361.1115 Kujala, Arthur J./43

The Ambassador in the Soviet Union (Steinhardt) to the Secretary of State

No. 236

Sir: With further reference to the Department’s telegraphic instruction number 282 of December 13, 4 p.m., and to my despatch number 217 of December 1640a transmitting a copy of the note which the Embassy addressed to the Commissariat for Foreign Affairs under date of December 15, I have the honor to enclose: (1) a copy of the Russian text of the answer of the Commissariat for Foreign Affairs under date of December 22, 1939, (2) an English translation thereof, and (3) a copy of my reply under date of December 27, 1939.

Should the Foreign Office fail within a reasonable period of time to make a satisfactory reply to my note of December 27, the Department may wish to consider the advisability of lodging a strong protest as suggested in its telegram under reference.

[Page 916]

The indifference, not to say contempt, of the Soviet Government toward personal liberty, not only in respect of its own citizens but of foreign citizens as well, is so pronounced as to accentuate the desirability of giving clear evidence that unwarranted deprivation of the liberty of an American citizen will not be allowed to pass unchallenged.

Respectfully yours,

Laurence A. Steinhardt
[Enclosure 1—Translation]

The People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union (Molotov) to the American Ambassador (Steinhardt)

Mr. Ambassador: In reply to your note of December 15, 1939, in regard to the case of Mr. Arthur John Kujala, I have the honor to state that in its note number 534–AM of November 11, 1938, the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs informed the Embassy of the United States of America concerning the circumstances of the arrest of Mr. Kujala and informed the Embassy that he had lived in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics since 1936 without any documents whatsoever. Therefore, I do not perceive in the actions of the Soviet authorities in the given case any departure whatsoever from the agreement reached in 1933 between the President of the United States, Mr. Roosevelt, and the People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Litvinov. It is entirely obvious that the above-mentioned agreement cannot be extended to persons who are not in possession of proof of their American citizenship.

In conclusion, I consider it essential to point out that as soon as it had been established that Mr. Kujala was really a citizen of the United States of America the appropriate authorities of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics not only carried out the above-mentioned agreement but also afforded Mr. Kujala the possibility of leaving for the United States before the expiration of the sentence given him.41

Accept [etc.]

V. Molotov
[Enclosure 2]

The American Ambassador (Steinhardt) to the People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union (Molotov)

Excellency: I have the honor to acknowledge receipt of your Excellency’s note of December 22, 1939, in reply to my communication of [Page 917] December 15, 1939, with reference to the failure of the Soviet authorities to comply, in the case of the arrest and detention of Mr. Arthur John Kujala, an American citizen, with the provisions of the agreement of November 16, 1933, between the President of the United States of America and the then People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs, Mr. Litvinov.

I regret to have to inform Your Excellency that the explanation offered in regard to the failure of the Soviet Government to notify this mission of the arrest of this American citizen and the failure to permit a member of this Embassy, in accordance with the above-mentioned agreement, to visit Mr. Kujala within a reasonable period of time cannot be regarded as satisfactory.

I observe that you state that as soon as Mr. Kujala’s American citizenship had been established the appropriate authorities of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics complied with the provisions of the above-mentioned agreement. I feel constrained to bring to your Excellency’s attention the fact that Mr. Kujala’s arrest was effected by the same Soviet authorities to whom his American passport had been repeatedly exhibited, an American passport having been issued to him by this Embassy on April 28, 1936. In the Embassy’s note of June 17, 1938, to the Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, reference was made to Mr. Kujala’s passport. Despite the fact that the Commissariat for Foreign Affairs was officially apprised of the American citizenship of Mr. Kujala in a formal document bearing date of: June 17, 1938, it was not until November 11, 1938, that the Embassy was notified of his arrest by the Soviet authorities.

Furthermore, in the note from the Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of November 11, 1938, to which you refer, the Soviet Government recognized that Mr. Kujala was a citizen of the United States. Despite this recognition, it was not until [August] 17, 1939, a further delay of eight months, that a representative of the Embassy was granted permission to interview Mr. Kujala, despite the clear and unequivocal obligation contained in the above-mentioned agreement to grant to this Embassy the right of visit to an arrested American citizen without delay.

With reference to your Excellency’s observation that “the abovementioned agreement cannot be extended to persons who are not in possession of proof of their American citizenship”, I invite your Excellency’s attention to the protocol signed on December 21, 1928, at Moscow, between the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and Germany, supplementing article 11 of the treaty between those two countries signed on October 12, 1925,42 providing that insufficient proof of [Page 918] the citizenship of the person arrested shall not revoke the obligation in respect of notification and right of visit provided thereunder, and to the fact that under the agreement between the President of the United States and the then Commissar for Foreign Affairs nationals of the United States are accorded rights to legal protection no less favorable than those enjoyed by the nationals of the nation most favored in this respect.

In the light of the foregoing, I have to inform your Excellency that I consider that the actions of the Soviet authorities in the case of Mr. Kujala were not in conformity with either the letter or the spirit of the agreement between the President of the United States and the then Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

Accept [etc.]

[File copy not signed]
  1. Despatch not printed.
  2. On September 12, 1939, Soviet authorities informed the Embassy in Moscow that Kujala was on his way to Helsinki, where he was examined at the American Legation on September 13 concerning his imprisonment in the Soviet Union. He obtained passage to sail for the United States from Copenhagen on October 7, 1939.
  3. These provisions are quoted in the letter of November 16, 1933, to President Roosevelt from Litvinov, p. 33.