795.00/9–451

The Secretary of Defense (Marshall) to the Secretary of State

top secret

Dear Mr. Secretary: The Department of Defense has considered your department’s Draft Position Paper (WFM–T–10/1) dated [Page 880] 18 August 1951, and entitled “United Nations Action in Korea in Case of No Armistice”.

The Department of Defense is unable to concur in this paper for the reasons set forth in the enclosed memoranda from the Joint Chiefs of Staff, dated 29 August 1951, and 13 July 1951.1 I am in agreement with the comments and recommendations of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as set forth in these two memoranda with the exception of the recommendation in paragraph 1-e of the memorandum of 13 July.

Because of the important implications involved in this particular recommendation, I am reserving my position with respect to it and am transmitting the views of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the National Security Council for early consideration.2

Faithfully yours,

G. C. Marshall
[Attachment]

Memorandum by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the Secretary of Defense (Marshall)

top secret

Subject: Washington Foreign Ministers Meetings (Tripartite and British Talks) Draft Position Paper (WFM T–10/1), Dated 18 August 1951, Entitled “UN Action in Korea in Case of No Armistice.”

1. The Joint Chiefs of Staff have formulated, from the military point of view, the following statement of views on the Department of State draft position paper, subject as above.

2. On 13 July 1951, the Joint Chiefs of Staff forwarded to you a memorandum on the subject of “United States Courses of Action in Korea” on which they recommended you obtain Presidential approval. The memorandum included the recommendations of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of additional actions to be taken to increase military pressure on the enemy in the event that the current armistice negotiations in Korea fail. In the formulation of this memorandum, the Joint Chiefs of Staff considered and rejected any concept of relating United States actions in Korea to specific enemy actions. The subject Department of State position paper attempts to relate both the military actions recommended by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and several political actions within Department of State capabilities to hypothetical military contingencies following failure of the armistice talks.

3. The Joint Chiefs of Staff, from the military point of view, consider this concept to be not only unsound but so dangerous militarily [Page 881] as possibly to jeopardize the security of the United Nations forces in Korea. Specifically they would point out that:

a.
Both the commander in the field and the Joint Chiefs of Staff would be unnecessarily limited in their freedom of action in view of the consultations which are required; and
b.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff previously recommended and they now reaffirm their recommendation that all of the military actions included in their memorandum to you dated 13 July 1951 be initiated after the failure of the armistice negotiations and that none of them await such contingencies as de facto cease fire, massed enemy ground attack, or massed enemy air attack. In this connection, the Joint Chiefs of Staff would be unwilling to accept the military risk incident to consultation with the sixteen participating nations preliminary to initiation of countermeasures set forth in paragraph 1 of their memorandum referred to above. Furthermore, from the military point of view, there is not and cannot be a truly de facto cease fire without agreement.

4. In view of the foregoing, the Joint Chiefs of Staff do not concur in the Department of State draft position paper WFM T–10/1. They adhere to the recommendations contained in their memorandum to you dated 13 July 1951 subject to the following change:

Delete from subparagraph 1 d the word “Rashin” and the comma which follows.

Reason: This change is necessitated by the governmental decision to bomb Rashin.3

For the Joint Chiefs of Staff:
Omar N. Bradley

Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff
  1. Below and p. 667.
  2. See infra.
  3. See footnote 3, p. 767.