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; Codeword. No drafting information appears on the minutes. The
meeting was held in the White House Situation Room. A briefer record of the
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
Samuel DePalma
Bruce Laingen
David Schneider
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 Staff
Maurice Williams
Donald MacDonald
NSC Staff
Harold H. Saunders
Samuel Hoskinson
Adm. Robert O. Welander
Col. Richard T. Kennedy
Jeanne W. Davis
SUMMARY OF
CONCLUSIONS
It was
agreed that:
1. the question of the extent of the cutoff of military
assistance to
2. we will
not take the initiative or encourage others to take the initiative to call a
Security Council meeting; however, if the issue moves into the SC, we will take
a position along the lines of the draft resolution prepared by State and the
draft speech prepared for Ambassador Bush, once it has been reviewed and amended,
as required.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Gen. Cushman) Bob, can you tell us where we stand?
(General
Cushman briefed from the text attached at Tab A.)/2/
/2/
According to the attached outline for his briefing, General Cushman reported
that there had been no dramatic change in the military situation in
Mr.
Kissinger: Do you think the Indian High Commissioner in
/3/ In telegram 11740 from
Gen.
Cushman: That's a very puzzling situation. In a later conversation at a party
with Ambassador Farland, he didn't seem to know what
messages he had sent to
Mr.
Kissinger: Did I understand that he didn't know the content of the messages he
was sending to
Gen.
Cushman: The messages he had sent to
Mr.
Kissinger: Hasn't he just come from
Gen.
Cushman: Yes.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Moorer) What
are your views on the military side?
Adm. Moorer: Our intelligence is about the same. We did have a
report of a remark by Yahya at a party to the effect
that "You won't see me for a day or two-I am going to the border to lead
war operations." The logistic situation is such that the
Mr. Irwin:
What is your estimate of the time limit for the Pakistani supplies?
Adm. Moorer: Less than 30 days.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Sisco) Will
you give us a rundown on the diplomatic moves.
Mr. Sisco: The principal move, of course, was the President's
messages to Mrs. Gandhi, Kosygin and Yahya./4/ The focus of the message to Mrs.
Gandhi was to try to get a positive response to the concrete proposals for
disengagement-to try to get India and Pakistan to name representatives who
could work out some form of withdrawal from the border to get them out of this
eyeball-to-eyeball situation in West Pakistan. In
/4/
See Documents 205, 207, and 206, respectively.
/5/
Ambassador Keating called on Prime Minister Gandhi on November 29 to deliver
President Nixon's letter. Gandhi's response to the letter is summarized in
Document 211.
Mr.
Kissinger: Do you think this campaign was planned before the Gandhi trip?
Mr. Sisco: Militarily, yes. There had already been some
deployments. But the most active military moves were made post-Washington.
Adm. Moorer: They obviously had a contingency plan.
Mr.
Kissinger: I'm asking this for my own education. We have been debating all
summer whether or not the Indians were being restrained. If they had been
planning this all along, would this have been the earliest they could attack,
given the time needed for deployment and the advent of the rainy season? If the
decision had been made last June, what would have been the earliest time they
could have attacked?
Adm. Moorer: Four or five weeks.
Mr.
Williams: It was timed to the requirement for the training of the Bengalis.
Mr.
Kissinger: I'm not trying to put words in people's mouths. But one could argue
that everything the Indians have done since June has been designed to prepare
for this, and that the trips by Foreign Secretary Singh and Mrs. Gandhi were
smoke-screens. Or, one could say that the Indians have been making a serious
effort to solve the problem and that they finally
moved out of desperation.
Adm. Moorer: I think the readiness of the Bengalis dictated the
timing. The Indians could have moved earlier with their regular forces. What is
happening is that guerrillas are backing up against the Indians, who then are
giving them artillery and other support. The Indian objective is to change the
relative strength of the Pakistanis and the guerrillas.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Williams) What do you think?
Mr.
Williams: I think the Indians might have moved two or three weeks earlier,
allowing for time to train the Bengalis and for the monsoon. They did have a
margin of about three weeks before they invaded, which coincided with Mrs.
Gandhi's trip. I think they waited for her to return.
Adm. Moorer: They have obviously been training and supplying the
guerrillas.
Mr.
Williams: I think they had hoped the guerrillas would be more effective in
their internal operations than they were. They found, however, that the
guerrillas were only effective when stiffened by the Indians, which was their
second strategy. They would have preferred that it be done internally, strictly
by the Mukti Bahini.
Mr.
Kissinger: Does this put an end to relief operations? Will there be famine?
Mr.
Williams: Relief operations are at an end. The UN personnel have been withdrawn
and the situation is deteriorating. The crops are in and a
good deal of the supplies are there, but the imports are not moving, the
things aren't being distributed, and there will be pockets of famine.
Mr. Irwin:
There will also be some hoarding.
Adm. Moorer: And the guerrillas are destroying the boats.
Mr.
Williams: Yes. They have dismantled in a few days what it took weeks to put
together. There are twenty-two people left in
Mr.
Kissinger: Dave (Packard), what do you think?
Mr. Packard:
I don't have much to add.
Mr.
Kissinger: In her talks with the President, Mrs. Gandhi wrote off
Mr. Packard:
Yahya has indicated his flexibility. We have
transmitted his willingness to withdraw to the Indians with no response. It
looks as though
Mr.
Kissinger:
We have
three problems we need to discuss: (1) military assistance; (2) an approach to
the UN; and (3) a cutoff in economic assistance. All of you have seen the State
and Defense papers/6/ on a military aid cutoff, haven't you? The President and
the Secretary decided last Wednesday/7/ that the military aid suspension would
be announced on Friday./8/ State suggested we await a reply to our overtures to
Yahya, Kosygin and Mrs. Gandhi before the
announcement, and that was accepted.
/6/ See
footnotes 5 and 6, Document 198.
/7/
November 24.
/8/ November
26.
We now have
the replies, and the President wants to go ahead. I have talked to the
Secretary and he agrees. So, unless someone makes a strong reclama,
the question of the suspension of military assistance is pretty well decided.
There remains the question of what should be cut off. There are two ways to do
it: (1) to suspend the issuance of new licenses, or (2)
to suspend new licenses and revoke all existing licenses.
Mr. Irwin:
You have the questions of the timing of going to the cutoff and the amount of
the cutoff.
Mr.
Kissinger: What is the difference between the two choices in terms of amounts?
Mr. Irwin:
I'm not sure of the totals.
Mr.
Schneider: Licensed items, for which there are contracts, total $5.3 million.
Additional licensed terms without contracts total $8.2 million.
Adm. Moorer: Are there any contracts without licenses?
Mr.
Schneider: Yes, over $16 million.
Mr. Irwin:
Where are the spare parts for the C-119 aircraft?
Mr.
Schneider: There are contracts for $4 million for C-119 spares, but no licenses
have been granted.
Mr. Irwin:
They are without licenses but are under contract. I understand they are pretty
far advanced on the manufacturing-the manufacturers just haven't asked for the
licenses.
Mr. Noyes:
That's correct.
Mr. Packard:
This creates problems. We have firm contracts on some of these things. If they
are cut off, we'll have some liability.
Adm. Moorer: Of course other people are using C-119s. We might
buy them and slip them into some other program.
Mr. Irwin:
We have two categories: items licensed for export and those licensed and under
contract. Those licensed and under contract total $5 million and those
licensed, $8 million. We also have unlicensed contracts for C-119 spares-$4
million; radar communications equipment from the FMS $17 million line of credit-$12.8
million; and FMS cash sales-$70,000. The total of it all is about $30 million.
Dr.
Kissinger: What is the definition of "unlicensed"? Do you mean a
contract which requires a license but the license has not been requested, or
are there contracts which don't require licenses?
Mr. Irwin:
We mean a contract which requires a license but the license has not yet been
obtained.
Dr.
Kissinger: If we cut off future licenses, we will hit the full amount.
Mr. Irwin:
If you cut off the $4 million for C-119 spares you will ground the C-119s. I
understand
Dr.
Kissinger: If we grant no new licenses, with a possible exception for the C-119
spares, we will hit $16 million. If we dry up the pipeline, we will hit $30
million.
Mr. Irwin:
Sometimes manufacturers get a license before a sale, and then use the license
to help make the sale. Sometimes they get an order and sign a contract before
they have the license. This accounts for some of the unknowns.
Dr.
Kissinger: So we have contracts without licenses and licenses without
contracts. The choice we have to put to the President is whether to stop only
items which have not been licensed or to stop both licensed and unlicensed
items. The argument for stopping only unlicensed items is to hold something in
reserve for future pressure. The argument for cutting off both licensed and
unlicensed items is that we would have to take the heat for a first step and
would have twice as much heat if we did it in two steps. We don't reduce the
heat by reducing the amount of the cut-off.
Mr. Sisco: Also, from a domestic point of view, the question
will be why we left the pipeline untouched. On the other hand, if we act on
only new licenses it could be equated with what we did with regard to
Mr. Packard:
There are some special problems here. For example, there is the $17 million
line of credit to buy communications equipment to make our radar in
Mr. Irwin:
Is this our radar or theirs? I thought it was their radar screen, to which we
tie in.
Mr. Packard:
It's theirs but we get a potential take from it.
Mr. Irwin:
Our take is just warning, though, isn't it?
Mr. Waller:
I'm not aware of any take as far as CIA is concerned.
Adm. Moorer: We get an indication of the level of activity of
Chinese forces.
Mr. Noyes:
The Air Force gets a take on Chinese Air Force movements.
Mr. Irwin:
But it's primarily to warn
Mr. Packard:
I think we should get a decision either to stop everything not licensed or to
stop everything in the pipeline, and then we can work out the details.
Dr.
Kissinger: That's right. We can't ask the President to decide each little
detail.
Mr. Sisco: Yes, but we need to be as clear as possible as to
exactly what the action applies to and what are the implications. I learned my
lesson from the
Mr. Packard:
If we stop everything in the pipeline, there are significant items-the C-119s
spares, the radar equipment, the road work in
Dr.
Kissinger: But all the key items are in the new category,
aren't they?
Mr. Irwin:
The more important ones.
Mr. Van Hollen: The $4 million for C-119 spares is in the new
license category.
Dr.
Kissinger: What is in the licensed category?
Mr. Sisco: About $5 million in aircraft spares, radar jamming
equipment, cartridge cases and cartridge case manufacturing equipment.
Mr. Packard:
$22 million worth of licenses were issued in the last year. That's an awful lot
of stuff.
Dr.
Kissinger: I don't think the President can get into all this. Would it be proper to use the State Department paper/9/ as the
basis for putting the question to the President. [1 line of source text
not declassified]
/9/
Summarized in footnote 6, Document 198.
Gen.
Cushman: [less than 1 line of source text not declassified]
Dr.
Kissinger: We'll put this in a memo to the President and get a decision
tomorrow. My understanding from Secretary Rogers is that he has agreed to the
cut-off but would like to wait a day or two. The present idea is that State
would make the announcement on Wednesday./10/
/10/
December 1.
Mr. Irwin:
The Secretary thinks we should cut off military assistance-he thinks we should
cut off both new licenses and the pipeline. But he wants to wait until we see
Kosygin's reply and also what, if anything, happens at
the UN. Yahya has asked his UN Ambassador to ask for
UN observers on his side of the border and this might lead to a Security
Council meeting.
Dr.
Kissinger: Does he think we should not cut off military assistance if the
matter goes to the Security Council?
Mr. Irwin:
Not necessarily. He thinks we should go ahead, subject to a last look.
Dr.
Kissinger: We'll take another look at the situation tomorrow and will plan to
go ahead on Wednesday. We'll give the President the choice between the two
options for a cut-off, [less than 1 line of source text not declassified]. I'm
sure the President and the Secretary will be talking on the phone about it over
the next day or two.
Mr. Sisco: We have given you a draft press statement/11/ on the
limited option of new licenses. We will prepare another draft press statement
on an across-the-board cut.
/11/ Sent to
the White House as an attachment to the memorandum summarized in footnote 6,
Document 198.
Dr.
Kissinger: I thought the papers/12/ we got over the weekend were damned good.
/12/ Not further identified. Papers received by the White House
over the weekend of November 27-28 apparently included the memorandum
referenced in footnote 14 below, as well as a November 27 memorandum from Eliot
to Kissinger that refined the licensed and unlicensed military supplies
scheduled to go to India. (National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC
Files, NSC Institutional Files (H-Files), Box H-083, Senior WSAG Meeting,
Adm. Moorer: Timing is important.
Dr.
Kissinger: We're planning for a release Wednesday/13/
/13/
December 1.
/14/
Reference is to a November 27 memorandum from Eliot to Kissinger that dealt
with the possibility of recourse to the UN Security Council on the
confrontation between
Mr. Sisco: The paper is self-explanatory. We understand that
the Paks by the end of the day will have told U Thant that they are willing to accept UN observers on their
side of the border. They have done this on their own. I don't know to what
degree they have thought this through. They probably think they can achieve
their purpose by informal means without a Security Council meeting. I
personally think the Secretary General will say he wants to refer the matter to
the Security Council, but this will be clearer tomorrow. Recourse to the
Security Council has one great advantage for the Paks
and one great risk. The advantage is that the Security Council will focus on
some provisions to deter broader military action. However, Indian strategy will
be to block those elements which undermine their policy of military pressure
and try to move the SC to express itself on political accommodation. Our draft
resolution has four elements: 1) withdrawal of foreign forces; 2) a ceasefire;
3) a call on both sides to do everything possible to get the refugees back; and
4) a call on the parties to avail themselves of the good offices of the
Secretary General. We think we can probably get the required nine votes for
such a resolution. However, all the SC members, including our friends, will be
under great pressure to support a concrete provision in the direction of
political accommodation. That would be part of the quid pro quo. I have one
modification of our paper. We say on page 3 (reading): "In our judgment,
there will be strong efforts by the Soviets to delete the
withdrawal paragraph, soften the ceasefire paragraph, and to call upon
On
reflection, I think that with a maximum
Mr.
Kissinger: Who will sit in for
Mr. Sisco: Malik for
Mr.
Kissinger: So it's round two. The Chinese have a real ability to get under the
Russians' skin.
Mr. Sisco: Yes and in acrimonious terms. Malik
has a shorter fuse than most Russians.
(Mr.
Kissinger was called from the room.)
Mr. Sisco: We have a very preliminary draft of a speech that Ambassador
Bush might make which we will circulate for comment. (Handed copies of the
speech attached at Tab B/15/ around the table.)
/15/
Attached but not printed.
(Mr.
Kissinger returned.)
Mr.
Kissinger: On the UN, we will look over the speech. We will not take the
initiative for a meeting or encourage anyone else to take the initiative. If it
goes into the Security Council, we will move in the direction of the draft
resolution and of the draft speech, as commented on.
Mr. Sisco: If the Pakistani Ambassador raises the issue of
going into the SC with me when I see him this afternoon, I will say that this
is a decision for them to make. I will take no initiative, but if he asks me a
question I will try to answer.
Mr. Irwin:
The Paks may have already started the process by
their request for observers.
Mr.
Kissinger: We will meet within the next forty-eight hours to tie up the
military assistance question. Then we should have a session on economic
assistance.
Mr. Irwin:
One argument for delaying a decision on the timing of the cutoff until we know
about the UN is that a bilateral
Mr.
Kissinger: If the issue goes to the Security Council before Wednesday
Source: Document 209, volume XI,