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I have learned with deep regret that the
meetings of the Palestine Conference in London have been
adjourned and are not to be resumed until December 16, 1946.
In the light of this situation it is appropriate to examine
the record of the administration's efforts in this field,
efforts which have been supported in and not of Congress by
members of both political parties, and to state my views on
the situation as it now exists.
It will be recalled that, when Mr. Earl
Harrison reported on September 29, 1945, concerning the
condition of displaced persons in Europe, I immediately
urged that steps be taken to relieve the situation of these
persons to the extent at least of admitting 100,000 Jews
into Palestine.(2)
In response to this suggestion the British Government
invited the Government of the United States to cooperate in
setting up a joint
Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry, an invitation which
this Government was happy to accept in the hope that its
participation would help to alleviate the situation of the
displaced Jews in Europe and would assist in finding a
solution for the difficult and complex problem of Palestine
itself. The urgency with which this Government regarded the
matter is reflected in the fact that a 120-day limit was set
for the completion of the Committee's task.
The unanimous report of the
Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry was made on April
20, 1946, and I was gratified to note that among the
recommendations contained in the Report was an endorsement
of my previous suggestion that 100,000 Jews be admitted into
Palestine. The administration immediately concerned itself
with devising ways and means for transporting the 100,000
and caring for them upon their arrival. With this in mind,
experts were sent to London in June 1946 to work out
provisionally the actual travel arrangements. The British
Government cooperated with this group but made it clear that
in its view the Report must be considered as a whole and
that the issue of the 100,000 could not be considered
separately.
On June 11, I announced the establishment
of a Cabinet Committee on Palestine and Related Problems,
composed of the Secretaries of State, War, and Treasury, to
assist, me in considering the recommendations of the
Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry.(3)
The alternates of this Cabinet Committee, headed by
Ambassador Henry F. Grady, departed for London on July 10,
1946, to discuss with British Government representatives how
the Report might best be implemented. The alternates
submitted on July 24, 1946 a report, commonly referred to as
the "Morrison plan", advocating a scheme of provincial
autonomy which might lead ultimately to a bi-national state
or to partition. However, opposition to this plan developed
among members of the major political parties in the United
States-both in the Congress and throughout the country. In
accordance with the principle which I have consistently
tried to follow, of having a maximum degree of unity within
the country and between the parties on major elements of
American foreign policy, I could not give my support to this
plan.
I have, nevertheless, maintained my deep
interest in the matter and have repeatedly made known and
have urged that steps be taken at the earliest possible
moment to admit 100,000 Jewish refugees to Palestine.
In the meantime, this Government was
informed of the efforts of the British Government to bring
to London representatives of the Arabs and Jews, with a view
to finding a solution to this distressing problem. I
expressed the hope that as a result of these conversations a
fair solution of the Palestine problem could be found.(4)
While all the parties invited had not found themselves able
to attend, I had hoped that there was still a possibility
that representatives of the Jewish Agency might take part.
If so, the prospect for an agreed and constructive
settlement would have been enhanced.
The British Government presented to the
Conference the so-called "Morrison plan" for provincial
autonomy and stated that the Conference was open to other
proposals. Meanwhile, the Jewish Agency proposed a solution
of the Palestine problem by means of the creation of a
viable Jewish state in control of its own immigration and
economic policies in an adequate area of Palestine instead
of in the whole of Palestine. It proposed furthermore the
immediate issuance of certificates for 100,000 Jewish
immigrants. This proposal received wide-spread attention in
the United States, both in the press and in public forums.
From the discussion which has ensued it is my belief that a
solution along these lines would command the support of
public opinion in the United States. I cannot believe that
the gap between the proposals which have been put forward is
too great to be bridged by men of reason and good-will. To
such a solution our Government could give its support.
In the light of the situation which has
now developed I wish to state my views as succinctly as
possible:
1. In view of the fact that winter will
come on before the Conference can be resumed I believe and
urge that substantial immigration into Palestine cannot
await a solution to the Palestine problem and that it should
begin at once. Preparations for this movement have already
been made by this Government and it is ready to lend its
immediate assistance.
2. I state again, as I have on previous
occasions, that the immigration laws of other countries,
including the United States, should be liberalized with a
view to the admission of displaced persons. I am prepared to
make such a recommendation to the Congress and to continue
as energetically as possible collaboration with other
countries on the whole problem of displaced persons.
3. Furthermore, should a workable
solution for Palestine be devised, I would be willing to
recommend to the Congress a plan for economic assistance for
the development of that country.
In the light of the terrible ordeal which
the Jewish people of Europe endured during the recent war
and the crisis now existing, I cannot believe that a program
of immediate action along the lines suggested above could
not be worked out with the cooperation of all people
concerned. The administration will continue to do everything
it can to this end.
Notes:
(1) Department of State
Bulletin of October 13, 1946, pp. 669-670.
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(2) For text of Mr.
Harrison's report to the. President, see Department of State
Bulletin of September .10, 1945, p. 456; and for the
statement of the President, see Department of State Bulletin
of November 18, 1945, P. 790.
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(3) For text of the
Executive order establishing the Committee, see Department
of State Bulletin of June 23, 1946 p. 1089.
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(4) Department of State
Bulletin of August 25, 1946, p. 380. |