From: London To: The President of the United States Unnumbered, 14 December 1943 To the President. Following is complete text of Eden's speec The Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (Mr. Eden): "My first sentence must be to express my warmest that thanks to this House for their generous treatment of me in so kindly re-arranging business as to enable this debate to take place in the last week before the Christmas recess. I understand, of course, that that re-arrangement must have been inconvenient to many of my Hon. Friends in all parts of the House, and I am the more grateful to them. The fact is that it would not have been possible for me to take part in these recent Turkish conversations in Cairo and get back, despite the best efforts of the Royal Air Force, in time for a debate last Thursday. Again I express my thanks. Let me say also that I only too well under-stand the disappointment that Hon. Members must be feeling that the Prime Minister is not able to be here himself to give and account of these three conferences in which he has played so leading a part My right Hon. Friend asked me to express his regret to the House, but there is still important work for him to do in the so here where he now is, and he is sure the House would wish him to see that work through to the end. So this poor substitute "struts and frets his hour upon the stage." We have spent three very strenuous weeks, into that short time have been compressed three conferences of world significance any one of which in the ordinary leisured, times of diplomacy would have taken a full month. But, with the repaid development of air communication, methods of consultation have been transformed, go it was possible within only a month of the meeting of the Foreign Secretaries in Moscow to open the yet more authoritative conferences of the heads of governments in Teheren. These meetings between the three men who %bear the chief responsibility in their respective countries must be a rare event, their value can hardly be exaggerated. They impose a considerable additional burden on those who travel or take part in them. It is not so |