governor11.6
PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL
June 1993
The Right Honourable Christopher Patten Governor of Hong Kong
Government House HONG KONG
I discussed with you when I was in Hong Kong last month the
advice we were proposing to put to the Cabinet Secretary on
Sir Percy Cradock's memoirs.
Sir Robin Butler wrote to Sir Percy Cradock on the lines we
discussed, asking him in the interests of avoiding damage to our continuing negotiations with the Chinese on electoral
issues and the airport either to excise the relevant passages
from his book or to postpone publication until after these
negotiations were concluded.
and
Sir P Cradock has now replied to the Cabinet Secretary. He
takes the line that our fears about the effect of his book on
our continuing negotiations with China are groundless. He
explains this by saying first, that he is no longer in an
official position, second, that his views are well-known,
third, that having changed our policy we have now come back
to an approach close to the one he had advocated throughout.
He says that we cannot reasonable expect him to delete from his book a defence of the policy with which he is closely
associated. On the airport, he considers that his account
will not cause the Chinese to withdraw from talks on the
airport. He is willing to consider some minor fudging on the
Airport, but that is as far as he is willing to go.
We propose to advise the Cabinet Secretary to make a further
attempt to dissuade Sir P Cradock from publishing the
damaging part of his book. We would take the line that:
PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL
7