794.5 MSP/10–154

No. 809
The Deputy Chief of Mission in Japan (Parsons) to the Acting Director of the Office of Northeast Asian Affairs (McClurkin)

confidential
official–informal

Dear Bob: The enclosed memorandum is self-explanatory. It was drafted by Andy Kerr who was chairman on the United States side at the meeting in question. Also present for the Embassy were Duke Diehl and Van Swearingen.1 Admiral Smith (J–4) represented the Headquarters, and Brigadier General Moore represented MAAG.

Andy and Duke reported this incident immediately, of course, to me and the Ambassador. While the Ambassador was still considering what action to take—for example, a stiff representation to Mr. OkazakiTakeuchi paid an official call on the Ambassador to present an expression of regret over the Toya Maru disaster.2 The Ambassador decided to take this opportunity to read the riot act to Takeuchi. I will not attempt to summarize at secondhand the [Page 1736] points made by the Ambassador in expressing his views of this extraordinary variety of “diplomacy”, except for the following reference to the Toya Maru disaster. The Ambassador informed Takeuchi that American newsmen in Tokyo had proposed to him that, following the precedent established by the Japanese Government in the Fukuryu Maru case, the United States Government should demand compensation, and he pointed to the respects in which the two incidents were parallel: The Toya Maru disaster was apparently due to neglect on the part of the Japanese Government, and approximately 56 American lives were lost, although there was no question in either case of ill intent. The Ambassador added, of course, that he had no thought then of taking this position publicly.

The interview lasted almost an hour, and the Ambassador reports that Takeuchi’s response left nothing to be desired. Takeuchi indicated, for example, that he had promptly retracted his accusation of bad faith when challenged by Andy Kerr. He protested his friendship for the United States and pointed to the fact that he had taken the initiative in setting up a series of bimonthly off-the-record meetings between Bureau Chiefs in the Foreign Office and senior Embassy personnel for frank, cordial, and off-the-record discussions.

The Ambassador has decided to let the matter rest, at least until a similar transgression is repeated. Distribution of the enclosed five copies of the memorandum is left to your discretion.

Because various other Japanese agencies—Finance, MITI, Defense, etc.—were represented at this official meeting, we have decided that Andy should make a statement at the next meeting of the group that is calculated to serve notice to these other Japanese Government agencies that such tactics are neither advisable nor condoned. It is possible that Takeuchi himself may say something in the spirit of retraction, and if so, Andy will tailor his statement accordingly.

Sincerely yours,

Jeff
[Page 1737]

[Enclosure]

Memorandum of Conversation, by the First Secretary of the Embassy in Japan (Kerr)

confidential

At a regular meeting of the US-Japan Consultative Group on September 24,3 Mr. Takeuchi unexpectedly raised again the question of utilization of the $40 million of yen proceeds arising from sales of wheat and barley under Section 550 of the Mutual Security Act. He repeated the proposition that the JG had been given firm assurance during the negotiations that offshore procurement in Japan during USFY 1954 would total $100 million so that payments would amount to $60 million in dollars and $40 million in yen whereas only $70 million worth of contracts had been placed. He indicated that these Section 550 purchases would not have been acceptable to Japan if it had been known that offshore procurement would total only $70 million.

I explained again that the estimate of $100 million was not a commitment but only a target, that in fact it is impossible to make a firm commitment concerning the volume of offshore procurement because of various factors. On the US side, for example, after appropriations are made, there is need for provisional division of the total procurement program between Stateside and offshore, provisional division of the worldwide offshore procurement program on a country-by-country and item-by-item basis, determination of a pricing policy for procurement in Japan, and issuance of purchase authorizations to US procurement agencies in Japan. By the time such US actions have been completed, the US fiscal year is well advanced and the actual volume of contracts that can be placed in Japan during the time that remains depends upon such factors as price, quality and delivery dates. Thus, failure to achieve the target figure of $100 million in USFY 1954 was due in part to factors on the US side causing delay and in part to factors on the Japanese side (notably price) which prevented placement of contracts after purchase authorizations were finally received.

Mr. Takeuchi stated that he was thoroughly familiar with this explanation, having listened to it to the point of weariness. He then proceeded to accuse the US of bad faith by advancing the fantastic charge that the. US had never intended to achieve the $100 million target for offshore procurement in Japan. He stated that the US must have known by the time of signing the surplus-purchase [Page 1738] agreement (March 8) that achievement of this target would not be possible. He said he realized that the US had not committed itself in legal terms to achieve this target, that in fact “US negotiators are very clever in devising legal language that permits escape from what is regarded by the naive Japanese negotiators as a binding commitment.”

Referring to the RobertsonIkeda talks in Washington in the fall of 1953, Mr. Takeuchi expressed confidence in his knowledge of the English language and stated that there could not be the slightest doubt that the $100 million “Commitment” had also been made at that time. He expressed the opinion that, during these talks as well as during subsequent negotiations concerning the $50 million purchase of US surplus agricultural commodities, the naive Japanese negotiators had been taken in by the Americans who are adept at sharp practices which enable them to advance apparent commitments which they have no intention of keeping. He expressed regret that he had not been permitted to participate in these talks (except as an observer), implying that he would not have been so easily fooled.

He implied that, in all future negotiations with the US, it behooved the Japanese side to be on guard and take care to leave no loopholes in any agreement because the good faith of the US cannot be taken for granted. In effect, he served notice to the US officials present that they would find him much less easy to hoodwink than the Japanese negotiators during the RobertsonIkeda talks in Washington or the Japanese negotiators of the $50 million surplus-purchase agreement.

The US representatives at the meeting were officials of the Embassy and of the Far East Command who are charged with responsibility for seeking to maximize the volume of US contracts placed in Japan in order to strengthen the Japanese economy in general and to expand Japan’s defense production industries in particular. It is hardly necessary to point out that it is primarily Japan’s interest that is served by placement of these contracts. Mr. Takeuchi’s tactics were hardly calculated to encourage the US in its efforts to maximize the volume of offshore procurement in Japan.

The US officials present were shocked by Mr. Takeuchi’s fantastic charges against the US as well as by the nasty manner in which he presented these charges. Throughout his outburst, Mr. Takeuchi exhibited obvious hostility to the US. Such tactics are least expected from a high-ranking diplomatic official who is charged with conduct of US affairs.

  1. Jay Allen Van Swearingen, an Economic Officer in the Embassy.
  2. In the Toya Maru ferry boat disaster late in September, over 1,000 persons, of whom some 50 were American, lost their lives.
  3. This was the body whose initial meeting was described by the Embassy in telegram 363 from Tokyo, Document 789.