Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek to President Roosevelt 2

Generalissimo’s reply follows:

Your suggestion3 that I should exercise the supreme command over all forces of the United Powers which are now or may in the future be operating in the Chinese theater, including initially such portions of Indo China and Thailand as may become accessible to troops of the United Powers, is one which I have considered with a full sense of all the grave responsibilities it entails toward the other countries and peoples concerned as well as toward China. If it were simply a question of my own capacities and military qualifications, I could not accept this supreme command with its attendant duties and responsibilities. However, I do not hesitate to accept it at your suggestion in agreement with the British and Dutch governments. The establishment of a supreme command will unify the strategy and promote the full cooperation of the United Powers in the Chinese theater. The effective coordination of these forces in [is?] the common need that must be placed before everything else. Your own initiative and efforts have brought this unity of purpose and made them within reach of achievement and I shall spare myself nothing to second your effort and serve the common good of all the nations which are now linking to their resources at home, their communications and their fighting forces on every front. This growing unity has rallied the entire Chinese people behind it. In line with your suggestions I welcome the prompt disposition of American and British representatives to serve on a Joint Headquarters Planning Staff. The question of Russian representation can be considered as [Page 2] soon as this staff has assembled and begun its duties. The proposed exchange of liaison with the Commander of the British forces in India and the Commander of the Southern Pacific Theater can be carried out as soon as the Command and Headquarters Staff of the Chinese theater have been established. In every successive phase of development I would be happy to have your views and suggestions.

  1. Photostatic copy obtained from the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, Hyde Park, N. Y. This message was transmitted through Navy channels from Chungking, and was delivered to President Roosevelt in a paper dated January 3, 1942. It was shown by the President to British Prime Minister Churchill. Records of the First Washington Conference in December 1941 and January 1942 between President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, with their advisers, are scheduled for publication in a subsequent volume of Foreign Relations.
  2. For text of President Roosevelt’s message of December 29, 1941, to Generalissimo Chiang, see Foreign Relations, 1941, vol. iv, p. 763.