Memorandum of
Conversation/1/
/1/ Source: National Archives,
Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 492, President's Trip Files, Dobrynin/Kissinger, 1971, Vol. 8. Top
Secret; Sensitive; Exclusively Eyes Only. Drafted by
Kissinger. The meeting was held in the Map Room at the White House. In
his memoirs Kissinger notes that Ambassador Dobrynin
was in Moscow during much of the culminating phase of the crisis, and he
had to deal with Vorontsov, who had authority to
receive and transmit messages, but not to negotiate. (White House Years, p.
900)
Washington, December 5, 1971, 4 p.m.
PARTICIPANTS
Minister Counselor Yuli M. Vorontsov
Dr. Henry A. Kissinger
The meeting took place at my
request. I told Vorontsov that the President had
instructed me to convey the following message to General Secretary Brezhnev. A
letter for the General Secretary/2/ would be delivered the next day, but in
view of the urgency of the situation, the President wanted it transmitted to
Moscow immediately.
/2/ Document
236.
-The President did not understand how the Soviet Union
could believe that it was possible to work on the broad amelioration of our
relationships while at the same time encouraging the Indian military aggression
against Pakistan. We did not take a position on the merits of the
developments inside Pakistan that triggered this sequence of events. We have, indeed,
always taken the position that we would encourage a political solution. But
here a member country of the United Nations was being dismembered by the
military forces of another member country which had close relationships with
the Soviet Union. We did not understand how the Soviet Union
could take the position that this was an internal affair of another country. We
did not see how the Soviet Union could take the position that it wanted to
negotiate with us security guarantees for the Middle East and to speak about
Security Council presence in Sharm El-Sheikh, while
at the same time underlining the impotence of the Security Council in New York.
We did not understand how the Soviet
Union could maintain that neither
power should seek special advantages and that we should take a general view of
the situation, while at the same time promoting a war in the Subcontinent. We
therefore wanted to appeal once more to the Soviet Union
to join with us in putting an end to the fighting in the Subcontinent. The TASS
statement which claimed that Soviet security interests were involved was
unacceptable to us and could only lead to an escalation of the crisis. We
wanted to appeal to the Soviet
Union to go with us on the road
we had charted of submerging special interests in the general concern of
maintaining the peace of the world.
-The President wanted Mr.
Brezhnev to know that he was more than eager to go back to the situation as it
was two weeks ago and to work for the broad improvement of our relationship.
But he also had to point out to Mr. Brezhnev that we were once more at one of
the watersheds in our relationship, and he did not want to have any wrong turn
taken for lack of clarity.
Vorontsov said he hoped we were still at this good point in our
relationship. I said I would be remiss if I did not point out that we were
developing severe doubts, both because of the Subcontinent and because of
developments in Vietnam.
Vorontsov asked whether he could convey something about a political
solution, since this was featured so prominently in Kosygin's letter./3/ I
replied that our attitude towards a political solution was as follows: If there
were a ceasefire and a withdrawal, the United States would be prepared to work immediately with the Soviet Union
on ideas of a political solution. We recognized that substantial political
autonomy for East Pakistan was the probable outcome of a political evolution, and we
were willing to work in that direction. I wanted him to know that I had offered
the Indian Ambassador precisely that-to work out with him a concrete program
over a limited period of time. I also wanted to point out to him that President
Yahya was eager to turn the government over to
civilians, which would in turn open entirely new prospects. Therefore the major
thing was to get the military action stopped and stopped quickly.
/3/ See
footnote 7, Document 218.
Vorontsov asked me what was happening on my invitation to
Moscow. The Soviet leaders, he said, were really looking forward
to seeing me at the end of January. I said, "There are major bureaucratic
obstacles, but now there are major substantive ones as well." Vorontsov said, "In a week the whole matter will be
over." I said, "In a week it will not be over, depending on how it
ended." He said he would transmit this immediately to Moscow./4/
/4/ Shortly
after this conversation, Kissinger called Vorontsov
to reiterate that President Nixon viewed the crisis in South Asia as
a watershed in relations between the United States and the Soviet
Union. Kissinger said that he had
just reported to the President on his conversation with Vorontsov
and the President wanted it made clear to Moscow that "in a week or so it may be ended but it won't be
over as far as we are concerned if it continues to take the present
trend." (Transcript of a telephone conversation, December 5, 4:55 p.m.;
Library of Congress, Manuscript Division, Kissinger Papers, Box 370, Telephone
Conversations, Chronological File) The transcript is published in Foreign
Relations, 1969-1976, volume E-7, Documents on South Asia,
1969-1972, Document 160.
Source: Document 231, volume XI, South
Asia crisis 1971, Department of State.