he was thoroughly convinced of Catroux’s disloyalty to de Gaulle and that he was scheming to succeed him. Helleu then showed me a telegram dated November 22 from de Gaulle requesting him to proceed to Algiers immediately and closed with expressions of great friendship and signed himself as “his sincere friend.” Helleu is in Cairo today enroute to Algiers in compliance with de Gaulle’s request.

I am entirely convinced of the truthfulness of Helleu’s statement to me that the arrests were made on his own initiative but that his action was immediately confirmed and ratified by General de Gaulle. Helleu is a man of integrity and has always been entirely truthful and frank in our relations as colleagues. In view of the circumstances and substance of our meeting today it is inconceivable that the two original telegrams which he showed me and which he had carefully folded in his wallet could have been fabricated for the occasion. If the first telegram is genuine, it follows that his statement that he acted on his own in making the arrests and that de Gaulle immediately ratified his action must be true.

L. A. STEINHARDT

President Roosevelt to Marshal Stalin

Cairo, 6 December 1943

Personal and secret from the President to Marshal Stalin.

The immediate appointment of General Eisenhower to the Command of OVERLORD has been decided upon.

ROOSEVELT


President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill to Marshal Stalin

Cairo, 6 December 1943
Secret

Secret and personal from the President and the Prime Minister to Marshal Stalin.

In the Cairo Conference, just concluded, we have arrived at the following decisions as to conduct of war in 1944 against Germany additional to the agreements reached by the three of us at Teheran:

The bomber offensive against Germany, with the objective of destroying the German air combat strength, dislocating the German military, industrial and economic system, and preparing the way for a cross-channel operation, will be given the highest strategic priority.

We have reduced the scale of operation scheduled for March in the Bay of Bengal to permit the reenforcement of amphibious craft for the operation against Southern France.

We have ordered the utmost endeavors to increase the production of landing craft in the United Kingdom and the United States for the reenforcement of OVERLORD, and further orders have been issued to divert certain landing craft from the Pacific for the same purpose.

ROOSEVELT
CHURCHILL

President Roosevelt to King Farouk of Egypt

Cairo, December 6, 1943

My Dear King Farouk, It is a cause of profound regret to me that owing to Your Majesty’s absence from Cairo following your regrettable accident I am forced to leave Egypt without having the pleasure of meeting you.

My visit to your country has been brief, and the exigencies of my duties while here have prevented me from enjoying all that Egypt holds of interest and beauty. I wish, however, to assure you that I have been happy to be here and that I appreciate deeply the hospitality of this land and the signal courtesies which you have proffered.

I hope that I may visit Egypt again and that then circumstances will permit our meeting. In the meanwhile, I extend to you my best wishes for your speedy recovery and for the welfare and happiness of your people.

I very much hope that you will find it possible someday to visit me at the White House. It would give all of us the greatest pleasure to greet you and to give you the opportunity of seeing the United States.

Those most delicious ducks have just arrived. I am having some of them tonight and the rest of them we are taking with us to eat on the return voyage home.

Again with many thanks, I am,
Your sincere friend,
FDR

The Pittsburgh Press (December 6, 1943)

BIG THREE PACT REVEALED
Three-front war to knock out Germany; formula for lasting peace adopted

Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin map victory, push from east, west, south
By Oskar Guth, United Press staff writer


Historic meeting of Marshal Joseph Stalin, President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill brought this picture of the three Allied leaders sitting on the portico of the Russian Embassy at Tehran, Iran. Mr. Churchill is in the uniform of an RAF marshal.


With military, naval aides, Marshal Joseph Stalin, President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill pose on the portico of the Russian Embassy at Tehran after their conference. In the background are Gen. H. H. Arnold, Chief of the U.S. Army Air Forces; an unidentified British officer; Adm. Sir Andrew Browne Cunningham, British Chief of Naval Staff, and Adm. William Leahy, Chief of Staff to President Roosevelt.


Outside the Tehran Embassy, a group of Allied leaders are shown after the conference. Gen. George C. Marshall, U.S. Army Chief of Staff, shakes hands with an unidentified man. others are Harry Hopkins, an interpreter, Marshal Stalin, Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov and Russian Marshal Kliment Y. Voroshilov.

Tehran Conference in brief

The men

  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President of the United States
  • Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
  • Joseph Stalin, Premier of the Soviet Union

The place
Tehran, capital of ancient Iran, where the mechanized military might of the Western nations who have made Iran a supply route for Russia contrasts with the customs of the Orient unchanged for centuries.

What they did
Agreed to work together in the war and in the peace to follow; agreed to the scope and timing of the final assault upon Germany from east, west and south; agreed to write a peace welcoming all enemies of tyranny into a world of democratic amity.

Tehran, Iran –
President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill and Premier Stalin have agreed on a master plan to crush Germany by powerful offensives on three fronts – including invasions of Western Europe and possibly the Balkans – and have mapped a peace that should endure for “many generations.”

The “Big Three” of the Allied nations announced their decisions in broad terms in a declaration issued today after 100 hours of unparalleled conferences that embraced military, diplomatic and political questions both of the war and the peace to follow.

After concluding their four-day sessions last Wednesday, Premier Stalin returned to Moscow and Messrs. Roosevelt and Churchill to Cairo to translate into action the decisions that their joint declaration said guaranteed “victory will be ours.”

With the Tehran Conference, the Allies completed the blueprint for the war in the months to come in both the Atlantic and Pacific. The previous week, Messrs. Roosevelt and Churchill conferred with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and laid down the broad strategy calculated to bring Japan to her knees.

Specifically, the three heads of states proclaimed in their joint Tehran declaration:

  1. “We have reached complete understanding as to the scope and timing of operations which will be undertaken from the East, West and South.”

  2. “No power on earth can prevent our destroying the German armies by land, their U-boats by sea, and their war plants from the air. Our attacks will be relentless and increasing.”

  3. “We recognize fully the responsibility resting upon us and all the United Nations to make a peace which will command good will from the overwhelming masses of the world and banish the scourge and terror of war for many generations.”

  4. “We will welcome… as they may choose to come into the world family of democratic nations… all nations, large and small, whose peoples in heart and in mind are dedicated, as are our own peoples, to the elimination of tyranny and slavery, oppression and intolerance.”

  5. “We came here with hope and determination. We leave here friends in fact, in spirit and in purpose.”

Contrary to expectations in many quarters, the declaration contained no ultimatum to the German people to throw out their Nazi leaders and surrender unconditionally to avoid complete devastation of their homeland.

It was believed that the “Big Three” may have decided to delay any such ultimatum until a moment when success is assured. Most Allied authorities agree that German morale has not yet reached the breaking point.

Messrs. Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin, in a subsidiary statement on Iran’s part in the war, said they counted upon the participation of all:

…peace-loving nations, in the establishment of international peace, security and prosperity after the war, in accordance with the principles of the Atlantic Charter, to which all four governments (including Iran) have continued to subscribe.

Though the conference laid the groundwork for an international post-war organization to build and enforce a lasting peace, the immediate military decisions overshadowed all else.

Anglo-American plans for the opening of a “second front” by an invasion of Western Europe and how it can be coordinated with a mammoth Red Army offensive from the East and new blows from the Mediterranean presumably dominated the discussions.

Military conferees who accompanied the “Big Three” included Gen. George C. Marshall, U.S. Chief of Staff and likely choice as Supreme Commander of the assault from the west, and Marshal Kliment Y. Voroshilov, hero of Stalingrad and one of Russia’s ablest military leaders.

The declaration’s reference to “complete agreement” on all major aspects of the three-front war by land, air and sea confirmed for the first time that Russia has accepted the date proposed by Messrs. Roosevelt and Churchill for a second front.

It also indicated that Stalin for the first time had informed the United States and Britain of the most secret details of the Red Army’s plans for offensive blows from the East.

Disclosure that operations will also be undertaken “from the South” pointed to a possible Allied thrust into the turbulent Balkans, either across the Adriatic from newly-won bases in southern Italy or from Africa and the Levant into the Aegean, in addition to a quickening of the current campaign in Italy.

Turkish participation would be most helpful in any Balkan operation and there has been widespread speculation that Turkey at least will grant bases to the Allies under the terms of her mutual-assistance pact with Britain.

Held in place

The Tehran Conference sessions were held in an old Persian palace which now serves as the Soviet Embassy. All servants of the Embassy, except for some U.S. Army cooks, were Russian secret police. British soldiers and Indian Sikhs stood guard around the compound wall and armored cars were stationed at each street intersection.

Other elaborate precautions were also taken because the Germans still have many agents in Iran seeking to stir up the natives.

Marshal Stalin, making his first trip outside Russia’s borders since he went to Krakau, Austria, in 1912, arrived in Tehran Nov. 26 and Messrs. Roosevelt and Churchill on Nov. 27.

Guest of Stalin

Mr. Roosevelt went to the U.S. Legation the first night, but moved into the main building of the Soviet Embassy as Premier Stalin’s guest the following night and remained there throughout the rest of the conference. Premier Stalin stayed in a small house in the Embassy compound, while Mr. Churchill stayed at the British Legation across the street.

The social program of the conference included a birthday party on Mr. Churchill’s 69th birthday Nov. 30, at which the 34 guests drank at least 34 toasts, including those by Marshal Stalin to both Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill, whom he called “my fighting friends,” and to American production, in which he mentioned victory in the past tense.

Roosevelt gives bowl

Mr. Roosevelt gave Mr. Churchill an old Persian bowl which connoisseurs called a “fair antique” with a card expressing the hope “may we be together for many years.” Marshal Stalin did not give a present.

Another high spot in the program was the dramatic presentation by Mr. Churchill to Premier Stalin and Marshal Voroshilov of the British honor Sword of Stalingrad on behalf of King George VI and the British people.

The conferees recognized Iran’s part in the war as a transit base for Allied supplies bound for Russia in a statement that promised all economic assistance possible during and after the war and expressed their desire for the maintenance of “the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Iran.”

Roosevelt and Stalin meet in closely guarded room

Tehran, Iran (UP) –
The moment which President Roosevelt had said would be the realization of his fondest hope – his meeting face to face with Joseph Stalin – occurred at about 3:15 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 28.

Mr. Roosevelt, who had driven on his arrival Saturday to the U.S. Legation, had just moved over to the handsome Russian Embassy, a former palace located in a compound guarded by Russian secret service men, Russian officers bearing Tommy guns, British Army Sikhs and Tommies.

Stalin strode up the gravel path from his villa within the grounds, wearing the dark blue uniform of a Soviet marshal and a long coat. Behind him a few steps came V. M. Molotov, Soviet Foreign Minister. Behind Molotov were several generals.

They vanished from view through the handsome portal.

Packed with guards

Eyewitnesses to the historic handclasp are not available. It occurred in a building closely packed with guards. Almost every few feet within the building was a Soviet secret service man. They were described as standing for hours without moving.

There were also many U.S. Secret Service men. In the kitchen were U.S. Army cooks to prepare the President’s meals.

Stalin was closeted with the President for 90 minutes while Molotov waited in an adjacent room. Mr. Churchill arrived about 4:45 p.m. and the initial plenary session began.

Four such meetings were held, one each day. The “Big Three” dined together each night.

Meanwhile, the military men of the three nations met almost continuously.

Nine-foot table

The table at which Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin conferred was made of oak and was about nine feet in diameter. The Russian Embassy gave a Tehran carpenter an order for the table shortly before the conference.

By Friday, when Stalin arrived, the Embassy compound was a fortress. Huge screens had been put up at each end of the street in which the Soviet Embassy and British Legations face one another and a four-block area, swarming with guards, was blocked off.

The excitement started long before Stalin’s arrival. For days the city’s streets had been abustle with innocent-looking Russians, Americans with broad-brimmed hats and rain-coated Englishmen. Miles of telephone wires were strung by American soldiers between the various United Nations embassies and legations.

Saturday guards around the British Legation were tripled and the city swarmed with new groups of mysterious foreigners.

Planes circle city

In midafternoon, several large planes circled the city and crowds in the streets cried:

Here they are! Roosevelt! Churchill!

The airfield was surrounded by troops armed with Tommy guns and bayonet-tipped rifles.

Mr. Roosevelt, surrounded by tanks and armored cars, led and followed by motorcycle troops, sped through Tehran to the legation at the other end of the city.

By comparison, Mr. Churchill was almost unguarded. Iranian police and horse guards lined some streets along his route.

Tehranites gathered on the main streets and cheered Mr. Roosevelt as he whizzed past.

So far as could be ascertained, Voroshilov was the only high Soviet military official participating in the vital sessions other than Stalin.

Final session Wednesday

The final conference started with a luncheon on Wednesday and continued without interruption until 10:30 p.m. Among those who participated were the three leaders, Molotov, Harry Hopkins, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, U.S. Ambassador to Russia W. Averell Harriman, U.S. Ambassador to Britain John Winant, Adm. William D. Leahy, Gen. George C. Marshall, Adm. Ernest King, Gen. H. H. Arnold, and Lt. Gen. Brehon Somervell.

Other British participants were Sir Alan Brooke, Adm. Sir Andrew Browne Cunningham, Air Marshal Sir Charles Portal, Sir John Dill and Clark-Kerr.

Military decisions were completed by 4:00 p.m. Thursday, after which a 10-hour session was devoted to drawing up the communiqué. The final conference broke up after Dec. 2.

Axis propaganda stresses delay

By Paul Ghali

Berne, Switzerland –
The delay in issuing a communiqué concerning the Tehran tripartite conference is being exploited by Axis propagandists to belittle its importance and reassure their apprehensive peoples concerning its outcome.

From both Berlin and “Fascist circles in northern Italy” come widely-publicized reports that the conference has not attained the results hoped for by Washington and London. It is even stated that Stalin has returned from his trip a very disappointed man.

Fascist circles, according to Chiasso dispatches today, speak of a “sensational diplomatic surprise” which forthcoming days reserve for those Fascists and Nazis who have never doubted final victory.

Conference in Tehran is also ‘family affair’

Tehran, Iran (UP) –
The Tehran Conference was a “family affair” for President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill.

With the President was his son, Lt. Col. Elliott Roosevelt, and his son-in-law, Maj. John Boettiger.

Accompanying Mr. Churchill was his daughter, Sarah Churchill Oliver, and his son, Capt. Randolph Churchill.

Nazis reported massing near border of Turkey

Germans say President Inönü and aides have gone to Cairo to see Roosevelt, Churchill
By J. Edward Murray, United Press staff writer

London, England –
German troops are massing in Bulgaria near the Turkish border, a Stockholm dispatch said today as speculation mounted that the Roosevelt-Churchill-Stalin conference may bring a Balkan invasion and draw Turkey into the war.

The German movement toward the Turkish border began during the weekend and continued at a rapid rate, Hungarian circles in Stockholm said. A large troop concentration was reported at Haskovo in southeastern Bulgaria, while a Nazi motorized detachment and two cars of officers continued on to Svilengrad, only six miles west of the border, yesterday.

Trip to Cairo reported

The purported shifting of German troops coincided with a German radio report that President İsmet İnönü, Foreign Minister Numan Menemencioğlu and Marshal Çakmak of Turkey had gone to Cairo to meet President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, presumably to discuss their country’s position in the light of the Tehran Conference.

Allied and neutral sources have speculated ever since the tri-power conference at Moscow a month ago that the Allies might prevail upon Turkey at least to provide bases under the terms of her mutual aid pact with Britain for an Allied offensive in the Balkans, even if not actively entering the war.

Eisenhower has meeting

Speculation increased following disclosure that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme allied commander in the Mediterranean, had presided at a meeting of his command at Cairo about 10 days ago, after the Roosevelt-Churchill-Chiang Kai-shek meeting.

It was theorized that British and possibly U.S. troops might thrust across the Adriatic from bases in southern Italy, or move into the Aegean from Africa or the Levant. A Russian amphibious landing from the Black Sea might also be planned.

British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden was believed to have given Menemencioğlu details of the Moscow Conference as they affected Turkey and the Turkish Minister later won his Parliament’s approval of his conduct of the negotiations.

Yanks seize 3 heights on way to Rome

Nazis throw in reserves in grim effort to stop Allies
By C. R. Cunningham, United Press staff writer

The boss says –
Lack of bathing facilities curbs Jap desire to work

Professor’s appeal to internees to become missionaries of sanitation in Midwest called ‘indiscreet’

Frank Sinatra must report to Army Saturday

CIO recruits talent for political drive

Allied planes bombard Japs on New Britain

Air offensive against isle in Southwest Pacific in third week
By Brydon C. Taves, United Press staff writer

U.S. Liberator rips island near Japs’ ‘Pearl Harbor’

Other Yank fliers strike at Marshalls and Nauru; enemy bombers hit Tarawa, Makin
By William F. Tyree, United Press staff writer

In Washington –
Early decision on subsidy bill backed by Jones

Food administrator denies he desires delay, asserts farmers must know program before planting

Independence delay scored by Koreans

Chungking, China (UP) – (Dec. 4, delayed)
Denouncing the Cairo Declaration’s pledge that Korea would be freed “in due course” as absurd, Kim Ku, President of the Provisional Government of Korea here, today warned that Koreans would continue their historic fight, unless they get “independence the moment the Japs collapse.”

It was the first official expression of any of the interested parties here against the Cairo Declaration signed by President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek.

Ku said that more than 1,000 free Koreans in free China are furious about the expression “in due course.”

He declared:

If the Allies fail to give Korea unconditional freedom and independence right after World War II, we are determined to continue our historical fighting against any aggressor or group of aggressors, regardless who they are.

Another jury presentment hits La Guardia

‘Shortsighted’ law enforcement in Brooklyn is reported

Snow White returns to the screen

Disney hit will be shown during holidays here and in England

Cross-Channel assault hinted by Big Three pledge

Gen. Marshall may direct invasion of Europe this winter
By Reuel S. Moore, United Press staff writer

Washington –
Military observers today interpreted the Tehran “victory conference” pledge to smash Germany from east, west and south as an omen of early land invasion of Western Europe.

Gen. George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army, is expected to lead that attack to be launched this winter or in early spring.

The Roosevelt-Churchill-Stalin declaration seemed to remove almost all doubts that may have existed as to whether the Allies would venture the attack from the west for which they have steadily been assembling powerful forces.

The announced decision of the American, British and Russian leaders, is to undertake a three-way attack on Germany by air, sea and land – from the east, west and south.

The unofficial Army and Navy Register suggested Saturday that decisions in Tehran might make an invasion of Western Europe unnecessary. But most military circles discounted that view. In the light of the Tehran Declaration, they believed the “Big Three” have even decided the time when the squeeze will be applied.

May attack in winter

The winter months or late spring would be the logical time to undertake the difficult western phase of the grand assault on Germany’s so-called Fortress Europe.

The advantages of a winter campaign include frozen highways which could support heavy equipment; fog or low-visibility conditions in the English Channel and North sea which could help protect invasion forces; and long nights which would permit more sustained aerial blows on vital German targets.

Has disadvantages

But winter would also have its disadvantages – rough seas that would increase difficulties of amphibious operations and the vagaries of the weather. In late spring, the roads would be sufficiently dried out and weather conditions would be more stable.

Military experts here believe that when the invasion comes, Allied forces will strike at numerous points along a front extending from northern Norway to northwestern France.

At the same time, observers here said, new invasions may be attempted from the south. For instance, the reborn French Army of Liberation could provide the Allies with a great psychological advantage if it landed in southern France. A drive across the Adriatic into the Balkans and an invasion of Greece from the Eastern Mediterranean are other possibilities.

Meanwhile, the Russians are expected to contribute a powerful new offensive in the east.

Writers score early release

Hit scoops on conferences by Reuters, TASS

Cairo, Egypt (UP) –
Seventy Allied newspaper correspondents, in a resolution to Brendan Bracken, head of the British Ministry of Information, and Elmer Davis, head of the OWI, today protested against press arrangements and breaking of releases dates on conferences of Allied leaders in the Middle East.

The resolution said:

Correspondents twice have been let down in the matter of safeguarding releases. The responsible government department so underestimated the importance of the occasion as to entrust its handling to an official with only the slightest experience in press or public relations.

The resolution added:

Many assurances given to the correspondents were not honored.

The correspondents – who watched the initial break on the Cairo Conference come from Reuters in a Lisbon dispatch and the news of the Tehran Conference released by the Russian news agency TASS via the Moscow radio – felt that the fault lay not with British or OWI officials who handled the press relations, but with Prime Minister Churchill and President Roosevelt.

Correspondents were not allowed any access to Mr. Churchill, Mr. Roosevelt or Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in Cairo, and repeated requests for a press conference were turned down. After Gen. Chiang left Cairo, it was learned that he would have been glad to see the newspapermen.

Many details unrevealed by Tehran parley

Congress believed sure to ask for full explanation
By Lyle C. Wilson, United Press staff writer

Washington (UP) –
The brief and general nature of the Tehran Declaration published today left unrevealed all details regarding the “problems of the future” surveyed by President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Premier Joseph Stalin in their historic Tehran Conference.

Congressional requests for fuller explanation of conference discussions, agreements and commitments – if any – are inevitable. On the face of the declaration, it would appear that the conferees were more concerned with immediate military than future political questions. But from the standpoint of post-wat politics, observers found most significance in the formal commitment of the three conferees to world democracy.

Find common ground

Although the declaration proved to be wholly general, its cordial tenor indicated the three men had found common ground for their joint enterprises.

There was no reference in the declaration to post-war territorial boundaries, notably those of the Soviet Union, and well-informed observers here had not expected that such questions would be dealt with in any major way at the conference. But the declaration did explain that there had been a survey of the future.

There was some surprise here that the declaration did not in some way indicate what political and geographic future a defeated Germany might expect at the hands of the victors. A semi-official Soviet Union proposal of last summer invited the German people to repudiate their masters.

Pledge to oust Nazis

But the President, Prime Minister and Premier all are on record for the annihilation of Nazism and the elimination of its leaders from the life of Europe. There was in the Tehran Declaration no appeal to the German masses to shorten their torment by chucking their leaders.

General satisfaction here with the declaration’s military commitments seemed assured. Congress and the people evidently are reconciled that the opening of a land front in Western Europe is part of that hard bargain. It will be costly in lives but the consensus here is that it will shorten the war.

There was some indication, after the recent Moscow foreign ministers conference, of political and other dissatisfaction with the Soviet Union’s territorial plans in the west. The states of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania, a part of Finland obtained in the treaty of March 1940, eastern Poland and the Romanian provinces of Bessarabia and Bukovina have been absorbed into the Soviet Union by amendment of the Soviet Constitution.

Landon warning cited

Former Governor Alf M. Landon of Kansas was here last week warning the Republications against endorsing the Moscow Conference agreements without more information, and especially regarding Russian territorial plans in the west.

It is believed, however, that such criticism will be answered by the argument that the United States has no enforceable interests on the continent of Europe at all. The realistic military reaction to questions of Russian boundaries is that there is no way by which the United States could prevent Russia from establishing any boundaries she might desire.


Talks resume in Cairo after Iran sessions

Both Roosevelt, Churchill described as ‘elated’ by Stalin meeting
By Harrison Salisbury, United Press staff writer

Cairo, Egypt –
President Roosevelt, described as elated and confident that the Tehran Conference with Premier Joseph Stalin had shortened the war, began a series of new conferences with Prime Minister Winston Churchill and other leaders immediately upon their return from Iran.

There appeared little doubt that they were following up the Tehran decisions with specific action. The range of discussions among the Allied leaders was as broad as the world.

While the communiqués have failed to mention any specific areas such as Finland, {Poland, the Balkans or the Dardanelles, there was no question that the talks, which are continuing, dealt with such specific areas.

Speculation regarding the nature of possible action centered on the military phase, particularly the statement in the Tehran communiqué about attacks upon Germany from the east, south, and west.

Both the President and Prime Minister were described as “elated” by the Tehran meeting with Marshal Stalin. The President had said months ago that it was his “fondest desire” for a meeting with the Russian leader and now that he had had it he was said to regard it as “very successful.” He was also reported as saying that great progress toward the end of the war had been achieved.

Greater blows seen by Arnold

General reports 13,500 Axis planes wrecked