296.
Letter From the Secretary of Defense (Wilson) to the Administrator of the General Services
Administration (Floete)[1]
Washington, September 18,
1957.
DEAR MR. FLOETE: This letter, supplementing
intervening discussions, is written in reply to your letter of August 15, 1957,
in which you requested authorization for the disposal of the government‑owned
nickel plant at Nicaro, Cuba, and with which you enclosed a letter dated July
8, 1957, to you on the same subject from the Director, Office of Defense Mobilization[2]
In 1947 it was determined that under conditions then
existing continued ownership of this plant by the government was no longer
necessary for security purposes, and efforts were made to sell it, subject to a
national security clause. It is my understanding that these efforts were
unsuccessful and that after the enactment of the National Industrial Reserve
Act of 1948 (Public Law 883 of the 80th Congress),[3] this plant was one of
those placed in the National Industrial Reserve under that Act.
As a result of the increased need for nickel arising
from the Korean crisis, it was realized that reactivation of the nickel plant
at Nicaro would be desirable. By letter dated November 13, 1950, to the then
Administrator of General Services Administration, the Acting Chairman of the
Munitions Board requested GSA to "enter into a lease agreement" with
whichever of two named firms then found to be qualified should "offer a
proposal most advantageous to the United States Government".[4] Later a
third firm was held to be qualified.
Following receipt of the above letter, GSA provided
for the operation of the plant by entering into a management agreement which
contemplated that after about one year of operation thereunder it would either
be converted into a lease or terminated, and that if terminated, the plant
might then be sold or leased to others. The operator of the plant under that
agreement was the successor in interest to one of the three firms approved by
the Munitions Board. By a later amendment, dated January 23, 1953,4 the
operation under the management type of arrangement was extended to a full five
year period from the date of commencement of full operations after
reactivation.
In December 1953 the Office of Defense Mobilization
authorized GSA to expand the Nicaro plant for the purpose of increasing its
productive capacity. Construction was started in October 1954, and completed on
March 10, 1957.
The amended management agreement was due to expire
on or about July 15, 1957. When we considered this situation last April, only
limited information was available as to the production capability of the
enlarged plant. Under all the circumstances I declined in my letter of April
12, 1957,[5] to approve at that time either a lease or sale of the plant,
feeling that some extension of the existing management‑type arrangement
was the better course. You thereupon extended that agreement to December 31,
1957.
Upon review of present conditions and the
circumstances set forth in your letter, I now withdraw the objections in my
letter of April 12, 1957, to disposal of this plant and agree that GSA may
proceed with lease arrangements under the authority given it by the Department
of Defense through the Munitions Board in its abovementioned letter dated
November 13, 1950, in accordance with the authority granted in Section 7 of the
National Industrial Reserve Act of 1948 (Public Law 883 of the 80th
Congress).[6] As indicated in that letter, the Department of Defense will be
glad to consider recommendations by you, either now or hereafter, of other
firms which under present circumstances should be included in the list of possible
qualified operators.
I understand that in seeking lease proposals you may
also secure alternate proposals for purchase of the plant. If after having
fully explored the matter, you decide to recommend a sale rather than a lease
as being in the best interests of the United States, the Department of Defense
will, of course, consider such a recommendation, in the light of the provisions
of Section 7 of the above‑mentioned Act.
The Department of Defense is interested in
preserving the nickel production of this Nicaro property as part of the
mobilization base and it feels that in any lease (or possible sale) of the
property, it is important that appropriate provisions be included to secure to
the United States for defense purposes any needed part of the productive
capacity of this plant.
I recognize that the responsibility for working out
this transaction from the point of view of economics rests with your agency.
However, I am sure that as to national security aspects of any agreement, you
will seek the advice of the Office of Defense Mobilization and of this
Department.[7]
Sincerely yours,
[1] Source: Department of State, Central Files, 837.2547/2‑2758.
Official Use Only. Attached to a memorandum of February 27, 1958, from Snow to
Mann.
[2] Neither found in Department of State files.
[3] Enacted July 2, 1948; for text, see 62 Stat.
1225.
[4] Not found in Department of State files.
[5] Not found in Department of State files.
[6] Section 7 authorizes the Secretary of Defense to
dispose of property in the national federal reserve when deemed in the interest
of national security.
[7] On October 24, representatives of the General
Services Administration (GSA) and the Department decided that Ira Beynon,
Special Assistant to the GSA Administrator, would go to Habana to attempt to
obtain agreement with the Cuban Government on three points considered essential
before Nicaro could be sold. These were: 1. tax benefits to derive to the
purchaser, 2. U.S. control over production to insure continued supplies of
nickel to the U.S., and 3. Cuban private capital participation. (Memorandum of
conversation, October 24, by Leonhardy; Department of State, Central Files,
837.25471/2‑2758) No agreement was reached with the Cuban Government on
these points in 1957.