be found to have established a sound basis for future cooperation between the four countries -- ourselves, Soviet Russia, and Since his return to Ankara, the Turkish Foreign Minister himself has made a statement which the House, perhaps, may not have noticed in which he said that the conversations in Cairo were so intimate and far-reaching that he could now say that Turkey's relations-with the Unites States and the Soviet Union were almost, as cordial and as strong as with Great Britain. Those who know the past history of this business will realize what an important statement that is. It augura well, I think, for the progressive development of future relations between us four, and were it on account of this development alone I should feel justified in. the House that we regard the Cairo conference encouraging. Further than that I cannot go today. While we were in Cairo my Right Hon. Friend the member for Stockton (Mr. Harold Macmillan and with my Hon. and Gallant friend the member for Carlisle (Major-General Sir Edward Spears), who is our minister at Beirut, as well as with the Minister of State in the Middle East. The House has already been informed of the development and of the conclusion of that crisis, but, if the House will allow me, I want to take this, my first opportunity, to say something about it. We have sympathy, deep sympathy, with the national aspirations of the Arab world. We are the only countries that has ever concluded a treaty with and withdrawn from an independent Arab state. Yet at the same time the preservation of order and tranquility in the Lebanon is an allied interest, for it closely affects the whole of our war effort in the Middle East. I understand that General Catroux is going back to Beirut on behalf of the French Committee of National Liberation, and he is to conduct negotiations to try and bring about a modus vivendi in the Levant states. No happier choice of representative, I think, cou %ld have been made by our French friends, and I am sure the House will share the earnest hope, which we have expressed already through diplomatic channels to the authorities concerned, that these negotiations will be conducted in a conciliatory spirit on both sides and that they will lead to early agreement. I am confident that all our Allies, all the members of the United *Our interest in this matter is twofold. |