Memorandum
for the Record/1/
/1/
Source: National Archives, RG 59, NEA Files: Lot 73 D
69, Miscellaneous-SOA 1971. Secret; Nodis.
Washington, December
16, 1971.
Shortly
after 10:00 a.m. this morning General Haig called on the secure line to say the following:
The
President wishes Mr. Sisco to call in Indian
Ambassador Jha immediately. Sisco
should make the following three points forcefully.
1. With
respect to India's earlier refusal to give
assurances that it had no territorial ambitions without similar assurances from
Pakistan, we are now giving him
Pak assurances of no territorial ambitions. We wish to know immediately that India has no territorial
ambitions on its side.
2. Now
that East
Pakistan
has fallen, there can be no justification for continued fighting. If fighting
continues, it will "have the most drastic consequences on U.S.-Indian
relations." (Haig commented that we should be no
more specific than that.)
3. We
consider it intolerable for the Indian Ambassador to use our media as a
platform to make attacks on the U.S. Government./2/
/2/ Sisco called in Ambassador Jha on
December 16 as instructed and made the points outlined by Haig.
The telegram reporting the conversation to New Delhi indicates, however,
that Sisco took note of a press report received that India had proposed a
cease-fire on the western front. Rather than convey the warning that continued
fighting would impact upon U.S.-Indian relations, Sisco
asked for conformation of the proposed cease-fire. (Telegram 226062 to New
Delhi, December 16; ibid., Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 578,
Indo-Pak War, India Chronology, Dr Kissinger)
RHM
Deputy Executive Secretary
Source: Document 317, volume XI, South
Asia crisis 1971, Department of State.