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(Dept. of State Bulletin,
Vol. V, No. 129, Dec. 13, 1941)
[This message from President
Roosevelt to Emperor Hirohito was dispatched Saturday
afternoon, December 6 and was made known to the
press. The press did not receive a copy of it until
4:20 p.m. on Sunday the 7th, two hours after they
had been told about the attack on Pearl Harbor by
Press Secretary Steve Early]
Almost a century ago the
President of the United States addressed to the
Emperor of Japan a message extending an offer of
friendship of the people of the United States to
the people of Japan. That offer was accepted, and
in the long period of unbroken peace and friendship
which has followed, our respective nations, through
the virtues of their peoples and the wisdom of their
rulers have prospered and have substantially helped
humanity.
Only in situations of extraordinary
importance to our two countries need I address to
Your Majesty messages on matters of state. I feel
I should now so address you because of the deep
and far-reaching emergency which appears to be in
formation.
Developments are occurring
in the Pacific area which threaten to deprive each
of our nations and all humanity of the beneficial
influence of the long peace between our two countries.
Those developments contain tragic possibilities.
The people of the United
States, believing in peace and in the right of nations
to live and let live, have eagerly watched the conversations
between our two Governments during these past months.
We have hoped for a termination of the present conflict
between Japan and China. We have hoped that a peace
of the Pacific could be consummated in such a way
that nationalities of many diverse peoples could
exist side by side without fear of invasion; that
unbearable burdens of armaments could be lifted
for them all; and that all peoples would resume
commerce without discrimination against or in favor
of any nation.
I am certain that it will
be clear to Your Majesty, as it is to me, that in
seeking these great objectives both Japan and the
United States should agree to eliminate any form
of military threat. This seemed essential to the
attainment of the high objectives.
More than a year ago Your
Majesty's Government concluded an agreement with
the Vichy Government by which five or six thousand
Japanese troops were permitted to enter into Northern
French Indo-China for the protection of Japanese
troops which were operating against China further
north. And this Spring and Summer the Vichy Government
permitted further Japanese military forces to enter
into Southern French Indo-China for the common defense
of French Indo-China. I think I am correct in saying
that no attack has been made upon Indo-China, nor
that any has been contemplated.
During the past few weeks
it has become clear to the world that Japanese military,
naval and air forces have been sent to Southern
Indo-China in such large numbers as to create a
reasonable doubt on the part of other nations that
this continuing concentration in Indo-China is not
defensive in its character.
Because these continuing
concentrations in Indo-China have reached such large
proportions and because they extend now to the southeast
and the southwest corners of that Peninsula, it
is only reasonable that the people of the Philippines,
of the hundreds of Islands of the East Indies, of
Malaya and of Thailand itself are asking themselves
whether these forces of Japan are preparing or intending
to make attack in one or more of these many directions.
I am sure that Your Majesty
will understand that the fear of all these peoples
is a legitimate fear inasmuch as it involves their
peace and their national existence. I am sure that
Your Majesty will understand why the people of the
United States in such large numbers look askance
at the establishment of military, naval and air
bases manned and equipped so greatly as to constitute
armed forces capable of measures of offense.
It is clear that a continuance
of such a situation is unthinkable.
None of the peoples whom
I have spoken of above can sit either indefinitely
or permanently on a keg of dynamite.
There is absolutely no thought
on the part of the United States of invading Indo-China
if every Japanese soldier or sailor were to be withdrawn
therefrom.
I think that we can obtain
the same assurance from the Governments of the East
Indies, the Governments of Malaya and the Government
of Thailand. I would even undertake to ask for the
same assurance on the part of the Government of
China. Thus a withdrawal of the Japanese forces
from Indo-China would result in the assurance of
peace throughout the whole of the South Pacific
area.
I address myself to Your
Majesty at this moment in the fervent hope that
Your Majesty may, as I am doing, give thought in
this definite emergency to way of dispelling the
dark clouds. I am confident that both of us, for
the sake of the peoples not only of our own great
countries but for the sake of humanity in neighboring
territories, have a sacred duty to restore traditional
amity and prevent further death and destruction
in the world."
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