For The Press:
The Acting Secretary of State issues the following
statement to the press in re American-Japanese action in Siberia:
In the judgment of the Government of the United
States, a judgment arrived at after repeated and very searching considerations of the
whole situation, military intervention in Russia would be more likely to add to the
present sad confusion there than to cure it. and would injure Russia rather than help her
out of her distresses.
Such military intervention as has been most
frequently proposed even supposing it to be efficacious in its immediate object of
delivering an attack upon Germany from the east, would in its judgment be more likely to
turn out to be merely a method of making use of Russia than to be a method of serving her.
Her people, if they profited by it at all, could riot profit by it in time to deliver them
from their present desperate difficulties, and their substance would meantime be used to
maintain foreign armies, riot to reconstitute their own or to feed their own men, women,
and children. We are bending all our energies now to the purpose, the resolute and
confident purpose of winning on the western front, and it would in the judgment of the
Government of the United States be most unwise to divide or dissipate our forces.
As the Government of the United States sees the
present circumstances, therefore, military action is admissible in Russia now only to
render such protection and help as is possible to the CzechoSlovaks against the armed
Austrian and German prisoners who are attacking them and to steady any efforts at
selfgovernment or self-defense in which the Russians themselves may be willing to
accept assistance. Whether from Vladivostok or from Murmansk and Archangel, the only
present object for which American troops will be. employed will be to guard military
stores which may subsequently be needed by Russian forces and to render such aid as may be
acceptable to the Russians in the organization of their own selfdefense.
With such objects in view the Government of the
United States is now cooperating with the Governments of France and Great Britain in the
neighborhood of Murmansk and Archangel. The United States and Japan are the only powers
which are just now in a position to act in Siberia in sufficient force to accomplish even
such modest objects as those that have been outlined. The Government of the United States,
has, therefore, proposed to the Government of Japan that each of the two governments send
a force of a few thousand men to Vladivostok, with the purpose of cooperating as a single
force in the occupation of Vladivostok and in safeguarding, so far as it may, the country
to the rear of the Westward-moving CzechoSlovaks; and the Japanese Government has
consented.
In taking this action the Government of the United
States wishes to announce to the people of Russia in the most public and solemn manner
that it contemplates no interference with the political sovereignty of Russia, no
intervention in her internal affairsnot even in the local affairs of the limited
areas which her military force may be obliged to occupyand no impairment of her
territorial integrity, either now or hereafter, but that what we are about to do has as
its single and only object the rendering of such aid as shall be acceptable to the
Russian people themselves in their endeavors to regain control of their own affairs, their
own territory, and their own destiny. The Japanese Government, it is understood, will
issue a similar assurance.
These plans and purposes of the Government of the
United States have been communicated to the Governments of Great Britain, France, and
Italy, and those Governments have advised the Department of State that they assent to them
in principle. No conclusion that the Government of the United States has arrived at in
this important matter is intended, however, as an effort to restrict the actions or
interfere with the independent judgment of the Governments with which we are now
associated in the war.
It is also the hope and purpose of the Government
of the United States to take advantage of the earliest opportunity to send to Siberia a
commission of merchants, agricultural experts, labor advisers, Red Cross representatives,
and agents of the Young Mens Christian Association accustomed to organizing the best
methods of spreading useful information and rendering educational help of a modest kind in
order in some systematic way to relieve the immediate economic necessities of the people
there in every way for which an opportunity may open. The execution of this plan will
follow and will not be permitted to embarrass the military assistance rendered to the
CzechoSlovaks.
It is the hope and expectation of the Government of
the United States that the Governments with which it is associated will, wherever,
necessary or possible, lend their active aid in the execution of these military and
economic plans.
