SOUTH VIETNAM: LAST CHANCE FOR FREEDOM IN ASIA

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January 1, 1964
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1964 Approved For Rase 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403ROW200130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 413' plan by the American people. We know to our mortification the final ransom paid for the prisoners with chemicals and drugs dragooned from the Ameri- can companies by U.S. officials of this ad- ministration. We know, to our bewilderment, the dispersal of the refugees; the orders prohibiting Cuban exiles from use of any of our shoreline for attacks on the Castro- ites and the persistent denial during 1962 by the U.S. Government of the clear evi- dence that Cuba was being made a major Communist arsenal in this hemisphere. We remember with soaring pride the sudden, dramatic, and courageous recognition of the direct threat to our country posed by a mis- sile armed 'Cuba; the unequivocal demand on Russia that all surface-to-surface mis- siles and long-range aircraft be removed from Cuba; that her territory be open to on- the-spot inspection by neutral teams or Red Cross inspectors. We remember the initial success of this program with the announced withdrawal of missiles and aircraft, and with a sinking heart we recognized that the inspections were to be dropped as high U.S. officials stated that Mr. Khrushchev must not be pushed too far. We have seen the building of Cuba as a front line, first-class arsenal and training camp for militant com- munism; and the arrogant contempt with which they supported the Panamanian riots and then contemptuously cut off our water supply at Guantahamo while we said and did nothing of substance, After 4 years of Democratic foreign policy,- Cuba has been transformed Into an island firmly in Communist control; with the sec- ond largest arsenal of military weapons in the hemisphere; with around-the-clock Communist propaganda pouring into Cen- tral and South America; exporting arms and trained saboteurs to Central and South American countries; convicted by the Orga- nization of American States` as guilty of ex- porting aggression to other countries in this hemisphere; and a training camp for Com- munist provocateurs active from Venezuela to Ghana, to Gabon, to Zanzibar, to Burma. A record no citizen of this country, regard- less of party, can view with pride or satis- faction. The vacillating, wavering incon- clusive policy of this administration with respect. to Cuba must be changed. The second plank of that 1960 campaign was devoted to the low prestige of the United. States in Europe and in other portions of the world and the need to regain leadership and direction of the free world struggle. This plank was repeated endlessly during the 1960 campaign; and as purported evidence, statements were made that the NATO coun- tries had not accepted U.S. programs for strengthening the Alliance; that the Com- munists continued to advance in South Viet- nam; that the solution to German reunifi- cation had not been reached; and that U.S. sanction of U-2 flights over Russia had lost us respect in all countries. Shortly after inauguration in 1981, the President stated in a worldwide television news conference that we would come to the aid of Laos, a small but strategic country in southeast Asia under attack by the Com- munists. Shortly thereafter, we retracted this stated position, advocated a cease fire, actively solicited a coalition government, and forced this upon that defenseless country, with the Communists given the key posts of Ministry of Defense and Ministry of Interior. These are the two governmental posts historically used by Communists to take over control of a country. Thereafter, the Cuban Bay of Pigs fiasco occurred. Then the President met with Mr. Khrushchev in Vienna and upon his return to this country stated that Mr. Khrushchev had made no new demands upon him. A short 10 days later, Mr. Khru- shchev published a written memorandum of points and demands submitted at that conference. In August 1981, in violation of all agreements and all decency, the Commu- nists constructed the Berlin wall. A major city and the families in it were divided, and the flood of refugees from Communistic East Germany and East Berlin subsided to a slow trickle. The only reaction from the United States was a verbal protest and a speech stating that we would support the remain- ing half of the city. Nuclear test ban dis- cussions had been continuing and the United States had preserved a moratorium on testing, when suddenly the Soviets under- took a new program of testing, unprece- dented in scope and in size of blasts. The United States did nothing. Communist at- tacks in South Vietnam increased substan- tially and civil disorders broke out. Despite warnings, the United States took no action to discourage a coup against the Nhu gov- ernment and the apparent murder of Diem and his brother. Since then, the first gov- ernment has been overthrown, a military dictator replaced it, and the process of de- fending against Communist attacks grows weaker. The United States supported the unprepared African nations against our traditional allies, jeopardized the faith of our allies, and released in the United Nations and on the world scene many countries wholly unprepared for self-government, We supported Sukarno, the militant dic- tator of Indonesia, in seizing Dutch-held property in West New Guinea. We casti- gated Portugal for holding Angola and said nothing about India's armed invasion and seizure of Goa from Portugal. We refused to share nuclear competence with France as we have with Great Britain. We reneged on our agreement to supply Great Britain with nuclear air-to-ground missiles, and have re- cently tried to placate the rapacious Su- karno, who is slavering over newly created Malaysia Panama is now physically as well as verbally attacking U.S. military personnel, Venezuelan bandits have raided U.S. military quarters, stripped U.S. offices, despoiled the U.S. flag, and even kidnaped a U.S. colonel. Communists led by Cubans in Zanzibar, at- tacked the U.S. consulate, imprisoned con- sulate officials, ransacked the premises, and as punishment get recognized by our Demo- crat regime. A prominent German has summed. up our foreign policy activity by the following: "American foreign policy seems to be hos- tile to her friends, friendly to the neutrals, and neutral to her enemies." As the National magazine has said: "America today is going from defeat to defeat in almost every corner of the world." For 4 years Democrat foreign policy has been based on the principles that commu- nism will evolve into something with which we can live if we do nothing to disturb its leaders; that Khrushchev is the most mod- erate of Communists and cannot be forced into a corner lest we get someone worse; and that communism thrives amongst the poor and uneducated and hence can be overcome by scattering Yankee dollars. Each of these planks have been demonstrated failures of self-delusions. After 4 years of these poli- cies the free world is in disarray, the NATO Alliance is shattered at the political level, the last strongholds of freedom in Asia are tottering, and communism is on the march in Africa and South America. Our prestige about which we were so concerned in 1960 is now non-existent and every pip-squeak nation in the world is taking turns first kicking us around and then demanding foreign aid. It would se pm that the worst must be over. To the contrary, the worst was and is still to come. The floodgates of cyni- cism were opened when the United States, long the leading exponent of trade and aid barriers with Communist countries, wholly -,lost it's direction. The wheat sales to Rus- sia, negotiated, directed and demanded by the Democrat administration,' sales. which are subsidized by the American taxpayers and with Communist credit guaranteed by the American taxpayers, have loosened the floodgates and successfully undercut any and all efforts to cut off trade with our enemies. Against our protests, Great Brit- ain has sold 400 buses to Cuba with an- other 600 on order; four British airliners are being reconditioned for delivery and negotiations are almost complete for de- livery to Castro of $1.4 million heavy road building machinery. France is negotiating for the sale to Castro of $10 million worth of trucks. Spain is completing plans for the sale of 100 fishing, boats and two freighters. Italy is negotiating for an increase in sales and Prime Minister Ishibashi, a leading Japanese advocate of trade with Red China, has not only -been given a basis for the renewed trade negotiations between these two countries, but publicly hailed the wheat deal as the "'big turning point" in trade with Communist countries. But the most serious reaction was France's opening of trade relations and almost immediate recog- nition of Red China-Red China, the most aggressive of all Communist nations; the butcher of 18 million of its own citizens, as well as the raper of Tibet; Red China, the power behind the Korean war and re- sponsible for the deaths of so many Ameri- can and free world soldiers; Red China, the activating agent in the Communist takeover of southeast Asia; Red China, the attacker of India, Quemoy, Matsu, Formosa, and the despoiler of Outer Mongolia; Red China, still branded as an aggressor by the United Na- tions; still preaching war and terror as national policies; still castigating the lead- er of the free world; and still preaching universal communism spread by force, rev- olution and aggression. It seems apparent that after the last 4 years, American prestige is not merely low, it has totally disappeared; that new policies musj be developed and new programs in- stituted if we are to regain even self-respect; and that future problems must be foreseen and plans developed now. For 4 years those in charge of this administration have been chanting the defects in our system. These defects are now predominant in the minds of many people who do not know our country and our heritage. For 4 years, recognition of the dangers faced by the free world have been studiously avoided. For 4 years the steady downhill progress of freedom has been overlooked by use of oratory instead of organization; pal- liatives instead of plans; and forensics in- stead of foresight. Action is needed now if we are to regain self-respect, stability in for- eign fields, opportunity to resist Communist encroachments, and success in future prob- lems. This fall we will be faced with a fight over admission of Red China to the United Na- tions. French recognition will add great weight to this annual exercise and there is a very great chance that Red China will be admitted unless the United States takes def- inite steps: now to offset this threat. Cer- tainly admission of Red China to the United Nations would constitute a cynical disregard of the ideal and purpose of the organization and would make membership an award for aggression. Just recently, I was informed by "authoritative sources" in the State Depart- ment that the United States will continue its objection to Red China's admission, but that no plans had been made as to our course of action if our objections should be unsuc- cessful, Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 48 1 Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE March 11 A mere outline of the situation we now face after the last 4 years of bumbling. vacillating, inefficient foreign policies Indi- cates clearly that a crossroad is directly ahead. Either we change direction or we continue stumbling and weaving down the dusty road to oblivion. Positive programs are needed and they are needed now. Many have been made and more will be made, but I would group the overall need for a change under the title "The Will To Live." 1. Announce a new Western Hemisphere doctrine specifically excluding from govern- mental power in this hemisphere commu- nism or Marxism, whether Imposed from without or infiltrated from within. 2. Form as rapidly as possible an English- speaking military and political alliance with announced goals in opposition to Commu- nist aggressions In the world. 3. Start negotiations to create a common market with Canada and announce policies designed to encourage Latin and South American common markets. 4. Create governmentally sponsored train- ing courses In this country for all U.S. per- sonnel desiring to go into governmental for- eign service, emphasizing in the process the history, background and culture of the United States and the tactics of the Com- munist conspiracy, as well as the language, culture, and credo of the country to which each may be assigned. The principal in- stitution under this program should com- bine the concept of a Foreign Service Acad- emy and the need for a Freedom Academy. 5. Eliminateall U.S, aid and trade to Com- munist governments and extend trade or aid to the people of those countries only where it is managed, distributed, and or- ganized under direct U.S. supervision, 6. Announce our positive intent to retain Guantanamo Bay and the Panama Canal and the will to use such force as may be necessary for such purpose. 7. Institute a quarantine of Cuba as a health and military menace to the world. 8. Actively encourage the millions of free- dom loving people in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas to resist communism. 9. Recognize that the economy of this country is the first and strongest bulwark against communism and Institute trade pro- grams and policies which will enhance that economy Instead of injuring domestic In- dustries. 10. Stop apologizing for the very factors which have made this country the greatest Nation on earth and make It known that we intend to take such steps as may be necessary to give people existing under Communist terror the hope of living under freedom's banner. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further morning business? If not, morn- ing business is closed. CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the motion of the Senator from Montana [Mr. MANs- FIELD] that the Senate proceed to con- sider the bill (H.R. 7152) to enforce the constitutional right to vote, to confer jurisdiction upon the district courts of the United States to provide injunctive relief against discrimination in public accommodations, to authorize the At- torney General to institute suits to pro- tect constitutional rights in public facil- ities and public education, to extend the Commission on Civil Rights, to prevent discrimination in federally assisted pro- grams, to establish a Commission on Equal Employment Opportunity, and for other purposes. ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. HUMPHREY. Mr. President, I have consulted with some of my col- leagues with reference to the address which is about to be delivered by the Senator from Connecticut [Mr. DODD]. I ask unanimous consent, despite the rule of germaneness, that the Senator from Connecticut may be permitted to speak for not to exceed 45 minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? The Chair hears none, and I t is so ordered. Mr. DODD. Mr. President, I am grateful to the distinguished Senator from Minnesota for his assistance. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut Is recognized. SOUTH VIETNAM: LAST C ANCE FOR FREEDOM IN ASIA Mr. DODD. Mr. President, if the American people could see 9,000 miles toward the Orient with the eyes of his- tory, they could discern a dark, funnel- shaped cloud spinning on the far hori- zon and beginning to twist across south- east Asia. Like a natural tornado which leaves in its wake ravaged terrain, shat- tered buildings, and twisted wreckage, so this political and military tornado men- aces the continent of Asia with ravaged nations, shattered peoples, and twisted patterns of history. TODAY WE ART LOSING The struggle to preserve South Viet- nam, the key to the independence of southeast. Asia, is at a critical peril point. Two South Vietnamese governments have gone down in 4 months; a third is suffering repeated hammer blows at the hands of subversion and intrigue at home, and counsels of despair and sur- render from abroad. This unhappy nation, in the midst of a mortal combat for survival, has had to suffer the traumatic shock of a com- plete turnover in leadership all the way from the smallest village compounds up to the presidential palace. The Communist Vietcong guerrillas, following the toppling of the Diem re- gime last October, have scored a series of impressive military and psychological gains. They now control one-half of the Mekong Delta, the most crucial prize. France has made an ignominious bid to return to Asia as an influential force, first by recognizing Red China and then by counseling the free world to throw in the towel in South Vietnam, thus adding appeasement to a French legacy in Asia which historically has been char- acterized by exploitation in peace, capit- ulation in war. and abandonment of re- sponsibility at the surrender table. Some prominent American newspapers support France's plea for neutralization and distinguished U.S. Senators are sym- pathetic to this proposal and publicly question the continuation of military and economic assistance there. Even our Defense Department added to the flood of contradictory official statements and unofficial news leaks by announcing a substantial withdrawal of American forces from South Vietnam by 1965, notwithstanding the worsening mil- nary situation there and despite the in- ternal disintegration for which we bear a measure of responsibility. The situation, therefore, is critically grave. We must assume that at this moment, we are losing. Only a supreme effort by the South Vietnamese and an increased effort by the United States will turn back the Communist tide. INDIFFERENCE AND DEFEATISM Yet, forces are at work within the free world whose effect is to nap our will to win this crucial struggle. A significant number of Americans, highly placed in private and in Gov- ernment circles, look upon what is hap- pening in South Vietnam as something of marginal concern to us. For a long time they engaged in the now familiar luxury of becoming all lathered up over the mote in the eye of an embattled ally while remaining se- renely indifferent to the beam in the eye of its aggressor. They chose for their crusade, not the cause of turning back Communist ag- gression. but the cause of destroying the Diem regime, which, whatever its faults-and they were vastly exagger- ated-was energetically leading the anti- Communist war in South Vietnam. They had their way. Diem was over- thrown and murdered; and the result was a complete catastrophe, a catastro- phe that can be measured in terms of political chaos, military defeat, and psychological defeatism. The heralded attempt to liberalize and democratize the South Vietnam Government resulted, as was easily and often predicted, in gun barrel rule by a succession of military juntas, lacking even a fascade of legiti- macy. And so the anti-Diem crusaders in this country and elsewhere, apparently shamed by the sorry consequences of their effort, but unwilling to admit their error, have decided that the situation is hopeless and that the only reasonable alternative left is to pull out of Vietnam altogether, or to make a shabby deal to turn this area over to the Communists piecemeal, a process which they call "neutralization." So I take the floor of the Senate be- cause I feel it is the duty of everyone who believes that South Vietnam must be preserved to counter, each in his own way, the attitudes of indifference and defeatism which threaten to paralyze our national policy. First of all then, I say that we must preserve the independence and freedom of South Vietnam for exactly the same reason that we must preserve the inde- pendence and freedom of West Berlin- because the cause of freedom everywhere in the world, and the efficacy of the United States as the leader of that cause, is squarely on the line in the Mekong Delta. Let us not join the querulous, faint- hearted chorus of those who always ask the price of victory. Let us ask, "What is the price of de- feat?" And having soberly assessed the price of defeat, let us determine upon victory, and then we shall find the ways to achieve it. Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 196 Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R00 200130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 4815 THE MORTAL STAKES What is the price of defeat? - - What. is primarily at stake is the capacity of the free world to deal with a particular method of aggression that is peculiarly suitable to the Communists. In Korea, whatever else we failed to accomplish, we did prove that we -could .effectively deal with open, traditional military aggression; and we have had no major confrontation of that type since Korea. The Communists are now testing us with a different method, guerrilla war- fare, with its accompanying complex of military, psychological, and propaganda tactics. Through this method, they in- tend to subjugate Asia, and if we prove unable to overcome it in Vietnam, all Asia is within their grasp. Guerrilla warfare is made to order for the Communists because it enables them to turn their weaknesses into strengths, while it transforms into weaknesses the strengths of its victims. - it puts a premium upon a small in- vestment of men and material, upon stealth, terror, upon limitless patience, upon the avoidance of head-on con- frontation with basically stronger foes. It does not require the armament, the logistics and the economic support nec- essary for other types of combat. And, so long- as we submit to its rules, it effec- tively prevents the forces of freedom from making use of their massive su- periority in traditional military power, in air and sea might, and in economic strength. It takes 20 South Vietnamese soldiers to deal with 1 Vietcong guerrilla. This is no reflection on the South Vietnam- ese; it is inherent in the type of warfare, as proved true in previous guerrilla con- flicts in the Philippines and in Malaya. And - so the North Vietnamese and their Red Chinese backers, stricken with poverty, hunger, economic collapse, and demoralization at home, through the relatively inexpensive device of field- ing 20,000 or 30,000 guerrilla soldiers, lightly equipped and able to live off the land, can successfully maintain a war of deadly attrition against a nation su- perior in every respect and backed by the wealth and power and training of the United States. They can tie down an army of 400,000 South Vietnamese, half regular soldiers and half militia. They can engage in this riskless warfare indefinitely with- out jeopardizing their own home base because, up to now, free nations have not treated guerrilla invasion as a kind of war which merits retaliation on the homeland of the aggressor. Guerrilla warfare enables the Com- munists, through prolonged terror to gradually destroy the will to resist of the peoples it invades. it has enabled them to assassinate 1,000 local South Vietnamese officials each month for sustained periods of time. It has destroyed communications and transportation in large areas of the country. It has forced a whole population to live in thousands of barbed wire en- tangled encampments, in constant fear. It places terrible pressures upon any government, and upon the very conduct of civilized life and thus, if unchecked, threatens with inevitable demoraliza- tion the whole fabric of the attacked society. If the United States cannot deal with this method of aggression in South Viet- nam, where we have invested so much in terms of aid and training, where we have developed and equipped an indi- genous army with great possibilities and where, therefore, our entire credibility is.at stake; if we cannot successfully as- sist the South Vietnamese to turn back a relatively puny enemy weakened by famine, discontent, and economic col- lapse, is there apy reason to hope that we can succeed in the other countries of Asia? On the contrary, if South Vietnam falls to guerrilla warfare as North Viet- nam did, it is inescapable that the pre- dictions of President Eisenhower and President Kennedy will be borne out and that the nations of Asia will fall to communism like a string of dominoes. There are those who scoff at what is called the domino theory. I do not think it is anything to be scoffed at. This theory was one of the strong ideas behind the NATO Alliance. We recog- nized that if one European country fell at a time, they would fall in just that fashion, like dominoes. I think it is even more true in Asia. If South Vietnam is yielded to the Communists, Laos and Cambodia, al- ready with one foot in the grave, are automatically doomed. - Thailand, comparatively helpless, with its 1,000 miles of frontier adjoining Laos and Cambodia, will then be immediately imperiled. If 'Thailand goes down, nothing can save Malaya and Singapore. When Malaya has been subjugated, Indonesia, with its huge Communist movement, will be a pushover. With communism thus solidly en- trenched in the Pacific all the way from the Arctic Circle to Indonesia, the de- fense of Australia and New Zealand, even with Anglo-American -naval assistance, would become hazardous and extremely difficult. Inevitably the Philippines, South Korea, Japan, and Formosa will be swept into the maelstrom and the whole Pacific will indeed become a Red ocean. And this is only part of the cost of defeat in South Vietnam. The freedom of half the world is dependent upon al- liances which are based upon confidence in the capacity of the United States to stand up effectively to Communist ag- gression, What would be the posture of the United States if we permit ourselves to preside impotently over such catastro- phes? Three Presidents of the United States have committed us to the defense and assistance of South Vietnam. If we do not have the will and the capacity to carry out that relatively modest commit- ment, why should anyone have confi- dence in us? And why should we have confidence in ourselves? More than two decades ago, immedi- ately following the Japanese attack upon the United States and Great Britain, Winston Churchill said to the Congress of the United States: What kind of a people do they think we are? Is it possible that they do not under- stand that we shall never, cease to persevere against them until they have been taught a lesson which they and the world shall never forget? The Congress rose in a mighty ovation to those words, representing the unani- mous determination of the American people. Surely we are today opposed by a threat in Asia which, if less spectacular, is equally grave. And surely, once we understand this, our determination will be equal to whatever we are called upon to risk and endure. NEUTRALIZATION There are those who agree openly that the consequences of a Communist vic- tory in South Vietnam would be disas- trous, but maintain that the solution is "neutralization" of the contested area. Even in its most charitable interpreta- tion, neutralization is a philosophic mon- strosity. Heretofore, our concept of collective security has been that if an independent nation were attacked by- the Commu- nists, the concert of free nations would assist that nation to defend itself. Now it is contended that the nation which is attacked must be disarmed, must have some sort of coalition government im- posed upon it from without, and must have its future existence entrusted to some sort of international supervisory body, over which its enemies exercise a veto power. What is to be done with the aggressor state which attacked the non- aggressor nation has never been made clear. The only practical experience we have had with this strange concept is in Laos, where the Communists have used it as a cover under which they have contin- ued their piecemeal subjugation. The protective devices that were supposed to maintain peace in this area have proven, as was-predicted, absolute nullities. However, there is another variety of neutralization with which we do have long practical experience. When there is an internal struggle going on within a nation between the forces of commu- nism and liberty, the neutralization concept is applied in the form of a coali- tion government in which both Commu- nists and non-Communists divide the cabinet posts. We have assisted or acquiesced in the establishment of many such governments, With uniformly tragic results: Through this Rumania, Poland, Bulgaria, Hungary, Czechoslo- vakia, and Yugoslavia have been totally enslaved by the Communists. - China was lost in part because during the- very period when the Nationalist Government could have taken firm con- trol of China it was immobilized and demoralized for a protracted period of time while we sought to impose upon mainland China a- neutralized coalition government made up of Communists and non-Communists. - Mr. HUMPHREY. Mr. President, will the Senator from Connecticut yield? Mr. DODD. I yield. Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Mar64 11 Mr. HUMPHREY. I wish to empha- size the point the Senator from Con- necticut has made in regard to so-called coalition governments, in which Com- munist representatives are included, supposedly in an effort to ease them off, so to speak, from their campaign of sub- version and terror. Certainly that does not work; the Senator from Connecticut is absolutely correct. We have learned from the cruel facts of history that either the Communists or the Fascists will turn any cabinet in which they are a part to their own use, and ultimately to the destruction of democratic institu- tions. That was the record of Hitler in Germany, and it has been the record of every so-called Socialist-Democrat re- gime which included Communist repre- sentatives, and including the experience in Czechoslovakia. If Communists are placed in a cabinet, the Communists in- sist on having the posts at the head of the ministry of interior, the ministry of labor. or the ministry of transport. Mr. DODD. Or the ministry of in- formation. Mr. HUMPHREY. Yes; and that means that if they hold those posts. they can control the secret police and the communications and the labor move- ment. When the Communists obtain control, as a result of having control of those three posts, the record shows that they take over. Regardless of one's views on South Vietnam or on any other part of the world, it is a fact that there is no safety in a coalition government; it means slow death, and nothing else. I thank the Senator from Connecticut for emphasizing this point. Mr. DODD. I thank the Senator from Minnesota. His words of approval give me great comfort and encouragement. It is difficult to discuss neutralization in the context of southeast Asia, because of the vagueness with which the proposi- tion is advanced; but let us try to do so, nonetheless. If neutralization of the currqnt con- flict means that both North Vietnam and South Vietnam should be disarmed and placed under some kind of international supervision which effectively removes both from the cold war, then it is futile and absurb even to discuss it. It is futile and absurb, because the Communists reject it utterly, openly, and contemptuously, both as an abstract concept and as a practical solution to any conflict in which they are involved. They have specifically and violently condemned it as a solution to the cur- rent conflict in Vietnam. True neutralization can thus be dis- missed; it has never been a possibility. Only false neutralization has any chance of being considered. Under false neutralization, South Vietnam would be disarmed, given a half- Communist government probably, and placed under the so-called protection of some international body which has no substance, and exists only on paper. The victim of aggression, not the_ag- gressor, is to be neutralized; and this neutralization serves only to delay for a short time complete Communist enslave- ment. So let us be candid about neutraliza- tion. If we use the term, let us define what we mean by it. If we mean that both the Communist aggressor and its victim are to neutral- ized-and even this would be an injustice on the face of 4t, since it treats equally the aggressor and the victim-let us immediately dismiss it until we receive some indication that the Communists have totally abandoned their philosophy and their tactics and are willing to enter- tain a suggestion so contrary to their doctrine and their history. The above situation would be similar to that of a quarrel between two men, in which one of them was entirely inno- cent and had not been doing any wrong; if, when he was attacked by a hoodlum, the police rushed up and said, "We are going to punish both of you"-obviously an injustice. And if we mean by neutralization that only the victim of aggression is to be neutralized, let us call this term what it is--a dishonest substitute for uncondi- tional surrender. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator from Connecticut yield briefly to me? Mr. DODD. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I appreciate very much the senator's comment. It is so important that I believe it should be repeated; and, with the permission of the Senator from Connecticut, I shall do so now: And if we mean by neutralization that only the victim of aggression is to be neu- tralized, let ps call this term what it is-a dishonest substitute for unconditional sur- render. That is what neutralization in South Vietnam would do at the present time, would it not? Mr. DODD. It, most certainly would. I am happy that the distinguished Sen- ator from Massachusetts has risen to call our attention to that point. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question? Mr. DODD. I am happy to yield to the distinguished Senator from North Carolina. Mr. ERVIN. Many years ago I read a statement to the effect that even the best of men cannot have peace unless their wicked neighbors are willing to permit them to do so. Is it not true that up to the present moment the neutraliza- tion of a country has resulted, in a sense, in denying that country the power to defend itself, making it subject to the will of its wicked neighbors? Mr. DODD. In every case. There has been no exception. The most recent has been the case of Laos. That has been the rule in so-called neutralization. Secretary Rusk recently made an ex- cellent statement on neutralization which put it in its proper perspective. I applaud, also, the repeated rejec- tions of neutralization by both Presi- dent Kennedy and President Johnson. The only ends served by treating neu- tralization as a possibility are to hearten our enemies and dismay and demoralize our friends. THE KEY TO VICTORY Over and over again we hear it said that the key to victory is the morale of the South Vietnamese people; their be- lief in their way of life; their willingness to stand up and fight for ii. This is a vast oversimplification. Ob- viously, the morale of a people under attack is a very important element. But in this war, in which South Vietnam is. actually a battleground between the Communist world and the free world, the morale of the people should not be the key to victory or defeat. The real key is our capacity to respond effectively to the methoc: of guerrilla warfare, supplied and directed from the privileged sanctuary of North Vietnam. Were it not for this onesided methodof warfare which gives all the initiative to the enemy, which permits hardened guerrilla soldiers to terrorize an entire people for years on end, to turn a whole nation into a series of barbed wire en- campments-were it not for all this, the durability of the South Vietnamese would not even be in question. Armies exist for the purpose of saving civilian populations from l: aving to fight. it is the failure to deal effectively with the military threat that makes the mor- ale and courage of the people a vital ele- ment in the war. Let us be frank. Let us ask ourselves how our own people would stand up in such a contest if they were subjected to ceaseless attack year in and year out, from which their own army seemed pow- erless to protect them. Does anyone suppose that under the same conditions the people of North Viet- nam would fight to protect their status? Of course not. But that does not pre- vent their enslavers from successfully carrying forward aggression against their neighbors. Our task is to change the nature of this conflict. if we continue to perirdt the war in South Vietnam to be, in considerable measure, a contest between professional guerrillas against helpless civilians, most certainly we are in grave danger of los- ing. But what a monumental abdica- tion of responsibility it would be to at- tribute our defeat, if we suffer such, not to our own unwillingness to change the terms of battle, but to the morale of the people whom we are asking to live in constant danger by day and by night for a period that is apparently to have no end. Those who are entrusted with the re- sponsibility for the defense of South Vietnam can reverse this situation al- most overnight by carrying the struggle to its source: North Vietnam. The key to victory in South Vietnam is the effective carrying of the war into North Vietnam until the forces of Ho Chi Minh have sustainer; such terrible attrition that they cease their aggres- sion against the South. How can it be done? A PROGRAM FOR vx. 'rORY I fully recognize here the limitations of Members of the Senate; I do not present myself as a military tactician. Yet, those who believe that we should Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 196,;x- -. r Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R00W00130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 4817 push on in Vietnam-as I do-have as much information at our disposal and as much occasion for speaking up as those who believe we should pull out. One does not have to be an architect to know that a house is falling down, and one does not have to be a military expert or a foreign service officer to know that our military and political ef- fort in South Vietnam is going badly and that the course of our efforts must be changed if we are to succeed. Our first task is to stabilize the rapid- ly deteriorating political situation in South Vietnam. There are a number of ways in which we can help to bring this about and I shall cite only three: First, we must make clear our irrevo- cable determination to see this struggle through to victory, as long as the South Vietnamese carry their part of the bur- den. President Johnson's statement of Feb- ruary 21, and subsequent statements contained just such a commitment and have helped a great deal to stem the confusion and demoralization resulting from statements by other Americans. Secretary McNamara's clear assertions have had a good effect. On the radio this morning I heard a report of a speech by Secretary McNa- mara in which he told the people in Viet- nam that we would render whatever aid was necessary for as long as it was nec- essary. I say, good for him. There must be other statements by the President and by other top American leaders. There should be statements in the Congress, perhaps congressional resolu- tions. There should be pledges by leaders of both parties, until our posture with re- spect to South Vietnam is as clear as our posture concerning West Berlin. Second, we should help the present Government of south Vietnam, under General Khanh, to ride out its present difficulties. We have no choice but to support this Government as it is, with its strengths and its weaknesses. In doing so, we must seek to help it overcome its shortcomings, through per- suasion and example, not only for the immediate purpose of strengthening its ,resistance to communism, but so that it may ultimately become a beacon of jus- tice and progress for all the peoples of southeast Asia. General Khanh is probably as good a man as can be found in the Vietnamese armed forces, and we may count our- selves fortunate that the second coup was not instigated by a man of less stat- ure. He has a reputation as a capable and aggressive commander and as a care- ful planner. According to all the reports I have heard, he is also a man of integrity and strong personal loyalty. He has dis- played sound political instinct in re- taining the popular Gen. Duong Van Minh as Chief of State and in bringing certain prominent political leaders and intellectuals into his Cabinet; while his energetic visiting to villages and to sol- diers at the front suggests that Vietnam may at last have found the benevolent strong man it so sorely needs. His ini- tial pronouncements, moreover, suggest that he recognizes the imperative need for constructive village programs if the people's loyalty is to be won and re- tained. Instead of standing on the sidelines, waiting to see how General Khanh will shape up, we must do everything in our power to help the government of General Khanh stabilize itself and to help the general himself develop the popular im- age that is essential to effective national government. We must make it unmistakably clear to the other officers in the Vietnamese Army that we are opposed to any more coups and that we shall support the Gov- ernment against any attempted coup. This is mandatory because another coup or two and even the Marines will be un- able to save South Vietnam. Secretary McNamara has performed admirably in this regard during his visit. Third, we must use our influence and our aid to assist the new Vietnam Gov- ernment to build upon a beginning that has already been made in encouraging the development of village democracy; in improving agriculture, education, and public health; and in giving the Viet- namese people the feeling that they have something to fight for and something worth daily risking their lives for. The plan announced by General Khanh last Saturday, if properly implemented through our aid, will mark a significant step forward. We must help turn the war against North Vietnam. We must explain to our own people, to our allies, and to the world the reasons which impel us to carry the fighting to the home base of the aggressor. One method of doing this would be the publication of a white paper on North Vietnamese and Red Chinese ag- gression in South Vietnam, setting forth in detail all the massive information that has been accumulated about guer- rilla infiltration and the smuggling of arms from the North, the evidence that the war is in fact directed from the North, and the evidence of Red Chinese involvement. We have the truth; and we have the means to disseminate the truth to all who are disposed to believe it. Having made this attempt to solicit favorable world opinion, we must go forward and do what the facts of the situation re- quire of us. We now come to the critical point of our policy. What should be the nature of our attempt to take the offensive in this war which has been forced upon South Vietnam from the North? It is, of course, for our military lead- ers to decide upon the tactics and for our diplomatic leaders to assess the pos- sible repercussions. But it is the direction of our efforts, not the details, that is my principal concern. As a minimum, I believe we must per- mit, train, and assist South Vietnamese guerrilla forces to begin hit-and-run raids along the coast of North Vietnam, directed against targets like marshaling yards, harbor facilities, refineries, fac- tories, bridges, dams, and so on. As ex- perience and confidence are gained, it should be our goal to assist the South Vietnamese to open up sustained guer- rilla operations in North Vietnam and give the Communists a full taste of their own medicine. Every day that this war continues, the Red regime in Hanoi should be hurt in a very material way. And every day that we allow them to ravage South Viet- nam with complete impunity to their home base, we give them an advantage which they should not have and which could be decisive in the war. That is the minimum. The maximum operation against North Vietnam would be to build up South Vietnamese air and sea forces so that they could launch air strikes against industrial and military targets and conduct naval blockades against commerce. We have all read that this alternative is under serious consideration by the administration. We know that action of this kind would be a very bold step and that there are many reasons why any administration would be reluctant to undertake it. But if it is necessary it should be done, and I believe that the Congress and the American people will support this action if .our best advice tells us that it is the quickest and most effective way to end the agony of South Vietnam and redeem our commitments in southeast Asia. Three years ago, upon my return from Laos and South Vietnam, I urged that we ,not continue a purely defensive war but that we enable the forces of freedom to go over to the offensive. I stated the objectives of such an approach in words which I should like to repeat now: The best way for us to stop communist guerrilla action in Laos and in South Viet- nam is to send guerrillas in force into North Vietnam, to equip and supply those patriots already in the field; to make every CoTn- munist official fear the just retribution of an outraged humanity; to make every Com- munist arsenal, government building, com- munications center and transportation fa- cility a target for sabotage; to provide a rallying point for the great masses of op- pressed people who hate communism because they have known it. Only when we give the Communists more trouble than they can handle at home, will they cease their aggression against the out- posts of freedom. I think these words are even more applicable today than they were when I first spoke them 3 years ago. Finally, I believe that we should make an effort to involve the other nations of the area in the task of keeping South Vietnam free. As late as April of 1961, the SEATO nations in the immediate area, the Phil- ippines, Thailand, Australia, New Zea- land, and Pakistan, all favored common action against the Communist menace in Laos. But the British and French were opposed to such action, and we ourselves set on the fence; and the result was that nothing was done. In the absence of American leadership, SEATO has inevitably become an orga- nization of questionable effectiveness. When I was in the Philippines in May of 1961, Foreign Minister Serano made a Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 AMW .9w Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 4'lai?cb 11 statement to me which I shall never for- get. "We are prepared to fight and die with you if necessary," he said, "but we cannot fight without American leader- ship." Our failure to react to the chal- lenge in Laos is one of the chief reasons for Pakistan's loss of confidence and her consequent erratic behavior. Given American leadership and given the evidence of our determination to de- fend southeast Asia, it is not too much to hope that SEATO can be reactivated. Certainly it would be salutary and help- ful to have other Asians fighting along- side the South Vietnamese and Laotians, in defense of their common freedom. Conceivably, France might object to the reactivation of SEATO, now that De Gaulle seems bent on the appeasement of Mao Tse-Tung. But if France should take this stand, then in my opinion she no longer belongs in SEATO. and we should ask for her withdrawal. THE CONTINUING CRISIS In South Vietnam, as at so many other pressure points around the globe, the American people are being tested as nev- er before, and as no other people have been tested. In the past our Nation, like other na- tions, has risen to direct challenges which brought us under open attack and which clearly imperiled our survival. In such conflicts our danger was ob- vious, our objective was clear, and our people could throw themselves into a total national effort with confidence that our sacrifices were only temporary and that total victory was attainable and foreseeable. Such have been the challenges of the past. But the current crisis Is not a clear military challenge emanating from definite sources. combatable by tradi- tional means, and subject to total retaliation. We are challenged on every continent, in every country, by every means, but not directly, not overtly. It is always some other nation that is under direct attack, and the attack comes disguised in many forms, subversion, infiltration, revolution, espionage, propaganda, psy- chological warfare, economic warfare, guerrilla warfare, and on and on-war without form, war without limitation, war without end. It has fallen to us to lead the defense of freedom against this omnipresent but illusory onslaught. And we have under- taken to do so, for our own sake, and for the larger cause of humanity. That we have often failed in individual instances is to be grievously regretted; that we have tried, that we have attempted to mount a many dimensioned global de- fense equal to the challenge, is to our eternal credit. Our sons at this hour are stationed in military bases in the farthest and most remote corners of the earth. Our aid missions and Peace Corps units and tech- nical assistance teams are functioning in fourscore nations and more. Our in- formation programs seeking to combat falsehood with truth are operating around the globe. In outer space, in the air, on the land, on the sea, and under the sea we have mounted a tireless de- fense against the ultimate enemy attack. a defense for ourselves and for all people. The struggle in South Vietnam Is a crucial part of this larger struggle; per- haps the most vital part at the moment because it is the most challenged at the moment. In the normal course of my duties as a Senator. I have had the privilege of visiting and talking with our American soldiers in South Vietnam just as I have had similarly rewarding experiences in meeting the young men who man our Polaris fleet, and those who go out into outer space in an attempt to insure our predominance even In that remote sphere. It is hl pondering the sacrifices and achievements of these men and in con- fronting the challenges which have caused them to undertake these tasks that we begin to grasp something of the meaning of being an American In this sixth decade of the twentieth century. In the early years of our Nation Ben- jamin Franklin and Thomas Paine had an exchange which prophetically out- lined the course of our history and ex- plained our present posture in the world today. Franklin said, "Wherever free- dom is, that is my country." Paine re- sponded, "Wherever freedom is not, that is my country." This seeming contradiction has been harmonized by the development of our history. There is no free nation which has not had the active and continuing assistance of the United States in the effort to fulfill and defend Its liberty. There is no free nation under attack today whose survival is not dependent upon this American involvement. There is no enslaved nation whose hope for ultimate freedom does not rest with us. Americans of our day realize more completely even than did Franklin and Paine the indivisibility of freedom. To preserve our own freedom we must see to it that the South Vietnamese preserve theirs. That is why we are there. That is why we must continue there until vic- tory is assured. And that is why Americans of this decade, like their predecessors, are earn- ing a place in history which, In Lincoln's words, "the world will forever applaud and God will forever bless." Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to insert at this point in the RECORD a statement I prepared early in Febru- ary for the February 17 issue of the Washington Report of the American Se- curity Council. There being no objection, the state- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From Washington Report, Feb. 17, 19641 FORMULA FOR VICTORY IN VIETNAM We are rapidly approaching the moment of truth in southeast Asia. The events of the coming year will, In all probability, de- cide whether freedom has any future In this strategically vital area, or whether the few free flags that stilt wave there will all be replaced by the hammer and sickle. If we minimize the gravity of the situa- tion, if we continue to engage in half-meas- ures, if we permit the Communists to oper- ate from privileged sanctuaries, if we again permit ourselves to become involved in plots against our allies, then scutheast Asia is doomed. I believe southeast Asia can be saved. But it can be saved only if we are prepared to face up to the facts in all their gravity and ugli- ness and act with the utm)st resoluteness. There are those who say that the United States Is overextended, that. we cannot de- fend Asia as well as Europe, ghat we must re- duce our commitments in southeast Asia, even though this might result in a Commu- nist takeover. I find this proposal as lacking In logic as it is In morality. For better or for worse. our own fate is intertwined with that of southeast Asia. In- deed, the Communist conquest of the area would produce so serious a shift in the world balance of power. that our very ability to survive would be called into question. More- over, our prestige is so heavily committed In South Vietnam that if we accept defeat there, or if we accept defeat, on the install- ment plan under the name of neutraliza- tion, no nation could In the future place any confidence in America's commitment to its defense. The gravity of the situation in southeast Asia and the continuing downward spiral of our fortunes there simply do not jibe with the optimistic reassurances of the Depart- ment of State. In Laos, the hard-pressed royalists, now supported by the neutralist. forces of Gen. Kong Le. have been forced back from one position after another by a aeries of limited but carefully calculated offensive actions, initiated by the Pathet Lao forces of Prince Souphannavong. The coalition government triumphantly put together by Mr. Harriman, for all practical purposes does not exist. The Americans have withdrawn from Laos, the North Vietnamese have not. The tripar- tite supervisory committee has been able to operate In the non-Communist portions of the country; but it has not been able to in- spect those areas under Communist control, sometimes because of the obstruction of the Polish member of the committee, more fre- quently simply because they have been de- nied access by the Pathet Lao. In Cambodia, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, himself an anti-Communist, has sadly ac- cepted the inevitability of Communist rule throughout Asia, and has severed relations with Britain and America and terminated their assistance programs. He has been re- markably frank In stating that his only pur- pose In doing so is to buy it bit more time for himself and his people. There is mount- ing evidence that the Vietcong has been us- ing his territory for hit-and-run attacks on South Vietnam. In Vietnam, the war has been going dis- astrously for our side ever since the over- throw of the Diem government last Novem- ber 1. The military junta which overthrew President Diem has, In tern, been over- thrown, and no one can tell where the dam- age done to the political stability of the country will end. Internationally, our position has been un- dermined by the decision of President De Gaulle to recognize Red China. Perhaps the most single serious consequence of De Gaulle's action is that it may induce a weakening of U.S. policy by emboldening these elements in the Department of State who have always believed that the way out of the southeast Asia crisis lies via coalition governments and neutralization and disen- gagement. Already some of our pundits and editors are saying that If a brave and stanch anti-Communist like De Ga'alle accepts the inevitability of the recognition of Red China and the neutralization of southeast Asia, we might do well to heed his example. Almost without exception, these pundits are opposed to all those things De Gaulle has stood for In Europe. But they do not hesitate to Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 1964x Approved For Retwxse 2005/02/10: CIA-RDP66B00403ROW200130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 4819 invoke the authority of his name in pressing for appeasement in southeast Asia. We shall hear more such opinions and witnesses more such pressures over the. com- ing months. Against this otherwise bleak background, there is at least one faintly hopeful ray. The new government of General Khanh, al- though it has still not been able to repair the damage done to the apparatus of admin- istration and command by the overthrow of Diem, appears to be a definite improvement over the first junta. General Khanh has a reputation as a resourceful and courageous commander; and as a careful planner; and it was impossible not to be impressed by the swiftness and smoothness with which he executed his coup. All the news indicates that he has taken power firmly into his own hands and that he is shaping up as the wise and benevolent strong man his country so desperately needs. General Khanh's reputa- tion forVersonal loyalty should be a definite asset, in his relations with his fellow officers and in his relations with us. He has shown his political astuteness in retaining the popular Gen. Duong Van Minh as head of state. Although the generals guilty of plotting with the French have been imprisoned, there has been none of the wholesale dismissals and reshuffling of com- mands that characterized the military junta. And whereas the junta had been foolish enough to give all key posts to the so-called southerners, General Khanh, himself a northerner, has wisely distributed his posts between people coming from the north, south, and center. To add to all this, Khanh seems to have the political instinct and gregariousness of an American. presidential candidate, and an ability to move from one point to another on the fighting fronts that reminds one of the way Mayor La Guardia played the role of inspector-general in New York. In short, everything about Khanh looks good. In him Vietnam may well have found a man capable of unifying and leading its diverse peoples. Let us hope that we will give him our un- stinting support, that we will do our utmost to help him develop the national image es- sential to the task of leadership, that we will let it be known that we stand by this government, and that we will use all our influence to discourage any new plots or coups. For the fact is that Vietnam cannot afford more coups.. Another two or three coups and even the American marines would not be able to save South Vietnam. The firming up of the Khanh government is the first task in any formula for saving southeast Asia. In helping to firm it up, I hope we will not insist on a dilution of au- thority, in the name of democracy, because no civil war can be successfully prosecuted without a strong government. Second, it is essential that we let the world know in unequivocal terms that we will not abandon southeast Asia, that there will be no neutralization of Vietnam, and that we will have no part of a conference to neutral- ize Cambodia. Third, by way of preparing the ground for a political and military counteroffensive, the Government of South Vietnam should be en- couraged to bring out a white paper incor- porating all the massive evidence that the Vietcong guerrilla war is not of indigenous origin, but has beery planned, armed, orga- nized, and led. by the agents of Ho Chi Minh, Similary, the anti-Communist elements in the Laotian coalition shoul4l be encouraged to prepare a white paper detailing the re- peated violations of the cease-fire and of the terms of the Geneva Treaty by the Pathet Lao and the evidence of the continuing pres- ence of North Vietnamese forces in Laos. Fourth, having given these facts to world opinion, we should then unleash the South Vietnamese and put an end to the one- sided set of rules under which the war in South Vietnam has heretofore been con- ducted. Up until now, the war' has been fought entirely on the territory of South Vietnam. The South Vietnamese Army has had to spread its. forces thin to protect bridges and railways and powerplants and other installations against territory attacks. The North Vietnamese have operated under no such penalty. Not a week goes by with- out the murder of several hundred South Vietnamese village leaders and local of- ficials by the Vietcong. But the political commissars in the North have been able to carry out their work of political control and repression in absolute safety. The situation in Vietnam, indeed, pro- vides a classic example of our tacit accept- ante of the Communist ground rule that the cold war and hot wars, both, must always be fought on the territory of the free world and never on the territory of the Communist world. We must put an end to this imbalanced situation. Ho Chi Minh must be made to pay a penalty for his aggression in the south. Sustained guerrilla warfare may be difficult to conduct in a country under the iron con- trol of the Communists. But North Viet- naiv, because of its long coastline, is exceed- ingly vulnerable to hit-and-run raids from the sea. The minute the South Vietnamese are given the green light to mount such raids, the minute they start blowing up bridges, and dams and generators and fac- tories in the north and ambushing patrols and political commissars, it will have an immediate impact on the conduct of the war in the south. Fifth, He Chi Minh conducts his activities in the south under the ostensible auspices of a front for the liberation of South Viet- nam, which maintains representatives in 15 countries. There are capable and deter- mined men among the refugees and defec- tors from the north who would like nothing better than to be granted permission to set up a front for the liberation of North Viet- nam from the tyranny of communism. We must encourage, not inhibit, the creation of such a front, committed to a program of liberation and social reform and we must provide it with the necessary propaganda facilities.. Sixth, it can be taken for granted that the Communists will again attack in Laos. We must respond to the next attack by an- nouncing that we consider the Geneva agree- ment to be abrogated, by encouraging Gen- eral Phoumi and Gen. Kong Le to coun- terattack, and by giving them the necessary support. We should make it our strategic objective to assist the anti-Communist forces in securing at least the southern half of the country, including the Laotian pan- handle through which the He Chi Minh is infilterating men and supplies into South Vietnam. No measure we could take would do more to take the pressure off South Viet- nam or would have greater psychological impact throughout Southeast Asia than the liberation of Tchepone, the chief Communist base in the panhandle. Senator TriONuAS J. Donn, Guest Editor. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. DODD. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I am grateful to the Senator for making so clear our re- sponsibilities in the cause of ' freedom. We have a -real cause today for which to work and to fight, in assisting the South Vietnamese in the Far East. Yesterday, we listened to a speech on the floor of the Senate by another dis- tinguished Senator, who took a contrary position to the one the Senator from Connecticut has taken today. Mr. DODD. Yes. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I personally be- lieve that we should help them in every way we can so long as we are advancing the cause of freedom by doing so. While the Senator feels at the present time that we have this cause, and that we should go forward with it, ultimately we must make decisions that may have to be changed because the situation changes and new factors of the different facts in- volved are introduced. Our role in South Vietnam is related, not only to our rela- tionships with the South Vietnamese but also with other countries in the Far East and in the world, where our pres- tige may be involved. Does the Senator feel that that is a correct interpretation of the remarks he has made? Mr. DODD. Exactly so The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator from Connecticut has ex- pired. Mr. HUMPHREY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senator from Connecticut may proceed for an additional 15 minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Connecticut is recognized for 15 additional minutes. Mr. DODD. I believe we are faced with a situation in which we have no al- ternative. My view Is that if we should back out, or give up in South Vietnam, all of Asia ultimately would be lost; and I do not believe that fateful day would be too far away. That Is, of course, of the gravest importance. But besides that, I believe the rest of the world would lose confidence in us. Whether we like it or not, we are the leaders of the free world. I believe it is true, as I have tried to say that there is not a free country in the world that we have not helped. There is not an en- slaved country in the world whose hope for freedom does not rest with us. We have friends and we have allies who help us; nevertheless, it rests with us. If we pull out, if we take the advice of those whom I call "the fainthearted ones," I believe one disaster after another will attend us, and we shall face a time and an hour when we shall be alone. There will be no allies to help us and we. shall face the accumulated might of a foe the like of which has never been seen-on earth. I know it is much easier to say, "Let us get out." All of us are conscious of the sacrifices of American boys there. I have four sons, and all of them are of military age. Two are in the Army Reserve. I do not want my boys in a war any more than I want the boys of others to be in a war. But I believe the surest way to be certain that my sons and the sons of others will not be involved in a war is to do what is required of us, and to do it now. If we do not, our sons will be in that war, and what will be worse, the chances of their surviving it will be greatly reduced. Mr. SALTONSTALL. What we must do, if the Senator will permit me to com- ment, is to accomplish our objective of furthering the cause of freedom. We must use methods which we believe will be most helpful In attaining that ob- Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 4820 Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE -7a~-c i. 11 jective. That is what we are doing today in many places. Mr. DODD. The Senator is correct. Mr. SALTONSTALL. So long as we maintain our prestige, so long as the op- portunity of achieving our objective exists we should go forward. Does the Senator from Connecticut believe that to be a fair statement? Mr. DODD. Yes; I believe the Senator from Massachusetts is absolutely cor- rect. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I thank the Senator. Mr. DODD. his comment. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, will the Senator from Connecticut yield for an observation? Mr. DODD. I am glad to yield. Mr. ERVIN. I commend the able and distinguished senior Senator from Con- necticut for making a most illuminating speech. The speech should receive the consideration of the public, as well as the consideration of those who make our military and diplomatic policy in south- east Asia. I believe the Senator has expounded in most eloquent fashion what Kipling said in a beautiful poem he wrote at the be- ginning of the First World War, the sub- stance of which was that free men can keel) their freedom in this precarious world only by keeping their hearts in courage and in patience and by lifting up their hands in strength. The Senator's able address has been a fine exposition of the same thought. Mr. DODD. I am very grateful to the Senator. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield so that I may make an observation on what the Senator from North Carolina has said? Mr. DODD. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. If we were to agree to neutralization in South Vietnam today, as the Senator from Connecticut has said, we would be agreeing to neutral- ization by only one side, with no com- mitment by the other side. That would really lead to defeat. Mr. DODD. I believe that is correct. Mr. JOHNSTON. Mr. President, I commend the Senator from Connecticut for what he has brought before the Sen- ate today. We must remain strong and do everything that we possibly can to help South Vietnam at this time. If we do not remain firm, our allies will become weaker and weaker. If that were to happen, of course, it would be harder and harder for us to remain there. We must stay there under all the circum- stances at the present time. If we do not, it will appear to the world that we are a very weak nation. Mr. DODD. I believe the Senator has stated the reality of the situation. I am grateful for his comments. Mr. HUMPHREY, Mr. President, I commend the Senator for his forthright statement. This kind of debate is al- ways helpful. Neutralization, as has been indicated, cannot be very helpful; it could be detrimental, unless it were applied to the entire peninsula. I shall not go not go into a detailed discussion of the Senator's address. I claim no expert knowledge In this area. How- ever, these debates are helpful, and I am sure the administration welcomes such discussions. We must have a na- tional consensus on this subject if our policy is to succeed. Mr. DODD. I agree with the Sen- ator. That Is one of the reasons for my remarks today. Mr. DAVITS, Mr. President, I am pleased that the Senator from Connecti- cut has discussed our problems in Viet- nam on the basis that he has in the course of his distinguished speech to the Senate. I do not necessarily agree with every aspect of the matter, as he discussed it. However, the fundamental thrust of his remarks demonstrates two things: First, a need to expose the situation to the view of the American people. In that regard, the Senator from Alaska [Mr. GRUENING)-who has discussed this matter with the Senator from Connecti- cut and with me and with other Sen- ators-also Is rendering a service in pre- senting his point of view. Certainly the people should know the points on both sides; and, as Members of the Senate, it is our duty to make that analysis avail- able to the people. Second, although I do not necessarily agree with all the points the Senator from Connecticut has made in the course of his speech, certainly its fundamental thrust is that our people should under- stand that the great stake we have in South Vietnam-namely, to keep that country from going over to cominu- nism-ii fundamental. The casualties which already have occurred there are tragic; but it is clear that our choice now is between those casualties and perhaps much greater casualties later on-in- eluding the possible casualty of the loss of freedom there. In that respect, Mr. President, the speech of the Senator from Connecticut is most valuable; and I am grateful to him. Mr. DODD. I thank the distinguished senior Senator from New York. Mr. HUMPHREY. Mr. President, is there any time remaining under the unanimous-consent agreement? The PRESIDING OFFICER. Ten minutes remain. THE PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATION IN VENEZUELA Mr. HUMPHREY. Mr. President, to- day is an important day for those in this hemisphere who believe that politi- cal liberty, social progress, and economic development go together. Today is an important day for those who wish to see a successful example of the Alliance for Progress at work. For today in Vene- zuela a new President will be Inaugu- rated, the first constitutional President In Venezuelan history to succeed another constitutional President. Today Presi- dent-elect Raul Leon! will succeed Romulo Betancourt as President of Venezuela. President Leoni was chosen in a free election In December, an elec- tion held despite continuous violent har- assment by Communist and Castrolte groups. His victory, together with the i impressive showing of COPEI, the part- ner of Action Democratic, in the Betan- court coalition, is assurance that Vene- zuela will continue the same en- lightened progressive domestic policy and pro-Western foreign policy that char- acterized the Betancourt government. The successful peaceful transition from.one freely chosen government to another is a triumph fo:r the principles underlying the Alliance for Progress, a triumph for the Kennedy policy in Latin America. And no one would have been more pleased today to witness this triumph of Venezuelan democracy tharf our late President John F. Kennedy. The election which brought President Leoni to the Presidency showed that the people of a wealthy, rapidly developing country like Venezuela support the poli- tical parties whose objectives and pro- grams are virtually identical to the aims of the Alliance for Progiess. But if the new Venezuelan Government is to have a chance to continue the work of the Alliance for Progress in Venezuela, it must have the firm support of its allies in this hemisphere. It must have-and I believe it will have-the firm support of the United States under President Johnson, just as President Betancourt enjoyed the full suppo:'t of President Kennedy. As a new government, it should merit special consideration from other republics in this hemisphere for protection against Communist subver- sion directed and financed from Cuba. The report issued last month by the OAS makes it indisputably clear that Cuba has smuggled arms to terrorists in Venezuela. It has presented photo- graphic evidence of the plan and the plot to subvert the Bet=court govern- ment at the time of the election in De- cember 1963. I wish my position on this subject to be crystal clear. Our national policy should be one of clear, unequivocal sup- port for taking the necessary steps to cut off arms shipments from Cuba to Venezuela. We can no longer condone Cuba being an arsenal for terrorism, revolution, and chaos. It is about time, instead of merely worrying about gov- ernments of friendly countries being able to stay in power and resist violence, that we choke off the source of that violence. We have stated before that we will not permit the Castro regime to subvert the democratic governments of its neigh- bors through armed aggression, whether covert or open. We have repeatedly stated this as our policy. Today we have a clear, carefully documented case of arms shipments into Venezuela. The Venezuelan Government has presented convincing photographic evidence of the smuggled arms shipments. The OAS re- port has confirmed the accuracy of the Government's allegations. What is our response to the situation? I believe we should mean what we have been saying. We should take all steps necessary to prevent further arms ship- ments from Cuba into Venezuela. And I mean all steps-whate-rer steps are re- quired in terms of navr:l operations, or any form of activity to stop these arms from crossing over into the Caribbean areas and Latin America. Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130008-6