-2- much the intensity of the work that has to be done as the wide range of subjects through which the mind has to move from one to %the other which adds so heavily to the burden. I do not believe even my Right Hon. Friend the Prime Minister, ardent as we know him to be for work, has ever devoted more hours of the day, and alas, of the night to unremitting labor than during these conferences. I am glad to be able to report to the House that, in solve of that, I left my Right Hon. Friend, though perhaps a little tired, in good health, stout of heart and most confident in spir Now let me describe our work. It fell into three main, easily defined chapters. First, the first Cairo conference for the prosecution of the-war against Japan, next the Teheran conference for the prosecution of the war against Germany, and then the second Cairo conference for discussions with the President and the Foreign Secretary of Turkey. I propose to say something about each, and also about a number of subsidiary and important matters which were discussed and dealt with in both Cairo and Teheran. The greater part of the time of the first two conferences in Cairo about the Far East, and in Teheran about the war against Germany, were taken up with military matters. It was possible for us to bring these matters to a state of complete sad collective preparation far exceeding anything that had hitherto been realized in this war. The thought is, I think, quite well expressed in two sentences of the Teheran communiqué, to which I draw the attention of the House because they are, I think, the most important of all. It states: "Our Military Staffs have joined in our round table discussions and we have concerted our plans for the destruction of the German Forces have reached complete agreement as to the scope and timing of the operations which will be: undertaken from the east, west and south." That is a message which it has never, %as yet, been possible to give to the allied peoples in this war. The words must ring ominously in German and in those of Germany's unhappy satellites. They could be applied textually to the earlier conference at Cairo in respect of the Far East. That conference had certain social features. It gave the Prime Minister, for instance, his first opportunity of meeting the Generalissimo and Madame |