Memorandum
From the President's Assistant for National Security
Affairs (Kissinger) to President Nixon/1/
/1/ Source:
National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 570, Indo-Pak
War, South Asia, 1/1/71-9/30/71. Secret; Nodis.
Sent for information. A stamp on the memorandum
indicates the President saw it. On July 30 Saunders and Kennedy sent this
memorandum, which they drafted, to Kissinger for his consideration and
submission to the President. (Ibid.)
SUBJECT
Military and Economic Assistance to
With
mounting press and Congressional pressure on our assistance to
Economic
Assistance
There are
three elements:
-The
-Meanwhile,
a pipeline of $82 million is still flowing from earlier commitments. Of that
$82 million, about half is already tied up in letters of credit for purchases
in process; $15 million is committed to longstanding projects in
-Food and
relief assistance is moving at the rate it can be absorbed, and a major
internal
The time
frame for further decisions is set by the fact that
Military
Supply
Because
military supply procedures are intricate, it helps in understanding where the
present situation stands to understand the three avenues through which Pakistan
has procured military equipment here:
1. Under our
Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program,
2. Also
under the FMS program, where equipment is not immediately available in US
stocks, Defense has put a private
3. Apart
from the FMS program, the Pakistani procurement mission here can make its own
contracts directly with the supplier. Defense is not involved at all.
In addition, it is important to understand the two controls that have been used
to limit shipments since the outbreak of fighting in
1. All
Munitions List equipment-regardless of the channel through which it is
procured-requires an export license issued by the State Department.
2. In
addition, equipment in the first category above-equipment supplied under the FMS
program from US depots-is subject to administrative controls within the Defense
Department.
When fighting broke out in East Pakistan on March 25, the first tentative
decision was to establish an administrative hold on equipment still within US
Government jurisdiction but not to touch equipment which had already been
turned over to a Pakistani shipping agent or was being handled directly between
a US supplier and the Pakistani government.
This meant:
(a) no new export licenses would be issued, but valid ones (good for one year)
would be honored until they expired; (b) equipment in US depots would be
administratively held. This left the following equipment moving: any equipment
for which a license had been issued and which was under Pakistani jurisdiction,
either because a
The
rationale behind this distinction was that administrative actions over
equipment within US Government jurisdiction could be explained for a time as
bureaucratic delays, but establishing control over equipment within Pakistani
jurisdiction would have had conveyed all the political signals of a full
embargo. Those were signals we wanted to avoid.
It has been
difficult to know exactly what the effect of these partial controls would be on
the actual flow of equipment because the accounting is so diversified-through
the Defense system and out into the commercial market.
What is
clear now is that our policy has become more restrictive simply with the
passage of time because licenses which were good for one year continue to
expire. When Secretary Rogers wrote you on our military supply options in
June,/2/ it was estimated that equipment up to a value of $34 million might
legally be shipped under valid licenses but-because some of that was under
administrative hold-the value of actual shipments possible would have been
less. By mid-July, further refinement of the list which took into account the
expiration of licenses set the outside figure at $15 million under valid
license, although again the amount free of administrative controls would have
been less. The passage of another month is expected to reduce the amount that
/2/
See Document 78.
On the other
side of the ledger, we do not know how much equipment Pakistani shippers may
already have picked up before licenses expired and have in transit. Some
shipments could continue to show up from time to time, but the amount is not
thought to be large.
The results
of this policy are twofold:
1. The
Pakistanis have played along with the administrative game and have not made an
issue of our restrictions. It was clear when I was in
2. The
Indians and the Congress have objected sharply to our not imposing a total
embargo. The fact that very little equipment is actually moving now under
present policy does not satisfy them. There are widely supported moves in the
House and Senate to cut off both military and economic (except relief)
assistance to
/3/ Nixon
and Kissinger discussed this memorandum in a telephone conversation at
As a product
of two SRG discussions I would expect to have for you very soon a game plan
covering our policy on these two issues as well as on the other elements of the
South Asian problem./4/
/4/ Nixon
highlighted this paragraph and wrote "OK" in the margin.
Source:
Document 113, volume XI,