wenhower; rapers, 1750-4 | Whitman file) .,(4pn iy yee epee ee * th. | . quar ae) Giant ASOU a 1 ge e ah Ber t factor. or the Middle East--merchant shipping could be a very importan in the blocked were Canal Suez the if , instance What would we do, for course of a limited war in the Middle East? Mr. Brundage pointed out that the current cost of replacing . an obsolescent vessel was now four times as great as it had been when ents the program began. Mr. Gray commented that to meet the requirem of the Joint Chiefs, there would have to be a program of building 60 new merchant vessels each year. We would have to anticipate expenditures of $300 million a year for the next 20 years if the program were approved on the basis of the JCS requirement of 1200 vessels. These were the budgetary implications of the current requirements estimated by the Joint Chiefs. Mr. Brundage continued by pointing out that American seamen were paid mich more than the seamen of other countries. This adds to the level of the subsidy required by the U. S. Merchant Marine Act. Mr. Brundage believed that the Government could save a considerable amount of money if we were permitted to build our merchant vessels in foreign shipyards and were permitted to operate these vessels under the Panamanian flag. Secretary Quarles stated that while it would create domestic ( political difficulties if we were to build our merchant vessels in for- - eign yards, there would be, nevertheless, considerable advantages in other respects if this could be done. Mr. Brundage said that he had this matter very much on his mind. Essentially, however, whet was bothering him at the moment was the definition of what constituted an adequate J. S. merchant marine fleet. : The President inquired how much money we had spent on our merchant marine program in FY 1957. Mr. Brundage replied that we had put nothing in it in that fiscal year. The crux of the problem was that we were now undertaking to start a new program, for which Mr. Bruneeee gave the estimated funding requirements for FY 1960 and FY 1961. The President said he thought it necessary to ask a couple of pertinent questions. What we needed to calculate was how much shipping would te needed by the Free World states in the event of war, and thereafter how mch of this over-all need would have to be met by the United States. From the military viewpoint, we need to take into consideration all available Free World shipplog resources, and not only the resources available to the United States. Such an approach to the problem of shipping requirements would not only assist the economtes of other Free World nations; it would also cut our cwn U. &. costs and make possible a more moderate U. S. shipbuilding progran. FERECUR aT, 5 Coane ANSI be :

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