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June 27, 1950 |
![]() Heading from the Blair House to the White House are Attorney General Howard McGrath, President Harry S. Truman, and Defense Secretary Louis Johnson, June 27, 1950. Source: Truman Library.
At7:13 a.m., the President asked the White House
operator to get
[Ambassador W.] Averell Harriman (who was in Paris) on the phone for him.
The call came through on overseas telephone lines and the President spoke
with Harriman from 7:29 to 7:31 a.m. from the swimming pool. The President
asked Harriman to come home as soon as he could. (The announcement of
Harriman's appointment as spec[ial] ass't [for National Security Affairs]
(to be effective one August) had been made on 16 June.
Administrative Assistant to the President George Elsey
I called the President and he said, "Yes, why I would
like you to come
back,' and he asked, 'How soon can you get here?"
I said, "Well, I'll leave this afternoon." So I left on four hours
notice.
Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs W.
Averell Harriman
At 9:50 A.M. the President met, in his office, with Secretary [of Defense
Louis] Johnson, Under Secretary [of Defense Steve] Early, General [Omar]
Bradley and General [J. Lawton] Collins. At this meeting the draft of a
statement - the second by the President - on the Korean situation was
discussed.
After this meeting several changes and minor revisions in the statement
were made at the suggestion of the President and the Secretary of State
and the final statement was submitted.
Administrative Assistant to the President George Elsey
Ross came in . . . and at twelve o'clock or shortly before, he called in
the newspapermen and gave them the statement . . . . The correspondents
went out of the office in a rush. The statement was the outgrowth of
another conference which the president held last (Monday) night at Blair
house with the same group which met with him Sunday night. At last
night's meeting the final decisions covered by the statement were made and
the orders to carry them out were sent out immediately afterward.
Assistant Press Secretary Eben Ayers
The [United Nations Security Council resolution] . . .
did not pass
unanimously. That was drafted in my office. . . . I remember that at one
stage . . . [Deputy U.N. Represenative] Gross and Senator Austin [the U.N.
Representative] were on the telephone and said, "'We've gone as far as we
can. If we could postpone this another 24 hours, we might get the Indian
vote, but we're not at all sure, What do we do?"
I've forgotten what the lineup was, but the Indian vote would have been
important. . . . I said, "I'll check this with the Secretary, and call you
back, but I don't think we can wait. You've given all the arguments and
they know this thing. There's a UN Commission in Korean. There was; and
they reported there had been aggression and the North Koreans did it." I
said, "What more can you say than that?"
Acheson confirmed what I said and I reported back to Senator Austin at the
UN, India and one or two other states abstained but the resolution
passed.
Assistant Secretary of State for U.N. Affairs John Hickerson
[Undersecretary of State] Jim Webb told me . . . that [at] his meeting
with the President at 6:15 at the Blair House on Tuesday, June 27, 1950 .
. . Webb talked with the President about [Secretary of Defense] Louis
Johnson's "leaks" to reporters about the Blair House meeting of Sunday,
June 25, and Monday June 26. Johnson was feeding stories to the reporters
that [Secretary of State Dean] Acheson had been "soft" on Formosa and he,
Johnson, was responsible for the President's order that Formosa be
neutralized. A reporter had come directly to Webb from Johnson's office to
tell Webb that this kind of thing was going on and Webb came straight to
Blair House to report it to the President.
Administrative Assistant to the President George M. Elsey
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June 27, 1950
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