GENERAL BALKAN POLICY It is the desire of this Government that the three principle Allies should consider the problems of South- eastern Europe in their relation to general European wel- fare and security. The distinctions between Allied and enemy states are gradually merging into a single problem as the "satellites" come under the administration of Al- lied Control Commissions, with some participation in the war against Germany in a status approaching co-belligerency. An important aspect of this problem is the tendency of one or another of the principal allies to exert a par- ticular influence in a given country, or to come to an ar- rangement defining the regions where such influence would be admitted as paramount (See separate paper on American Policy Toward Spheres of Influence). The mere dissociation of the United States from such arrangements does not con- stitute a policy unless an effort is made to impress upon the other principle Allies the need for restraint, if the several peoples are really to be left free to determine the kind of democratic institutions best suited to their needs. In a recent consideration of these problems the De- partment agreed on certain basic principles by which the policy of this Government should be guided. They are: 1. The right of peoples to choose for themselves without outside interference the type of political, social, and economic systems they desire, so long as they conduct their affairs in such a way as not to menace the peace and security of others. 2. Equality of opportunity, as against the setting up of a policy of exclusion, in commerce, transit and trade; and freedom to negotiate, either through govern- ment agencies or private enterprise, irrespective of the type of economic system in operation. 3. The right of access to all countries on an equal and unrestricted basis of bona fide representatives of the recognized press and information agencies of other nations engaged in gathering news and other forms of public information for dissemination to the public in their own countries; and the right to transmit information gathered by them to points outside such territories without hindrance or discrimination. 4. |