Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
The Council of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) held its ninth annual meeting in Manila on April 13–15, 1964, under the chairmanship of Salvador P. Lopez, Secretary of Foreign Affairs of the Philippines. The communiqué issued at the close of the meeting expressed the Ministers' contention that SEATO had had, and continued to have, a most important stabilizing influence in Southeast Asia. Despite the sharpening of the Sino-Soviet dispute, the Council agreed that world domination remained the aim of communism and that vigilance could not therefore be relaxed. In addition to measures to deter overt aggression and active insurgency, the Ministers agreed that emphasis on the development of economic and social conditions should be continued in order to strengthen national resistance to subversion. Reaffirming that the determination of national policy rested with individual governments, the Council declared that material support and encouragement should be given to those nations which, in defending themselves, needed and requested such support.
1 For the text of the communiqué, see SEATO Press Release VI(4)/64–22; and Department of State Bulletin, 05 4, 1964 (Vol. 50, No. 1297), pp. 692–693Google Scholar. For a summary of the eighth meeting, see International Organization, Autumn 1963 (Vol. 17, No. 4), p. 993CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2 “SEATO: 1954–1964 A Stabilizing Factor in Southeast Asia,” SEATO Press Release.