793.94/1868c: Telegram

The Secretary of State to the Minister in China (Johnson)63

340. Please communicate to the Minister for Foreign Affairs immediately as a note, the identical text of which will be communicated by the American Chargé to Japan to the Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs, the following:

“The Government and people of the United States have observed with regret and with great concern events of the past few days in Manchuria. In view of the sincere desire of the people of this country that principles and methods of peace shall prevail in international relations, and of the existence of treaties, to several of which the United States is a party, the provisions of which are intended to regulate the adjustment of controversies between nations without resort to use of force, the American Government feels warranted in expressing to the Chinese and the Japanese Governments its hope that they will cause their military forces to refrain from any further hostilities, will so dispose respectively of their armed forces as to satisfy the requirements of international law and international agreements, and will refrain from activities which may prejudice the attainment by amicable methods of an adjustment of their differences.”

Stimson
  1. The same, mutatis mutandis, to the Chargé in Japan (No. 167), Foreign Relations, Japan, 1931–1941, vol. i, p. 9.