Memorandum
from Acting Secretary of State Irwin to President
Nixon/1/
/1/
Source: National Archives, RG 59, Central Files 1970-73, SOC 10 PAK. Secret. Drafted by Deputy Assistant AID Administrator Curtis
Ferrar (AA/NESA), and
Alexander S.C. Fuller (NEA/PAF) and cleared by Spengler,
Townsend Swayze of the Office of South Asian Affairs
(AID/NESA), Van Hollen, and Sisco.
Washington, June
9, 1971.
SUBJECT
Pakistan: Economic Aid Prospects
Over the
last three weeks, we have been able to put ourselves in a reasonably good
position for dealing with the situation in Pakistan. M. M. Ahmad returned
from his Washington visit with an
understanding of our desire to be helpful and of the need for Pakistan to come up with a
credible program that we and other donors could support.
Ahmad was
also fully exposed to our humanitarian concern for the millions of people
affected in East
Pakistan.
He visited the UN Secretary General in New York before he left the U.S., and as a result of our
strong initiatives, fully supported by the British and others, the Pakistan
Government has requested an international relief program. UN Assistant
Secretary General Kittani is now in Pakistan to work out the
modalities for the relief effort under United Nations auspices.
With our
encouragement, the IMF and the IBRD have sent a joint team, some of whose
members are already at work in East Pakistan. After assessing the
evolving circumstances on the ground, the team will seek to assist Pakistan in working out a
program of measures necessary to avoid economic collapse. Such a package will
undoubtedly include trade, fiscal and monetary reforms, already overdue before
March 25, as well as specific new measures arising from problems caused by the
civil disorder, Pakistan's unilateral debt
moratorium, the loss of East Pakistan production and exports,
and the lack of business confidence in the West.
If
a viable program can be worked out, it will probably include support for Pakistan in
the form of an IMF drawing and regularization of the debt moratorium on a short
term basis.
While it is recognized that the Bank and Fund would not expect from the
Consortium/2/ a normal year's aid pledge there may be an appeal for a lesser
amount of special bilateral financing as part of a short term financial package
to supplement an emergency Fund drawing. The Bank/Fund team will make its
first, informal report to a restricted Consortium meeting in Paris on June 21.
/2/
Reference is to the Pakistan consortium; see
footnote 5, Document 42.
In
summary, Pakistan has been accorded a
favorable opportunity to come forward with a program the Consortium and the
donors can support. Indications are, however, that the Pakistan Government will
have severe difficulties in formulating a credible program. The picture
emerging from our reporting shows:
-a
population still largely cowed and fearful of Army action: people are hesitant
to return to work in government and private offices and factories. The Hindu
population has suffered strong persecution, and many have fled the country. The
total number of refugees in India is now over four
million.
-evidence of increasingly organized and effective insurgency,
including guerrilla disruption of transport and commerce, and intimidation of
those who cooperate with the Martial Law Administration.
-failure so far of the political initiatives taken by
President Yahya to achieve any substantial response
in East Pakistan.
-a continued low level of law and order, and partial
breakdown of the local government apparatus, outside of the main towns where
the army has achieved some security.
-lack of effective action to deal with the food distribution
problem in spite of expressions of concern from the Government in
Islamabad. There is still no one
in charge of this question in the East Wing, and no effective priority on the
use of water transport for moving food.
-imminent food shortages in some areas. We have been
pressing the Government of Pakistan to permit us to have access to the cyclone
affected districts. When access is finally achieved, we may discover that some
starvation will already have occurred.
As a
result, the economy of East Pakistan is still stagnant. The
provincial government is barely functioning. Peace and normalcy have not
returned. There has been a consistent disparity between the official Pakistan
Government expectations, and the facts as they emerge. The gap may be widening.
Work on
humanitarian programs goes forward as the situation allows. Hopefully Mr. Kittani will establish a framework within which effective
relief can be extended on a broad scale. The next major decisions on the
economic program will arise in the context of the report of the IMF/IBRD team
late in June. We are not sanguine, however, that a viable and soundly based
economic program will emerge at that time.
John N.
Irwin II