The President July 5, 1943 If a meeting of three were held reasonably soon after your first meeting alone, he recognizes, I believe, the logic of the historic sequence of the two tete-a-tete meetings culminating in the third with three present. Should Germany not attack this summer, there is much in the Prime Minister's argument of the need for a closer military understanding between the Chiefs of Staff of the three countries. The question is whether much would come of a large meeting of the Staffs now unless you had first created a foundation of understanding which I am satisfied would come from the type of meeting you have in mind. In fact I am not all sure that you would not be able personally to accomplish more toward an immediate military understanding in the meeting you propose than would be accomplished by the larger meeting he proposes. I explained to the Prime Minister the first night that there was no need for hurry in his reply, but he prepared a cable to you the next day, discussed it with Eden, and called me over to Number 10 (Annex) at one o'clock the following evening. I think he expected another argument from me and he seemed relieved when my only comment was that I thought his cable, although I did not agree with his reasoning, fairly |