894.85/657: Telegram

The Secretary of State to the Ambassador in Japan (Grew)

762. Your 1820, November 18, 6 p.m., visit of Tatuta Maru. The Department desires that you reply to the oral statement of the Foreign Office along the following lines:

  • “1. The Government of the United States has no objection to the visit of the Japanese-Government-requisitioned ship Tatuta Maru at Honolulu, Los Angeles and Balboa as proposed in the oral statement handed to the Embassy by the Foreign Office on November 18.
  • 2. With regard to the desire of the Japanese Government that this Government give a guarantee that the Tatuta Maru will have freedom of ingress to and egress from the ports mentioned above and will be [Page 442] allowed to obtain necessary supplies of fuel, water and food and to pay for such supplies from Japanese frozen funds in the United States, the Government of the United States would be prepared (1) in case the Japanese Embassy in Washington formally notifies the Government of the United States that the Tatuta Maru has been requisitioned by the Japanese Government, to bring to the attention of the appropriate judicial authorities, with a view to freeing the vessel of any impediments arising from the institution of legal proceedings, such information as the Japanese Government might furnish showing that the ship was requisitioned; (2) to permit the vessel to take on board necessary supplies of fuel and stores sufficient to enable it to return to a Japanese port and to extend facilities for the payment of such supplies out of blocked funds arising from passenger fares collected in the United States. (Note: the above-mentioned formal notification by the Japanese Embassy of the requisitioning of the Tatuta Maru by the Japanese Government should state that the vessel is on a mission for the Japanese Government and should be accompanied by a copy of the order of requisition.)
  • 3. Trade between the United States and Japan is of course subject to this Government’s freezing regulations. This Government understands, however, that the question of cargo is not involved in the proposed visit of the Tatuta Maru.
  • 4. In order to avoid misunderstanding, this Government wishes to make clear to the Japanese Government that, as the United States postal authorities are in process of formulating new general procedures for handling of transocean mails, this Government cannot make any commitment in regard to the carrying of American mail on the Tatuta Maru.
  • 5. Note has been made of the Japanese Government’s readiness to accord every possible facility to American nationals wishing to return to the United States on the Tatuta Maru. This Government assumes that the Japanese Government will give full publicity to the sailing so that knowledge of it will reach all Americans in Japan in due time to avail themselves of the sailing if desired.”57

Sent to Tokyo via Peiping. Repeated to Chungking.

Hull
  1. In his despatch No. 6002, December 4, Ambassador Grew transmitted a note from the Japanese Foreign Office dated December 1, together with a schedule for the sailing of the vessel on December 2, from Yokohama (894.85/681). See also note from the Secretary of State to the Japanese Ambassador, December 5, 1941, Foreign Relations, Japan, 1931–1941, vol. ii, p. 273.