THE STRUGGLE IN VIETNAM

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January 1, 1965
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196 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --SENATE 911 point and count tiQlp eeldu&ic Ralaas 3 1 IA-RDP67 04446R000300170021-8 s recent orders enforcing the fund with- measure their degree of readiness It was also 'Im able to tell the President almost exactly how NEWSLE'T'' M BY SENATOR holding provisions of title VI of the Chil- the Soviet strategic order of battle across the THURMOND Rights Act of 1684 provide an the proof world-bombers and rockets and long-range . wry on the element of control sn-Ieh submarine: -compared to our own. Probab- Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, on lurks behind all Federal aid dollars, ly never before in history has a head of state January 15, 1965, I Introduced a number' There is a good alternative for all Federal entered a war situation so well informed of of legislative Proposals for owlalderation aid to public education, and I have intro- the adversary's strengths and weaknesses an by the senate. Among leglenatlon to make this eitsrnattvs was Kennedy October, n6li'1, or, for that otig these wan Senate possible. The President in suggesting the y bill 543, which would eliminate the Fed- --ins M4 of some Federal weirs gases, I matter, with ao absolute a knowledge of the eral excise tax on alcohol and tobacco have thus proposed that the Federal Govern- overwhelming vantages that lay with him products. The purpose of this proposed ment withdraw Its excise taxes on alooholia.. across the board. le legislati be n i t f s ar o verages and tobacco pdt th e orth iii my weeklyn Nlc eary 9 years after the Otober affair, theews-roucs soelates President's closest adviser on national s- letter dated January 1S, 1965, and on- Can have the full benefit of these tax sources. ourity affairs, McGeorge Bundy. was to supply titled "Education and Tax SOUl'oeL~ In I.M. the Federal Government collected a sirangs epilogue In an article published in Therefore, I ask unanimous consent, approximately $6 billion in taxes on alcohol and iobaoco. Au States the April Issue of Foreign Affairs. -M* Oo- Mr. Preaident, that this newsletter be now tax alcohol and t obsooo but th li ,ey aremited in their rove- Lobar art"" Bundy concludes, '.came out printed at this point in the RECORD, eo nues here as elsewhere by the intrusion of:,. better than President Kennedy or any of his that the purpose of this proposed legisla- the Federal Government. he had cis base nx~ ed." de inns that Lion can be studied and considered by all In foot, l ption of tax sources by the ? as : who are concerned with the Problem of primary him, B Federal Government is one of the power factors were oopeless providing additional funds for education reasons for the gradual erosion of State and reason. would seem have stacked against theinst local powers of government and the shift o[. better reasonn. , AS as he closed the e books on the without further intrusion of the more and more authority to Washington. Cuba incident, to think that matters had Government into this area Federal of activity, If the President truly is concerned about turned out better for him than he had a which under the Constitution has been promoting more progress in education and right to expect. For one thing, he was per. reserved for State and local governments, States rsaponaibillties--as well as presert- Mitte odue pass, wirtt kets he on- under There being no objection, the letter tag States rights and our Federal system of inspection that the Americans had arts de- was ordered to be Printed in the RECORD, divided Powers--then he should support this mended. For another, he and Castro be- as follows: proposal to keep tax dollars at home so prog- lteved that they had an American promise EDVCATsON AND Tax SOasons fens fort people can be promoted at the not to invade Cuba so loo as the rockets appropriate level of government. He could g (fly Sraou TsuaatoNn, U.S. Senator from also back a proposal r am cosponsorlpg to didn't return. And, finally. the U.S. middle- South Carolina) provide a tax credit for tax range rockets based in Turkey and Italy. in The 89th Con payer whoop"d the NATO Interest. were dismantled and to- ~~ haeen asked by money The enp only ay feature education nexpenses of g In thaw two pr - ken away, as Khruahchev long had demanded, President a massive ctio pro- element larking In two gram of dont m geneJohnson ral eral Federal to approve ao aid to education. powL L the e of control-whirwh, In in A F xrTING OPPORTUNITY There is little question about the impor- his education message, the president pro.. As matters turned out Cub lance of education It is vit fs l t .' - a a was the asea not to der o our people .. the last of Khrusbchev's shoestring opera. for many reasons, foremost among thus be- Since iy q tions against the United States, Meanwhile, tag the paramount responsibility of self-gov- /l / STROM T!lvastotrs, it ap ears that th ent G U i ern p m e n ted States Passed reat strides have beend i up. maen what some observers think was a truly the individual States to increase the quality extraordinary opportunity in the western of public education. In fact, public educe- THE STRUGGLE IN VIETNAM Pacific. By early 196'9. U.S. intelligence was Lion spending by the States has tripled In in possession of information that much of the past 12 years, Mr. COOPER, Mr. President, .last Red China was In ferment, Tens of thou- Long ago our rounding Fathers deter- Saturday. January 18, 1965, Henry Cabot sands of refugees were pressing against the mined that the task of public education Lodge, our eminent and distinguished gates of Macao and Hong Kong; harvest, must be a responsibility of local govern- former Colleague, addressed the 49th Sri_ bad failed; there were public demonstra- went, They realized that.education can. nual convention of the National Asso- Mona even rioting, by the hungry; in some trolled by a central government could be elation of Secondary School Principals in oowmuntties the militia had refused to act used. as could a centralized police, power. to Miami on the against the people and certain detachments destroy local self-government and individ- struggle being waged in had In fact mutinied. At this point Preset. ual liberty in the Interest of establishing a Vietnam. The address Is timely, and his dent Chiang Kai-shek pressed Washington monarchy or dictatorship. views deserve careful attention as we for Permission to attempt to establish a Also, the Founding Fathers recognized that consider South Vietnam and the lo.. beachhead on the mainland with his own more and better education could be obtained grains of U.B. assistance there, as well s1s forces. The American decision was to leave for the dollar if administered by a local possible alternatives in policy. I ask matters an they were in China. Not only was school board. Thus, the field of education unanimous consent that this addie.e the weight of American influence thrown on was never delegated to the Federal Govern- containing important observatim& ob- the aide of restraining Chiang. The State resment under the erved to the States, ConAtittulobut rather WBA n. the word through third parties. that if Chiang did tamed by Ambassador Lodge In his OX- Department was also ensuring Peiping. "education" is not to be found In the Cr- oPerience in Vietnam, be inserted In the through third start off. he would be on his own. It is stitutlon. Because of this clear lack of Con- RECORD. now recognized in knowledgeable circles in stitutional authority, supporters of general There being no objection, the apaeoh Washington, however, that a demonstration Federal ?id t Indirect on limited the Past was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, by Chiang. With US. power. on the flanks Proposed programs as follows: and rear, would have subjected the Peiping for the purpose of getting the "oamells nose regime to a test It was Ill equipped to meet. under the tent." Sven the national defense StezCN by 'me HONOaADL. Rxwat OM W Firmness on the U.S. part in the Interest Clause in the Constitution has been used In LOocz, JANVA&Y 16, 1985, PbuNTsiNaaa1V Of an ally would have brought about at least an effort to pervert the Intent of the Con$i HOTRL, MIAMI ])MACH, AT Tess 49m ANNUAL an ebbing. perhaps even an a tution rather than seeking to amend the 0owvzrgTION or NATIONAL AssooaTtou or menace In Asia. . LO )tLaO? Oonstltutton, BacONDART SCHOOL ParNCnaL, By the beginning of the 1960', the Cu- szeFarr the fiscal year beginning July 1, IM. Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentleman. ,aq lave branch of the the President has requested authority to represent such a tremendous inffuepee ca Government had both the spend approximately one-third as much as America's youth and, therefore. such a deci. Information and the power to call Kbru- is now being *Pont for education by all the atve factor in America's destiny that it Is ebchev^s bluff and to finish off Castro. That States. This money will go to public, pre- Indeed a privilege for me to have yoq give me we did not do to was due In part to a want Tate, and church-supported reboots at au a hearing tonight. of resolution, which one may hope will now levels, beginning with kindergarten sod ex- I submit some thoughts. born of be surmounted. For today the united States tending through oolfege postgraduate work. experience, about Vietnam and What say Clearly stands at rile pinnacle of power. TITS Each year the Federal spending will go higher Will be in two parts: First, on Why Vietnam Oommunist system stands second, a very until total Control and responsibility rustu is Important: and second, on what is the ns- Weak suoond-weak militarily, weak soonom- In Washington With Pederal bureaucrats Lure of the problem. Wally and Political Yectian, in its inter- cuurriiccu ummou the s and conntrnuisnteacher textbooks a" pay and I. hl , UKWANCX Vietnam seas t standards. Of a~tt are ythe - n& at thsaat the h" Asie.-- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 9 f2 CONGRESSIONAL REOORD -- SENATE Januar#-19 an uses with ihYAC dQd'Aedl 2QOad1+AU53ta61Ae 7&Q"1 00Wfi447M4j6the war in south Vistaum. pie attending 2'9W Vince from north to south, and the rat Of the free world. , Neutralism that does not include somen gam. coed 3.000 miles from east to wart. The Because of an these eonsuigrstlOD, the at enforcement. that does not lBalude north. Mekong River, one of the 10 lssrgeat river united States has undertaken to support V7at em, that means that Mouth VMtnasw in the world, reaches the on in Beath Vet- the Vietnamese bdth politically and mdmm- will be alone and disarmed, is nothing some Warn, me who holds or has tnffuenoe In Fist- tarry in an effort whist. has cost us lives end than surrender.. It should be oprawe Or Dam can affect the future of the Philippines treasure. Vietnam just as It is opposed for aeetia. err. th Viet nam th b t 4 e are "arsatratw" o ru 6- In Burma with their huge rice surpluses to the wef ass not yet victe awar, mace rs as been rubber. by sspsQieaoe. now by article 10 of the CWnses sseeosd oaf waste and Malaysia and Indonesia with their oomptIdied. Wa has learrrvd bhes, oil and tin to the south. Japan 1s Tsrere Is more night-flghtlrn[ by small rafts. Jail thi, 11184. which said: 'Rte two parties. deeply concerned. Ali this affects Australia there are able province chiefs. there are man shun Insure that the zones assigwad so f be=, and New Zealand. Vietnam thus does not at impressive abllity in the netiopad 1,aavem- do not adhere to spy milltasy afianes r Jorge storehouses of wealth and population can be influenced and undaaalaed. Elatcsiaany. Vietnam has long phomed a part In the political development the For Last. For many centuries it wee under the occupation or Influence of the Chinese and was used by the Chinese sea a means of en- forcing their hegemony over the whole of southeast Asia. The Vietnamese did not en- joy this experience and have traditionally done whet they could to tiRow off Chinese ovealordahip. But today Vietnam should be seen as one more instance in It long eerie, of events which began in Tray, Turkey, and Greece after World War U which includes the seizure of Cmchoslovakla., which led to the Marshall plan In Europe: which caused the Korean war. the Maisyan emergency, the Ruk rebellion in the Philippines, end the Berlin Crisis. In all these widely separated places the Communist bloc has tried to sub- vert and to undermine the free world in order to spread their monolithic control and. their euppreclotfad freedom. In opposing this Communist onslaught, the free world has stood together tux nearly two decades. One-manifstatlon of our cogs- mon determination to frustrate the Commu- nist design to conquer Europe was the crea- tion of NATO. Elsewhere In the world we have formed other. alliances, The United States alone has suffered 150,000 casualties, since the end of. World War II in this effort to contain the.sgread of communism.' This worldwide effort by nations of the few worst has not been undertaken out of s simple quisoyd defig'bt to engage In taw" in distant places. ,Nor furs Is signify a de. sire to establish a new colonWism or any kind of special position. The war In Vietnam is not only the struggle of a small ustion to eidst, but it is also an open encounter be- tween the doctrine that "wan of revolution." as the Coomiuntets call them an the wave of the fuyuue, and our belies that to the future nations should be allewafd to dsvoko their own destinies free from outside Intel- Although the North Vietnamese have their own motives for their aggrealpa. In South Vietnam and have played the leading role, they have atwa p been backed by the Gringos Communists. Should their aggression be s ucceesfuL the, Chinese Communists will have seen positive proof that their approach to International relations Is oorrsst. Such an outcome might well lead the Soviets. In their desire to ratsdn the leader- ship of the Communist bloc, to adopt a more belligerent stance In their relations With the outside world. This would surely affect the West It would also be regarded everywhese as a reflection of the inability or lack of will of the free world to prevent aggression. What, for example. Would be the reaction In Europe If the United States were to withdraw truss southeast Asia An the face of its commitment The - state of public opinion In the United States itself would also be afbeted. Should YNstrssaa bs l"+ost,_ many vices would' be heard urging us to effect to 'resign harm the world" to fall back onto our "fortress America," and to gird up our loans for a contest with guided missiles. This too would be some- recognition that the war is above }1l a pout- leas matter. In which the adbefeace of the people to the Government Is the crucial factor. lb an" this effort the United States has built up an able organization In Vietnam to a.elat the Vietnamese. Ambassador Taylor. Ambassador Johnson, and General West- moreland head an American organization which has trained and helped to build the Vietnamese Army. On the economic card social front the United States has contrib- uted to the building of aobocts, cdlndm and better farms, all of which are essential to gaining and holding the political support that must be had to win the war. And we try to help in every way in tratolng civil administrators and In orating political en- ergy in the country:. Some have said that despite this effort the war in Vietnam cannot be woo. Yet recent history shows that we have bees fighting wars of this sort -fax the past 20 years and that the record Is creditable. We of the free world won in. Greece, we thwarted the - Qommualst aggression in Eurea. we won to Malaya, we won In the Philippines. and we can. win in Vietnam. We must persist and we must not play into the enemy% IIwdss by csuntiug on a quick sensational and esag way out, - Persistent execution of the political and military plans which have been agreed to will bring victory-provided outside paes- cures do not become too great. These out-. side pressures occur la many torox, such as th problem of sahctdules from which Viet- namr can be attacked and the - Vietcong helped with impunity. Infiltration from such sanctuaries cannot be.atlowed to defeat the efforts the Vietnamese are laaktng. We will not shrink from tolling such measures as seem necessary to cope with It,. . Another form of ^autstde.pyeuti e" Is fife desire in sans. quarters for on international conference here and now.. We pattus-tly do feat appose the idea of holding international oonferenQee as an abstract plcpcattion-tt. they are held at the proper time, and under the proper dncuawtimoes, but we think that to hold is conference now 'w uld. serve no good purpose and would asrdoa y undermine mozate tn. South Vietnam,. Consider the Moon": 1. Them have alraedy byes! two confer. Owes. en southeast Asti, they ogress of which here extb4ctory but which the Communists Violated before the Ink. we - dry botore holding another conference there must be some sign that the Oos munlsrta cc hand sad Peiping are prepared to leave their southern nolobe s alone. - 2. Poe the South Tiotmanies to go to sl conference now with a lame and aggressive fifth column on 'their soli taonld amount to s surrender. A oaalae+ussoe nob preceded bg a verifiable Camhm niet decision to cease at- tacking and subverting South Vietnam would be nothing morn atlas a. esapitulation. 8. -Thee is dearly no a~re~mt between ire and- the' is evens on the siniplaa prabovition to lave Bola th Vietnam atone. IL held to an stomphere of bit- ter disagreement could only make matters more dangerous than they already are. So-called neutralism is another outside pressure standing in the way of the success- -tilities or to further an ag rasoaea a s, This provision has been formally sppeci04 by article b of the the anal de heat m of as Geneva Conference of 1954 In wbleb' hose U.S.S.R., Red China, balsas, the UatiSR Aingdari, the United States, Casabediss, node. North and South Vietnam participated. We must therefore Waist before tlse a iss any discussion of a conference or d nes>krsalb lam. that the Communists stop their agtasw. .Ices and live up to the agreements akdsb already exist. The minute the csssslaagbt crass., there can be peace. At proem* thia North Vietnamese seem only .to ondeashom& force, and. of course. when they use lesion they must be met with force as they Tn" In the Gulf of 'lbnktn. They should also be mot with the strong and united opposition of the free world. It seems that conflicts in far-osg places an precisely those which have of0ost- brought war and calamity to all of us. se m-- churls seemed tar away in 1981: the au#w version of Ceechosslovakla by $itieer seesnot! remote to the United States in 1038. Yet the result was an untold outpouring cf-btsrpd and treasure. Persistence, and unity In the face at Communist pressure have'suooowb . to Europe and In southeast Asia, - and ota succeed again. a. sense or Tun Psostzs What you have In Vietnam to a hew kind of $ghtlug man. He Is as distinct M the Infantrymen or the aviator. B. Is tbe'loo- most He's not only different front' thi ta- t antryman she the avlatoz- -he'1d dffiss" from a guerrilla fighter. B. dzbes ~ Mw everybody sloe--and in those hot eo '. , a man ,rears a pair of pants and a to'? sod that's what the terrorist wears. amt bleb part of a very elaborate organlea loaf, IN is carefully controlled. protected, and gulssrd. He'n-. be told, for example, to go in and ter arse some village- where the V iesm" want to take, over. So, Monday'- idol there will be 12 bodies an the s#sesb-a10 man, wirsnen. ehtidren. Nobody's Gone thing--nobody's guilty-they're pert pkMW Indiscriminately. The Idea is to craft got. rot. 7bbn they'll kidnap the vehp ~. cut off his head, put it an a pooh east al- it around. Wall, by 3 o'clock in tfila-stfhor.+ noon you don't have too much asvthblw sing 17- or 13-year-old boys - to )do Vietcong. It' jut as simple as theft, Now. you don't get rid at this putting In an infantry battritoe' _ fenntry battalion comes In and it slays s'rolliq ilea hawbver long it wants to. .osisto disappear Into the lsvasesa = mss and paLn lest houses of the chisel . They the battalion moves a It. arsa'a ale: there forgives, And the arecelyta essz-acre again, Nothing has been aaaosnpbab & :sea tact In many ways the sitlatlca is . apses because a number of Innocent people bean been killed:. You don't get add, Of the -tom. !gust by bombing, because - yOB *s a bomb and you kill 20 people. 10'of'.tlO[tiOR women and ddidrom, who hate got to afar with the suereslsha as alx ane= 7s because t h e t e r r o r i s t Is .l ea4- ii s Well. therefore. to it hopeless? No, it So n% hopeless. But you've got to organise the totality of the population-42 of the Poo,- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 1965 Approved For F WkRiMA ' : 'I?t$P67`B 00300170021-8 "pie-to protect ti..' local village oflelala, slid that means you get a good man in each precinct-the arnaileet unit of government-- to be chairman. and a ga:x1 committee of young men who have it stake In the -in- munity, who have a fan.liy, who own a farm, or who own a home, or who want to get ahead in business or something-and you form a counterterrorist precinct committed. And then, with the help of the police--- and where there lent any police (and there lsn't any in most places In Vietnam), you have the Army and the local militia backing you, You then oo5iduct a census, Jesus Identification cards, have a curfew, and everybody who is out aster 8 o'clock has to expiala why, or, if he doesn't, they give him the buatness. And thus you go through each precinct with a tine-tooth comb. Now, .that's how you get rid of terrorism. And it isn't very fast, but it can be very sure. It has worked in many places where It has been tried-in Kuala Lumpur; In Algiers; in the Philippines; and in the city of Saigon. And then everybody gives the village chief and the chief of police where there is one some confidence that he may be going to live, and then he in turn can interest himself in the security of the people, aril you begin to get an upward spiral. And then you can bring in your doctors, and your school- teachers, and your welldlggera, and the ani- mal husbandry people--and all the other people that make life worth while. :3o, that's one part of the problem. One of the best things that any American has ever said about Indochina that I've read with sold by the late Gen. Bedell Smith, who was the U.B. repreieritative at Geneva in 1954, after the French had been defeated at Dlenbienphu. Georges Bidault, who was then the Prime Minister of France, told Bedell Smith that he was thinking of reliev- ing General Navarre because of the defeat at Utenblenphtt. And General Bedell Smith said, "Any second-rate general could win In Indochina If there werb a proper political atmosphere.- A profound remark. Because, you sec. In this struggle there's no front, there's no rear, there are no flanks-- and when the fighter wants to hide, he goes into the average Vietnwmese man's home. When he wants to rest, he goes into the average Vietnamese man's home. When he wants something to eat, he goes into the average Vietnamese man's home. If he's wounded and he wants to get taken care of, he goes into the average Vietnamese man's home. It he wants information 6s to what the army Is doipg, and as to what the Arrier- ics.na are doing, he goes into the Vietnamese home--and the old lady, the old grand- amother who is 85 years old, she can sit there and we what goes on, and she can tell him all about what she sees on the road-if she wants to. Well, now, the minute the everyday citizen. living in his home in Vietnam, says to the Vietcong, "You can't come in here to hide, You can't come In here to sleep and rest, you can't come in here to get food, you can't came here to have your wounds bound up- we aren't going to give you any informs- tlon"-the war's over. I was asked this question recently: "I sup- pose when we get rid of this Instability, then we can go ahead and win the war." I said: When you get rid of the instability, there isn't any war. The Instability is the prob- Ietn." This is an oriental country, a tropical country. Now think of what that meats. In the tropics, nature is rich-much, much, richer than it is in the north. 9o, a poor mad, living in the Mekong Delta looks at the water of the rice paddy where the rice grows and sees fresh water fish swimming around, There are also ducks swimming on the sur- face, that eat the fish. Then no place in Vietnam Is far from the ocean. So this poor No. 12----- 9 man can eat rice, fresh water fish, duck, and some of the most marvelous salt water fish in the world out of the South China' flea, There are also coconuts and pineapples and all manner of vegetables. Living right there, he can, for next to nothing, have a per- foctty marvelous diet without traveling more than a few hundred yards. So this oriental and tropical Vietnamese has everything he needs close to home. But, in addition to being oriental add tropical, he is also often a Confucianist. This means reverence for one's ancestors; it means great loyalty to family and to the small local group consisting largely of relations and near-rels, thous. This is the loyalty which counts for him above all-others-for which be is willing to die. How natural for some of these oriental, tropical, and Confucianist Vietnamese to say to themselves: "Why should I extend my frontiers 500 miles and pay taxes, and have an army, and a navy, and a diplomatic corps, and all the trappings of a Western nation-state, when r don't need it? It's all right for these people in the North-they have to, but I don't need to." And, this would be an unanswerable argument-if It were not for Communist China. It Is the nearness of Communist China which means that they must become a modern nation- state In order to survive, In 1964 more Viet- nainese realized this than In 1454. But it still goes against their traditions. Thus the concept of national government does not mean there what It meant in the West. And a loyalty to such groups as Roa Hao and Coo Dal have a vitality for which there Is no counterpart in the West. So, what you aee there-and r think I may have Invented a word for it-Is a strong sense of peoplehood-and of group and fam- ily loyalty-but not the same sense of na- tionhood that we have. These people think of themselves as Vietnamese, as being of a distinct race, which they are-you don't have to be there 5 minutes before you we that, They think of themselves as having their own language, which they have-their own literautre, their own an. their own history. They go 'way back-it's a very old civilita- tlon, They do not want to be overwhelmed and absorbed by the Chinese, but their "peoplehood" often doesn't involve the same attitude toward the flag. and the Republic, and the nation, and all those things that in the West we go out and die for. These people are brave, I must have talked with 5o of our young West Point captains, and, believe die, there are some young men that we can all be proud of. They're with the Vietnamese army battalions.. They are enthusiastic about the bravery of the Viet- namese soldier-his oourage, his toughness, the long-suffering quality that be has, But his loyalty has a Vietnamese quality to It, He Is loyal to his group, be Is loyal to his region, he Is loyal to his unit. In our own Western European history many years ago them was, for example, the hike . of Bur- gundy, and the Duke of Normandy, and the Duke of Piciardy, and finally It was put to- gether and became France. Well, this coun- try is evolving from this medieval lack of rational orgatiiratton into the 20th century. It's making progress. But It isn't-and it never was the same kind of country that we have In the West, and It shouldn't be judged that way. In the caws of Malaya, It took 12% years to win the struggle against the Vletoong of Malaya. And the thing that turned the balance against the Vietcong. was when a political arrangement was reached between the Malay community and the Chinese com- munity. When that was reached, then they were on their way. And I believe that, when a settlement is reached between the prin- cipal communities within Vietnam. then that 913 will be the beginning of a new day for that country. In conclusion: The struggle in Vietnam is as example of Mao Tee-tung's statement that "yotlttee to war without bloodshed and 'war Is politics with bloodshed." Thus, poll- tics and war are opposite sides of a coin- or, as has been said, "the two wheels, or wings. of statecraft." Armed combat Is thus only one-and not necessarily the most tin. portant--segment of war, The struggle in Vietnam is thus not a war In the sense that World War It:?-tMt Xorea-was a war, because total etlitagy success In Vietnam unaccompanied by Itil!- effort will solve the problem; the probtern iit thus the despair of the headline writer and of the political stump speaker or of any kind of black and white phraseology. Therefore,,thaee who try to make you tibias that there is a quick solution or a simple solution or an exclusively military solution axe doing you as much of a disservice as art those who tell you that there is no hope, that we must pull out and that anothr southeast Asian conference (added to the two which have been already held- and dlai, honored) will do other than turn South Viet- nam over to the Cotn:nunista. They also do you a disservice who deny ! that much has been achieved, that the =Ili- tsry program, the economic program, the social program, the informational program and the various technical programs have all accomplished much-have Indeed built the springboard of victory--and .that it Is the political, counter-subversive. counter-tar- roriat program which still needs special at- tention. It is accurate to say that a glass is halt full of water and it is equally accurate also to Say that a glass Is halt empty. To dwell on the fact that we have not achieved vdo- tory does not negate the other fact that we have prevented defeat-and that a stalls- mate is much better than a defeat. It is not the American tradition to get lsanicky whenever there is rough weather-- and to get desperate 'whenever It becomes clear-as it does every day-that a quick purely military victory is impossible. It we decide only to Interest ourselves in the nice, quiet, neat countries (which do not need our help) and abandon all the rough, tough, difficult places to the Communists, we will soon and ourselves surrounded by a rough, tough world which to aimed straight at the destruction of the United States and 'W'hich will make our present effort in Vietnam seem mild Indeed. Win Or lose, the stakes tit Vietnam are enormous. And we need not lose. THE NEED FOR CONGRESSIONAL REFORM CONTINUES Mr. CASE. Mr. President, a recent editorial In the Washington Post, Cant. meeting on a study by the National Com- mittee for an Effective Congress, re- minds us that the need for congressional reform continues. The recent changes in the rules of the other body are a recognition of this fact; and?I am hopeful that, before logy, both bodies will join in enacting legislation to set up a Joint Committee on the Mod- ernization of Congress. I ask unanimous consent that the edi- torial from the Washington Poet be printed in the RscoRD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed In the R.rcoan, as follows: Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For Release 2003/10/15: CIA-RDP67B00446 000300170021-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Whereas the U.S. Senate in the 88th Con- gress, 2d session, passed a bill authorizing the construction of the initial 250,000-acre phase of the Garrison diversion unit, and the U.S. House of Representatives Commit- tee on Interior and Insular Affairs in the same session, reported out favorably and rec- ommended for passage a bill, H.R. 1003, as amended, authorizing the construction of the initial phase of the Garrison diversion unit, which report and amended bill were accept- able to the sponsors of the reauthorizing legislation, but said H.R. 1003 failed to re- ceive House action because of lack of time before sine die adjournment of the 88th Congress: Now, therefore, be it Resolved by the House of Representatives of the State of North Dakota, the Senate concurring therein: That the 39th Legislative Assembly of the State of North Dakota here- by expresses its unequivocal support for the early development of the Garrison diversion unit and fully concurs in and endorses the presentations by Gov. William L. Guy and other proponent witnesses at the hearings in the 88th Congress on S. 178 and H.R. 1003, and companion bills; and be it further Resolved, That the 89th Congress be and it is hereby most respectfully urged to take early action to effect enactment of legisla- tion authorizing the construction of the Garrison diversion unit along the lines of S. $4, H.R. 1718, and H.R. 237, 89th Congress; and be it further Resolved, That copies hereof be trans- mitted by the secretary of state to the Mem- bers of the North Dakota congressional dele- -gation, the chairmen of the Senate and House Committees on Interior and Insular Affairs, President of the Senate, Speaker of the House, the President of the United States, the Secretary of the Interior, the Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Water and Power, and the Commissioner, Bureau of Reclama- tion. :ARTHUR A. LINK, Speaker of the House. DONNELL HONGEN, Chief Clerk of the House. CHARLES TIGHE, President of the Senate. Secretary of the Senate EARLY AND FULL DEBATE ON SOUTH VIETNAM IMPERATIVE Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, last Friday, January 15, 1965, the able and distinguished senior Senator from Idaho [Mr. CHURCH], one very well versed in the foreign affairs of the United States, stated: The Senate has a responsibility in the field of foreign affairs. We have suffered from too much conformity of thought on the matter of Vietnam. A dissent constructively ex- pressed, indeed, a full-fledged debate on the subject of Vietnam, is long overdue. At the very least, such a debate would give the American people a better idea of the alterna- tives available to us. It would give the President more elbow room, should he need it, within which to deal with this difficult situation in southeast Asia. I concur wholeheartedly in Senator CHURCH'S recognition of the need for a full, frank, and open debate in the U.S. -Senate-of, the situation in South Viet- nam. The American people have a right to demand such a debate on a subject matter so important to their future wel- fare and to the welfare of the Nation as a whole. As a matter of fact such debate has already started. No. 12-6 GERALD L. STAN, . In tile issue of the American Legion magazine for August 1964, some of the pro and con arguments for our present position in South Vietnam are set forth by the able and distinguished senior Sen- ator from Massachusetts [Mr. SALTON- STALL] and myself. I ask unanimous consent that those arguments under the heading "Should U.S. Troops Be With- drawn From Vietnam?" be printed in full in the RECORD at the conclusion of these remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. With- out objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 1.) Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, last Sunday, January 17, 1965, in the New York Times Magazine a similar discus- sion of the pros and cons of our con- tinued unilateral presence in South Vietnam by the able and distinguished senior Senator from Oregon [Mr. MORSE], and the former Ambassador to South Vietnam, Mr. Lodge, were set forth. I ask unanimous consent that this discussion also be printed in full in the RECORD at the conclusion of my re- marks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. With- out objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 2.) Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, both of these debates in the Nation's periodi- cals serve a most useful purpose. But the debate on South Vietnam should be brought to the Senate floor for here there can be give and take which in years past has been used so often to focus public attention on vital issues. And at this time there can be no more vital issue than our future course of ac- tion in South Vietnam. The U.S. position in South Vietnam is steadily deteriorating. It is deteriorating despite the massive military and financial aid the United States is increasingly pouring into that country and despite the stepup and extension of our Air Force bombings which, although they have been going on for some time, were re- vealed to the American people only by the shooting down of two of our planes. Not only is the stability of the Govern- ment of South Vietnam ebbing and flow- ing from day to day, but it seems to be losing-if indeed it ever had-the confi- dence and support of an increasing seg- ment of the people. 'I ask unanimous consent that there be printed at the con- clusion of these remarks a report by United Press International in the New York Times for January 18, 1965, en- titled "Four Students Shot in Vietnam as Rioting Sweeps Two Cities." The PRESIDING OFFICER. objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 3.) Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, as further indication of the rapidly deteri- orating situation in South Vietnam and the impossibility of U.S. fighting advisers replacing South Vietnamese troops lack- ing the will to fight, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the CONGRES- SIONAL RECORD a dispatch by Jack Lang- guth in the New York limes for today, January 19, 1965, entitled, "Thirty Per- cent of Vietnam Draftees Desert Within 6 Weeks." 889 The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 4.) Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, in an excellent editorial published in the Chris- tian Science Monitor for January 18, 1965, entitled, "Delay or Diplomacy in Vietnam," the alternatives facing the United States are set forth clearly and concisely. I ask unanimous consent that this editorial be printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. With- out objection, it is so ordered. -See exhibit 5.) Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, the time is long overdue for the full airing on the floor of the Senate of all the facts on the U.S. position in South Vietnam and for a discussion of the alternative choice for future action open to the United States legally, morally, militarily, and politically. It is my earnest hope that such a de- bate will take place without delay and will be participated in by as many of my colleagues as possible. [From American Legion 19641 Exnnirr magazine, August TROOPS BE WITHDRAWN FROM VIETNAM? YES ERNEST GRUENING, Democrat, of Alaska) The war in South Vietnam is not and never has been a U.S. war. It is and must remain a fight to be fought and won by the people of South Vietnam themselves. Will to fight and will to win must come from the spirit of the South Vietnamese. The United States cannot instill that will in them. For the past 14 years, U.S. military and economic aid to South Vietnam has totaled nearly $3 billion, but despite state- ments of leaders of both political parties, Vietnam continues to be rocked by internal strife which drains the nation of its re- sources. The root of the present dilemma in which the United States finds itself in South Viet- nam lies in the aftermath of France's defeat at Dienbienphu on May 7, 1954. Today-10 years later-the U.S. position resembles that of France although we haven't used a quar- ter of a million troops, yet. Those who compare South Vietnam today with South Korea of the 1950's make a great mistake. South Korea had the will to fight and to win. South Korea was a country invaded from the north--South Vietnam is a country divided within itself by a civil war. More important-in Vietnam we are alone; in Korea we were in there as part of the United Nations effort. Where are our allies in South Vietnam? Over 200 Americans have been killed in South Vietnam, as we fight alone. Prospects are that we will continue to do so. The theory was advanced by the late John Foster Dulles that the United States must keep South Vietnam strong to prevent the fall of Cambodia and Laos to Red China like a row of dominos. We poured aid money into each domino, including $300 million into Cambodia, yet it recently neutralized itself and fell of its own accord, thereby voiding the Dulles progression theory ad- vanced during the Eisenhower administra- tion. I consider the life of one American worth more than this.putrid mess. Let us do a little hard rethinking. Must the United States be expected to jump into every fracas Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE January 19 all over the world, to go it all alone, at- the cost of Our youngsters' lives, to stay blindly and stubbornly when a decade of bitter ex- perience has shown us that expenditure of blood and treasure has resulted In failure? The time haq come to reverse our policy of undertaking' to defend areas such as South Vietnam, whose people are so reluc- tant to fend for themselves. Let us keep on, by all means, supplying them with arms. Let us continue to give them the means if they wish to use them. But not our men. We must reassess the Dulles doctrine of seeking to engage communism on its own ground-12,000 miles away. The situation in South Vietnam and else- where in southeast Asia cries out for inter- national solution. The problem will not be resolved in battle but around a conference table. The United Nations is such a confer- ence table. NO (By Senator LEVERETT SALTONSTALL,Republi- can, of Massachusetts) The withdrawal of U.S. troops from South .Vie tam would assure the Communists of vic- tory there and result in a drastic defeat for the United States-morally, politically, and psychologically. The issues at stake in South Vietnam reach far beyond our minimum objective of preserv- ing the non-Communist social order of that country. The war in Vietnam is a struggle for the survival of U.S. leadership in the fight against Communist expansion, not only in southeast Asia but throughout the world. Those who propose U.S. withdrawal, a nego- tiated settlement, or the neutralization of South Vietnam as alternative solutions for terminating the conflict there, have failed to grasp this underlying significance of the war and. the importance of its outcome upon the U.S. world position. While it may be debatable whether we were prudent in doing so, nevertheless, the un- alterable fact remains that the prestige of the United States has been fully committed to the prevention of a Communist takeover of South Vietnam. If the United States should fail to honor that commitment by disengaging from South Vietnam, our default was disastrously affect world opinion and would surely be construed by the nations of the world as evidence of our weakness and vacillation in coming to grips with com- munism. Moreover, from the military standpoint, the U.S. formula for advising and assisting the South Vietnamese to resist Communist-in- spired wars of national liberation rests in the new concept of counterinsurgency-now un- dergoing its acid test in the rice paddies of the Mekong River Delta. If this defensive concept falls in its purpose to overcome the creeping aggressions of Communist guerrilla warfare, the United States will have to admit to a military defeat in being incapable of devising effective military tactics to cope with that type of warfare. As a consequence, an increase in guerrilla wars can surely be an- ticipated not only in southeast Asia but throughout the world as communism expands without U.S. military hindrance or resistance. Politically, a defeat in South Vietnam will be the catalyst for the nations of the Orient to aline themselves with Communist China which would, as a result of U.S. disengage- ment, become the dominating influence of all of Asia. Should South Vietnam fall, it is more than likely that communism would eventually triumph in southeast Asia through subversion, bloodless coups, or guerrilla wars. The neutralization of South Vietnam is appealing in principle but it has thus far failed in Laos. Similarly, a settlement under United Nations auspices is attractive in prin- ciple, but there is no assurance that the Communists would not undermine and sub- vert United Nations efforts in South Vietnam as they did In the Congo. The United States, whether rightly or wrongly, is so involved morally, militarily and politically, and its prestige so fully commit- ted in South Vietnam that it cannot coun- tenance a defeat there. Consequently, under present conditions U.S. troops cannot be withdrawn if we are to avoid serious inter- national repercussions. EXHIBIT 2 [From the New York (N.Y.) Times Magazine, Jan. 17, 1965] WE MUST LEAVE VIETNAM (By WAYNE MORSE) Ten years ago the United States embarked upon an adventure in South Vietnam that was just about 100 years out of date. While Britain, France, and the Netherlands were terminating their rule over their Asiatic colonies, the United States began trying to establish its own beachhead on the Asiatic mainland. Although present at the Geneva Conference of 1954, which drew up the accord whereby France withdrew from its old colony of Indo- china, the United States refused to sign the final agreement. So did one of the subdivi- sions of Indiochina, South Vietnam. The United States began a heavy program of financial and military aid to a new Premier In South Vietnam who, we believed, was most likely to preserve a Western orientation. When it came time for the 1956 election throughout both North and South Vietnam required by the Geneva accord, we and our client in Saigon, Ngo Dinh Diem, realized it would be won by Ho Chi Minh Is followers not only in his own North Vietnam but in the South as well. South Vietnam refused to proceed with the election. In the last decade we have explained our policy as one of helping a free government resist Communist subversion. But South Vietnam never has had a free government. In its 10 years of existence its governments have been picked for it by the United States and maintained by our heavy doses of eco- nomic and military aid. - The fraudulence of our claim has been starkly exposed by the successive coups in Saigon and by the piecing together of one government after another by the American Embassy. Leaders suspected of favoring neu- tralism or any form of negotiation for set- tlement of the civil war are firmly excluded from Government ranks. The major tools we have used in manipulating political and military leaders have been various threats and promises regarding our aid, which now hovers around the level of $600 million a year In a country of 14 million people. This sum is exclusive of the cost of keeping 23,000 American "advisers" and large contingents of aircraft in the country. In fact, our official explanations of why we are there now play down the "helping a free government" lineand play -up American security and American prestige as the stakes In Vietnam. At least, the explanations are getting closer to the truth, which is that the United States took over this quarter of Indo- china in 1954 when the French pulled out. Having intruded ourselves into southeast Asia, where we never were before, it was this country and not the Communists who made our prestige in Asia the issue. Our Secretary of State often says that "China must leave her neighbors alone." Under this premise, our officials have vaguely threatened to expand the war to North Viet- nam and possibly China if we cannot win in South Vietnam. But there are no Chinese forces in South Vietnam nor Chinese equip- ment in appreciable amount. Americans are still the only foreign troops in South Viet- nam. Nonetheless, China has the same interest in what goes on in the subcontinent of south- east Asia as we have in Mexico, Cuba. and other countries of Latin America. She will increasingly resist having hostile govern- ments on her borders, as do Russia and the United States. We recognize and accept this principle as regards Russia, but we refused to recognize it as regards China. This has been true even though we have watched other Western nations ousted from Asia and Africa by rising nationalism. It was inevitable that once China became part of this tide she would reassert her interest in the governments on her borders. A re- awakened China would assert this intern:?t whether she were Communist or not. The more we escalate the Vietnam conflict, the more likely China is to intervene directly. In South Vietnam, we invite China's ap- prehension, but more than that, in trying to surround China with American bases and pro-Western states, we have to buck not only communism but anticolonialism. One of our many mistakes is to equate the two, es- pecially when antiwhite feeling is directed against the United States. Advocates of a containment policy for China, similar to that applied to Russia with some success in the late 1940's and 1950's, overlook the impossi- bility of maintaining Western strongholds in Asia, no matter what their purpose. What we could do in white Europe and even the Middle East is not to be imposed upon an Asia that is united in at least one respect- its determination to see the white man sent back to his own shores. With our great wealth we can sustain the current war effort In Vietnam indefinitely, even if it is escalated. But it will never end because our presence and our selection of Saigon's rulers will always inspire rebellion. Far from maintaining our prestige in Asia, our present policy in Vietnam is eroding it. The fact that we are losing despite the steady increase in our aid, the addition of +23,000 American advisers, and complete American air domination, has already led several Asian nations to throw out an anchor on the Chinese side. Of the famous dominoes that were all supposed to fall to China if we failed to take up the French burden in southeast Asia, Burma and Cambodia have already neutralized themselves. Pakistan has made it clear that the aid she gets from us is directed against India and not against China, Japan and India, the largest non- Communist nations of Asia, who might be expected to be the most helpful to us in Vietnam, have not associated themselves with what we are doing there. A few days ago India's Premier Shastri urged a new in- ternational conference to negotiate a settle- ment. He asked the United States not to press for a military decision and urged that we avoid a major military conflict. Of all the nations touted as potential Chinese victims, only Australia and the Philippines have offered tangible help in South Vietnam. The Australian contribu- tion amounts to some 66 advisers and 3 air- cargo planes. The Philippine offer of a force of volunteer veterans was turned down. That is the extent of the local interest and support for the American view that we are saving all of Asia from communism by our policy in Vietnam. Surely if one of these so-called dominoes believed it, they would be fighting side by side with us in Vietnam. They are not, because they see us having to run faster and faster just to stay in the same place in Vietnam. They see that the bulk of its people are too in- different to American objectives to resist the Vietcong. They know that sooner or later we will have to leave and they do not want to jeopardize their own standing in Asia by supporting a last-minute white intervention. - There are many ways this country could crawl back from the limb we crawled out on 10 years ago. Through the Southeast Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For Release 2003/10/15: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 1965 - CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 891 Asia Treaty Organization, the United Na- tions or a reconvened Geneva conference we could seek to establish an international presence in Vietnam to stabilize and pacify the country while it develops political in- stitutions. Our refusal to sign the accord of 1954 has always made suspect our claim that we were enforcing it. In truth, our enforcement has taken the form of violations far more massive than any violations by North Vietnam. Our jet air forces and bases, our helicopter fleet, the 23,000 U.S. military advisers are all violations of the 1954 accord. So are they violations of section after section of the United Nations Charter, under which we are pledged to seek peaceful solutions to disputes and to lay before the U.N. those disputes we are unable to solve peacefully through means of our own choosing. We have done neither in Vietnam. A negotiated settlement in South Vietnam is the first solution we are obliged to seek. Of course, it would mean some guaranteed neutralization of the country. That would give its war-torn people the best chance they have yet had to construct a country of their own, something the French, the Japanese, the French again, and now the Americans have not given them. If we fail to reach a negotiated settlement, then the U.N. Charter requires the dispute to be laid before a regional organization, such as SEATO, or one of the U.N. bodies. Both groups have the capacity to police the country; both the more likely to bring it some degree of cohesion than is the United States with its unilateral intervention in pursuit of our own interests. Some Americans have busily erected an enormous pyramid of disasters they contend would result even from this limited Ameri- can retrenchment. They see America as a power in the Pacific only if we and our friends control all its shores instead of just its northern, eastern, and southern shores, plus the island fringe off its western shore. Most important, they ignore the impossibility of creating an American foothold on that shore in mid-20th century, communism or no communism. Many countries, East and West, have ac- commodated themselves to the end of the old order in Asia. We will, too, eventually. The only question is how much blood and money we will waste first trying to turn the clock back. [From the New York (N.Y.) Times Magazine, Jan. 17,1965] WE CAN WIN IN VIETNAM (By Henry Cabot Lodge) "Pulling out of Vietnam" Is exactly the same as "turning Vietnam over to the Com- munists." Such a course would not be merely imprudent, but actually extremely dangerous. Geographically, Vietnam stands at the hub of a vast area of the world-southeast Asia- an area with a population of 240 million people extending 2,300 miles from north to south, and 3,000 miles from east to west. The Mekong River, one of the 10 largest rivers in the world, reaches the sea in South Vietnam. He who holds or has influence in Vietnam can affect the future of the Phil- ippines and Taiwan to the east, Thailand and Burma with their huge rice surpluses to the west, and Malaysia and Indonesia with their rubber, oil, and tin to the south. Japan, Australia, and New Zealand would in turn be deeply concerned by the communization of South Vietnam. Historically, Vietnam has long played a part in the political development of the Far East. For many centuries it was under the occupation or influence of the Chinese and was used by the Chinese as a means of enforcing their hegemony over the whole of southeast Asia. The Vietnamese did_not en- joy this experience and have traditionally done what they could to throw off Chinese overlordship. In a very real sense, there- fore, the present struggle is one of self- determination. But today Vietnam should be seen as one more instance in a long series of events which began in Iran, Turkey, and Greece after World War II; which include the seizure of Czechoslovakia; which led to the Marshall plan in Europe; which caused the Korean war, the Malayan emergency, the Huk re- bellion in the Philippines, and the Berlin crisis, In all these widely separated places the Communist bloc has tried to subvert and to undermine the free world in order to spread its control and its suppression of free- dom. In opposing this Communist onslaught, the free world has stood together for nearly two decades. One manifestation of our common determination to frustrate the Communist design to conquer Europe was the creation of NATO. Elsewhere in the world we have formed other alliances. The United States alone has suffered 160,000 casualties since the end of World War II in this effort to contain the spread of communism. This worldwide effort by nations of the free world has not been undertaken out of a simple quizotic delight in engaging in battles in distant places. Nor does it sig- nify a desire to establish a new colonialism or any kind of special position. The war in Vietnam is not only the struggle of a small nation to exist, but it is also an open encounter between the doctrine that "wars of revolution," as the Communist call them, are the wave of the future, and our belief that in the future nations should be allowed to develop their own destinies free from out- side interference. Although the North Vietnamese have their own motives for their aggression in South Vietnam and have played the leading role, they have always been backed by the Chi- nese Communists. Should their aggression be successful, the Chinese Communists will have seen positive proof that their ap- proach to international relations is correct. Such an outcome might well lead the Soviets, in their desire to retain the leader- ship of the Communist bloc, to adopt a more belligerent stance in their relations with the outside world. This would surely affect the West. It would also be regarded everywhere as a reflection of the inability or lack of will of the free world to prevent aggression. What, for example, would be the reaction in Europe if the United States were to withdraw from southeast Asia in the face of the commit- ment to assist the nations there? The state of public opinion in the United States itself would also be affected. Should Vietnam be lost, many voices would be heard urging us in effect to "resign from the world," fall back onto our "fortress America" and gird up our loins for a contest with guided mis- siles. This too would be something which neither Europe nor the rest of the free world could ignore. Because of all these considerations, the United States has undertaken to support the Vietnamese both politically and militarily, in an effort which has cost us lives and treas- ure. The effort has not been in vain. Although we are not yet victorious, we have achieved a stalemate, which is surely much better than defeat. On the economic and social front the United States has contrib- uted to the building of schools, clinics, and better farms, all of which are essential to gaining and holding the political support that must be had to win the war. And we try to help in every way in training civil ad- ministrators and in creating political energy in the country. Some have said that despite this effort the war in Vietnam cannot be won. Yet recent history shows that we have been fighting wars of this sort for the past 20 years and that the record is creditable. We of the free world won in Greece, we thwarted the Communist aggression in Korea, we won in Malaya, we won in the Philippines, and we can win in Vietnam. We must persist and we must not play into the enemy's hands by counting on a quick, sensational, and easy way out and then being disappointed when it does not occur. Persistent execution of the political and military plans which have been agreed to will bring victory-provided outside pres- sures do not become too great. These out- side pressures occur in many forms such as the problem of sanctuaries from which Viet- nam can be attacked and the Vietcong helped with impunity. Infiltration from such sanc- tuaries cannot be allowed to defeat the ef- forts the Vietnamese are making. We will not shrink from taking such measures as seem necessary to cope with it. Another form of "outside pressure" is the desire in some quarters for an international conference here and now. We do not op- pose the idea of holding international con- ferences as an abstract proposition-if they are held at the proper time and under the proper circumstances-but we think that to hold a conference now would serve no good purpose and would seriously undermine morale in South Vietnam. Consider the reasons: 1. There have already been two conferences on southeast Asia (one on Vietnam and an- other on Laos), the terms of which were satisfactory but which the Communists violated before the ink was dry. Before holding another conference there must be some sign that the Communists of Hanoi and Peiping are prepared to let their south- ern neighbors alone. 2. For the South Vietnamese to go to a conference now with a large and aggressive fifth column on their soil would amount to a surrender. A conference not preceded by a vertifiable Communist decision to cease attacking and subverting South Vietnan would be nothing more than a capitulation. 3. There is clearly no agreement between us and the Communists on the simple prop- osition to let South Vietnam alone. A con- ference held in an atmosphere of bitter dis- agreement could only make matters more dangerous than they already are. So-called neutralism is another outside pressure standing in the way of the success- ful prosecution of the war in South Viet- nam. Neutralism that does not include some means of enforcement, that does not include North Vietnam, that means South Vietnam will be alone and disarmed, is nothing more than surrender. It should be opposed for Vietnam just as it is opposed for Berlin or for Germany. It takes strength to be neutral. South Vietnam is not strong enough today to be neutral. In truth both Vietnams are "neutralized" now by article 10 of the Geneva accord of July 21, 1954, which said: "the two parties shall insure that the zones assigned to them do not adhere to any military alliance and are not used for the resumption of hostil- ities or to further an aggressive policy." This provision was formally approved by article 5 of the final declaration of the Geneva Conference of 1954, which the U.S.S.R., Red China, France, the United Kingdom, the United States, Cambodia, Laos, North and South Vietnam attended. We must therefore insist before there is any discussion of a conference or of neutral- ism, that the Communists stop their aggres- sion "and live up to the agreements which already exist. The minute the onslaught ceases, there can be peace. At present, the North Vietnamese seem only to understand force, and, of course, when they use force they must be met with force, as they were in the Gulf of Tonkin. They should also be Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 892 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE January 19 met with the strong and united opposition of the free world. It seems that conflicts In far-off places are precisely those which have often brought war and calamity to all of us. Manchuria seemed far away in 1931; the subversion of Czechoslovakia by Hitler seemed remote to the United States in 1938. Persistence, and unity in the face of Communist pressure have succeeded in Europe and in southeast Asia, and can succeed again. Mao Tse-tung said: "Politics is war with- out bloodshed; war is politics with bloodshed." The struggle in Vietnam is not a "war" In the sense that World War II--or Korea-was a "war," because total military success in Vietnam, unaccompanied by success in other fields, will not bring victory. A many-sided effort is needed; no single effort will solve the problem; the problem is thus the despair of the headline writer and the political stomp speaker employing black-and-white phraseology. Therefore, those who say that there is a quick solution or a simple solution or an exclusively military solution are doing as much of a disservice as are those who say that there is no hope, that we must pull out and that another southeast Asian conference (added to the two which have been already held--and dishonored) will do other than turn South Vietnam over to the Communists. They also do a disservice who deny that much has been achieved, that the military program, the economic program, the social program, the informational program, and the various technical programs have all accomplished much-have indeed built the springboard of victory-and that it is the political, countersubversive, counterterrorist program which still needs special attention. It is accurate to say that a glass is half full of water and it is also accurate to say that the glass is half empty. To dwell on the fact that we have not achieved victory does not negate the other fact that we have prevented defeat-and that a stalemate is much better than a defeat. It is not the American tradition to get panicky whenever there is a little rough weather. If we decide only to interest our- selves in the nice, quiet, neat countries (which do not need our help) and abandon all the rough, tough, difficult places to the Communists, we will soon find ourselves sur- rounded by a rough, tough world which Is aimed straight at the destruction of the United States and which will make our present effort in Vietnam seem like the mildest of pink teas. EXHIBIT 3 [From the New York (N.Y.) Times, Jan. 18, 1965 ] FOUR STUDENTS SHOT IN VIETNAM AS RIOTING SWEEPS Two CTTIEs-2,000 AT HUE DEMAND OUSTER OF HUONG AFTER OUTBREAK OF VIO- LENCE IN DALAT-TROOPS EVADE VIETCONG TRAP SAIGON, SOUTH VIETNAM, January 17 - Anti-Government demonstrations by student and Buddhist groups swept the central Viet- namese cities of Hue and Dalat today. Four students were shot and wounded. '['he rioting occurred as the Government reported two new clashes with Communist guerrillas. In one battle, a Government unit outwitted the Vietcong and inflicted heavy casualties as they were preparing an ambush. At Hue, the ancient imperial capital near the North Vietnamese border, 2,000 students, including some Buddhists, massed outside the radio studio and shouted demands for the dismissal of Premier Tran Van Huong. They were angered by reports that the four students wounded in Dalat had died. Actu- ally the students were being treated at a pri- vate clinic and the nature of their wounds was not disclosed. In the Dalat demonstration, 500 students paraded through the streets, forcing shops to close. Policemen and troops set up barri- cades to keep order, but the preventive meas- ures shortened tempers and rocks were thrown. A U.S. Embassy source said there were re- ports that a Vietnamese national policeman in civilian clothes had fired the shots. The demonstrators were reported to include students from two Government-run high schools-the Hung Dao School for boys and the Bui Thi Xuan School for girls-and from a Buddhist school. In the fighting at Tayninh, near the Cam- bodian border, meanwhile, Government forces killed 25 Communist rebels after discovering a Communist ambush plot. Instead of breaking through the rebels' roadblock, the Government troops halted and called for reinforcements to steal behind the Vietcong troops lining the road. Two Government soldiers were killed and one was wounded. A number of Vietcong weapons were seized, including 11 rifles, 2 pistols, 2 carbines, and a radio. In other action, Government troops using 105-mm. artillery fire, supported by Viet- namese Air Force strikes, drove off two Viet- cong companies 10 miles south of Binh Gia. U.S. military spokesmen said two Govern- ment outposts had withstood the Vietcong assault despite casualties totaling 10 killed and 15 wounded. The artillery fire and the air strikes finally drove off the Communist forces, the spokesman said. ExHrsrr 4 [From the New York (N.Y.) Times, Jan. 19, 1965] THIRTY PERCENT OF VIETNAM DRAFTEES DESERT WrrssIN 6 WEEKS (By Jack Langguth) PHU BAT, SOUTH VIETNAM, January 18. - Tram Niem, a 28-year-old potato farmer, was recently drafted into the South Vietnamese Army, and he does not like it. "There has not been enough food for the past 3 weeks," the new private said. Although the winds were raw on the rifle range, he was firing in his bare feet, He had never worn shoes before his induction and the, boots the army issued to him had left bleeding blisters on his heels and toes. Thirty percent of the draftees inducted with Private Niem 6 weeks ago like the army even less than he. They have already de- serted. That percentage is standard for the Dong Da National Training Center at Phu Bai, near Hue in central Vietnam. Some recruits leave to attend to family problems, then return to camp. There is no organized at- tempt to pursue and punish the men who do not come back. TRAINING IS VERY HARD Another private, Hoang Ton, the father of two children, said he was looking forward to leaving the army as quickly as possible. Private Niem's thin face was alert and mo- bile as he gave his reasons for wanting to return to his nearby village. Private Ton's expression was sullen. "All of the training," he said through an interpreter, "is very hard for me." Unless he also deserts, Private Ton's return to civilian life is far off. Both volunteers and draftees are usually held in the regular army for the duration. In some instances, men have been released after 3 years of serv- ice, but a new soldier cannot count on it. During his service a soldier's pay is ade- quate. A private receives 1,600 piasters, al- most $13 a month. Woodcutters in this prov- ince learn a quarter of that. The training that perplexes Private Ton is based on U.S. Army manuals. It is divided into a 5-week basic course and a 4-week period of advanced combat training. An added 3 weeks of training, which had been trimmed to speed the output of recruits, will soon be restored. The most time for any one aspect of mili- tary training, 50 hours, is given to teach- ing the new soldier to use a carbine. Eight hours is devoted to teaching him to use the heavier M-1 rifle. Only 12 hours in the first 5 weeks are given over to political indoctrination Complaints about the food here go beyond the griping traditionally done by soldiers. The floods south of Hue have made trans- portation of supplies difficult and student protest demonstrations have kept many stores closed. Lt. Col. Tran Heuu Tu, who commands the Dong Da center, is allotted 15 piasters a day, about 12 cents, to feed each trainee. COOKING SOMETIMES EARLY Rice and meat strips are cooked in outdoor vats. The food is then set out on plank tables hours ahead of time, sometimes with plastic sheets stretched across the plates to keep flies off. Soup is heated and served in scrub buckets. Australian and American advisers at the camp do not interfere. "We're not here to lecture them on sanitation or anything else," one adviser said. "We save our nudging for those areas of tactics where we might be able to contribute something." Dong Da is responsible for guarding Hue Airport ammunition dumps and a classified American radio-research unit in the area. Regular reconnaissance companies, back at the center for refresher training, handle most of the night patrols. Although the hilly countryside Is dotted with Communist-led Vietcong bands, the pa- trolling is generally uneventful. When the Communist guerrillas have ventured out in any numbers, Government troops, with an assist from the trainees, have driven them back and inflicted heavy casualties. Despite these successes, the practice has been for Government patrols to huddle to- gether at dusk and move only during day- light hours when Vietcong activity was lim- ited. After forceful objections by the Australian advisers, Colonel Tu this week changed the procedure. He ordered his men to travel at night in eight-man patrols. The new method has not yet been per- fected. On the first small patrol the Viet- namese troops set out with live geese and chicken slung over their shoulders. While Western advisers deplore a prevail- ing lack of aggressiveness they have found that with proper leadership the Vietnamese make good soldiers. "And when leadership fails," one Austral- ian officer said, "You hear some lovely sto- ries about our men picking up a few Viet- namese by the scruff of the neck and saying 'You're coming with me.' " EXHIBIT 5 [From the Christian Science Monitor, Jan. 18, 1965] DELAY OR DIPLOMACY IN VIETNAM? Is U.S. military and diplomatic policy in South Vietnam the haphazard, improvisatory, Micawberish affair that it may seem when viewed from one angle? Is Washington-as well as Saigon-merely waiting for "some- thing to turn up," which could point out a new path through the jungle of American troubles in southeast Asia? Or are recent American actions-specid- cally the heavy bombing raid against the bridge at Ban Ban in Communist North Viet- nam and the presence of atomic weapon- bearing Polaris submarines in Asian waters- part of a well-thought-out and complex dip- lomatic maneuver? We get no hint of an answer from Wash- ington. This silence would be expected if Washington is conducting a delicate diplo- matic maneuver. It would also be expected Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ,- SENATE 893 if, unhappily, Washington did not know in which way to move or what policy to follow. Three choices seem to lie before. Washington in South Vietnam today: (a) to keep on helping South Vietnam fight to the bitter end, with a constant stepping up of Ameri- can military action, (b)a negotiated peace with the Communist North, and (c) to abandon the entire effort as quickly and as decisively as possible. Each of these courses is difficult. The first is the one which has been tried, but which does not seem to be succeeding. The third would cause a disastrous decline in American prestige in the area, and would raise grave doubts all over the world as to Washington's determination to live up to its many commit- ments, The middle course is the one which appears to be receiving a wider and wider hearing in Washington. Yet, if the present American -policy is veering toward negotiation, why the stepping up of the military effort? May it not be with the intention of sitting down at the conference table in as strong a position as an otherwise disastrous situation will per- mit? If such is the case, it is understandable why Washington must refuse to answer the evermore insistent questions of those who demand to be told what the United States plans to do about southeast Asia. If the United States is seeking to build a strong bargaining position, through an increased demonstration of military might, it cannot be expected to weaken that position by talk- ing about it. Perhaps Washington is not following such a delictae diplomatic maneuver. Perhaps it is merely groping and hoping. Perhaps it is prepared to step up its military intervention to the point where it believes that North Vietnam can be made to reconsider the cost of its growing intervention in the Com- munist rebellion in the south. We do not know. But it is doubtful if, with the war going as badly as it has in recent months, the answer can be long delayed. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that when the Senate adjourns today, it adjourn to meet at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? The Chair hears none, and it is so ordered. LEGISLATIVE PROGRAM Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, for the information of the Senate, and after discussing the matter with the distin- guished minority leader [Mr. DIRKSEN], I announce that there will be no business transacted on tomorrow, Inauguration Day. The Senate will move in a body, - shortly after convening, to the Inaugura- tion. It is our intention after the prayer to suggest the absence of a quorum, and, at approximately 10:45, or thereabouts, adjournment will take place. ORDER FOR ADJOURNMENT FROM WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I move that when the Senate adjourns to- morrow, it stand in adjournment until 12 o'clock noon on Friday next. The motion was agreed to. THE VETERANS' ADMINISTRATION closing. So far the only help we've received CLOSING OF LINCOLN HOSPITAL from the Federal Government is to close the PROTESTED - veterans hospital. Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, the Veterans' Administration has deter- mined that several VA hospitals should be closed. The hospital at Lincoln, Nebr., is included among those to be eliminated. Many of us in the Senate and in par- ticular on the Appropriations Commit- tee have a great appreciation for the im- portance of eliminating unnecessary spending. There are, however other con- siderations in spending the taxpayer's money. One of these is the defense of our country, past as well as future. We have a continuing obligation and duty to provide adequate and necessary care for our veterans. When any doubts arise concerning the economy of cutting back on those who have given of their health and their lives, these doubts must be resolved in favor of providing ade- quate medical care for our ex-service- men. This obligation is not met by shipping veterans off to our overcrowded and dis- tant urban centers to spend their more difficult days. It is not met by removing them from their homes, the places they have chosen to return after defending their country. It is not met by sending them somewhere because others have chosen to go there or, in some cases, can afford to go there. Our veterans are human beings, not units or numbers to fill beds. We must see that they are treated as human be- ings who have come to the defense of their country when it needed them the most. The national conscience can allow no less. The distinguished majority leader, the Senator from Montana [Mr. MANSFIELD], has pointed out the losses suffered by the State of Montana in defense installa- tions and now in defense obligations. Lincoln, Nebr., has suffered a similar fate. It and Miles City, Mont., are the only cities to be hit by both the closing of a veterans hospital and an Air Force base, all within a few weeks. We hear much talk about the computers which make these decisions, but are computers really coordinating all the factors which must be considered? If so, their com- munications have broken down. When the Lincoln Air Force Base was closed, an economic development expert was sent by the Department of Defense to help Lincoln overcome the impact of the cutback. While he was busily giving advice, the hospital closing was an- nounced. I am told that he had to call back in disbelief to the Veterans' Admin- istration to confirm the announcement. Just as the Administration neglected to inform Members of Congress, it appar- ently failed to inform the Department of Defense. The president of the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce, Thomas Pansing, said that a team sent out by the Federal Gov- ernment to soften the blow of the air- base closing told him: The Federal Government would do every- thing possible to ease the impact of the Mr. Pansing summed up the feeling of many Nebraskans when he said: We can't afford too much more help like this. My fellow Nebraskans and I know that our economy can withstand these clos- ings. It will set us back `but we will sur- vive. The Federal Government may well find another activity' to conduct in Lincoln. But that is not the question. The question is: Will this provide the care needed by our veterans? I am gratified that the Veterans' Af- fairs Subcommittee will study this question. I ask unanimous consent that a letter sent to the chairman of that subcommittee, Senator YARBOROUGH, re- questing that such a study be conducted be printed in the RECORD at the conclu- sion of my remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit-1.) Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, when the Veterans' Administration briefed members of the Nebraska delegation on this action, we were not satisfied that the closing of the Lincoln Hospital was fully justified. Additional information has been requested from the VA on the future medical needs of veterans in the region served by the Lincoln facilities. It is my hope that the Veterans' Affairs Subcom- mittee will examine this factor in study- ing the decision. Let it be clear that this decision to close these facilities is the decision of the Veterans' Administration, the Bureau of the Budget, and through the Bureau the ultimate decision rests with the Johnson administration. The sole elected official participating in this decision is the President. As Members of the Senate, we did not receive notice that these closings were under consideration until the decision had been made. Within a few days after I was notified of the decision, an announcement was made that no more patients would be admitted to the Lin- coln Hospital. It is my hope, therefore, that the Veterans' Administration will take notice of the congressional hearings and reverse its policy of refusing admis- sion to patients. I am gratified at the announcement that hearings are scheduled on the sub- ject of the closing of all Veterans' Ad- ministration hospitals, and I earnestly commend to the subcommittee the merits and facts which pertain to the proposed closing of the hospital in Lincoln, Nebr. EXHIBIT 1 JANUARY 18, 1965. Hon. RALPH YARBOROUGH, Chairman, Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee, Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, U.S. Senate DEAR MR. CHAIRMAN: Announced closing of the Lincoln Veterans Hospital was received with sharp sense of loss and disappointment in Nebraska, as undoubtedly was the case as to the other facilities similarly treated. No one that we know of would be against cuts of clearly demonstrated unnecessary spending; but in every case, due regard Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 894 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE January 19 should be accorded the objectives of the pro- gram at issue. This is especially true of the national commitment made to our veterans, and the firm obligations flowing therefrom. if any doubts appear in the balancing of these factors, they must be resolved in favor of the medical care which our servicemen have earned and to which they are entitled. It is strongly felt, as I am certain the con- sensus shows, that the Veterans' Adminis- tration should be put on very strict proof as to the humane, moral, and overall wisdom of the course it proposes. To that end, I join with those of our colleagues who have already called upon you as chairman of the Veterans' Affairs Subcom- mittee to make a thorough study and inquiry into all these closings, and that the situation in Lincoln and in Nebraska be given a search- ing, scrutiny with them. At one upon receipt of the Veterans' Ad- ministrations announcement, my colleague Senator CURTis and I held a conference in my office with Dr. Linus Zink who was cour- teously requested to be present by Mr. Driver, Administrator of the Veterans' Administra- tion. He furnished us some information on which the Veterans' Administration decision was based. Frankly, at the close of the meet- ing, neither my colleague nor I were satisfied that a case had been made out to justify the announced action. Dr. Zink agreed to transmit to us additional information which will be sent to you for the subcommittee records and consideration upon its arrival. Communications and pro- tests from Nebraskans -veterans, patients, employees, and others-have come to me. They are being sent to you for the record also. It is hoped that arrangements for hearings will be made and announced soon, and vig- orously pressed. Sincerely yours, ROMAN L. HRUSXA, U.S. Senator, Nebraska. Wh_ "COMMUNITY SERVICE--WE BUILD," KIWANIS THEME FOR 1965 Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, Kiwa- nis International has adopted for its ad- ministrative theme for 1965, "Commu- nity Service-We Build." An impressive presentation of the theme, the objectives and committee emphases for this year is being made this month at local Kiwanis clubs throughout the Nation. Mr. Robert Hasebroock, member of Downtown Kiwanis Club of Omaha, Nebr., has sent me a copy of the presen- tation "as an outstanding example of what freemen, through voluntary action, can and will do without government assistance." The Kiwanis program is characterized in this quotation from the presentation of its 1965 theme: There can be no building by freemen un- less men are free. If we are to assume the continuity of Kiwanis service, we must as- sume the continuity of a society In which men are free to work toward goals which they themselves have chosen. Service clubs have no reason for existence, even if permitted to exist, in a society where all services are pro- vided by the state; pervice clubs would have no sustaining force in a society where the state denies the existence of a Supreme Be- ing. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have the text of the theme pres- entation printed In the RECORD. There being no objection, the theme presentation was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: COMMUNITY SEavIc&--WE BUILD They dreamed a dream. In an age obsessed with the material, they dreamed that man could give primacy to the spiritual. Though nation was rising against nation, they dreamed that man could do to others what he would want others to do to him. They dreamed that, in the heart of man, apathy could be supplanted by aware- ness-that Indifference could be transformed into concern, and self-concern into self- giving. Fifty years ago-they dreamed a dream. The merchant, the teacher-the farmer, the banker-men of all callings-joined in that dream, having faith in the ideal that men working together in community service mightchange the world. Through the golden anniversary of Kiwanis International, we acknowledge our debt to those men of vision, and our awareness of the golden legacy which they created, nur- tured, and now lay at our feet for us to protect, enrich, and bring to fruition. No other group of men has received a richer heritage than we. But dreams can pass into nothingness, and fade away like morning dew. Each age must dream anew. "Each age is a dream that- is dying or one that is coming to birth." With gratitude, we glance behind us; with a sense of destiny, we strive ahead, looking to the stars and hearing God's promise to Isaiah: "For behold, I create new heavens and a new earth." Change and permanence are the only cer- tainties in our future. Change will bring about its own enchanting miracles-new op- portunities to serve, new resources to use, new dreams to dream. No seer can yet set down the course of man in the next century or the next decade. But as change is cer- tain, so too is permanence. The star that led the camel caravan in the days of the Pha- roah guides the astronaut in his orbit. The principles which have endured through the past 50 years of Kiwanis history will en- dure permanently, guiding us as surely as the Pole Star in determining the course we shall pursue. Man can change and produce change, but man cannot alter the eternal. Let us then resolve to focus our sights on the principles which have characterized our 50 years of service: faith in God, the dignity and freedom of the individual, citizenship responsibility, patriotism, and good will. Let us resolve that as community service has been the dominant philosophy under which Kiwanians have served for 50 years, com- munity service will be the dominant philos- ophy of Kiwanis for the next 50 years. Whatever changes may occur in our manner of life or fortunes, whatever changes may occur in our organizational structure or our immediate objectives, community service ,can be the permanent characteristic of Ki- wanis history. The past, then, is our introduction to a continuing drama. As we enter this golden anniversary year, we draw the curtain for act 2, playing our roles according to the scenario provided by our forebears. Reflect- ing our rededication to the spirit of Ki- wanis-past, the renewal of our vows to Ki- wanis-present, and the affirmation of our faith in Kiwanis-future, our administrative theme for 1965 is "Community Service-We Build." The golden anniversary year provides no occasion for marking time while we celebrate the past. The need and the opportunities for Kiwanis service were never greater. The 1965 theme of "Community Service-We Build" not only provides the continuity for the mainstream of Kiwanis history; it chal- lenges us to complete the unfinished work at hand. Stated in another way, the theme says: "Through services to our communities, we will build a better world in 1965." But where shall we build, and what shall we build? What are our objectives for 1965? There can be no building by freemen un- less men are free. If we are to assume the continuity of Kiwanis service, we must as- sure the continuity of a society in which men are free to work toward goals which they themselves have chosen. Service clubs have no reason for existence, even if permitted to exist, in a society where all services are pro- vided by the state; service clubs would have no sustaining force in a society where the state denies the existence of a Supreme Be- ing. If the time should ever come when we look upon man and see him as no more than a well-fed, well-housed organism in a god- less world, a statistic without individual freedom or dignity, then we can be certain that the service club movement is ancient history. Our whole existence depends upon the freedom of the individual to act inde- pendently and to serve his Creator according to the tenets of his faith, whatever that faith may be, so the first objective for 1965 is that we build, defend, and preserve our heritage of freedom, our belief in God, and the dig- nity of man in his human and spiritual re- lationships. Two thousand years ago, it was recorded that a voice from Heaven spoke to shepherds tending their flocks and said: "Glory to God in the highest, and peace on earth to men of good will." Whatever our religious faith may be, none can deny that good will is es- sential for the maintenance of peace and the strengthening of bonds among the free na- tions of the world. Even among- nations which would be friendly, the seeds of dis- trust, of envy, and of fear are always pres- ent: this is a fact of life. But distrust, envy, and fear can be germinated by ignorance and nurtured by misunderstanding. It is pos- sible, as'the people of Canada and the United States have so dramatically demonstrated, for men of different nations to do to others what they would want others to do to them, yet this would not be possible without under- standing. We know too little about our brothers In the other nations of the free world; we must work purposefully in 1965 to bring about maximum contacts, maxi- mum communication, and, in turn, maxi- mum understanding. Our second objective for 1965 is that we build international understanding by demonstrating the basic principle of the Golden Rule, using as an example Canada-United States good will. It is idle to speak of freedom without be- lieving in economic freedom. Part of the heritage of freedom is that man has the right to own property, to operate a business, to pursue a profession of his choice, ' and to save, spend, or invest his earnings as he chooses. This economic system has brought us strength; it has brought us prosperity; it has made independence possible. It must be preserved from all substitutes and de- fended against all who would weaken it. We cannot well defend or preserve what we take for granted, what we do not understand. It is imperative that we ourselves and the youth of our nations understand the fundamental principles of a free economy. Therefore, our third objective for 1965 is that we build an understanding of and appreciation for the private ownership of property by educating ourselves and our youth in the principles of a free capitalistic system. Government at any level takes on the char- acter of those who govern. Where our lead- ers are weak, our government will be weak; where strong, our government will be- strong. Patronage does not insure performance; lx-- tegrity is not a necessary product of popu- larity. Character and competence are the hallmarks of responsible leaders. Kiwanis Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For Release 2003/16/15 : CIA-RDP67B00445R000300170021-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE whether you will propose that this veto be decision taken unanimously? How do you exercised to protect our balance of payments. assess the impact on our balance of payments Sincerely yours, in concrete terms? WAYNE MORSE. In short, I would appreciate learning the Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I par- full story of this transaction and its im- plications; you need not be concerned about Dill ' M on s r. tiCUlarly call attention to sparing me any details. words: Sincerely yours, Any application by the Bank for bond sales in our market will be reviewed on its merits in the light of. the concrete situation at the time-including our own balance of of payments and the effect of any Bank bor- rowing thereon. Yet at the end of December the World Bank announced that it will float a $200 million bond issue in the United States beginning on January 18, an announce- ment that coincided with the news that the U.S. balance-of-payment deficit had reached record proportions and required a special message from the President to the Congress regarding steps to curb it. I trust that this special message will report the reasons for permitting this World Bank bond issue to proceed at the very time when it would have the worst possible impact upon our balance of payments. Finally, I ask unanimous consent to have printed at this point a letter I have addressed to the Secretary on January 8 concerning this matter. There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: JANUARY 8, 1965. Hon. C. DOUGLAS DILLON, Secretary of the Treasury, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. SECRETARY : I wish to recall my letter to you of October 13, 1964, in which I expressed concern over the prospbct that the World Bank would seek to raise new capital in the U.S. market. In your response of October 27 you stated that the United States should not at present prohibit "any and all attempts by the Bank to mobilize private funds for development through bond sales to U.S. residents." There nevertheless was at least an implication that the bulk of the $300 to $400 million of new capital required by the World Bank might be raised outside this country. According to the New York Times of December 29, however, the World Bank has now announced it will float a $200 million bond issue in the United States be- ginning on January 18. It seems to me that the key sentence in your October 27 letter was the following: "Any application by the Bank for bond sales in our market will be reviewed on its merits in the light of the concrete situa- tion at the time-including our own balance of payments and the effect of any Bank bor- rowing thereon." Frankly, I am not aware of any measurable improvement in our bal- ance-of-payments situation during the past 2 months; indeed, I would assume the con- trary from the New York Times story of December 30, 1964, by Richard E. Mooney-a copy of which is attached. The article re- ports that the OECD annual review of the U.S. economy contains the advice "that more curbs on outfiowing capital may be needed to put the country's international payments in better balance." Yet the proposed World Bank bond issue appears a dramatic move in the opposite direction. In these circumstances, I would like very much to know just what sort of review of the Bank application took place within the U.S. Government, Specifically, was approval of the application given by the National Advisory Council on International Mone- tary and Financial Problems, and was the WAYNE MORSE. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I express my appreciation to the Senator from Missouri [Mr. SYMINGTON], who has performed yeoman service for the Sen- ate in his constantly challenging the ad- ministration's policies in regard to the balance-of-payments problem. Most respectfully I say to my Presi- dent, "You had better take a long, hard look at the record of your Treasury De- partment in this field before you send up any special message on the subject, be- cause you are going to be confronted with a long series of questions here in the Senate in regard to the policies that have been followed by the Secretary of the Treasury, which, in my judgment, are unfortu\iate policies, to say the least." N U.S. ACTION IN LAOS Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I see no other Senator who wishes to speak dur- ing the morning hour. I ask unanimous consent that I may proceed for an addi- tional 3 minutes on another subject. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that there be printed in the RECORD a UPI article appearing in this morning's New York Times entitled "U.S. Terms Raids in Laos Justified by Red Violations." There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: U.S. TERMS RAIDS IN LAOS JUSTIFIED BY RED VIOLATIONS-SAYS COMMUNISTS DISREGARD GENEVA ACCORDS-STRIKES To CONTINUE IF NEEDED WASHINGTON, January 18.-The Johnson administration contended today that U.S. military actions in Laos, such as the air strike last Wednesday against a bridge, were justified by Communist violations of the 1962 Geneva accords establishing Laotian in- dependence and neutrality. It also made clear that it intended to con- tinue using U.S. military force, if necessary, to maintain Laos against Communist incur- sions. The administration's position was made known in two forms-a Presidential defense message to Congress and a statement issued by the State Department. ASIAN PROGRAM UNCHANGED In his defense message, the President re- affirmed that "our program remains un- changed" in southeast Asia. He said the United States would continue to give military and economic assistance to nations such as Laos and South Vietnam, which are "strug- gling against covert aggression in the form of externally directed, undeclared guerrilla warfare." In Laos, he went on, the United States has demonstrated since 1950 its commitment to freedom, independence, and neutrality by "strengthening the economic and military security of that nation." "We shall continue to support the legiti- mate Government of that country," he de- clared. The President stressed that "the problem of Laos Is the refusal of the Communist 903 forces to honor the Geneva accords in which they entered in 1962." The State Department "also said that the American military actions in Laos were "en- tirely justified" by the repeated Communist violations of the 1962 accords. POSITION QUESTIONED Whether the United States still felt bound by the 1962 accords was questioned after it was disclosed that Americans had conducted bombing missions against key points in the supply routes used by the Communists from North Vietnam Into Laos. Reconnaissance missions were acknowledged earlier. Senator WAYNE MORSE, Democrat, of Ore- gon, charged .last weekend that such attack and reconnaissance missions represented a U.S. violation of a provision of the 1962 ac- cords. This prohibits the introduction of foreign military troops in Laos. When the question was raised last Friday, it was met by silence at th4 State Depart- ment. Today, however, the Department was pre- pared with a statement providing a justifi- cation for the air missions. At the same time it still refused to confirm that the United States had been conducting bombing missions against Communist targets in Laos. The statement, given by the Department Press Officer, Robert J. McCloskey, said: "We continue to support the Geneva agree- ments and the independence and neutrality of Laos which they are intended to achieve." Mr. McCloskey declined to say whether U.S. assistance included the air strike Wednesday by a squadron of U.S. fighter- bombers against a strategic bridge near Ban Ban in central Laos. Mr. McCloskey did say that any "assist- ance" had been given at the request of Prince Souvannah Phouma, the Laotian Premier. The Prince is understood to have de- manded that there be no announcement about the missions. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I wish to quote a paragraph or two of that article: The Johnson administration contended to- day that U.S. military actions in Laos, such as the air strike last Wednesday against a bridge, were justified by Communist viola- tions of the 1962 Geneva accords establish- ing Laotian independence and neutrality. It also made clear that it intends to con- tinue using U.S. military force, if necessary, to maintain Laos against Communist in- cursions. That statement is shocking. Mr. President, I say there is no question about the fact that the U.S. military has conducted these raids. There is no justi- fication on the part of my party's ad- ministration for concealing from the American people this fact and no justifi- cation for not issuing a formal official statement that the United States is mak- ing war in Laos and killing American boys in that war. Mr. President, I am shocked that such a policy is being followed by the State Department and the Pentagon, and that we let the American people learn of our warmaking activities in southeast Asia through war correspondents. Then our State Department and our Pentagon attack those war correspondents. I happen to be one who defends these war correspondents, because time and time again they have demonstrated that they will not follow the propaganda line of the State Department and the Pentagon, for if they followed that line, they would be nought but kept journalists on the war front. Mr. President, we are greatly indebted to the fat that at least our war cor- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446ROO0300170021-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE January 19 respondents abroad insist upon putting into practice the precious constitutional meaning of freedom of the press. But the article to which I have referred is very interesting. It states further: Whether the United States still felt bound by 1962 accords was questioned after it was disclosed that Americans had conducted bombing missions against key points in the supply routes used by the Communists from North Vietnam into Laos. M:r. President, Britain, France, Rus- sia, and China are some of the other countries that signed the treaty along with the United States. The treaty set up an International Control Commission composed of India, Poland and Canada, to investigate any violations of the treaty and of the cease- fire between the rival Laotian factions. The London Observer reports that in the British view of the treaty, it is up to this Commission to investigate whether there has been any breach of the treaty. It is true that the American bombing raid took place in territory controlled by the Pathet Lao. Whether the Pathet Lao would permit the Commission to in- vestigate U.S. complaints of violations is doubted by American authorities, hence the resort to force of arms. Mr. President, my opposition to war- making policies of the United States in Laos is the same as my opposition to the unjustifiable killing of American boys in South Vietnam in a warmaking policy of our Government there. What we ought to do is live up to our obligations and call upon our allies to live up to their obligations under the United Nations treaty. Great Britain, Canada, France, and the other signa- tories to the United Nations Charter, in- cluding the United States, ought to be calling upon the United Nations to make a report to the world in regard to the vio- lations of the Laotian treaty by North Vietnam, Red China, and possibly others. But, in my judgment, there is no hope of avoiding a massive war in Asia in the very near future if the United States con- tinues to take this present attitude-an attitude which was expressed by the American Ambassador in the United Na- tions not so many weeks ago in that un- fortunate speech he delivered before the Security Council, in which he said, in ef- fect, that the United States Intends to do what it thinks needs to be done in south- east Asia, and the rest of the world can take it and like it. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. MoN- RONEY in the chair). The time of the Senator from Oregon has expired. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may proceed for 2 more minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? The Chair hears none, and the Senator from Oregon is recognized for 2 additional minutes. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I wish to say to our Ambassador to the United Na- tions and to the President of the United States that they are skating on thin ice. The danger is that we are going to see an outbreak of a massive war in Asia be- cause of the unilateral action of the United States in making war in South Vietnam, in clear violation of the United Nations Charter, in violation of the Geneva accords of 1954, and in violation of our long standing, professed ideals that we are a nation that believes in sub- stituting the rule of law for the jungle law of military might. We are now practicing an application of the jungle law of military might as a substitute for our ideals. So long as there is any hope of avoiding that war and helping to bring my country back inside the framework of international law and laying this whole threat to the peace of the world before the United Nations, the voice of the senior Senator from Oregon will be raised in that cause. I believe the time is long overdue when the President of the United States should proceed to make clear to the world that the United States stands ready for a review by the United Nations of the whole threat to the peace of the world. The issue of the Congo will be coming up. I hope that the United Nations will go back into the Congo. Yet there are forces in the United States that would have the United States go into the Congo on a unilateral basis and allow the killing of American boys there in carrying out a unilateral American military policy. I pray that before it is too late, we will try to put on the spot, so to speak, our alleged allies in the United Nations- Great Britain, France, Canada, Italy, and all the rest-who claim that they believe in the substitution of peaceful procedures for military force. Let us ask them: "Are you willing to stand with us in trying to work out an honorable peace that will not result in carrying out all the fears that are being expressed by increasing hundreds of thousands of sin- cere, patriotic Americans, who are rais- ing the question: `How much longer are we going to cai^ry out a unilateral course of action and killing American boys in South Vietnam, when we have not yet exhausted peaceful procedures for the settlement of the dispute through the United Nations?"' I ask unanimous consent to have print- ed at the close of these remarks an edi- torial from the Wall Street-Journal of today entitled "If Vietnam Falls." There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: IF VIETMAN FALLS - If the United States is forced out of Viet- nam one way or another, what does it then do about the rest of southeast Asia? The question may never have to be an- swered, and the U.S. Government undoubted- ly hopes it won't have to be. Conceivably, in some fashion totally unclear at present, the Communist Vietcong attacks can be halt- ed and stability at last restored in Saigon. But since no one is putting many odds on that possibility, It is essential to consider the implications of failure and withdrawal. Though the United States has no known in- tention of suddenly up and leaving-its pub- lic statements emphasize just the opposite- it could be compelled to abandon the effort for at least a couple of imaginable reasons. One might be a military determination that the war is unwinable even in the lim- ited sense of getting the Reds out of South Vietnam; certainly there is nothing to indi- cate we are making headway after these lengthening years of costly struggle. An- other reason might be that the Vietnamese would in effect ask the United States to leave, either through their leaders of the moment or through an evident unwillingness of the people to go on fighting. The South Vietnamese in general haven't shown notable zeal for the fight anyway, and their attitude Is understandable enough. Not only does the conceptual distinction be- tween communism and freedom hold com- paratively little meaning for most of them; they have also been in this war, with the support first of France and then the United States, practically since World War II. As for the Saigon governments, if that is what they should be called, they have been unable to win the support of the people or exercise stable rule; the United States, with all its aid and influence, has been unable to promote or maintain such a government since the overthrow and killing of Diem in late 1963. While the Diem regime was ob- viously no model of abstract democracy, very few governments are that, in Asia or any- where else, it did manage a degree of sta- bility. The United States which condoned the re- moval of Diem, is perhaps too preoccupied with governmental modes and deportment. If we have an important stake in southeast Asia, our policymakers need not to be so in- sistent that the government in Saigon be civilian and virtuously democratic; what should matter, from the point of view of our interests, is that it be an effective govern- ment able to invest citizens and soldiers with a will to rout the Communists. If those objectives prove unattainable and the whole thing blows up in America's face, it is needless to say America's interests will have suffered severe damage. For our part, however, we are not convinced that it has to be catastrophic damage. The basic U.S. Interest in southeast Asia is not, or should not be, solely the preserva- tion of a non-Communist South Vietnam as though it were in a vacuum; rather, the American concern is to keep Red China from expanding-insofar as the United States is reasonably capable of doing so. If that can- not be done with regard to South Vietnam, we still must consider the area as a whole. In that broader context, failure in Vietnam, if it happens, does not automatically doom all southeast Asia. There are other, and maybe more defendable, areas of resistance to communism and to Red China in partic- ular. Thailand is a large one. Malaysia, currently more directly menanced by Indo- nesia's pro-Communist Sukarno than by Peiping, appears to be a firm one. The United States does, we believe, have to stand firm against Red Chinese imperialism. But whether the major stand is taken at Thailand, Malaysia, or indeed the Philippines or Australia should be determined by the cold considerations of a given nation's will to fight, terrain, logistics, and all the normal military bases for judgment. If we look only at South Vietnam as the be-all and end-all of our southeast Asia policy, we risk not only profound disappointment but also perhaps inadequate thinking and preparation for the larger problem. To say we might lose in South Vietnam is not defeatism but military realism, no matter how much it may be hoped that the country can somehow be kept out of Communist hands. What must be hoped most of all, in our view, is that the officials in Washington are paying full attention to Asian strategy in the event they cannot hold Vietnam. MONTANA'S "WAGONMASTER" Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, as my colleagues in the Senate are well aware, Montana has produced a number of distinguished sons and daughters who have achieved fame and success outside its borders. I am reminded of an im- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 !Ppendix Debate on U.S. Policy on Vietnam EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. GEORGE McGOVERN Or SOUTH DAKOTA IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES ~uesday, January 19, 1965 Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, a continuing and in my Judgment, very constructive debate,- on U.S. policy on Vietnam is underway. Right now, I be- lieve, there exists what amounts to a deadlock _ between the state of South Vietnam, aided to an increasing extent by the United States, and the Vietcong guerrillas, aided to an increasing extent by North Vietnam. It would be difficult, and probably impossible, for South Viet- namese forces to win a final military vic- tory, since there appears to be a grass roots cooperation with the Vietcong throughout much of the countryside. On the other hand, it would be equally dif- ficult for the Communist forces to achieve a final. victory over the South Vietnamese, with their strong U.S. mili- tary backing. The U.S. forces are un- doubtedly able to remain there indefi- nitely and to prevent a Communist take- over in that manner; yet there is raised with increasing frequency the question of whether we might achieve basically the same results, over the long run, by a negotiated settlement which would spare the Vietnamese.people the long suffering and economic devastation of continued warfare. It would also avoid the con- tinued financial drain and loss of life now being suffered by the United States. Few Americans favor an immediate and unqualified pullout. I believe the commitment we have given the leaders of South Vietnam and the concern we have for. the people there would make it impossible for the United States to with- draw Immediately. Yet it is not too soon to discuss the terms on which a with- drawal might ultimately be possible, and to assess the long-term requirements for the settlement of an issue which is basi- cally political, not military. During the present struggle, we should not remain silent, with bated breath, as it were, waiting for a sudden resolution of the problem, which is most unlikely. Rather, we should use, here in Congress and throughout the country, the exist- ing deadlock to discuss alternative poli- cies and forms of settlement, so that the American people, as well as the adminis- tration, will be better equipped to take further actipn , at , an opportune time. Prolonging the conflict indefinitely could only mean continued painful losses for both sides. In this connection, Mr. President, a debate ver U.S. policy on Vietnam was published in the New York Times magazine of _ January 17. The de- bate was between the Senator from Ore- gon [Mr. MoesE] and Henry Cabot Lodge, former Ambassador to South Vietnam. Both points of view-"with- draw now" or "fight on to victory"- were presented clearly and cogently. I ask unanimous consent that this presen- tation be printed in the Appendix fol- lowing my remarks, in the RECORD. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: WE MUST LEAVE VIETNAM (By WAYNE MORSE) Ten years ago the United States embarked upon an adventure in South Vietnam that was just about 100 years out of date. While Britain, France, and the Netherlands were terminating their rule over their Asiatic colonies, the United States began trying to establish its own beachhead on the Asiatic mainland. Although present at the Geneva confer- ence of 1954, which drew up the accord whereby France withdrew from its old colony, of Indochina, the United States refused to sign the final agreement. So did one of the subdivisions of Indochina, South Vietnam. The United States began a heavy program of financial and military aid to a new Premier in South Vietnam who, we believed, was most likely to preserve a Western orienta- tion. When it came time for the 1956 elec- tion throughout both North and South Viet- nam required by the Geneva accord, we and our client in Saigon, Ngo Dinh Diem, realized it would be won by Ho Chi Minh's followers not only in his own North Vietnam but in the South as well. South Vietnam refused to proceed with the election. In the last decade we have explained our policy as one of helping a free government resist Communist subversion. But South Vietnam never has had a free government. In its 10 years of existence its governments have been picked for it by the United States and maintained by our heavy doses of eco- nomic and military aid. The fraudulence of our, claim has been starkly exposed by the successve coups in Saigon and by the piecing together of one government after another by the American Embassy. Leaders suspected of favoring neu- tralism or any form of negotiation for settle- ment of the civil war are firmly excluded from Government ranks. The major tools we have used in manipulating political and military leaders have been various threats and promises regarding our aid, which now hovers around the level of $600 million a year in a country of 14 million people. This sum of exclusive of the cost of keeping 23,000 American "advisers" and large contingents of aircraft in the country. In fact, our official explanations of why we are there now play down the "helping a free government" line and play up American secu- rity and American prestige as the stakes in Vietnam. At least, the explanations are get- ting closer to the truth, which is that the United States took over this quarter of In- dochina in 1954 when the French pulled out. Having intruded ourselves into Southeast Asia, where we never were before, it was this country and not the Communists who made our prestige in Asia the issue. Our Secretary of State often says that "China must leave her neighbors alone." Un- der this premise, our officials have vaguely threatened to expand the war to North Viet- nam and possibly China if we cannot win in South Vietnam. But there are no Chinese forces in South Vietnam nor Chinese equip- ment in appreciable amount. Americans are still the only foreign troops in South Viet- nam. Nonetheless, China has the same interest in what goes on in the subcontinent of Southeast Asia as we have in Mexico, Cuba and other countries of Latin America. She will increasingly resist having hostile gov- ernments on her borders, as do Russia and the United States. We recognize and accept this principle as regards Russia, but we re- fused to recognize it as regards China. This has been true even though we have watched other Western nations ousted from Asia and Africa by rising nationalism. It was inevitable that once China became part of this tide she would reassert her interest in the governments on her borders. A re- awakened China would assert this interest whether she were Communist or not. The more we escalate the Vietnam conflict, the more likely China is to intervene directly. In South Vietnam we invite China's ap- prehension, but more than that, in trying to surround China with American bases and pro-Western states, we have to buck not only communism but anticolonialism. One of our many mistakes is to equate the two, especially when antiwhite feeling is directed against the United States. Advocates of a "containment" policy for China, similar to that applied to Russia with some success in the late 1940's and 1950's, overlook the impossibility of maintaining Western strong- holds in Asia, no matter what their pur- pose. What we could do in white Europe and even the Middle East is not to be imposed upon an Asia that is united in at least one respect-its determination to see the white man sent back to his own shores. With our great wealth we can sustain the current war effort in Vietnam indefinitely, even if it is escalated. But it will never end, because our presence and our selection of Saigon's rulers will always inspire rebellion. Far from maintaining our prestige in Asia, our present policy in Vietnam is eroding it. The fact that we are losing despite the steady increase in our aid, the addition of 23,000 American advisers, and complete American air domination, has already led several Asian nations to throw out an anchor on the Chinese side. Of the famous dominoes that were all supposed to fall to China if we failed to take up the French burden in southeast Asia, Burma, and Cambodia have already neutralized themselves. Pakistan has made it clear that the aid she gets from us is directed against India and not against China. Japan and India, the largest non- Communist nations of Asia, who might be expected to be the most helpful to us in Vietnam, have not associated themselves with what we are doing there. A few days ago India's Premier Shastri urged a new in- ternational conference to negotiate a settle- ment. He asked the United States not to press for a military decision and urged that we avoid a major military conflict. Of all the nations touted as potential Chinese victims, only Australia and the Philippines have offered tangible help in South Vietnam. The Australian contribu- tion amounts to some 66 "advisers" and three Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 A206 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX January-0 air-cargo planes. The Philippine offer of a in the world, reaches the sea in South Viet- in an effort which has cost us lives and force of volunteer veterans was turned down. nam. He who holds or has influence in Viet- treasure. The effort has not been in vain. That Is the extent of the local interest and nam can affect the future of the Philippines Although we are not yet victorious, we support for the American view that we are and Taiwan to the east, Thailand and Burma have achieved a stalemate, which is surely saving all of Asia from communism by our with their huge rice surpluses to the west, much better than defeat. On the economic policy in Vietnam. Surely if one of these and Malaysia and Indonesia with their rub- and social front the United States has con- so-called dominoes believed it, they would be her, oil, and tin to the south. Japan, Aus- tributed to the building of schools, clinics fighting side by side with us in Vietnam. tralia, and New Zealand would in turn be and better farms, all of which are essential They are not, because they see us having to deeply concerned by the communization of to gaining and holding the political sup- run faster and faster just to stay in the same South Vietnam. port that must be had to win the war. And place in Vietnam. They see that'the bulk Historically, Vietnam has long played a we try to help in every way in training civil of its people are too indifferent to American part in the political development of the Far administrators and in creating political en- objectives to resist the Vietcong. They know East. For many centuries it was under the ergy in the country. that sooner or later we will have to leave and occupation or influence of the Chinese and Some have said that despite this effort they do not want to jeopardize their own was used by the Chinese as a means of en- the war in Vietnam cannot be won. Yet standing in Asia by supporting a last-minute forcing their hegemony over the whole of recent history shows that we have been white intervention. southeast Asia. The Vietnamese did not en- fighting wars of this sort for the past 20 years There are many ways this country * could joy this experience and have traditionally and that the record is creditable. We of the crawl back from the limb we crawled out on done what they could to throw off Chinese free world won in Greece, we thwarted the 10 years ago. Through the Southeast Asia overlordship. In a very real sense, there- Communist aggression in Korea, we won in Treaty Organization, the United Nations or fore, the present struggle is one of self- Malaya, we won in the Philippines, and we a reconvened Geneva Conference we could determination. can win in Vietnam. We must persist and seek to establish an international presence in But today Vietnam should be seen as one we must not play into the enemy's hands by Vietnam to stabilize and pacify the country more instance in a long series of events which counting on a quick, sensational and easy while it develops political institutions. Our began in Iran, Turkey, and Greece after way out and then being disappointed when refusal to sign the accord of 1954 has always World War II; which include the seizure of it does not occur. made suspect our claim that we were enforc- Czechoslovakia; which led to the Marshall Persistent execution of the political and Ing it. plan in Europe; which caused the Korean military plans which have been agreed to In truth, our "enforcement" has taken the war, the Malayan emergency, the Huk rebel- will bring victory-provided outside pres- form of violations far more massive than lion in the Philippines and the Berlin crisis. sures do not become too great. These outside any violations by North Vietnam. Our jet In all these widely separated places the Com- pressures occur in many forms such as the air forces and bases, our helicopter fleet, the munist bloc has tried to subvert and to un- problem of sanctuaries from which Vietnam 23,000 U.S. military advisers are all violations dermine the free world in order to spread can be attacked and the Vietcong helped with impunity. Infiltration from such sanctu- of the 1954 accord. So are they violations its control and its suppression of freedom. aries cannot be allowed to defeat the efforts of section after section of the United Nations In n opposing this Communist onslaught, ll not Charter, under which we are pledged to seek the free world has stood together for nearly the shrink from Vietnamese se ag are such m making. We easures wi seem taki peaceful solutions to disputes and to lay two decades. One manifestation of our com- necessary from cope with it. before the U.N. those disputes we are unable mon determination to frustrate the Commu- her oorm of "outside pressure" is the to solve peacefully through means of our own nist design to conquer Europe was the cre Another choosing. We have done neither in Vietnam. tion of NATO. Elsewhere in the world we desire h desire in some quarters r pr sintern ure here and nan aisothe do not n l A negotiated settlement in South Vietnam have formed other alliances. The United the idea a and now. international cop- Is the first solution we are obliged to seek. States alone has suffered 160,000 casualties pose holding Of course, it would mean some guaranteed since the end of World War II in this effort ferences as an abstract proposition-if they neutralization of the country. That would to contain the spread of 'communism. are h heeld ci at t the etpr proopper er time we and think under the that. give its war-torn people the best chance they This worldwide effort by nations of the pr hold a rcufertanc now would serve hi no good have yet had to construct a country of their free world has not been undertaken out of hold and would seriously morale in South Vietnam. Consider the the French again and now the Americans ties in distant places. Nor does it signify reasons: have not given them, a desire to establish a new colonialism or 1. There have already been two confer- If we fail to reach a negotiated settlement, any kind of special position. The war in ences Asia (one on Vietnam and then the U.N. Charter requires the dispute to Vietnam is not only the struggle of a small ences o or n southeast Laos), east the terms of which were be laid before a regional organization, such nation to exist, but it is also an open en- but which the Communists were as SEATO, or one of the U.N. bodies. Both counter between the doctrine that "wars of satisfactory the ink wdry. Before hold- groups have the capacity to police the coun- revolution," as the Communists call them, lated another before the ink was the Bef be some conference both are more likely to bring it some are the wave of the future, and our belief ing that h the Communises of must Hanoi and degree of cohesion than is the United States that in the future nations should be allowed sign to let their southern with its unilateral intervention in pursuit to develop their own destinies free from out- Peiping are prepared of our own interests. side Interference. neighbors alone. Some Americans have busily erected an Although the North Vietnamese have their 2. For the South Vietnamese to go to a enormous pyramid of disasters they contend own motives for their aggression in South conference now with a large and aggressive would result even from this limited Ameri- Vietnam and have played the leading role, fifth column on their soil would amount to can retrenchment. They see America as a they have always been backed by the Chinese' a surrender. A conference not preceded by a power in the Pacific only if we and out Communists. Should their aggression be verifiable Communist decision to cease at- friends control all its shores instead of just successful, the Chinese Communists will have tacking and subverting South Vietnam would its northern, eastern, and southern shores, seen positive proof that their approach to be nothing more than a capitulation. international relations Is correct. 3. There is clearly no agreement between Mosst im the irlan portan tt, t th ey hey ignore its the a impossibility shore, Such an outcome might well lead the So- us and the Communists on the simple prop- of creating an American foothold on that viets, in their desire to retain the leadership ositioonfon renc to e h let etd in South atmosph Vietnam ere of alone. A bitter shore in mid-20th century, communism or no of the Communist bloc, to adopt a more bel- con recce h could dn opt mosp ere matters more communism. ligerent stance in their relations with the disagreemake outside world. This would surely affect the dangerous than they already are. ac- Many countries, East and West, have of West. So-called neutralism is another outside order in themselves to , ev end of the old It would also be regarded everywhere as pressure standing in the way of the success-ventu onl Asia. is We how much too blood od and money mTooceyy a reflection of the inability or lack of will of ful prosecution of the war in South Vietnam, only question uest the free world to prevent aggression. What, Neutralism that does not include some means we will waste first trying to turn the clock for example, would be the reaction in Europe of enforcement, that does not include North back. if the United States were to withdraw from Vietnam, that means South Vietnam will be WE CAN WIN IN VIETNAM southeast Asia in the face of its commitment alone and disarmed, is nothing more than to assist the nations there? surrender. It should be opposed for Viet- (By Henry Cabot Lodge) The state of public opinion in the United nam just as it is opposed for Berlin or for "Pulling out of Vietnam" is exactly the States itself wouldalso be affected. Should Germany. It takes strength to be neutral. same as "turning Vietnam over to the Com- Vietnam be lost, many voices would be heard South Vietnam is not strong enough today munists." Such a course would be not mere- urging us in effect to resign from the world, to be neutral. ly imprudent, but actually extremely dan- fall back onto our Fortress America and gird In truth both Vietnams are "neutralized" gerous. up our loins for a contest with guided mis- now by article 10 of the Geneva accord of Geographically, Vietnam stands at the hub siles. This too would be something which July 21, 1954, which said: "* * * the two of a vast area of the world--southeast Asia- neither Europe nor the rest of the free world parties shall insure that the zones assigned an area with a population of 240 million peo- could ignore. to them do not adhere to any military al- ple extending, 2,300 miles from north to Because of all these considerations, the liance and are not used for the resumption south, and 3,000 miles from east to west. The United States has undertaken to support the of hostilities or to further an aggressive Mekong River, one of the 10 largest rivers Vietnamese both politically and militarily, policy." Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 Approved For 11 2003/10/15: CIA=RDP67B00446R000300170021-8 19 %X O RESSIONAL RECORD - NI?JX A207 This provision was formally approved by geared in th D c b e e em er 1964 edition of supreme court, and thence to the U.S. Su- article 5 of the final declaration ,of the, the Tennessee Lawyer, a wholesome pro- preme Court. Now we have a Federal trial Geneya Conference of 1954,_ which the fessional journal, an excellent article by court, superseding the State supreme court, V.'S,S,ft,, _ Red China, France, the United Mr. Olin White, president of the Terines- as well as a State trial court. This is only Kingdom, _Jnited States, Cambodia, Laos, one of the many indications of the rapid, and North and South Vietnam attended,. see Bar Association. so far uncontrolled, movement toward ab- We II?niit .therefore insist,, before there is, In his timely remarks,, Mr. White solute concentration of power in the Federal any discussion of a conference ox of,neutral- points. out that the judiciary is suffering Government. ism, that, the Cohn unists stop their aggres- from an uncontrolled movement toward I am also familiar with the unwritten lion and live up to the agreements which al- concentration of power in the Central rule among lawyers not to criticize judges for ready exist. The minute the o.pslaught Government and it is not Only a right but fear that when the criticizing lawyer appears, ceases; there can he peace, At present, the a duty of the bar to criticize judicial in some other case, punishment will be in- North Vietnamese, seem only to understand abuses. Believing this article to be of flicted upon him. This will not happen with force, and, ofcourse, when they use force any good judge no matter what the difference they must be met with force, as they were in interest to all my colleagues in Congress of opinion may be, and whatever happens, the Gulf of Tollkia,. They should also be met and particularly those on.the Judiciary lawyers should quit whispering among them- with the strong and united opposition of the Committee having jurisdiction over leg- selves about these matters and now speak free world}. islation in this field, I include it in the out boldly on the subject. It seems that conflicts in far-off places are Appendix of the RECORD. I have refrained from such direct com- precisely those which have often brought The article follows: ments prior to the recent national elections war and calamity to all of us. Manchuria THE PRESIDENT REPORTS for fear that some person might think my seemed far away in 1931; the subversion of comments were politically inspired. Czechoslovakia by Hitler seemed remote to By Olin White) Space does not permit me further com- the United States fn, 1938, Persistence, and It has always been the view, if not a rule, ments, but I assure you that I shall have unity in the face of Communist pressure of our profession that lawyers should refrain further comments on the subject in future have succeeded in Europe and in southeast, from criticizing the Supreme Court of the issues. Asia, and can succeed again. United States, and other courts. Mao Tee-tung Said: "Politics is war with Surely this is restricted only as to the de- htdbloodshed; war is politics with blood- gree of differences in the opinion of the bar Bank Loans to Overseas Borrowers and in the holdings of the Supreme Court The Struggle in Vietnam is not.a "war" in of the United States and of other courts. In the sense that World War I1-or,Xorea-was, other words, is this an absolute protection EXTENSION OF REMARKS a "war," because total military success in from criticism? I think not, and although A. OF Vietnam, unaccompanied by success in other I believe that lawyers should in the ordinary WILLIS ROBERTSON fields, will not bring victory. A many-sided administration of justice refrain from public HON. tf effort is needed; no single off -f. -ill solve the iti ' I fee cr c the headline writer and the political stump their decisions are extreme, then it is not IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES speaker employing black-and-white phrase- only the privilege of the bar but the duty of Tuesday, January 19, 1965 ology. the bar as leaders to speak out-to criticize- Therefore, those who say that there is a and to seek legislative correction of such Mr. ROBERTSON. Mr. President, solution or a simple solution or an ex- judicial abuses, if there is no other remedy connection with the vital subject of our clusively military solution are doing as much at hand. balance of payments, which is such an of a disservice as are those who say that there It is my opinion that it is not only high important element in our gold reserve is no hope, that we must ,pull out and that time, but that we are somewhat late in such problems, I ask unanimous consent to another southeast Asian conference (added criticism and action for the correction of have printed in the Appendix of the REe- to the two which have been already held- such matters. and dishonored) will do other than turn We have been faced in the last few years ORD a letter I have just received from Mr. South Vietnam over to the gmmunists. with Federal decisions which not only per- Walter B. Wriston, executive vice presi- They also do a disservice- who deny that mit but require the release of prisoners dent of the First National City Bank of nAuch has been achieved, that the military guilty of the most heinous crimes, on so- New York, together with an excerpt from program, the economic program, the social called technical grounds which to some, at the December 1964, Economic Letter of program, the informational program and the least, appear to be not a ground but an ex- that bank, on the subject of commercial various technical programs have all accom- cuse and not a technicality but a triviality. , bank term loans abroad. plished much-have indeed built the Spring- A great many, if not all, the prisons of this I believe Mr. Wriston's letter and the that board of victor wean doh ter- s the pptlitica, country have a law library (or law books) discussion of commercial bank term gram which still needs special attention pro- __.,tions where for prisoners habeas may corpus so work that upon a mtheiran c con-- loans will be helpful to members of the - It is accurate to-);ay that a glass is half- victed, sentenced, and whose sentence has Senate and the public in their considera- full of water and it is also accurate to say been confirmed through the highest courts, tion in the near future of these important that tl}e glass is half-empty. To dwell on may open and indeed reopen'. from time to matters. the fact that we have not aohieyed victory time the door to release, thereby requiring There being no objection, the letter does not negate the other fact that we ,have the attorney general and other officials to and the excerpts were ordered printed in prevented defeat-and that a stalemate is appear and testify about matters and pro- the RE much better than a defeat. cedure which occurred years before. CORD, as follows: It is not the American tradition, to get The holding that the failure to take before FIRST NATIONAL CITY BANK, panicky whenever there is a little rough a committing judge promptly, and in some New York, N.Y., January 14, 1965. weather. If we decide only to interest our- instances 71/2 hours, entitled a prisoner to Hon. A. WILLIS ROBERTSON, selves in the nice, quiet, neat countries release, and to renew his claims is more than Chairman, Committee on Banking and Cur- (which do not need our help) and abandon startling. rency, U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. all the rough, tough, difficult places to the The number of Federal courts will have to DEAR MR. CHAIRMAN: There has recently Communists, we will soon find ourselves sur- be doubled in a relatively short time to take been a good deal of talk about the rise in rounded by a rough, tough world which is care of the hundreds of habeas corpus peti- commercial bank term loans to overseas bor- aimed straight at the destruction of the tions that are filed, as well as appeals or rowers and the effect of these loans on the United States and, which will make our pres- petitions interfering with the administration country's balance of payments. There has ent effort in Vietnam seem like the mildest of the State courts-unless some laws are not, however, been enough understanding of of pink teas, passed to govern and restrict this subject. the fact that these loans finance our exports. Not only do the prisoners file these but the It is no coincidence that those parts of the courts construe the law as requiring lawyers world which have the highest volume of to appear and even to make long journeys American commercial bank term loans also Law Duty To Criticize to appellate courts to represent this man, are the largest buyers of American exports. wlthpyt expense to the criminal >ln? without- These exports produce the Nation's trade FTkStQIy OF REMARKS expense to the government, hence, at the ex-. surplus of nearly $7 billion which is so es- _- '? pense of the lawyer. sential to the squndpeSS of_the dollar. HON. W. E. ~BILL~ BROCK Local State courts are becoming more and I am writing to ask that you take some more familiar with the fact that under Su- time from your busy schedule to consider OF TENNESSEE preme Court of the United States rulings, a what the imposition of the interest equali- prisoner or indeed any litigant may, and zation tax on commercial bank term loans IN THE HOUSE OF, REPRESENTATIVES many do, remove themselves from the trial would do to American exports and other Tuesdlty, January 19, 1965 court 'of a State to the trial court of the sources of revenue from abroad. We firmly Federal court. In other words, we once had believe that the result of such a move would Mr. BROCK. Mr. Speaker, there ap- trial in State trial court, and appeal to State be no gain for our balance of payments and Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-ROP67800446R000300170021-8 A208 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021An Ual CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX y .19 the principal nations. These trends and de- velopments have in turn strengthened inter- national competition in the field of money and banking: they have also created new opportunities. Within a relatively short span of time, U.S. banks have girded themselves to play a prominent role in world finance. With the dollar the leading international currency, the United States the world's largest exporter and importer, and U.S. money and capital markets the single most important source of financial resources, this has been a nat- ural evolution. PATTERNS OF BANK LENDING American commercial banks- engaging in international business extend both short- and long-term credits. According to deft- nitions used by official statisticians, short- term credits are those with a maturity up to 1 year; they are frequently renewed from year to year. Loans beyond 1 year are called tern loans. These term loans have been customary in domestic financing in the United States for a quarter of a century and have, since World War II, spread to the field of international financing. U.S. banks have outstanding short- and long-term credits abroad of $9.5 billion. U.S. exporters, importers, and industrial and commercial firms also grant credits to their foreign clients; these amount to $2.3 billion at this time, Of the short-term bank credits, about $1 billion are short term, and $3.5 billion are largely on behalf of customers. An addi- tional $2.5 billion of the short-term bank a great deal of lost international business for our country. A detailed discussion of this subject is set out in the December issue of this bank's Monthly Economic Letter at pages 141--143 under the heading "Commercial Bank Term Loans Abroad " I enclose a copy and would be glad to send you additional copies if you wish. Very truly yours, 'WALTER B. WRISTON. COMMERCIAL BANK TERM LOANS ABROAD In the world today, nations are exchanging goods in rapidly growing volumes. Our own exports have expanded from $15 to $25 bil- lion in the past 10 years. Understandably, the remarkable expansion of world trade has required growing supplies of credit. Commercial banks in the United States and other principal trading nations extend credits to their foreign correspondents and customers. Indeed, the resources of com- mercial banks constitute a pool of private international liquidity that is drawn upon by creditworthy borrowers in creditworthy countries throughout the world. Along with direct investment in bricks and mortar, commercial bank credit abroad has greatly expanded over the pa.t 15 years as private U.S. capital has replaced U.S. Government aid to Western Europe and Japan-aid that had been an essential. in- gredient during the `earlier postwar period in reinvigorating world commerce. In re- cent years, private financing has received further impetus ?rom -the restoration of meaningful currency convertibility among Changes in U.S. banking credits abroad [In millions of dollars] Collec- tions Accept- ances I 1955---- ----------------------- 62 - 1956--------------------------- 87 137 1957 ----------------- - - -17 255 - ------ - 1958--------------------------- -2 --43 195 9------------------------ 95 -74 1960---------------------------- 89 651 1961---------------------------- 95 641 1962--------------------------- -14 93 1963---------------------------- 146 696 1963: January to March .___-_____-_ 22 90 April to June_________________ 25 341 July to September ----------_ 24 --42 October to December --______ 74 207 1954: January to March --____-_____ 100 138 April to June_________________ 1 242 July to August______________ 23 -101 Outstanding: August 1964______ 956 2,840 40 93 45 213 8 -35 224 274 -171 94 94 -27 125 32 22 140 20 -207 -94 6 124 103 67 15 1, 326 credits represent bankers acceptances. After a long period. of inactivity, these have grown remarkably since 1950, with the encourage- ment of the Federal Reserve System; most acceptances are made under arrangements that involve exports from the United States. Loans to foreign banks and customers today amount to about $5.7 billion, of which $2.2 billion are short term, and $3.5 billion are term loans. THE ANATOMY OF TERM LOANS There is general agreement that short- term loans by U.S. banks are indispensable as a means of financing U.S. trade and other international business that directly benefits the U.S. balance of payments. Sometimes, however, the question is raised-particularly by those who tend to blame the U.S. balance- of-payments deficit on private capital invest- ments abroad-whether loans in excess of 1 year serve purposes beneficial to the U.S. balance of payments. To assure export fi- nancing and "normal recurring international business," the administration's proposal and the House-approved bill for an interest equal- ization tax r exempted bank loans made in the ordinary course of business as well as all obligations maturing within 3 years. Before the tax was enacted last September, however, a provision was added in the Senate giving the President standby authority to extend the tax to bank loans with a maturity of 1 year or more. I The tax and its implications have been reviewed in the April and November 1964 issues of this letter. Changes in U.S. long-term banking credits abroad [In millions of dollars] Latin America 1955 ---- --- -21 240 -44 3 52 - ------------------- 1956 ------------------ 95 67 -27 22 11 --------- 1957 -------- 164 116 6 33 16 ------------------- 1958 -------- 20 65 28 71 -------------- .------ 1959 ----------- -28 131 5 72 ----------------- 1960 ------------ -1 125 -28 54 --------------- 1961 126 17 198 -10 ----------------------------- 1962 ---------------------- 86 -45 30 6 ------- 19631--------------------------- 518 -5 -29 1963: January to March------------ -16 -19 -30 April to June_________________ 30 -28 77 July to September --___-______ -1 10 October to December I_-__--_- -18 8 2 1964: January to March ---_-_______ 155 9 62 -6 April to June ---_.-___--______ 80 -15 14 -13 July to August____________ 49 28 8 14 Outstanding: August 1964-_____ 1,385 1,037 333 270 >txcluding the $193 million item described in footnote 4 to the preceding table. Its geographical distribution is as follows: Europe $5 million: Latin America $134 million; Japan $46 million; and others $8 million. The distribution of the $86 million item has not been published. 209 411 216 292 62 729 1,099 372 703 -65 297 15 456 369 393 -30 6, 041 Long term 230 168 335 188 183 153 336 126 4576 -36 4 178 121 4 313 231 64 130 3, 440 I Acceptances made for account of foreigners, including varying amounts of other financing. a Including central banks and other official institutions. Excluding credits in foreign currencies, which amounted to $689 million in August 1964. 4 Excluding items reported by banks for the let time but representing certain credits extended previously. Such items amounted to $86 million in the 2d and $193 million in the, 4th quarter of 1963. Of the latter amount. $150 million represented trade credits sold to banks by a U.S. corporation. Source: Derived from data published in the U.S: Treasury Department Bulletin and the Federal Reserve Bulletin. The author of this amendment; Senator ALBERT GORE, of Tennessee, stated that it seemed a foregone conclusion that the ex- emption of commercial bank term loans would be used to avoid the tax and char- acterized it as an important loophole. In his testimony before the Senate Finance Committee last June, Secretary of the Treas- ury Douglas Dillon pointed out that the rise in long-term bank loans had started be- fore,there was any thought of the tax and that, in the light of detailed information made available to the Treasury, any possible evasion of the tax through use of bank loans' could not be more than total bank loans." Changes in direction of the flow of loans to less-developed and developed countries have been remarkably similar to the changes in patterns of direct investment. Until 2 or 3 years ago, the direction of the flows had been mainly to Latin America and Canada. In recent years, most of the term loans have gone to Europe, particularly to Italy during late 1963 and early 1984, and to Japan. The shifts in the geographic dis- tribution are summed up in the second table. Over the past year, changes in bank credits abroad, short as well as long-term, have been particularly influenced by borrowings by Japan. These have grown substantially to support the expanding volume of Japanese Trade and business activity. In recent months, the rate of bank lending to Japan. has slowed down. As noted in these pages last month, Japan has floated sizable amounts of bonds in European markets. A HELPFUL rNNOVATION The use of term loans in foreign opera- tions is an adaptation of techniques devel- oped in the United States for domestic lend- ing. As is well known, term loans in the Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300170021-8