Memorandum
of Conversation/1/
Washington, July 23, 1971, 12:50-1:18 p.m.
/1/ Source:
National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 643, Country
Files, Middle East, India/Pakistan, July 1971. Secret; Nodis. Drafted by Saunders on July
24. The meeting was held in Kissinger's office at the White House. The
time of the meeting is from Kissinger's appointment book. (Library of Congress,
Manuscript Division, Kissinger Papers, Box 438, Miscellany, 1968-1976, Record
of Schedule)
PARTICIPANTS
Agha Hilaly, Ambassador of Pakistan
Henry A. Kissinger, Assistant to the President
Harold H. Saunders, NSC Staff
Ambassador Hilaly began the conversation by saying that in his talk
with Secretary Rogers/2/ the previous day the Secretary had said that he had
given Indian Foreign Minister Singh a further warning against letting
increasing incidents on the Pakistan-India border get out of hand. This had indicated
to him that the US was maintaining its
pressure on India. Dr. Kissinger said
that when he had seen Ambassador Jha in
San Clemente, he had made clear that
any Indian move to begin hostilities would be looked on by the US with extreme disfavor.
/2/
Ambassador Hilaly's meeting with Secretary Rogers was
reported to Islamabad in telegrams 134599 and
134643, both July 24. Telegram 134599 is in the National Archives, RG 59,
Central Files 1970-73, POL 17 PAK-US. Telegram 134643
is Document 107.
Ambassador Hilaly noted that President Yahya
had announced Pakistan's acceptance of UN
personnel in East
Pakistan
to facilitate the return of refugees. In response to Dr. Kissinger's question,
the Ambassador affirmed that President Yahya had
appointed a civil administrator-Dr. Malik-to oversee
the refugee repatriation program in East Pakistan.
Dr.
Kissinger said that Pakistan has not been good at
its public relations. What Pakistan needs is a
comprehensive refugee program. Instead of dribbling out its actions one by one,
Pakistan needed to draw them all
together into a program to which we could point. He said that he had talked to
Mr. McNamara of the World Bank, and he had said that he could support a maximum
food and relief effort.
Ambassador Hilaly said that Pakistan is getting that kind of
help from AID. What Pakistan needs from the World
Bank is straight economic assistance. The Bank has given a wrong lead to the
other consortium members. He then mentioned some of the comments made by
members of the recent World Bank team which had visited Pakistan. One member had said
that East
Pakistan
looked like "Arnheim after the Nazi blitz"
and another said that it looked like "a country after a nuclear
attack." Hilaly commented that these were not
the comments of a dispassionate group.
Dr.
Kissinger said that he had talked with the British again, here and through
"the direct channel." The Ambassador said that he had talked to a
number of members of Parliament when he had passed through London on his return from Pakistan.
Dr.
Kissinger returned to the question of a comprehensive refugee package. He
recalled that when he had talked to Foreign Secretary Sultan Khan in
Islamabad he had suggested the
idea of a comprehensive package which included UN personnel, a civil administrator
in East
Pakistan
and so on.
Ambassador Hilaly noted the trouble that Pakistan is having with the US
Senate and House. He wondered whether a package arrangement of the kind Dr.
Kissinger was discussing would help there. He felt that many of the members
were so strong in their feeling that their views would remain unchanged.
Dr.
Kissinger repeated that what would help us most in our approaches to the
Congress would be a comprehensive Pakistani program which we could point to. We
could then argue that we had been able to achieve more with friendship and
working with the Pakistan government than with
the kind of pressure a number of members of the Congress were proposing. He
went on to suggest that if Pakistan had a three-point or a five-point Pakistani
refugee program pooling everything together and going as far on each point as
possible, then the US would have a framework within which to argue for
continued support for Pakistan.
Ambassador Hilaly-seeming to miss the overall import of Dr. Kissinger's
comments-said that he hoped the Administration would use influence with some of
the Republicans in the Congress. He had had an invitation from Congressman
Frelinghuysen to talk informally to a group of 20 or so of his colleagues. He
also had been advised that Senator Kennedy wants to go to India and Pakistan. Dr. Kissinger replied,
"Let him go."
Ambassador Hilaly replied that a couple of Senator Kennedy's aides had
been very difficult. One of them had even said that he was going to India and would try to enter Pakistan across the Indian
border. The Ambassador said that he had pointed out to Senator Kennedy that
this would be illegal.
The
Ambassador then returned to an earlier subject: "So Jha
came to the West Coast. Did he ask about China's intentions?" Dr.
Kissinger, speaking slowly and avoiding precise response, said that Jha had just wanted to get a general fill-in. He said that
he had told Jha that we are violently opposed to any
moves that could lead to war. He had told him that a complete political
solution would take longer than working out a plan for the refugees, so the
Indians should not condition refugee return on political settlement.
Dr.
Kissinger reiterated that any ammunition that Pakistan could give us would
help us. He said he would talk to Senator Scott. Ambassador Hilaly
said he would send Dr. Kissinger a note, implying that the note would contain
the elements of the package Dr. Kissinger was talking about.
[Comment:
When that note arrived, it turned out to be simply a recapitulation of the
things that Pakistan had said and done on
the refugee question since the spring. It was not a new package such as Dr.
Kissinger was talking about.]/3/ Dr. Kissinger said that maybe the Foreign
Secretary could incorporate other ideas, in addition to those that Dr.
Kissinger had mentioned.
/3/ Brackets
in the source text. The note was not found.
Dr.
Kissinger, changing the subject back to China, repeated that
"our gratitude is very great." Ambassador Hilaly
said that he had recalled in his conversation with Secretary Rogers the
evolution of the China contacts. He recalled
that there had been Secretary Rogers' 1969 visit in which the Secretary had
mentioned the President's interest in improving relations with China.
Then there
had been the President's visit to Lahore, in which the President
himself had mentioned this to President Yahya. After
that, there had been two schools of thought:
-One school,
following the thinking of former President Ayub, felt
that Pakistan should continue to be
neutral between the major world powers.
-Another
school, however, felt that here were two friends of Pakistan, the US and China. Why should Pakistan not make an effort to
bring the two together? The argument was that Pakistan would contribute to
world peace and help itself as well as others.
The
Ambassador continued, saying that he remembered arguing that it was one of the
world's curses that the US and China had not talked for 20
years. It was an ill that had to be cured. International relations would be
artificial until a normal relationship was established. President Yahya had accepted the Ambassador's argument. He had
rejected the idea that Pakistan should not offend the
Russians or the Indians. He concluded that the Russians are "upset"
and may withdraw some bits of their aid to Pakistan.
As the
conversation concluded, Dr. Kissinger reiterated that he hoped that Foreign
Secretary Sultan Khan would review the conversation they had had in
Islamabad and would put his mind
to assembling a comprehensive Pakistani package on the refugee question.
H.S.