9, On November 4, 1948, the General Assembly adopted by a vote of 40-6 (the USSR opposing) a Canadian resolution approving the UN Atomic =inergy Commission majority plan (the U. S. proposal) as a basis for "establishing an effective system of international control of atomic energy.'"' The resolution created a committee of six to determine if there existed "any basis for agreement on international control of atomic energy." 10, : On September 23, 1949, President Truman announced the first atomic explosion in the USSR. 11. On October 24, 1949, the committee of six reported on fundamental differences between the USGR and the Western powers with regard to control of atomic energy. The report concluded that the majority powers put world security above sovereignty, while the USSR put its sovereignty firstand insisted on unimpeded exercise thereof, De 12, The United States on October 24, 1950, proposed that the work of the UN Atomic Energy Commission and the UN Commission on Se Conventional Armaments be more closely brought together and that this work be carried forward by "a new and consolidated disarmament ‘ey, commission," 13, On November +, 1951, the UC, UK and France sponsored proposals in the UN, providing for regulation, limitation and balanced reduction of all armed forces and armaments, including atomic weapons. The proposals provided for a progressive disclosure and verification of ali armed forces and armaments, including atomic, and provided that the UN majority plan should continue to serve as a basis for control of atomic energy, unless a better or not less effective system could be devised, 14, On November 16, 1951, the USSR rejected the tripartite proposal and submitted a counter-proposal calling for a convention prohibiting atomic weapons, 15. On January 11, 1952, the General Assembly adopted a resolution REPRODUCED AT THE DWIGHTD. EISENHOWER LIBRARY creating the UN Disarmament Commission. 16, On January 12, 1952, the UGSR delegation submitted proposals which provided that prohibition of atomic weapons and "strict international control" of atomic weapons should come into effect Simultaneously, but that the control organ not be entitled to interfere in the domestic affairs of any state. 17, On April 5, 1952, in the first meeting of the Disarmament Commission, the U. S, co-sponsored the first of a series of working Papers, including a "proposal for progressive and continuing disclosure and verification of all armed forcesand armaments, including atomic." more fai

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