Roosevelt Papers

The Secretary of State to the President

Memorandum for the President

Attached is a draft of statement, about which I spoke to you over the telephone this morning, for you to give out in connection with the [Page 669] announcement as to relations with the French Committee of National Liberation.

If you reach agreement in your talks with the Prime Minister with regard to the relations with the French Committee, I do hope you will have publicity withheld long enough for us to inform the Soviet Government before announcement in order to fill out our commitments to that Government.

C[ordell] H[ull]
[Attachment]

Draft Statement

Statement by the President on the Occasion of Announcing Establishment1 of Relations Between the Governments of Great Britain and the United States With the French Committee of National Liberation

The Governments of Great Britain and the United States have today made an announcement setting forth their relations with the French Committee of National Liberation subject to certain understandings. It is my firm hope that this Committee will demonstrate a single-minded purpose to represent and further the broad interests of the French people.2 Our arrangements for dealing with the Committee are made with the full knowledge that over 90 percent of the French people are still under the domination of the enemy and are unable freely to express themselves.

From the outset this Government has given military equipment and assistance to the French forces wherever they might be engaged in resistance to the Axis, This assistance has been intensified since the landing of our forces in North Africa. In recent weeks arrangements have been concluded which will insure that French forces have adequate modern military equipment effectively to participate in the defeat of the Axis and the liberation of France.

This limited relationship with the French Committee of National Liberation for all other matters is based on both the hope and the assumption that the Committee will achieve unity in support of the cause of the French people and the United Nations and will keep out of its activities any factional or personal political considerations.

In an earnest effort to go to the utmost practicable extent in promoting the entire French and United Nations cause, I am agreeing to [Page 670] conditional acceptance of the Committee, as already stated, for trial in any efforts to further unify itself and to free itself completely from any still existing factional and personal political objections [objectives].

  1. In the source text Roosevelt has changed the word “establishment” by hand to “continuation”.
  2. In the source text Roosevelt has changed the words “French people” by hand to “overseas French”.