Memorandum
from the President's Assistant for National Security Affairs (Kissinger) to
President Nixon/1/
/1/
Source: National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 642,
Country Files, Middle East, South Asia, Nov-Dec 1971. Top Secret; Codeword.
Sent for information. Printed from an uninitialed copy.
Washington, December
12, 1971.
SUBJECT
Situation Report on South Asia
When
Ambassador Farland asked for President Yahya's views on a ceasefire at midnight (EST) last night, Yahya
said that he was prepared to do "anything reasonable under the
circumstances."/2/ In response to Farland's question why Pakistan's first
ceasefire proposal of Friday had been replaced later in the day by a less
comprehensive one omitting political settlement, Yahya looked hard at Foreign
Secretary Sultan Khan and said there had been a breakdown of communication and
apparently some "general misunderstandings." He added that the
Foreign Secretary was rectifying the situation. According to a press report
from Rawalpindi, a Pakistani government
spokesman said that major diplomatic moves outside the UN and in keeping with
the protection of Pakistan's interests are
underway to end the conflict.
/2/
Telegram 12414 from Islamabad, December 12. (Ibid.,
RG 59, Central Files 1970-73, POL 27 INDIA-PAK) Telegram 12414 is published in
Foreign Relations, 1969-1976, volume E-7, Documents on South Asia, 1969-1972, Document
176.
Soviet
First Deputy Foreign Minister Kuznetsov flew into Delhi today at the head of a
five-man delegation. Former Indian Ambassador to Moscow, D.P. Dhar, who
negotiated the Indo-Soviet treaty, has flown to Moscow. Both moves are billed
as made under the consultation provision of the treaty. [2 lines of source text
not declassified]
From the
United Nations, Ambassador Bush reports/3/ that there are two main routes
events there could take:
/3/
Telegram 4960 from USUN, December 12. (National Archives, RG 59, Central Files
1970-73, POL 27 INDIA-PAK)
-One would
be to do as Bhutto is presently inclined to do, i.e. return to the Security
Council to seek a resolution identical to the one adopted in the General
Assembly. Bush feels that some members of the eleven who voted with us in the
Security Council previously, including China, would not have much
enthusiasm for simply provoking another Soviet veto. Bhutto regards one
advantage of this course as further discrediting the USSR in the eyes of the 104
nations who voted for the Assembly resolution. Bush points out that the Paks
could start down this track even if they are prepared (perhaps not overtly), to
have a resolution amended to include the last paragraph of the Soviet
resolution/4/ providing for following through the results of the December 1970
election in East Pakistan.
/4/ See
footnote 10, Document 263.
-The
alternative course would be to try through an intermediary to put together the
essentials of a resolution which both parties would be able to live with prior
to calling for a Security Council meeting. Bush reports/5/ that Bhutto's
expressed dislike for Pakistan's first Friday proposal
including political settlement suggests that Bhutto is more interested in
mounting a public campaign against India and the Soviets.
Yahya's comments to Farland, however, suggest that Bhutto may receive
instructions to accept a ceasefire resolution with at least implication of a
negotiated withdrawal and political settlement to follow.
/5/
Telegram 12414 cited in footnote 2 above.
There is,
of course, a third approach. This would be (1) to launch Security Council
debate calling for endorsement of the General Assembly resolution, as described
in the first approach above but (2) to be prepared by pre-arrangement with key
parties to divert the debate part-way through to a compromise resolution.
Bush also
reports/6/ Foreign Minister Singh's view that the UN cannot take useful action
at this time. If the UN does meet, he will insist that Bangla Desh
representatives be present. He maintained that India's recognition of Bangla
Desh had two purposes: (1) to make clear that India had no territorial
ambitions in East
Pakistan
and (2) to establish the moderate, elected democratic group in an effort to
control the Mukti Bahini.
/6/ See
Document 289.
Singh and
[said] India has no territorial aims in West Pakistan but cautioned that this
commitment is not open-ended if Pakistan continues the war and tries to make
gains in the west to compensate for losses in the east. Under questioning,
Singh would not make the same unequivocal commitment on Azad Kashmir. Foreign
Secretary Kaul said, "we have no major ambitions." Even in peacetime,
Kaul said, India and Pakistan had talked about minor
rectifications in the border. Both Singh and Kaul repeatedly said that they do
not wish to prolong the war.
The
evacuation of 300 foreign nationals from Dacca was completed this
morning, including more than 100 Americans. Four British C-130's with UN
markings completed the job.
Yesterday
there was a clandestine report from Islamabad/7/ that Yahya had told his prime
minister designate that the Chinese ambassador in Islamabad had assured him that
within 72 hours the Chinese army would move toward the Northeast Frontier
Agency border of India./8/ CIA and DIA report this morning that no information
has yet been received on unusual activity by Chinese forces in Tibet.
/7/
Distributed on December 11 as CIA Intelligence Information Cable TDCS
DB-315/07532-71. (National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files,
Box 426, Backchannel Files,
Backchannel Messages 1971, Amb. Farland, Pakistan)
/8/
Apparently in response to this report, Kissinger told Helms on December 11 that
"the President wants you to get out the word that a Chinese move may be
imminent." (Transcript of a telephone conversation; Library of Congress,
Manuscript Division, Kissinger Papers, Box 370, Telephone Conversations,
Chronological File)
In East Pakistan,
Pakistani forces continue to regroup for the defense of Dacca.
In contrast to the 30,000 or more Pakistanis that could be mustered there, the
Indians have roughly 60,000 men in three divisions moving toward the city with
at least as many more in reserve near East Pakistan's borders. The guerrillas
are also poised outside the city. In the west, fighting in the Kashmir
and Punjab areas continues with little significant
movement by either side. In the southern sector on the western front, the
Indians claim now to be some 30 miles inside Pakistan's
Sind Province.
If the Indians press toward Hyderabad, Pakistan
might have to divert forces from the north to prevent Karachi
from being cut off from the rest of the country.
Source: Document 282, volume XI, South
Asia crisis 1971, Department of State.