Minutes
of Washington Special Actions Group Meeting/1/
/1/ Source:
National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, NSC Institutional
Files (H-Files), Box H-115, WSAG Minutes, Originals, 1971. Top
Secret; Sensitive. The meeting was held in the White House Situation
Room. No drafting information appears on the minutes. A briefer record of this
meeting, prepared by James Noyes (OASD/ISA), is in the Washington National
Records Center, OSD Files, FRC 330 76 0197, Box 74, Pakistan 381 (Jan-Nov)
1971.
SUBJECT
PARTICIPANTS
Chairman-Henry A. Kissinger
State
John N. Irwin, II
Joseph Sisco
Christopher Van Hollen
David Schneider
Samuel DePalma
Defense
David Packard
Armistead Selden
James H. Noyes
JCS
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer
Capt. Howard N. Kay
CIA
Lt. Gen. Robert E. Cushman
John Waller
AID
Donald MacDonald
NSC Staff
Brig. Gen. Alexander M. Haig, Jr.
Harold H. Saunders
R. Adm. Robert O. Welander
Samuel Hoskinson
Jeanne W. Davis
SUMMARY OF
CONCLUSIONS
It was agreed
that:
1) State
would prepare a scenario for an approach to the UN including a draft
resolution;
2) State
would prepare telegrams for approaches to Mrs. Gandhi and to Yahya;
3) the WSAG would meet at 9:00 a.m. tomorrow, Tuesday, November
23.
Mr. Kissinger: (to General Cushman) Bob, can you give us a rundown?
(General
Cushman briefed from the attached text.)/2/
/2/ Based on
the briefing notes prepared for the meeting, General Cushman reported that
press reports from
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Mr. Irwin) What do you think?
Mr. Irwin:
We think the Pakistanis are probably overplaying the situation and the Indians
are underplaying it. We think increased participation by Indian regulars is
designed either to put enough pressure on Yahya to
get a more favorable political situation, or to try to provoke a Pakistani
attack on India and thereby put Pakistan further in the wrong in the eyes of
the world. We believe the first reason is more likely than the second. We think
we can do two things: (1) go back to Yahya on the
basis of his latest conversation with (Ambassador) Farland,/3/
which we found somewhat disappointing with regard to Mujib;
and (2) go to the UN.
/3/
See footnote 2, Document 192.
Mr.
Kissinger: Because Yahya has been attacked,
you would bring pressure on Yahya?
Mr. Irwin:
No, the move into the UN would put pressure on
Mr. Kissinger:
But if we do that, and Yahya doesn't agree to talk to
Mujib, we would be contributing to putting Yahya in the wrong. All this has to go to the President, of
course.
Mr. Irwin: I
was merely following up the discussion at the last meeting.
Mr. Kissinger:
What do you think, Dave (Packard)?
Mr. Packard:
It's damned hard to know what is going on. We've got to get the facts, first.
Mr. Irwin:
One way to avoid war, though, would be through some political accommodation.
Mr.
Kissinger: That's all right if we assume we want to do
Mr. Irwin: I
don't think that's doing
Mr.
Kissinger: But
Mr. Irwin: I'm
only saying that this would be one way to avoid war. Also, it is a step in a
process that is already started.
Mr.
Kissinger: Yes, we have been moving step by step along a line the President has
indicated he doesn't want to go. You can't use the last step, which the
President accepted only reluctantly, as the basis for the next step. Also, the
assumption on which we made our last move was wrong. We had assumed that Yahya had asked us for suggestions as to what he might do
politically, and this turned out to be wrong, if I read the cables correctly. (to Moorer) What do you think, Tom?
Adm. Moorer: We've all sent out flash messages to try to find
out what is happening. There's no question that the Indians have superiority in
all areas-157 aircraft to 18, for example, along the
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Irwin) What do you mean when you say we
could go to the UN?
Mr. Sisco: There would be two principal purposes in such a
move: (1) in the present circumstances, where we do not have an all-out war but
do have a significant increase in the number of incidents, we could try to get
some form of restraining order from the Security Council which hopefully would
arrest or slow down further deterioration of the situation.
Mr.
Kissinger: Could we see the text of such a resolution?
Mr. Sisco: We'll do one. The second purpose would be to involve
the UN in some form of good offices instrumentality. We obviously need facts.
But I think we know enough about the nature of the insurgency to believe that
it would be a good thing to begin to move our efforts somewhat more into the
public domain and to begin to place some of the responsibility on the shoulders
of the UN. We have withheld a firm recommendation on going to the UN on one
ground-as long as our private efforts offered any opportunity for success we
thought that approach was better than going public. The Indians have already
rejected any UN involvement in a statement by Mrs. Gandhi. If the reports of
the fighting are confirmed, I believe any idea of going back to Yahya should go by the board. Yahya
can't seriously consider accepting what he turned down 48 hours ago.
Mr.
Kissinger: And the President wouldn't approve.
Mr. Sisco: If we conclude that there is little else to be
gained by private efforts, the only alternative is to turn to the public
domain, and to begin through the UN. I see four options: (1) the most likely
development, if the military situation is confirmed, is that the Pakistanis
will move into the Security Council; (2) we could go to the Secretary General,
give our assessment of the danger of the situation, and suggest that he, on his
own initiative, convene the Security Council on the grounds that the situation
is a threat or potential threat to the peace; (3) we might get two or three of
the smaller powers on the Security Council to take the initiative, after they
had been thoroughly briefed; this would be a lot more complicated; or (4) the
U.S., in concert with the UK, might move to convene the Security Council.
Mr.
Kissinger: To what end? What would we want to accomplish by going to the UN?
Mr. Sisco: To avoid broadening the conflict. To
try to get some dialogue going through some UN instrumentality.
Mr.
Kissinger: Dialogue between whom?
Mr. Sisco: That's a question. The Indians would press for a
dialogue between East and
Mr.
Kissinger: And we will get caught between
Mr. DePalma: The Chinese won't let that kind of a resolution
come out.
Mr.
Kissinger: We don't want the Chinese to be the only country supporting
Mr. DePalma: There's a pretty good balance in the Security
Council.
Mr.
Kissinger: You'll have to tell us what we want to come out with. What sort of a
resolution do we want?
Mr. Sisco: We can put something on paper. There is no one who
can call the shots now in terms of what will come out of the Security Council.
Mr.
Kissinger: We can call the shots on what we will agree to.
Mr. Sisco: Our objective is to try to discourage war on the
sub-continent.
Mr.
Kissinger: That's a generalization. We can do that by giving
Mr. Irwin:
Anything that starts at the UN will run the danger of ending as a mish-mash.
Mr.
Kissinger: Not if we know what we want. Sam (DePalma),
you're the expert on this. What do you think?
Mr. DePalma: As its first target, the UN could be directed
toward stopping the Indian incursions. But as UN involvement continues, it will
undoubtedly focus on the political situation in
Mr.
Kissinger: That is what the President wants.
Mr. Sisco: The first half or the second half?
Mr.
Kissinger: He wants the first half, and he has agreed reluctantly to the second
half.
Mr. DePalma: That means talking among the five powers in the
Security Council. I agree that it is probably premature, but we can't escape
it.
Mr.
Kissinger: How much time do we have?
Mr. DePalma: We don't know enough about the situation on the
ground to know.
Mr.
Kissinger: I'm sure we will be in the Security Council before two or three
weeks are out.
Mr. Sisco: More likely two or three days. If there is any
confirmation of the military reports, the Pakistanis will move into the
Council. The Paks know they are in a weakened
position militarily. They have taken several initiatives toward the UN but have
been blocked each time by the negative Indian attitude. We will give you our
best judgment on what the Security Council can do and what is likely to come
out of Council consideration.
Mr.
Kissinger: And how we should play it.
Mr. Sisco: Yes.
Mr.
Kissinger: I'm sending Secretary Rogers everything we have from the Chinese on
the subject./4/
/4/ On
November 22 Kissinger sent to Rogers a copy of an undated note "just
received" from China which supported President Yahya's
proposal for a mutual troop withdrawal from border areas. The note claimed that
Mr. Sisco: I think the Chinese will be helpful in the Security
Council. There is a relatively even balance in the Council. There will probably
be things in the discussion and in any resolution which neither side will like.
Mr.
Kissinger: I'm not sure the President will take the position that we have to
accept anything we don't like.
Mr. Irwin:
That goes without saying. The Soviets won't accept anything the Indians
disapprove of.
Mr.
Kissinger: Could we have by the opening of business tomorrow: (1) a precise
scenario for going to the UN; (2) a draft resolution, including a discussion of
what we would be willing and what we would not be willing to have in a
resolution; (3) an idea of how consultations would be conducted at the UN and
with whom-who approaches whom? We will meet again tomorrow. Even if this
present thing blows over, within a week there will be another incident. If
Mr. Sisco: I think we can assume
Mr.
Kissinger: I'm not sure they want Mujib to settle the
situation in
Mr. Irwin:
They might well. But if we don't go to the UN, what would be our next move?
Mr.
Kissinger: We have a special problem at the UN-we don't want to get caught
between the
Mr. Sisco: This is, of course, inherent to some extent. The
Russians will give direct support to
Mr.
Kissinger: We don't want to push into the UN without knowing exactly how it is
to be played. We won't participate in any game in
Mr. Irwin: I
agree. But suppose we don't go to the Security Council? Where should we move
bilaterally, if, indeed, we should do anything?
Mr.
Kissinger: If the military developments are confirmed, you could make a good
case for a cable to Mrs. Gandhi, pointing out everything we have done and
making it clear that in this context Indian military activity would simply not
be understood.
Mr. Irwin:
Fine. We have been telling them this one way or another all along. Would we
also go back to Yahya in the same tone as before?
Mr. Packard:
What would we accomplish by going back to Yahya?
Mr. Irwin:
If he were willing to talk to Mujib, it might
possibly dilute the military pressure on
Mr. Sisco: If the Indian military activity is confirmed, I
don't think it would be wise to go back to Yahya to
press him on the Mujib talks.
Adm. Moorer: I agree.
Mr.
Kissinger: We should go to Mrs. Gandhi and the Soviets, if anyone, pointing out
all the things we have gotten from Yahya. Mrs. Gandhi
never even answered us on the offer of mutual withdrawal. Let's get the UN
material and both telegrams (for approaches to Mrs. Gandhi and to Yahya) over here tonight, and we'll meet at 8:30 tomorrow
morning.
(Time of
meeting later changed to 9:00 a.m.)
Source: Document 194, volume XI,