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Eight Points. The most specific statement of postwar aims to come from Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt is the two-year-old Atlantic Charter, which calls for: 1) no Anglo-American aggrandizement; 2) self-determination of national boundaries; 3) self-determination of governments; 4) free trade; 5) international social security; 6) freedom from want and fear; 7) freedom of the seas; 8) outlawing of force...
Seven Points. Clearest statement from Joseph Stalin is his outline, made last November, of a "program of action of the Anglo-Russian-American coalition": 1) "abolition of racial exclusiveness; 2) equality of nations and integrity of their territories; 3) liberation of enslaved nations and the restoration of their sovereign rights; 4) the right of every nation to arrange its affairs as it wishes; 5) economic aid to nations that have suffered and assistance to them in attaining their material welfare; 6) restoration of democratic liberties; 7) destruction of the Hitlerite regime...
...Frustrated Mission. In Algiers General de Gaulle contemplated the news from London: Prime Minister Winston Churchill's statement that Allied intervention on behalf of General Giraud "was made on military grounds,'' implied no Anglo-American control over "the political organization." He also contemplated the fact that he was not Commander-in-Chief during General Giraud's absence. That job had been assigned to General Giraud's Army Chief of Staff, dapper General Alphonse Juin...
...Berle Jr. is chairman. Other members : Artemus Gates and Robert A. Lovett, Assistant Secretaries for Air of Navy and War; Wayne Chatfield Taylor, Under Secretary of Commerce; and Milo Perkins, executive director of the Board of Economic Warfare. Their report will probably be made public next September, when an Anglo-American conference on postwar aviation will be held in Washington...
Symptoms. The gropings toward labor unity were symptomatic of other attempts to secure Anglo-American-Russian postwar collaboration. Said cautious U.S. Ambassador William Standley in Moscow last week: "Postwar cooperation is absolutely essential if we are to win the peace...