The
Secretary of State to the Allied Ambassadors:
Aide
Memoire
The whole heart of the people of the United States is in the
winning of this war. The controlling purpose of the Government of
the United States is to do everything that is necessary and
effective to win it. It wishes to cooperate in every practicable
way with the allied governments, and to cooperate ungrudgingly;
for it has no ends of its own to serve and believes that the war
can be won only by common council and intimate concert of action.
It has sought to study every proposed policy or action in which
its cooperation has been asked in this spirit, and states the
following conclusions in the confidence, that if it finds itself
obliged to decline participation in any undertaking or course of
action, it will be understood that it does so only because it
deems itself precluded from participating by imperative
considerations either of policy or fact.
In full agreement with the allied governments and upon unanimous
advice of the Supreme War Council, the Government of the United
States adopted, upon its entrance into the war, a plan for taking
part in the fighting on the western front into which all its
resources of men and material were to be put, and put as rapidly
as possible, and it has carried out this plan with energy and
success, pressing its execution more and more rapidly forward and
literally putting into it the entire energy and executive force
of the nation. This was its response, its very willing and hearty
response, to what was the unhesitating judgment alike of its own
military advisers and of the advisers of the allied governments.
It is now considering, at the suggestion of the Supreme War
Council, the possibility of making very considerable additions
even to this immense programme which, if they should prove
feasible at all, will tax the industrial processes of the United
States and the shipping facilities of the whole group of
associated nations to the utmost. It has thus concentrated all
its plans and all its resources upon this single absolutely
necessary object.
In such circumstances it feels it to be its duty to say that it
cannot, so long as the military situation on the western front
remains critical, consent to break or slacken the force of its
present effort by diverting part of its military force to other
points or objectives. The United States is at a great distance
from the field of action on the western front; it is at a much
greater distance from any other field of action. The
instrumentalities by which it is to handle its armies and its
stores have at great cost and with great difficulty been created
in France. They do not exist elsewhere. It is practicable for her
to do a great deal in France; it is not practicable for her to do
anything of importance or on a large scale upon any other field.
The American Government, therefore, very respectfully requested
its Associates to accept its deliberate judgment that it should
not dissipate its force by attempting important operations
elsewhere.
It regards the Italian front as closely coordinated with the
western front, however, and is willing to divert a portion of its
military forces from France to Italy if it is the judgment and
wish of the Supreme War Council that it should do so. It wishes
to defer to the decision of the Commander-in-Chief in this matter,
as it could wish to defer in all others, particularly because it
considers these two fronts so related as to be practically but
separate parts of a single line and because it would be necessary
that any American troops sent to Italy should be subtracted from
the number used in France and be actually transported across
French territory from the ports now used by armies of the United
States.
It is the clear and fixed judgment of the Government of the
United States, arrived at after repeated and very searching
reconsiderations of the whole situation in Russia, that military
intervention there would add to the present sad confusion in
Russia rather than cure it, injure her rather than help her, and
that it would be of no advantage in the prosecution of our main
design, to win the war against Germany. It cannot, therefore,
take part in such intervention or sanction it in principle.
Military intervention would, in its judgment, even supposing it
to be efficacious in its immediate avowed object of delivering an
attack upon Germany from the east, be merely a method of making
use of Russia, not a method of serving her. Her people could not
profit by it, if they profitted by it at all, in time to save
them from their present distresses, and their substance would be
used to maintain foreign armies, not to reconstitute their own.
Military action is admissible in Russia, as the Government of the
United States sees the circumstances, only to help the Czecho-Slovaks
consolidate their forces and get into successful cooperation with
their Slavic kinsmen and to steady any efforts at self government
or self defense in which the Russians themselves may be willing
to accept assistance. Whether from Vladivostok or from Murmansk
and Archangel, the only legitimate object for which American or
allied troops can be employed, it submits, is to guard military
stores which may subsequently be needed by Russian forces and to
render such aid as may be acceptable to the Russians in the
organization of their own self-defense. For helping the Czecho-Slovaks
there is immediate necessity and sufficient justification. Recent
developments have made it evident that that it is in the interest
of what the Russian people themselves desire, and the Government
of the United States is glad to contribute the small force at its
disposal for that purpose. It yields, also, to the judgment of
the Supreme Command in the matter of establishing a small force
at Murmansk, to guard the military stores at Kola and to make it
safe for Russian forces to come together in organized bodies in
the north. But it owes it to frank counsel to say that it can go
no further than these modest and experimental plans. It is not in
a position and has no expectation of being in a position, to take
part in organized intervention in adequate force from either Vladivostok
or Murmansk and Archangel. It feels that it ought to add, also,
that it will feel at liberty to use the few troops it can spare
only for the purposes here stated and shall feel obliged to
withdraw these forces, in order to add them to the forces at the
western front, if the plans in whose execution it is now intended
that they should develop into others inconsistent with the policy
to which the Government of the United States feels constrained to
restrict itself.
At the same time the Government of the United States wishes to
say with the utmost cordiality and good will that none of the
conclusions here stated is meant to wear the least color of
criticism of what other governments associated against Germany
may think it wise to undertake. It wishes in no way to embarrass
their choices of policy. All that is intended here is a perfectly
frank and definite statement of the policy which the United
States feels obliged to adopt for herself and in the use of her
own military forces. The Government of the United States does not
wish it to be understood that in so restricting its own
activities it is seeking, even by implication, to set limits to
the action or to define the policies of its Associates.
It hopes to carry out the plans for safeguarding the rear of the
Czecho-Slovaks operating from Vladivostok in a way that will
place it and keep it in close cooperation with a small military
force like its own from Japan, and if necessary from the other
Allies, and that it will assure it of the cordial accord of all
the allied powers; and it proposes to ask all associated in this
course of action to unite in assuring the people of Russia in the
most public and solemn manner that none of the governments
uniting in action either in Siberia or in northern Russia
contemplates any interference of any kind with the political
sovereignty of Russia, any intervention in her internal affairs,
or any impairment of her territorial integrity either now or
hereafter, but that each of the associated powers has the single
object of affording such aid as shall be acceptable, and only
such aid as shall be acceptable, to the Russian people in their
endeavour to regain control their own affairs, their own
territory and their own destiny.
It is the hope and purpose of the Government of the United States
to take advantage of the earliest opportunity to send to Siberia
a commission of merchants, agricultural experts, labour advisers,
Red Cross Representatives, and agents of the Young Men's
Christian Association accustomed to organizing the best methods
of spreading useful information and rendering educational help of
a modest sort, in order in some systematic manner to relieve the
immediate economic necessities of the people there in every way
for which opportunity may open. The execution of this plan will
follow and will not be permitted to embarrass the military
assistance rendered in the rear of the westward-moving forces of
the Czecho-Slovaks.
Department
of State,
Washington, July 17, 1918.
Source:
George F. Kennan, The Decision to Intervene (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1958), 482-485.
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