Summary Left to right: Brig. Jean Victor Allard, Commander 25th Canadian Infantry Brigade; Korean Foreign Minister Pyong Yung Tuck; Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent. Truman's Speech: Informed or Consulted? → Summary Korea, "Canopy," and Consultation: Canadian Attempts to Influence US Nuclear Policy in the Early 1950s SummaryTruman's Speech: Informed or Consulted?1 December 1950: Reacting to Truman's Speech2 December 1950: "More Important to Say What We Think"11 December 1950: Arneson to Ignatieff13 December 1950: Truman-Attlee DiscussionsCanada's Position on The Bomb in Korea3 December 1950, Korea and the Atomic Bomb4 December 1950: Informing Washington4 December 1950: Wrong to Pearson6 December 1950, Canadian Ambassador to the United States to SSEA6 December 1950: Canadian ViewsThe "Canopy" Agreement2-8 January 1951: Preliminary Canadian Discussions5 February 1951: Proposed Exchange of Notes28 February 1951: Ignatieff-Arneson Conversation 16 March 1951: "Consultation" and "Information"29 March 1951, Memorandum for the Minister on United States Strategic Air Command Project10 April 1951: Limits of Consultation4 May 1951: Heeney to Wrong16 May 1951: Canopy AbandonedFurther ReadingAbout the AuthorsCopyright Information