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UNITED NATIONS: By Acclamation
"Is there any objection?" asked Assembly President Paul-Henri Spaak of Belgium.
There were no objections.
Said Mr. Spaak: "There being no objection, I declare that the resolution on principles governing the general regulation and reduction of armaments is unanimously adopted by the General Assembly."
This, last week, was the most dramatic exhibition of the world's will to peace since the Charter was signed at San Francisco. By acclamation, the 54 members of the U.N. recommended that the Security Council frame treaties prohibiting atomic weapons and other instruments of mass destruction, reducing standard armaments, establishing safeguards not subject to the veto. The Assembly also recommended: 1) cooperation with the Atomic Energy Commission; 2) consideration of an international police force; 3) balanced withdrawal of troops from former enemy countries.
The Security Council's efforts would at best be long, difficult and troubled, and at worst might be futile. But Paul Martin of Canada called for "holy obstinacy." Alexandre Parodi of France mentioned "grounds for hope."
Gentleman's Agreement. Earlier in the week, matters had not looked so good. One nightwhich became famed as "gentleman's agreement" night the bright lights at Flushing beat down on a dapper, suave, self-assured diplomat with a red handkerchief flopping out of his coat pocket. This was Britain's Sir Hartley Shawcross, 44, a quick-witted prosecutor who had not yet learned that, at international conferences, haste makes waste, or worse.
The battered question of a troop census was still under discussion. Shawcross had taunted Russia's Molotov because of Russia's reluctance to include a census of home troops. Molotov taunted Sir Hartley with Britain's unwillingness to include information on armaments all armaments. When the Russian was through, the Briton rushed to the rostrum. Cried he: "I accept the challenge! I think this is going to be a historic occasion."
Shawcross then read his scribbled resolution. It provided for "the immediate establishment of an international supervisory commission operating within the framework of the Security Council but in its operations not subject to the veto of any Power. . . ." Purpose: to collect information on troops and arms.
Molotov, catching the full implications of the Briton's proposal, accepted "in principle."
Second Thoughts. In effect, Sir Hartley had committed the U.S. to disclose information on its stockpile of A-bombs and fissionable material as soon as the contemplated commission could be set up. All this seemed to fly right over Senator Connally's head, for the orotund Texan made no relevant comment. Next day, however, there was a great hue & cry.
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