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Cambridge Five Spy Ring — Part 23
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a
C
If these men Prove to be Soviet
sympathizers, it would, I assume,
quite a serious matter in foreign
relations.
SECRETARY AciizsoNn:
rect.”
SENATOR
That is cor-
Brewster: And we did
have the earliest case of Dr. Klaus
Fuchs in the atomic-energy devel-
opment,
Secrerary Acueson: ‘That is
right.
Senator Brewsrer: As I under.
stand you had inquired of the Brit-
ish Embassy here but they had no
further information about the mat-
ter?
Secrerary Acueson: I had in.
quiry made this morning and that
was the answer I got,
SENATOR Brewster: I have here
the latest, apparently, off the ticker,
which says:
“News of their disappearance
caused 2 sensation in Paris dip-
lomatic circles, One high western
diplomat exclaimed ‘Oh, my
God! There goes the tripartite
files of the Big Four Deputies
meeting.”
If this is true, would that be a
matter within the purview of the
head of the American desk, or the
Far-Eastern desk?
Secrerany Acieson: | don't
know how the British Foreign Of-
fice operates, I imagine that if this
man had jurisdiction over relations
with the United States, he would
have knowledge of what our discus-
sions were in Paris,
Dee...
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ane
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ie od
NCREDIBLE, but true, nobody ques-
tioned this alleged failure of the
British Government to naufy the
United States in the twelve-day in-
terval—May 25 to June 7, 195]—
that elapsed between flicht and
Seer SRL id
publication, nor did they question
the reported ignorance of the Brit
ish Embassy in Washington where
Burgess had been stationed as re-
cently as April of that year, The
statements, if true, were shocking,
© were at war and England was
our ally, but our Secretary of State
heard it on the radio. We also, ac-
cording to his Statement, had a
Secretary of State who did nor
know the functions of the Ameri-
can Department of the British For.
eign Office! The Congressmen did
not ask because they would not
know until September, 1955, about
the world-wide British security in-
vestigation carried on throughout
1950 and 1951 because of a British -
finding in 1949 that secrets had
been leaked for years. Did Mr,
Acheson know or was this item—
which might have alerted us—~
withheld by our ally?
So much for Mr, Acheson—and
the Joint Committee which did not
€ven remind the Secretary that he
himself had testified that checking
on Allied reaction to “hot pursuit”
had been limited to six nauons be-
cause “this would be a milita
Operation which you would not
Wish to inform the enemy abour™
and “it was Probably a view of not
spreading the security too widely.”
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