AMERICAN POSITION ON ALLIED CONTROL
COMMISSIONS IN RUMANIA, BULGARIA AND HUNGARY
The United States is represented on the Allied
Control Commissions established to control the execu-
tion of the armistice agreements with Rumania and Bul-
garia. The Commissions are organized on the same general
pattern as the Allied Commission Italy with Russia
playing the leading role which Great Britain and the
United States have in Italy. The Commission for Rumania
operates under statutes drawn up by the Soviet Governments.
So far as the Department is aware, no similar statutes
govern the operations of the Commission for Bulgaria. The
organization of the Commission for Hungary is now under
discussion at Moscow.
The United States Government has not taken excep-
tion to the Soviet view that the actual operation of the
Commissions should be in the hands of the Soviet military
authorities, at least in the period before the surrender
of Germany. The Department believes strongly, however,
that policy directives should not be issued to the local
Governments by the Soviet authorities in the name of the
Commissions without prior consultation with the American
and British representatives. Otherwise the United States
is in the public mind associated with actions of which
it has no official knowledge.
Following Germany's surrender the United States would
like to see the Control Commissions become genuinely tri-
parite in character, with all three Allied Governments
having equal participation.
In Rumania, the Soviet Chairman of the Commission has
accepted the principle of prior consultation with the Ameri-
can delegation before the issuance of directives. Notwith-
standing this apparent improvement there is now before us a
new example of the Soviet unilateral method; namely, the
orders issued to the Rumanian Government to prepare lists
of racial Germans in Rumania for deportation to Soviet Rus-
sia for labor service. This matter is now being taken up in
Bucharest, and representative one will also be made in Mos-
cow, both as to the substance of the order, and as to the
unilateral procedure adopted.
In the case of Bulgaria the Department has been in-
formed that prior consultation does not take place. In the
case of Hungary we have proposed a protocol to the armistice
clearly defining the rights of our representatives.