Papers and Documents relating to the Foreign Relations of Hungary, Volume 2, 1921 (Budapest, 1946)

Documents

1921 io77 As opposed to Prince Sapieha, General Sosnkovski in the first place seeks alliance with us and considers the Rumanian agreement 1 only as a means to achieve it. In order to be able successfully to support this question in Paris, he asked me to put at his disposal as personal information before Sunday 2 if possible, a short summary of our present rela­tions with Rumania, and the conditions upon which a compro­mise would be possible. Time being very short I thought it pro­per to accede to the request without asking for instructions, and gave the General a memorandum of a strictly private character. 3 No. 71. ' ooo/pol. The Special Emissary of the Hungarian Government, Mr. Jungerth, to the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dr. Gratz. Code telegram. RE VAL, January 30, 1921. Litvinoff fährt Moskau und wird wie er verstehen liess, russische Regierung Reduktion der Bedingungen auf Ausliefe­rung der zehn Volkskommissäre beantraget!. 4 Habe dem Estnischen Staatsoberhaupt, 5 gelegentlich Anerken­nung Estlands durch Fünferrat, im Namen der ungarischen Regie­rung gratuliert, was hier ausserordentlich guten Eindruck machte. 6 No. 72. 543/pol. The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dr. Gratz, to the Hungarian Chargé d'affaires in Vienna, Mr. Masirevich. [TRANSLATION] Code telegram No. 25. BUDAPEST, January 31, 1921. You are requested to call on Chancellor Mayr and, referring to my last conversation with him, 7 suggest that the best procedure 1 Cf. supra, Doc. No. 60. 4 Cf. supra, Doc. No. 62. 2 January 30. 6 Päts. 3 Cf. infra, Doc. No. 77. 6 Cf. infra, Docs. Nos. 83 and 105. 7 Dr. Gratz left Vienna on January 15 or 16, in connection with his appointment as Minister for Foreign Affairs. Before leaving he most probably saw the Chancellor, Dr. Mayr, but made no written report about this interview. Cf. supra, Doc. No. 1.

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