Editorial
Note
President
Nixon and his Assistant for National Security Affairs Henry Kissinger met at 12:44
p.m.
on December 9, 1971, in the Oval Office of
the White House for another discussion of the crisis in South Asia. Kissinger began by
repeating his warning of the dangers of allowing India to dismember Pakistan. Kissinger felt that
the impact of the dismemberment of a United States ally would "be
severe in Iran, in Indonesia, and in the Middle East." He concluded
"there is no good deal possible any more at this stage. And if the
Russians want to press it to a brutal conclusion, we're going to lose." He
saw possibilities, however, in the "conciliatory" letter from
Brezhnev (Document 253). The Soviets wanted a Middle East settlement, a European
security conference, trade with the United States, and a summit meeting.
Kissinger added that they were also concerned about pushing the United States and China closer together.
"So we are not without assets."
Kissinger
felt that the United States was in a position to
"warn the Russians and the Indians that if this continues we could leak
out or in some way make clear that Kennedy made a commitment to Pakistan against aggression from
India."
"Secondly," he added, "we should move that helicopter ship . . .
and some escort into the Bay of Bengal" ostensibly to
evacuate U.S. citizens. He was not,
at this point, recommending introduction of the carrier. "From the Chinese
angle, I would like to move the carrier. From the public opinion angle, what
the press and television would do to us if an American carrier showed up
there." Nixon asked: "Can't the carrier be there for the purpose of
evacuation?" Kissinger responded: "But against whom are we going to
use the planes? Are we going to shoot our way in?" Nixon asked what good
it would do to move a helicopter ship into the area. Kissinger said it would be
"a token that something else will come afterward." He also
recommended letting "the Jordanians move some of their planes. And I'd get
the Indian Ambassador in and demand assurances that India doesn't want to annex
territory."
Kissinger
again highlighted what he saw as the differing approaches to the crisis adopted
by the Department of State and the White House. The Department, he said,
"would propose a cease-fire in the west in return for in effect our
recognition of Bangladesh." Kissinger argued
that such an approach would constitute "a total collapse" and
"it would hurt us with the Chinese." Nixon, however, felt it was
necessary to take account of the "realities" of the situation.
"The partition of Pakistan is a fact" he
said. "You see those people welcoming the Indian troops when they come
in." "Why then," he asked, "are we going through all of
this agony?" Kissinger replied: "We are going through this agony to
prevent the West
Pakistan
army from being destroyed. And secondly, to retain our Chinese arm. And
thirdly, to prevent a complete collapse of the world's psychological balance of
power, which will be produced if a combination of the Soviet Union and the Soviet armed
client state can tackle a not insignificant country without anybody doing
anything."
Kissinger
felt that if the United States would "put enough
chips into the pot" it could persuade the Soviets "for their own
reasons, for the other considerations, to call a halt to it." "What
are we going to ask the Russians to do," Nixon asked. "Cease-fire,
negotiation, and subsequent withdrawal," Kissinger responded.
"But," he added, "we'd have to clear it with Yahya
first." "Cease-fire and negotiation on what basis," Nixon wanted
to know. "Between the Awami League and
Islamabad," Kissinger said,
"on the basis of the December 1970 election," and "within the
framework of a united Pakistan." Withdrawal, he
anticipated, would occur after the negotiations.
The time
to effect such an agreement was clearly limited. Kissinger said that Pakistan's army would run out of
ammunition and oil within 2 weeks. In response to Nixon's question about what
the United States could do to influence
the outcome, Kissinger replied: "I would keep open the possibility that
we'll pour arms into Pakistan." If the Soviet Union could ship arms to India, Kissinger did not see
why the United States could not supply arms
to Pakistan. "I don't
understand the theory of non-involvement," he said. "I don't see
where we will be as a country. I have to tell you honestly I consider this our Rhineland." He warned:
"If the Russians come out of it totally cocky, we may have a Middle East war in the
spring."
Nixon was
concerned about the implications of taking a hard line. "We have to know
what we are jeopardizing," he said. Kissinger responded: "You are
jeopardizing your relationship with the Soviets, but that is also your card,
your willingness to jeopardize it." Not to play that card, Kissinger
suggested, would be to concede the Soviet Union a dangerous victory.
Nixon observed that opponents of his policy toward South Asia were also concerned
about jeopardizing United States relations with India. Kissinger said:
"You could argue that it will help us in the long-term with the
Indians." Nixon replied: "I don't give a damn about the
Indians."
Reverting
to the question of introducing U.S. Naval forces into the area, Kissinger said
he had discussed the matter with Connally and Connally had favored using a helicopter ship rather than a
carrier. Connally felt that using a carrier would be
interpreted by the American public as a threat to intervene militarily. It was
a tough decision, Kissinger said, "I go back and forth on it myself."
He noted that there were some 200 U.S. citizens in East Pakistan. Nixon said:
"Goddamn it, I've got a responsibility to protect American lives. I'm
going to do it." The tape is difficult to understand at this point, but
Nixon apparently said he was prepared to use the carrier force to protect U.S. citizens in East Pakistan. "Nobody will
believe it," Kissinger warned. "The Indians will scream we're
threatening them." "Why are we doing it anyway," Nixon asked.
"Aren't we going in for the purpose of strength?"
Kissinger
shifted ground in the face of Nixon's apparent determination to use the
carrier: "I'd move the carrier so that we can tell the Chinese tomorrow to
move their forces to the frontier." He advised that a decision to move the
carrier group into the Bay of Bengal meant that "we'd have
to do a lot of things, and we'd have to do them toughly." "I
understand," Nixon agreed. Kissinger continued: "We'd have to get the
Indian Ambassador called in and demand assurances against annexation. We'd have
to leak at that moment that secret understanding to protect the Indians
[Pakistanis] against aggression." Nixon responded: "I
understand," and he authorized Kissinger "to get the whole thing
together."
Nixon
asked how the transfer of planes from Jordan to Pakistan could be facilitated.
Kissinger said: "The way we would do that is . . . to tell the King to
move his planes and inform us that he has done it . . . and then we would tell
State to shut up. We would have to tell him it is illegal, but if he does it
we'll keep things under control." "All right,"
Nixon said, "that's the way we play that."
Some
discussion followed concerning a meeting scheduled later that day with senior
administration officials involved in managing the crisis. Kissinger recommended
that Nixon express himself firmly with them regarding the policy line he wanted
them to follow. Nixon wondered if he should tell them about his decision to use
the carrier. Kissinger said: "If you've decided to do this game plan, I
think it is more important to see the Russian today because his cable would go
back." (See Document 257.) He added that the
others could be informed later.
Turning to
the political impact of using the carrier, Kissinger noted that it would take 6
days to move the carrier from Southeast Asia to the Bay of Bengal by which time Congress
would be out of session. He said he would talk to Admiral Moorer
"to see whether we can keep the carrier back of the Bay of Bengal." Nixon asked:
"Then can we move the other helicopter thing in?" Kissinger said yes.
Nixon
reviewed the other decisions reached during the discussion: to encourage the
transfer of Jordanian planes to Pakistan, to notify the Chinese
of about what they had decided to do, to leak the Kennedy commitment to protect
Pakistan, and to ask India for assurances that
there would be no annexations as a result of the crisis. (National Archives,
Nixon Presidential Materials, White House Tapes, Recording of conversation
between Nixon and Kissinger, December 9, 1971, 12:44-1:27 p.m., Oval Office,
Conversation No. 633-11) The editors transcribed the portions of the tape
recording printed here specifically for this volume. A transcript of this
conversation is published in Foreign Relations, 1969-1976, volume E-7,
Documents on South
Asia,
1969-1972, Document 168.
Source: Document 256, volume XI, South
Asia crisis 1971, Department of State.