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Approved For. Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R009Z00130026-6 - 1964 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 4619 only truly universal international money ante with U.S. monetary laws. Today, some food from us on a time payment plan. No today. The U.S. dollar is legal tender only foreign nations buy gold from, the U.S. private lending institution in the United to U.S. citizens. Gold is the legal tender to Treasury at $35 an ounce, some with dollars States would be likely to loan money to the foreigners who hold U.S. dollars. So the our Government may have given them in such an unworthy customer. Some of the importance of gold should never be under- foreign aid, they then mint the gold into dollars we gave foreigners were used to buy estimated. Any nation that possesses gold, their own national gold coins, not for cir- things from us and this has helped to con- can get in and stay in the game of interna- culation as money but for sale as a com- tribute to our immediate prosperity. But, tional trade. Any country that has ample modity. They receive anywhere from $50 billions of these dollars have been turned gold reserves has the buying power to ac- to $70 an ounce for such gold transactions. into take away our gold reserves and $26 quire needed items from other nations. A good bargain for them. I know of one billion more are still stacked up against us, Thus, in peacetime or in wartime, 'gold foreign gold mine that sells most of Its gold and our gold resources. Is essential. Gold is a vital defense fuel production to gold hoarders in the Orient at The drain on our official gold stocks since in wartime. Recent events have clearly $70 an ounce. 1957 has been very heavy. Our gold re- indicated how important gold is to Russia. Now let us turn our attention to the real serves still amounted to $23 billion in 1957. She has failed in her agricultural program, issue about our gold and our U.S. dollars. Then, all the free world countries, other than as she has in so many of her other plans. The issue is, Why are we losing so much of the United States, had almost $15 billion in So Russia has been selling gold in the hun- our gold? gold. Today we are down to about $15'/2 dreds of millions in recent months in order When Franklin D. Roosevelt became Pres- billion while our free world., foreign aid to buy food to refill her bare cupboards. ident, the United States had: $4 billion on friends have increased their own gold re- In the United States today, our Federal gold reserves; $2 billion in gold was required serves to $26 billion. Of their gains in gold, Government still possesses a large amount as reserves in gold for our Federal Reserve $8 billion of it came from the U.S. Federal of gold. About $151/2 billion worth. But, currency notes and deposits; $500 million in Government vaults, we have been losing our gold reserves rapidly gold was owed foreigners because of their We lost our gold to foreign nations simply since 1957. It has been a consistent one- U.S. dollar holdings, because we gave them too many of our U.S. way flow of gold-out. We were in a deep depression but we were dollars free. In no year since we have been Before explaining the causes of our flow of in no trouble over gold. We had $11/2 bil- losing our gold have we exported less goods gold out of this country, I'd like to mention lions in gold above all our gold requirements. and produce than we have imported. Our a few other items about gold: But, when the price of gold was raised to actual balance of trade has always been in London, England, has for many centuries $35 an ounce in 1934, several things hap- our favor. The entire deficit in what is been the gold marketing center of the world. pened to increase our gold supply. First commonly called our balance of payments, Back in the year 1250 gold was selling on the our gold reserves went up by the 70 percent has been very simply because of all the free London market at $4 an ounce, adjusted to dollars we have sent abroad. These free U.S. dollars. For 450 the gold price raise, the amount increase from years price of gold $20.67 to $35 an ounce, Second, because dollars have given rise the huge dollar was free to fluctuate and to bring whatever gold mining became more profitable, gold pro- claims by foreigners against our U.S. gold. people thought gold was worth. It went up duction also increased substantially. Third, There are items in the balance of payment, or aid, continually. In the days of Columbus gold a large flow of gold came in from other na- other than stme is abroad, vacation There vel brought $10 an ounce. By the year 1700 tions when the price was raised. This was foreign investments abroad, vacation travel gold was up to $25 an ounce. Then the price because the price was good and also because gold abrdact, we e are re., but in the final analysis the was pegged at $22 an ounce through the Europe began, during that period, is because of the - adoption of a gold standard. That price was ood from us in ' to buy tion of the total $108 billion we have given kept firm until World War I set in and the g preparation for War II and in foreign aid, that has not been spent back price of gold began to rise. After World War during War II. A great deal of U.S. exports in the United States. This has left a huge England had too much money and credit were paid for in gold. Our U.S. gold re- balance of dollars stacked up in the hands Issued against its gold m r h money and the redit serves increased every year for 15 years and ? of the foreign central banks and governments lash pound failed. The price of finally peaked out in 1949 at almost $25 bil- gold was and which are now claims , against our , raised, the English pound was devalued. lion. From 1949 on we began to lose our raining gold. France, Germany, Spain, Then the United States was going into the gold. Not because we lost any of our trade England, Italy, and other nations are among 1930's and the days of the great depression. or any of our strength, but because we com- the beneficiaries of our dollar handout pro- Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected President. menced giving away too many of our U.S. grams. Because of this situation we are Someone sold him on the idea that if the dollars to foreigners. Billions of our dollars continuing to lose our gold and even so, we price of gold was raised, the prices of goods were given away on ill conceived and ill are continuing to give away more dollars. would raise, salaries would raise, sales would planned methods of trying to buy the defeat This also has a great influence on our do- increase, unemployment would be substan- of communism. We simply began trying to mestic interest rate structure. At this time tially reduced and prosperity would come buy with our U.S. dollars the support of we are required to keep interest rates high back to the United States. any nation our Government thought would so that the foreign owned dollars will be In 1934 the price of gold was raised from be our ally against Russia. Some of the na- left with institutions paying interest rather $20.67 an ounce to $35 an ounce. The tions we supported with our U.S. dollar gifts than to be turned into gold which draws no U.S. dollar was devalued in terms of gold. were themselves Communist countries. At interest. But the depression didn't go away. Unem- first we did a great deal of good in helping Today we have left in our U.S. gold re- ployment remained high. Prices did not Europe back on its feet in a war reconstruc- serves- about $151/2 billion in gold; $12 bil- rise, We were still in a depression when, tion job. Then, after they did get back on lion are needed as a 25-percent gold reserve World War II came along and produced their feet, we continued to give them our for our Federal Reserve currency and deposit enough jobs and industrial activity to propel dollars when they no longer needed them. system; and $31/2 billion of gold are left. us forward in a war economy-a momentum And we are still giving away our dollars to Obviously, $31/2 billion are far short of that continued after World War II ended. them, far too many. When we began this the $26 billion of potential claims against The price of gold has continued on that dollar give-away program we were the great- our remaining gold. We are now in the po- $35 peg since 1934 with' the exception of a eat industrial power on earth. We still are sition of a houseman in a high-stake poker flurry on the London gold market during the strongest nation on earth. We had to game, who is so far behind that he doesn't the Cuban crisis in 1960, when for a short have great strength to be able to give away dare let the game end. He couldn't pay off. time gold went up to $41 an ounce. $108 billion in foreign aid and to spend an- So why are we losing our gold? In 1934, concurrent with the increase in other $884 billion on defense items in the Why does a man's bank balance decline? the price of gold, legislation was enacted past 18 years, and still be able to keep going. A bank balance goes down and into over- making it illegal for a U.S. citizen to own (George Washington warned our infant drafts because more checks are written than gold. Citizens were required by law to turn Republic against making foreign alliances.) deposits made. The truth is that our Fed- in their gold coins and their gold certificate But with all this spending, our foreign eral Government has overdrawn our gold re- currency for new paper money. Since that aid friends are not impressed, and our for- sources by a wide margin. And that is date the U.S. dollar could not be redeemed eign enemies are not afraid of us. We are at- where our gold losses begin and end. The for gold by a U.S. citizen. Coin collectors tacked in the Panama Canal Zone by Com- problems are created by the excessive spend- may now hold gold coins if they are dated munists who then charge us with aggression. ing habits of our Federal Government. The prior to 1933. Today a U.S. double eagle Even little Cuba is able to shut off our water matter of overdrafts against our gold has tms $20 golds piece) sells for about $50. In with impunity. We have more chaos, more gotten out of hand. Meantime our Federal ( $20 gold coin of U.S. mintage, a anarchy, more aggression, and more confu- Government goes merrily on its way spend- present $20 U.S. currency bill is worth about sion in the world today than ever before. ing still more and inflating our currency 40 percent of its former value in terms of And this, after all the billions we have spent system. Whenever we have a deficit in Fed- gold, or about $8. to bring peace to the world. Our massive eral Government spending at home, and that The new gold standard set up in 1934 and our reckless spending in this area has has been happening every year, we inflate allows foreign dollar holders to exchange been a costly flop. We even gave Russia $11 our currency and bank deposit system. their U.S. dollars for U.S. Treasury gold at billion worth of lend-lease aid and only a These have gone up by $86 billion since 1957. $35 an ounce. This is because our inter- token was ever paid back, Now Russia Is The gold back of each U.S. dollar in cur- national monetary system is different from working on a scheme to get the U.S. Gov- rency and bank deposits is now down to less our domestic monetary system, in accord- ernment to guarantee her the credit to buy than. 5 cents. If we subtract foreign dollar . Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130026-6 Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130026-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE March 10 claims now against our remaining gold then we have no gold left to back our monetary system. Whenever we have a deficit in our foreign financial transactions, the balance of payments, then the claims against our gold goes still higher. last year, in 1963, this deficit was $3 billion. Taking both of these deficits together, the foreign and our domes- tic deficits, our Federal Government Is put- ting too great a squeeze on our gold and that is why we are losing our gold. Who in Government is responsible for this state of affairs? It isn't simply the Demo- crats or the Republicans. It is the entire system of bureaucracy that may have prop- erly started back In 1932 but has never stopped growing. We do have in Govern- ment today, many sound-thinking Democrats and Republicans who are trying hard to correct excessive spending in Government. These people do not wear high-buttoned shoe.:. And you do not need to put on high- buttoned shoes to support them. In gen- eral. however, our administrations and our Congress since World War II have been guilty of failure to stop excessive spending. WASTE IN FOREIGN AID PROJECTS Mr, MORSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an article which appeared in Sunday's Washington Post, headlined "$8.5 Million Aid Wasted, GAO Says." There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Washington Post, Mar. 8, 19G41 58.5 MILLION Am WASTED, GAO SAYS U.S. aid administrators were accused yes- terday of wasting 98.5 million on projects in Turkey and Iran and misleading Congress about their progress. The charge was made by the General Ac- counting Office, which checks on Federal spending for Congress, in a report to the House and Senate. It said the funds were used to build high- ways and railways that were not needed and wound up going nowhere. In seeking the money from Congress, the report added, the administration presented incomplete and inaccurate information and withheld other facts that should have been presented. T`ne Agency for International Development (AID) disagreed with the findings and blamed them on "a fundamental difference" between it and the GAO over the nature of the projects. The report covers four rail and highway protects carried out under the economic de- velopment program for Central Treaty Or- ganization nations between 1957 and 1962. Such projects are supposed to aid two or more CENTO countries and advance regional economic development, not aid individual nations. The economic need for the projects said the GAO. was so dubious they were consider- abiv cut back. Only one---a. Turkey-Iran highway-has the regional characteristics re- quired for such projects, it added. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, the ar- ticle bears out charges of the Continua- tion of the shocking waste of the whole aid program. The article reads in part: United States aid administrators were ac- cused yesterday of wasting 98.5 million on projects in Turkey and Iran and misleading Congress about their progress The article reads further: '-,.'he funds were used to build highways and railways that were not needed and wound up going nowhere, In seeking the money from Congress, the report added, the Administration presented incomplete and inaccurate information and withheld other facts that should have been presented. I plead with my colleagues in the Senate that, before the new debate on the foreign aid program starts in this session of Congress, they read the reports of the Comptroller General's Office, for one report after another repeats and proves this shocking waste of the tax- payers' dollars. The taxpayers are en- titled to better protection from the Con- gress than they have been getting in the SECRETARY OF DEFENSE McNA- MARA AND SOUTH VIETNAM Mr. MORSE. Next. Mr.' President, I ask unanimous consent to ha'e inserted in the RtcoRD a series of newspaper arti- cles setting forth statements by the Sec- retary of Defense in regard to promises vis-a-vis South Vietnam. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Washington Post. Mar. 10, 19841 VIETNAMESE LoOFCING FOR MCNAMARA MAGIC SAIGON. March 9.-U.S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara. now on a tour of trou- ble spats in this war-torn country, appears to have inherited the late President Ken- nedy's image as the guardian of the South Vietnamese people. Many Vietnamese look upon McNamara as virtually the savior of the country and seem to expect. him to produce a magic formula for driving out the Communist Vietcong guerrillas. This was revealed today In an informal survey of several parts of.Saigon. Including the poorer areas. Many peoples, apparently as the result of Government propaganda. believe McNamara is going to give the green light for South Vietnamese forces to march across the bor- der and invade Communist North Vietnam. A Vietnamese-speaking newsman found many people, particularly refugees from the Communist North, strongly in favor of this idea. The Government has publicly promoted the Idea of "marching north" and students who greeted McNamara yesterday carried Government-printed banners advocating this policy. But a large student demonstration sched- uled for this morning. reportedly to ask McNamara for support In marching north. was called of. There was no Immediate ex- planation. During last year's Buddhist crisis, the people looked to Mr. Kennedy to bring down the regime of President Ngo Dinh Diem. When Diem was finally toppled In November the credit was given largely to Mr. Kennedy. One man Interviewed today said: "Ken- nedy helped us last year. Now the United States will help us again, won't It? What Is McNamara going to say?" Some American officials are concerned about this popular expectation that Mc- Namara is going to make a dramatic an- nouncement producing a solution to the war situation. They point out that final decisions must come from Washington after McNamara returns with his recommendations. American aid to South Vietnam "will from now on he total, unlimited, and without con- ditions," a South Vietnamese spokesman asserted today. The spokesman said this curie out of Mc- Namara's Initial talks with Scuth Vietnamese leaders yesterday and that It meant no set limit would be placed on U.S. aid to South Vietnam. Assistant Defense Secretary Arthur Sylves- ter, McNamara's spokesman. said later that he did not hear the Defense Secretary use the expression attributed to him, but it was considered by informed observers that the statements were not contrary to what Mc- Namara said yesterday. The Vietnamese spokesmar, Col. Tran Ngoc Huyen, also said American leaders would not make "soothing statements, such as predict- ing the end of the war at a definite date." McNamara and the Preraler, Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, visited three villages in the wartorn Mekong River Delta today and were cheered by thousands of South Vietnamese. Other members of his party included Gen. Maxwell Taylor, Chairman cf the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff. At least 10,000 persons swarmed in the main street of one village, lioa Hao, as Mc- Namara and Khanh walked down it, shaking hands with persons in the c'owd. At the city of Can, McNamara and Khanh gave donations of 500,000 plasters (about $7,000) each toward the rebuilding of sev- eral hundred houses burned down last week. The enthusiasm of Hoa Hao's welcome swept security arrangements aside. Anyone could have slipped a hand itrenade into Mc- Namara's pocket with ease. However, McNamara's tour was marred when two of the four crewmen aboard a US. helicopter accompanying hie helicopter flight through the Mekong Delta were killed when their helicopter crashed into a river. The dead were two gurners. The pilot and the copilot were rescued. The crash was blamed on a mechanical failure. At each of McNamara's three stops, he em- phasized that U.S. support for the South Vietnamese war against the Communist Viet- cong guerrillas would cone: nue to whatever degree was necessary. He also repeatedly stressed U.S. support for General Khanh and told crowds that Khanh needed the support of the people. [From the New York Times, Mar. 8, 19641 MCNAMARA NEWS CONFEF.ENCE EXCERPTS I have two brief announcements to make. First, I have Issued instructions today to reduce the B-70 program from three aircraft to two. This action is corcurred in by the Secretary of the Air Force and by the Chief of the Air Staff. It is a result of a very com- prehensive review of the project we have just completed and it reflects our concern over the continued delays in the program. These delays have been brought about by severe technical difficulties At the time the three-aircraft program was formulated and approved, the first flight was scheduled for December 1982. The pro- gram is already some 18 months behind that schedule and the first aircraft has not yet been completely assembled.. To date, some 91.5 billion have been allocated to the proj- ect, with the prospect thet more would be required were we to attempt to compete it with three airplanes. Now, secondly, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and I. and other members of our party, will leave tonight at midnight for South Viet- nam. The purpose of our trip Is to discuss with Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and Gen. Paul D. Harkins and with Gen. Nguyen Khanh and members of his Government the effectiveness of U.S. training and logistical support for the South Vietnamese In their resistance to the Communist-dominated Vietcong. From the Washington Post, Mar. 10. 19641 MCNAMARA VOWED UNLIMITED U.S. Are, VIET OTFICIAL SAYS (By Nicholas Turner) - SAIGON. March 9.-U.S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara has made it clear that Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130026-6 1964 -Approved For Reuse 2005/02/10: CIA-RDP66B00403R0`88200130026-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 4621 Our trip is a further affirmation of the units, which had been guarding certain In- more sophisticated mines, particularly water U.S. commitment to furnish whatever eco- stallations in South Vietnam. During the mines, more sophisticated sabotage devices, nomic aid, and whatever military train- , period that they were assigned there, South with advanced timing mechanisms, obviously ing and logistical support is needed by the Vietnamese troops were trained to take over of Chinese Communist manufacture. South Vietnamese to suppress this incur- those functions. So the volume of support, the character gency and to continue to furnish that sup- NO REASON FOR STAYING of support, the trend of support, from the port for whatever period it is required. We saw no reason. and the Government North Vietnamese of the South Vietnamese Question. Mr. Secretary, do you believe there can be a military solution to the prob- lem in South Vietnam within the present rules? Secretary McNAMARA. I think the problem in South Vietnam is very clearly a political- economic-military problem. It is a prob- lem that requires the support of the people, if it is to be solved. General Khanh, the Premier of South Vietnam, has in his first 30 days in office done much to build the sup- port of the people. He is clearly sensitive to the need for in- creasing their economic welfare, as well as for providing physical security for them. So I think he is aware as we are of the inter- relationship among the political, economic and military facets of the problem. Question. Mr. Secretary, there has been some controversy in the past over your ap- praisal of how we were doing in South Viet- nam? Would you like to try again? How are we doing? Answer. I have said that the situation was serious there on a number of occasions. OCCASIONS RECALLED In October, upon our return from the September trip, and in December, upon my return from NATO via South Vietnam, and in January. You probably recall those. In October, I said, "the political situation in South Vietnam remains deeply serious." In December, I stated, "we observe the re- sults of the very substantial increase in the Vietcong activity, an increase that began shortly after the new government was formed on November 2, and it has extended over a period of severe,l weeks." And then in January, in my statement to the Congress, I stated "the situation there continues very grave" and I went on to dis- cuss why. Then on the day after that I .elaborated further on it and stated that the situation was very grave, but that within the previous 2 weeks there had been prog- ress, and we were encouraged by that prog- ress. I wouldn't change my appraisal, I think, of these past 4 months. During that 4-months period, the country has had three governments, each of the new governments has changed Cabinet members, each of the new governments has changed provisional governors and each of the new governments has made changes in the senior military lead- ership. The Vietcong have sought to take advan- tage of the resulting period of confusion. They have substantially increased their rate of incidents, their terror attacks, their har- assments, and their military attacks upon the Vietnamese. That level of attack is higher today than It was 6 months ago. It is lower today than it was at sometimes within the past few weeks and it is lower today than it was in November and December. What the future holds, I can't say. Question. Mr. Secretary, a two-part ques- tion on Vietnam, sir. First, can you tell us military police units should remain in Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I do not South Vietnam to do a job that the South know when the Secretary of Defense was Vietnamese had been trained to perform invested with authority to take over and were entirely competent to perform and, therefore, we withdrew them. foreign policy, but the state- . in determining when to withdraw U.S. mill- made in regard to South Vietnam have tary personnel from South Vietnam. I think no justification, and he should be held I made very clear in my introductory state- to an accounting, because millions of ment that we shall furnish whatever mili- Americans are beginning to recognize tary training and logistical support the that it is time for us to get out of South South Vietnamese require to effectively Vietnam and stop the shocking waste of counter the insurgency campaign, and we American blood and American money in shall continue to furnish that support for that scan by. as long as it is required. But I think that you should expect us, I think the American I shall have more to say about this sub- people should expect us, to conclude a train- ject before the week is over, because, I ing mission after a reasonable length of repeat, the administration should be time. brought to an accounting for the shock- Question. In connection with Vietnam, ing waste of American blood and Amer Mr. Secretary, would the withdrawal or re- moval of American dependents in South 1ican money in South Vietnam. Vietnam add to the effectiveness of our ef- fort there and will you consider that on this trip? HAWAII'S TRADE ROLE Answer. This is one of the questions I - Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask will look into while I am out there. The unanimous consent that an article en- number of military personnel with depend- ents in South Vietnam is very small. I have forgotten the exact number. The total num- Honolulu Advertiser, be printed in the ber of military dependents is something on CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. I commend Dr. the order of 700. Joseph E. McLean for bringing about the Question. Mr. Secretary, what standards conference referred to in the article. will you use in Vietnam to judge the success There being no objection, the article or failure? was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, Answer. Well, I think the level and growth as follows: of the economy, for example, is one. And HAWAII'S TRADE ROLE this, by the way, affords an interesting com- parison with North Vietnam. I have said Earlier this month a small group of men the situation in South Vietnam is serious. from Japan, the Philippines, Taiwan, India, It Is. It is grave. But we should not fail Pakistan, Australia, Malaya, and the United to overlook the accomplishments in that. States met in Honolulu for 5 days. country of the past 10 years, and the rate of They were attending a conference "on eco- growth. of the economy is one, and particu- nomic cooperation fordevelopment and trade larly it is impressive when one compares that in the Pacific" sponsored by the State of with the situation in North Vietnam, which Hawaii and the East-West Center. is facing very serious economic problems. Their papers were technical, for these are I will obviously be interested in the action technical men. But the significance of such that General Khahn has taken to broaden a conference, and in Hawaii, was evident. his Government. From what we hear here, Governor Burns, at a luncheon meeting- at he has taken many steps indeed to making which Under Secretary of State Hilsman it a more representative Government than spoke,.said, "This must go down as one of was true in either of the two previous govern- the most important days in Hawaii's future ments. as the crossroads of the Pacific." Obviously, our major attention, particu- And President Hamilton of the University larly General Taylor's and mine, will be de- of Hawaii said the conference drew upon "the voted to the military plans. General Khahn resources of State, scholar, and scientist," has laid down some very ambitious plans. plus the experiences of practitioners. He has Indicated he wishes to aggressively Many papers were presented, including expand the military operations in the field, those of Indonesian and New Zealand rep- particularly night operations, Increase the resentatives who at the last minute were number of days per month that military unable to attend, and these were followed units campaign in the field. by discussions. ASSISTANCE-LEVEL STUDY Typical subjects were the prospects of promoting an expansion of manufactured Question. Mr. Secretary, you said one of and agricultural exports; regional coopera- the purposes of your trip is to review the tion to stimulate industrialization in the level of assistance by the North Vietnamese less developed countries; the problem of to the Vietcong. Are you suggesting there stabilizing prices of primary commodities; that your findings in that regard might the form which foreign aid and technical significantly influence our policy in Vietnam? assistance should take; the effects of eco- Answer I don't wish to su e t - . gg s any con nomic growth upon a country's balance of advisable, as you have said in the past, to clusion I'll draw. I simply want to get at payments. withdraw most of our military aid mission the facts. There has been evidence that in These are not the kind of problems that by the end of 1965; and, second, what criteria the last 6 months the North Vietnamese sup- are solved at one conference or a dozen. will you be using in your trip to determine port of the Vietcong has increased. But a session such as that held here con- just how we stand there? We have seen, for example, through the tributes to eventual solutions. As Dr. Joseph Answer. Well, first, as to our training and capture of Vietcong weapons the introduc- E. McLean, the East-West Center's confer- logistical support and the possibility of with- tion of larger bore weapons than had been ence director, puts it: drawing personnel. As you know, we with- seen previously, .75 mm recoilless rifles for "Conferences may open the door to new drew a thousand men in December of. last example, obviously of Communist dhinese techniques, to new knowledge, to new un- year. These men included, for example, two manufacture; heavy-duty machineguns, ob- derstanding, or even to administrative or military police units, U.S. Military Police viously of Chinese Communist manufacture; policy action. Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130026-6 4622 Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130026-6_ CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE March 10 ,.All this has been especially true of our Conference on Pacific Trade and Develop- ment. It seems to me that the scholars par- ticipating - - - have taken a long stop forward In developing a freer exchange of ideas. "The discussions have been lively and un- inhibited. To the extent that the scholars succeed In their endeavors, we shall thereby reduce the burdens upon future statesmen and soldiers - - -. "Building an economic community in the Pacific is one way of reducing International tensions in the years ahead. This, of course, was one of the reasons why Governor Burns and the Center were Interested In this con- ference from the beginning." Under Secretary Hilsman, whose responsi- bility is the area of Far Eastern affairs, said on his arrival from a visit to Australia, New Zealand, and Fiji that he was struck by Hawaii's role In the economics of the Pacific, and that It was fitting that the conference should be held here. Hillman's observations came only 2 months after Secretary of Commerce Hodges called these islands "the gateway to the Pacific mar- ketplace." Hodges saw Hawaii as "the natural head- quarters for many managerial functions of firms exporting to the Pacific market. As a forward base, as an advanced distribution and sales center, you are without equal." Governor Burns, who is dedicated to mov- ing Hawaii ahead in the field of trade rela- tions. was described by Dr. McLean as the prime mover In bringing about the recent conference. The Governor, Mr. McLean, and Prof. P. T. Ellsworth, visiting professor of economics at the University of Hawaii, who was chairman of the conference, are to be commended for promoting this latest Interchange of Pacific area knowledge and experience. TELEGRAM FROM T. GABRIEL DUQUE, OF PANAMA Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that a telegram I have received from T. Gabriel Duque, ex-President of Panama, be printed in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. I appre- ciate having the views of ex-President Duque, who now is publisher of La Estrella de Panama and the Star and Herald. There being no objection, the telegram was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows : Senator WAYNE MORSE, Washington, D.C.: It Is with the utmost sincerity that I ex- press to you my heartfelt gratitude as a Panamanian for the clear, precise, cour- ageous statements you made in the Senate of the United States when you referred to the crisis which has arisen with my country. Your intelligent and lofty position shows there are North Americans capable of under- standing reality, of denouncing unhesitat- ingly the blunders and mistakes of the Gov- ernment of the United States, and of sug- gesting timely and effective measures for the effective correction of the errors which have beep committed. I pray that your ideas will prevail, pointing the right way to your Gov- ernment In order that justice may be done to Panama, which has suffered from misun- derstanding for over half a century, in order that the United States may recover its pres- tige so severely damaged by the events of which my country has been the victim. Cordially, T. GABRIEL DUQUE. Ex-President of Panama and Publisher of La Estrella de Panama and the Star and Herald. THE PANAMA CRISIS Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that there be In- serted in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD a column by Inez Robb on the Panama crisis. It, too, shows the shortcomings of the past U.S. foreign policy toward Panama. I agree with Miss Robb's major observations and congratulate her. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Uss THE STICK (By Inez Robb) If there Is a time and place In which the United States is always advised to walk softly and carry a big stick, It Is Panama. In that small, sensitive country, we are the builders, operators, and the owners of one of the Seven Wonders of the modern world. This country cannot give up the Panama Canal or surrender control of such an Indis- pensable link In our own defense and that of our allies. So It Is little short of treason for chauvinist Americans of any age need- lessly to endanger the American position in Panama and seriously embarrass the Govern- ment in Its day-to-day operation of the canal and Its day-to-day relationships with the Panamanian Government and people. So If I were wielding the big stick at the moment, I would walk softly in the Canal Zone and apply it vigorously to the American teenagers and the adults who encouraged them In sparking the riots In Panama in which at least 24 persons. Including three American soldiers, were killed. That alone is a terrible price-24 lives-for an arrogant prank that everyone Involved well knew could bring trouble. By defying the gentlemen's agreement be- tween the United States and Panama that the American and Panamanian flags shall fly side by side in the Canal Zone, American high school students, backed by adults, have not only the deaths of 24 persons on their conscience, but have also: 1. Made the U.S. position In Panama much more difficult. 2, Inexcusably and intolerably given the Communists, particularly the Castrolte brand. a club with which to beat us. especially throughout Latin America where we are- for our own salvation-doing our utmost to combat Marxism. 3. Seriously embarrassed the Government and the President, not only In our relations with Panama but with all of South America. 4. Given the Panamanians an American- made opportunity to demand a drastic revi- alon of the 00-year-old treaty under which this country holds the Canal Zone In per- petuity. Many Panamanians In the past decade have been spoiling for trouble. for any excuse to attack the American position. No one knows the touchy position better than Americans who live In the Canal Zone. Since World War II we have lived in an Increasingly angry and touchy -world In which mounting national pride has been a prime factor In International relations. There is no defense of Panamanians looking for any excuse for a fight; but there Is less excuse for Americans gratuitously presenting Panamanians with a readymade pretext. By no stretch of Imagination can that student flag raising In the zone be construed as an act of patriotism when It was done in defiance of U.S. Government regulations. It was distressing to hear, via radio, some of the students responsible for the deed boasting of what they had done and of the adult encouragement they had received. when more than a score lay dead and Com- munists around the world were turning the tragedy Into a field day. Surely, the U.S. Government will find it ex- pedient quietly to weed out the troublemak- era and the adults who encouraged them and ship all back to the United States. At least, they would no longer be in a position to cause an International Incident -jy deliberately tossing a match Into a tinderbox. our jingoists will say that the United States can crush Panama in 24 hours, and that is doubtless a generous estimate of time. But that Is not the way this Nation does business, nor Is it the way of the 20th cen- tury among civilized peoples. The United States must continue to own, operate" and protect the canal not as a dic- tator or bully, but as a firm, friendly, and decent neighbor. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that a sound and penetrating column by Eliot Janeway on the Panamacrisis be printed in the CON- GRESSIONAL RECORD. The column is effective testimony in support of the need for a thorough over- hauling of our Panama foreign policy. I congratulate Mr. Janeway. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: So now we have a Suez of our own-right in our own backyard. it was 7 years ago that the Suez crisis erupted over Nasser's demand to take over the Anglo-French canal. This was certainly a distant early warning to us In this hemi- sphere, long before the rise of Castroism. But it seems to have fallen on deaf ears. Typically, the American reaction to Suez was: "It can't happen here." When England and France went to war against Egypt, Pres- ident Eisenhower made his displeasure clear and effective enough to back them off and leave the canal in Egypt's hands. Now we find ourselves hoist with our own petard. Panamanians want to clip the Eagle's wings just as Egyptians wanted to pull the Lion's tail. They can cite not only Eisenhower's stand against the European canal owner. They can aim point to the recommendation Harry Truman made at the time to mediate the dispute by the device of internationalization (though, of course, it is nationalism. not internationalism, which is powering Panama's demands). Even though we find ourselves the heirs to the embarrassing position Of the Suez Canal owners, surprised and policyless despite 7 years of warning, we have a great deal more strength to bring to the 'aargaining table than did the British and the French. It is economic strength, and not of the old-fash- ioned Imperialist variety. In fact, it is par- ticularly timely to bring It under scrutiny now because it relates to the well-known controversy over tax loopholes, which Is at the top of the senatorial agenda this year. For there's no tax loophole bigger than the loophole known as the Panamanian Cor- poration which, of course, enjoys exemption from U.S. Federal taxes. There are at least two ways in which this loophole becomes a cornucopia for the economy of Panama for those Panamanians who are on the receiving end of the Yankee dollar. The first relates to the acre subject of the merchant marine. We have, in fact, sub- sidized Panama into business at the expense of our own oceangoing commerce, our own port-serving industries, our own dying ship- building Industry, and all the trades and jobs which formerly served them. The Pana- manian-flag ship is one of she main reasons for the depression in U.S. shipping and ship- building which has reached crisis propor- tions. The demonstration of our inability to compete in the grain-carrying trade has just shown this to be the case. The second endowment ,his tax loophole of the Panamanian Corporation gives Pan- ants, and Yankee dollar-owning Panamanians Approved For Release 2005/02/10 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200130026-6