Memorandum
of Conversation/1/
Washington, August 9, 1971, 1:15-2:30 p.m.
/1/ Source:
National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 643, Country
Files, Middle East, India/Pakistan, July 1971. Secret.
The meeting took place 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
Ambassador Lakshmi Kant Jha
of India
Mr. Henry A. Kissinger
The lunch
took place at the Ambassador's request.
Mr.
Kissinger opened the conversation by saying that the Ambassador had picked a
rather difficult occasion-the signing of the Soviet-Indian friendship treaty
[treaty text at Tab A]./2/ In itself, the treaty was a matter of secondary
concern to us, though it was hard to reconcile with the non-alignment policy of
India. What did concern us, however, was the possibility that India might draw the
conclusion from it of an unlimited freedom of action vis-à-vis Pakistan. Mr. Kissinger said he
could not be more categorical in pointing out that a war between India and Pakistan would set back
Indian-American relations for half a decade. No matter what the Ambassador was
told around town, Mr. Kissinger wanted him to understand that an attack on East Pakistan would involve the high
probability of a cut-off of aid. Also, if India wound up as a result of
this treaty as a diplomatic appendage to the Soviet Union, there would be a much
lessened interest in India. As he had pointed out
to all the people he spoke with in India, the American interest
was a strong, self-reliant independent India.
/2/ All brackets in the source text. The attached text of the
treaty was released in Moscow on August 9 by TASS and
circulated in Washington by the Foreign
Broadcast Information Service.
The
Ambassador said that, of course, India was not going to be
anybody's diplomatic satellite. Mr. Kissinger called his attention to Article 9
of the treaty/3/ which, if read literally, meant that India would have to support
the Soviet
Union
diplomatically in a new crisis over Berlin. The Ambassador said
that, obviously, this was not the intention of the treaty. India was looking for a
counter-weight to Pakistan's repeated claims to
the effect that in a new war China would be on its side.
Mr. Kissinger said that anything that exacerbated conditions in the
subcontinent was against our policy. He hoped the Ambassador understood that we
were deadly serious about it.
/3/ Article
9 stipulated that each country would refrain from giving assistance to a third
country engaged in conflict with the other country. It further stipulated that
if either country was attacked or threatened with attack, the two countries
would consult "with a view to eliminate this threat."
Mr.
Kissinger also said that it seemed a pity for the United States and India, which have no
conflicting interests, to quarrel over a problem whose solution was preordained
by history. The Ambassador asked Mr. Kissinger what he meant. Mr. Kissinger
said that it seemed to him that over a historical period, East Bengal would be gaining
autonomy even without Indian intervention. We, in turn, had no interest in the
subcontinent except to see a strong and developing India and an independent Pakistan. Indeed, there was a
difference in our approach to India and in our approach to Pakistan. India was a potential world
power; Pakistan would always be a
regional power. For all these reasons, the problem would sort itself out if we
separated the issue of relief from that of refugees and the issue of refugees
from that of political accommodation. The Ambassador said that he had no difficulty
separating relief from refugees, but he saw no way of separating refugees from
political accommodation.
The
Ambassador then handed Mr. Kissinger a letter by Prime Minister Gandhi to the
President. The letter [Tab B]/4/ was couched in very conciliatory terms. He
said it would provide an excellent opportunity for the President to state his
basic policy towards India and to start a useful
dialogue. He also told Mr. Kissinger that Prime Minister Gandhi had accepted
the invitation to come to Washington and, indeed, on the
dates we had proposed. This would give us an opportunity to ease some of the
tensions.
/4/ Attached
is an August 7 letter that Kissinger sent to Nixon under a covering memorandum
on August 19; see the attachment to Document 128.
Mr.
Kissinger told the Ambassador that we welcomed Prime Minister Gandhi but that
it was essential that the India/Pakistan problem not be solved by war. We would
be generous in refugee relief, but India should not believe that
it could use this crisis to overthrow the settlement of 1946.
The meeting ended with an exchange of pleasantries.
Source:
Document 117, volume XI, South Asia crisis 1971, Department of
State.