867N.01/10–1245

Memorandum of Conversation, by the Director of the Office of Near Eastern and African Affairs (Henderson)

Participants: The Secretary
Mr. Acheson
Mr. Henderson, NEA
Mr. Mahmoud Hassan, Egyptian Minister
Dr. Nazem al-Koudsi, Syrian Minister
Mr. Ali Jawdat, Iraqi Minister
Dr. Charles Malik, Lebanese Minister

At their request, the Secretary this morning received the Ministers in Washington of four of the Arab countries.

The Egyptian Minister, speaking on behalf of his colleagues, stated that it did not seem necessary for him to present in detail to the Secretary [Page 767] the views of the Arab countries and peoples with regard to Zionist ambitions affecting Palestine, including the Zionist demand for mass immigration into that country. These views had already been expressed to the Department on several occasions—only recently to Mr. Acheson—and he was sure that they were known to the Secretary.

The Secretary stated that Mr. Acheson had informed him regarding the statements made to him by the Arab Ministers during their recent conversation with the Under Secretary.

The Egyptian Minister said that in order that he and his colleagues would not take up too much of the Secretary’s time, they had decided to prepare a brief aide-mémoire summarizing the attitude of the Arab countries and of the Arab League with regard to the question of Palestine. He handed this memorandum to the Secretary and added that the Secretary could read it at his leisure.

The Secretary said that he was glad that the Ministers had called upon him because it gave him an opportunity to make clear to them that there had been no change in the policy of the United States with regard to Palestine. The Government of the United States continued to adhere to the policy that it would give no support to any change in what it would consider to be the basic situation in Palestine until after such change had previously been fully discussed with Arabs and Jews.

L[oy] W. H[enderson]
[Annex]

The Arab Ministers to the Secretary of State

Aide-Mémoire

The renewed general interest on the part of many quarters in the question of Palestine seems to call for a restatement of this question from the point of view of the Arabs. This restatement should prove all the more instructive as the Arabs now have formed a League of Arab States which has, since its foundation, expressed the strongest interest in the fate of Palestine.

The bare historical facts are quite simple. Ever since the Balfour Declaration was made known, the Arabs of Palestine and the Near East have never failed to express by every means at their disposal their strong disapproval of unrestricted Jewish immigration and sale of land to the Jews in Palestine. It is unnecessary to recall the various forms which this expression of disapproval took during the last twenty years.

It is also significant to note that every independent Arab government has repeatedly made known its view on this matter. All of them have evinced the keenest interest in Palestine and regarded themselves [Page 768] directly involved in any settlement of that issue. The Arab League itself finally gave a more articulate and unified form to this general Arab concern by incorporating it into Constitution.

The essence of the Arab position is that no change in the status of Palestine should take place without the consent of the Arabs. The historical, cultural, religious, political and geographical ties which bind Palestine to the rest of the Arab world have always made this world feel Palestine to be a part and parcel of itself, a part for whose destiny it is directly and unavoidably responsible.

The British White Paper of 1939 recognized this decisive interest of the Arab world in the affairs of Palestine by stipulating that beyond the envisaged quota of Jewish immigration until 1944, any further changes could not be introduced without the consent of the Arabs, and recognizing the right of Palestine to complete eventual independence.

The Zionist leaders throughout the world have been proclaiming lately far and wide that their aim is to transform Palestine into a sovereign Jewish state. This aim seems to have been attended with much publicity. This has resulted on the one hand in a great misunderstanding of the real issue in Palestine on the part of American public opinion, and on the other in the generation of a deep feeling of concern throughout the Arab world. In this connection, it is right to call attention to the fact that the question of Palestine stirs not only the Arab world, and that regardless of religion, but also the Moslem world at large, and that regardless of nationality. To transform a country that has been non-Jewish for thousands of years and Arab for 1300 years into a Jewish state is an act that obviously cannot be viewed with equanimity by the Arabs.

The Arab people and states desire nothing more sincerely than to be on the best of terms with the people and Government of the United States. The two great peoples have always enjoyed a background of happy relations. It is in the highest interest of peace that these relations be preserved and promoted.

The Arab people have always believed that the United States would not favor the bringing about of any changes in the status and character of Palestine without the consent of the Arabs of that land and at the expense of themselves and the rest of the Arab world. They have lately been perturbed over reports that this policy may have changed. But they cannot believe that the United States, famous as she is in her history and outlook for a very exalted sense of justice, would favor a course of action which would run counter to the freely expressed wishes of the Arabs, especially as assurances have been made by the late and present Presidents that such would not be the case.

The Arabs sincerely deplore the persecutions inflicted upon the Jews [Page 769] in Europe. In this connection it is instructive to note that one of the most brilliant pages of Jewish history was written when the Jews shared with the Arabs the great achievements of their mediaeval culture. Feeling a sense of complete solidarity with the civilized world, the Arabs declare their readiness to do their part in helping to solve this world problem. They are sure Palestine will not solve it; and if it does, it will be only at the expense of the Arabs. In helping to shoulder a sacrifice, the Arabs cannot be asked to sacrifice themselves.

Regarding the peace of the Near East in general, and of the Arab world in particular, one principle is certain: there obviously can be no peace in that region by sacrificing Arab interest for the sake of the Jews. A Zionist political state can be created in Palestine, but only with the help of force which an artificial the introduction of further Jewish immigrants into Palestine, is obviously not in the interests of world peace, nor is it conducive to the development of the friendliest relations between the Arabs and the external world.