webGuinée/Diplomatie
USAGuinée
U.S. State Department
Foreign Relations
Vol. XIV. 1958-1960, pp. 670-723
Government Printing Office
National Archives and Records Administration
8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001
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332. Telegram From the Embassy in Guinea to the Department of State
298. Department pouch Freetown. CODEL Church 1 met December 19 with Sekou Toure and Cabinet. Atmosphere notably cooler than on similar occasions in past particularly meeting with Harriman 2. First 50 minutes occupied by elementary lecture by Toure on Guinean history, geography, and civics. President apparently prepared continue this vein but Church and Kennedy 3 broke in with questions which led to give and take. Following most important points to emerge:
Obvious to CODEL as well as Embassy officers Toure distorting facts and slurring over truth in making above remarks. However Toure's attitude seemingly one of indifference to what we might think. Left impression that he has all but written off possibility any significant cooperation with United States.
Source: Department of State, Central Files, 033.1100-CH/12-2060. Confidential. Repeated to Moscow, Paris, Bamako, Dakar, Monrovia, Accra, Abidjan, and London and pouched to Freetown. Received on December 22.
Notes
1. A senatorial delegation headed by Senator Frank Church of Idaho visited Guinea, December 17-19; despatch 158 from Conakry reported on the visit in detail. (Ibid., 033.1100-CH/12-2160).
2. Former Governor of New York W. Averell Harriman visited Guinea in August as part of a fact-finding mission for Presidential candidate John F. Kennedy. Telegram 104 from Conakry, August 29, sent to Dillon for transmission to Kennedy, reported two discussions with Toure in which the latter set forth his philosophy of "positive neutrality." (Ibid., 670B.00/8-2960).
3. Edward M. Kennedy, brother of President-elect Kennedy.
4. As on the source text.
5. See footnote 3, Document 330.
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