TOWARD THE PEACE TABLE

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CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8
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August 8, 1966
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Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX A4177 scouting activities, rather than previous em- ployment as teachers. Corpsmen are taught not only the three Rs but sex education, how to be the head of a family and how to apply for a job. An attempt is made to make the environ- ment as unlike a school room as possible. Students sit with the teacher around large tables. Small groups talk with the teacher while others work at their own pace on pro- grammed teaching materials. Smoking is permitted in class. In its first months, only 30% of the cen- ter's enrollees were Negroes. Following a na- tional trend, this has climbed to 47% Negro, 37% white, and the other minorities such as American Indians and Orientals. Gene Cox, a former Los Angeles County probation officer and forestry camp super- visor who is chairman of counseling, secu- rity and safety at the center, explains that there are several reasons for the racial shift. The main reason for the change, Cox said, is that there is less turnover among the Ne- groes because life at the center is a big step up from what they have known. The basic training period is one year. Most Negroes are staying on for a full year and enthusiastic about enrolling in an optional second year. "The more capable corpsmen here will be Negroes because they appreciate the life more," Cox said, "Whites who equal their ability can more easily find jobs in industry without joining the corps." Other factors in the racial shift: the white corpsman Is more inclined to drop out dur- ing the first 30 days because he usually is from a rural area and apparently more sub- ject to homesickness than the city-oriented Negro, and the white southerners resent mix- ing on an equal footing with Negroes. Acceptance of the trainees in the nearby communities of San Ramon, population 18,- 000; Pleasanton, 6,000, and Livermore, 20,000, has not been overwhelming. "We've had a certain amount of trouble with job corpsmen involved in burglaries, thefts, fights and drinking, but it hasn't been a drop in the bucket compared to what they have at some Job Corps centers back east," said Capt. Tom Houchins, commander of the Alameda County sheriff's station which patrols San Ramon, a new housing develop- ment only two miles from the camp. V,) Toward the Peace Table EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. G. ELLIOTT HAGAN OF GEORGIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, August 8, 1966 Mr. HAGAN of Georgia. Mr. Speaker, the Government's decision to turn loose our airpower on North Vietnam's oil facilities has not altered the objective of our military campaign in Vietnam. As has been the case all along, we were attempting to apply the pressure needed to force the Communists to come to their senses and join us at the peace table. This has been a dominant theme in many of the newspaper articles which support the bombing of oil targets near Hanoi and Haiphong. Unlike the enemy guerrillas and terror- ists, we have resolved to spare civilian populations. Our intention to wear down the Communists' ability to continue their aggresssion has been made clear. South Vietnam must be guaranteed the right to carry on by itself, immune to subversion or attack. That is our ob- jective. And we are detemined to pursue it by the necessary application of re- strained power. In this determination there has been overwhelming support from the Nation's press. I have attached here, for the RECORD, four editorials lauding our aims in Vietnam, which appeared in the State of Columbia, S.C., Chicago Sun-Times, Indianapolis Star, and Dallas Times Herald. However, when I read as I did today about the loss of seven of our finest aircraft and crews, and that all or even a part of these could have been -lost due to a more sophisticated SAM II which the North Vietnamese are being provided by the Soviet Union evidently in great enough quantities that they fired a reported near record of 24 yesterday, then we have an urgent requirement to reevaluate our relations with the Soviet Union. There have been reports that only individual "volunteers" have been engaged in the fighting and that only materiel assistance was being provided by the government. A UPI dispatch from London quoted by the distinguished columnist, David Lawrence, revealed that: Authoritative sources there said the Soviet bloc was readying major consignments of missiles for North Vietnam and of experts to install or possibly even to operate them. Should not we assume that both the Soviet Union and Communist China are beginning to behave in the manner that they did when during the Korean situa- tion we found so many Soviet and Chi- nese participating in the ground and air battles that it gave a lie to the title of "volunteers," or were they "volunteers by coercion?" And I find it difficult to conceive the SAM II's, which are the lat- est in antiaircraft defense, are entirely crewed by the North Vietnamese. It is apparent that when we lose as many as seven of our latest type fighting aircraft in one day, and a total of 120 fixed-wing aircraft in the campaign, that we need to reset our sights and either adopt some strategy which is going to preclude such future losses or we spell out in very plain everyday language to both the Russians and Chinese that if they insist on assist- ing the aggressor in this case, then they must be prepared to face the conse- quences. In an article published in the August 8 edition of the Evening Star under the byline of Richard Fryklund it is pointed out that the North Vietnamese can con- tinue the war indefinitely at its present pace, according to separate U.S. Army and Marine studies. And this further in- dicates that the strength of the American manpower should be upped to 750,000 men or more. Such a buildup would then require the mobilization of reserves and shift of troops from Europe. Yet, on the other hand, the Department of Defense denies that such studies exist. The big question is: Where do we go from here, the reported studies and the DOD not- withstanding? Are we going to continue to absorb such beatings in the air? Are we to be so wishy-washy that we cannot stand up to the two Communist touts who insisted on forcing Ho Chi Minh's actions and are without doubt now as much involved as they were in the Korean fiasco? I have long advocated that this war should be ended at the earliest practical date. I wish to make another plea on behalf of all the fine people of my dis- trict and the Nation as a whole that this was to be given every possible considera- tion to insure positive action and the most precise military decisions to achieve this most sought-after objective. As the Indianapolis Star said: Let us smash every strategic military target in North Viet Nam that we can hit, let us bring this war to an end! The articles mentioned follow: [From the Dallas (Tex.) Times Herald, July 1, 19661 HANOI BOMBINGS NECESSARY The bombing of oil depots in Hanoi and Haiphong is another deliberate and neces- sary application of restrained power by the United States in its effort to weaken the North Vietnamese and to convince He Chi Minh that we mean to end the war through either military power or negotiation. President Johnson has obviously long con- sidered the bombing of these important North Viet Nam centers and the matter of timing was his to decide, based on all the facts of the war and the chances of obtain- ing any glimmer of hope that negotiations might be started. With American dead in the Viet Nam war now past 4,000 and the casualties of last week alone totaling 131, the American people will rally behind the decision to carry the war vigorously to the north. Reaction to the bombings is along pre- dictable lines: cheers from the hawks, jeers from the doves. The hawks lament only that the bombings were so long delayed while the doves wring their hands and worry that the bombings will make it more difficult to entice the North Vietnamese Into nego- tiations. The North Vietnamese have made it clear that they don't yet intend to negotiate. The United States and South Viet Nam must therefore continue to increase the pressure, to turn the screw more and more until the Communist world is forced to give up the .aggression on South Viet Nam. The thrusts against Hanoi and Haiphong are baldly described as an escalation of the war and unmistakably increase the danger of retaliation by Red China, either through air support or ground action. It is a risk we must take. The decision of British Prime Minister Harold Wilson to disassociate his country from the attacks was expected but still rankles. Even if the United States cannot obtain military support from the British, we should be able to expect a few kind words. We should also demand that Britain and other allies halt the use of their ships in carrying supplies to North Viet Nam ports. They must know now that those ships run the risks of war-and that includes aerial bombing. Defense Secretary McNamara made a so- ber and realistic assessment of the bombings when he said that we have two aims: to make North Viet Nam's infiltration of South Vietnam more costly and to save the lives of Americans and their allies fighting in South Viet Nam. We hope the continued bombings of oil depots and ports will hasten the day when the North Vietnamese will be ready to talk peace. [From the Indianapolis (Ind.) Star, July 1, 1966] HIT THEM AGAIN! The United States' bombing of Communist oil depots in the Hanoi-Haiphong area is Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 A4178 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX August 8, 1966 good news for most Americans. There is only one way to win a war-that is to hit and hit hard and defeat the enemy. The "limited war" against the Communist invaders of South Viet Nam is costly in money and life. It is morally abhorent to many Americans, because we do not seem to be fighting to win. The United States should destroy the ca- pacity of the enemy to fight. That is the objective of any war. It should be for this one. Let us smash every strategic military tar- get in North Viet Nam that we can hit. Let us bring this war to an end! [From the Chicago (Ill.) Sun Times, July 1, 19661 THE SANCTUARY SHRINKS Given the rejection of offers to negotiate and the continuing escalation of the war by North Viet Nam, the bombing of the fuel dumps at Haiphong and Hanoi was inevit- able. The military reasons for shrinking the sanctuary enjoyed by those two cities was sound, as Sec. of Defense. Robert S. Mc- Namara pointed out. North Viet Nam, he said, is shifting its effort from a "small-arms guerrilla action against South Viet Nam to a quasi-conventional military operation." Since North Viet Nam has no railroad lines to supply its forces in South Viet Nam it must use the sea and trucks. If the fuel to keep those supply lines open is destroyed the ability of North Viet Nam to continue to escalate the war should be sharply reduced. The political reaction to the U.S. air strikes was predictable. However, there is little in any of the criticism voiced by some U.S. allies, or others, that suggests the crit- icism was made hurriedly, as a reaction to the rapids. Rather, the statements deplor- ing and castigating the raids were carefully put, suggesting that the United States had taken care to warn its allies-and perhaps others-that the raids were coming. It is significant that in the criticism, both from within the United States and from its allies, there is much regard for the possible loss of life that might be suffered 'in North Viet Nam as the bombing raids move closer to heavily populated areas. However, few if any of the critics lament the thousands of South Vietnamese civilians who have been slaughtered by North Viet Nam's guerrillas and troops, the. thousands of casualties America has suffered or the unassailable :fact that North Viet Nam has mounted an unlaw- ful aggression against a neighboring nation. It is significant, also, that the member na- tions of the Southeast Treaty Organization, five of which live close to the edge of the Communist knife, recognized in their an- nual meeting this week that the situation in Southeast Asia (and South Viet Nam) "is the most dangerous in the world." The SEATO council (with the exception of France) has promised to increase military and economic assistance to defeat the Com- munist attack against South Viet Nam which it said was "in flagrant violation of the Geneva agreements of 1954 and 1960." The widening of the war effort against North Viet Nam follows, as did other U.S. countermeasures, a progressive escalation on the part of North Viet Nam and a continued rejection by Hanoi of all overtures to nego- tiate an end to the conflict. It should also serve notice on Hanoi's leaders and their Communist masters that the conference table is the only alternative to utter defeat. [From the Columbia (S.C.) State, July 1, 1966] GET ON WITH ITI The bombing of fuel depots near the North Vietnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong has been long overdue. It may signal a new determination in Washington to win the war, not just to prolong it. As might have been expected, the stepped- up war effort has brought anguished outcries from American "doves" ("pigeons" is the better word) and lamentations from such "world leaders" as Great Britain's Prime Minister Harold Wilson. We now can anticipate a veritable deluge of pious preachments about "world opinion," and how we must avoid giving offense to the conscience of mankind. Balderdash. If there be any such thing as "world opinion," it is amorphous and well- nigh meaningless. And as for the conscience of mankind, there is little evidence to suggest that men and nations act for reasons other than self-interest. The United States has sought to defend the principle of self-determination, to preserve personal liberty, and to promote economic development throughout most of the world. These are the goals of the United States in Southeast Asia, where they are augmented by defense alignments aimed at curbing Com- munist aggression. But what is the rest of the world. doing to aid the cause? A bare handful of nations- Australia., New Zealand, South Korea, and a few others-are sharing the anti-Communist burden in South Viet Nam. Great Britain's contribution takes the form of indulging shipping of British registry to carry on trade with the Communists of North Viet Nam. Where was "world opinion" when Soviet Russia ignored international appeals and exploded its last nuclear bomb? Where was "world opinion" when neutralist India forcibly seized the Portuguese enclave of Goa? And what does "world opinion" say today about the millions of enslaved Europeans liv- ing under the heels of Communist masters? And what does "world opinion" say about Castro's oppression of the Cuban people, or the Viet Cong's terrorizing and murdering of the South Vietnamese people? Military and economic strength govern in international affairs today just as they al- ways have. But most Americans sincerely feel that the United States is exercising its strength in the cause of justice toward the end of ultimate peace. We do not say: "Might makes right!" We do say that the right, by itself, seldom pre- vails in today's cut-throat world. The time is at hand to add might to right, and to get on with the business of winning the war. We must make the price of aggres- sion to high for the Communists to afford. "Poverty War Escapes Scandal"-A Christian Science Monitor Survey of 40 Cities EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. JOHN BRADEMAS OF INDIANA IN TILE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, August 8, 1966 Mr. BRADEMAS. Mr. Speaker, the distinguished newspaper, the Christian Science Monitor, has been publishing a series of articles on the war on poverty. One of the most significant; of these articles was published on August 5, 1966, and is entitled, "Poverty War Escapes Scandal." The article is based on the findings of a recent survey by the Christian Science Monitor of the poverty program in ap- proximately 40 cities in the United States, Says the Christian Science Monitor of the war on poverty: In the nearly two years of operation, there hasn't been even a whisper of scandal in the administration of the overwhelming majority of programs across the country. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent to insert this article in the Appendix of the RECORD: POVERTY WAR ESCAPES SCANDAL (By William C. Selover) WASHINGTON.-The American "war on pov- erty" may have established some kind of all- time record. Believe it or not, in the nearly two years of operation, there hasn't been even a whisper of scandal in the administration of the overwhelming majority of programs across the country. And even where there has been some al- leged impropriety, it has most often re- sulted from misunderstanding or imprecise directives from Washington. This is the finding of a recent survey by The Christian Science Monitor of poverty programs in some 40 cities across the coun- try. This is all the more impressive since such large sums of money are involved-solve $2.5 billion a year. That is not to say that the prorams have been wholly efficient. They haven't in many cases. But, in general, the local administrators have taken great care to maintain close watch on funds and to keep the programs free of patronage or graft. POLITICAL REQUESTS REJECTED And the office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) has maintained constant vigilance, with inspectors crisscrossing the country always on the lookout for any possible scan- dal. R. Sargent Shriver Jr., OEO director, has let it be known that if there is any pos- sible irregularity found, he wants to know about it first. And he wants it corrected immediately. Typically, the directors of the Kansas City, Mo., program, Chester E. Stovall, told the Monitor he has occasionally had calls from local politicians asking how they could get somebody a job in the local program. "I tell them," he says, "to have the per- son send in the regular application, Then I say: 'But the fact that you called me won't be considered.' " And he adds: "But I think most of the politicians have bent over to keep politics out of it. They want the program to work." From Columbia, S.C., the Monitor corre- spondent writes: "There has not been a single allegation of graft or political bossism." The report pointed out that at the recent session of the South Carolina General As- sembly, "there was not a word uttered on the floor in criticism of the OEO program or how it is being run" during the entire five-month session. "This is indicative," said the report, "of the attitude of the politicians generally in this state." Similarly, from Louisville, Ky., our reporter noted that "among the blessings the local program has enjoyed is almost complete freedom from political interference of any kind." The occasional real scandals, such as ones in Boston, or Harlem, or Providence, R.I., make great news copy for much of the coun- try's press. UNEXPECTED FINDINGS But, unfortunately for the program, such stories paint a completely distorted view of the program as a whole. It is proverbial that scandals and failures of a program are bigger headline makers than their successes. On the other hand, the findings of this Monitor sur, ey are so unexpected as to be Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17711 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE their vote of confidence by electing him democracy designed and executed to im- neutralists whose acts are advantageous as speaker of the assembly every subse- part an aura of legitimacy to the present to Chet eommuni decreessts.condemns as criminal quent session since 1961. Under his Ky regime. leadership, the California State Assem- On Friday, August 5, and Saturday, "all moves which weaken the national bly has become a more effective instru- August 6, the Washington Post foreign anti-Communist effort and are harm- ment of legislative responsibility; com- 'correspondent, Ward Just, reported on ful to the anti-Communist struggle of mittee staffs have been enlarged, assem- the South Vietnamese elections. His ar- the people and the armed forces" and blymen have received additional staff ticles, which are included hereafter, un- "all plots and actions under the false assistance in their district offices, and ex- derline the urgent need for actions to name of peace and neutrality." perts in business, science, and academic secure free and meaningful elections. South Vietnam cannot have free and fields are being called upon to design The steps that should be taken forth- meaningful l eelections unleesustral di and as free to legislation. Most importantly, Jesse with are: Unruh's dynamic leadership has brought First, determined efforts should be peace negotiations as they are, for ex- new self-reliance to the assembly. No made by the United States to bring about ample, to advocate South Vietnam's rubberstamp legislature catering to supervision of the elections by the Inter- membership in the Western alliance and special interest groups, the California national Control Commission for Viet- continued a ffrare. om Saigon reflect the State Assembly, under the guidance of nam. ndebiltasto effort on Saigon reflect cam- Speaker Unruh, is an equal partner in International supervision is urgently State government. needed to give the South Vietnamese p ignsre ultin at throin e theedeecre s. be in- Jesse Unruh's achievements have been people a basis for confidence in the It i not th duly recognized by leaders in the aca- ness of the elections and to help over- voked extensively to be effective, al- demic world. In December of 1962 he come the legacy of suspicion that nat- though at least one candidate has al- delivered a series of lectures as a Chubb urally results from the series of rigged ready been before Central Committee and faces exclusion fellow at Yale University, an honor ac- elections under the French, the Vietminh, .from the ebecause es exponent corded to men of such stature as Adlat Boa-Dai, and Diem. The United Nations him election i an opponent so far has been sympathies, the Stevenson, Harry Truman, Clement has played a useful role in supervising accused More him of because Attlee, Ralph E. McGill, and Abraham elections in South Korea and in five for- Ribicoff. mer trust territories. Since the short- intimidating effect. Candidates are not In 1963 Speaker Unruh was invited by ness of time makes it impracticable to anxious to test the Government's inten- our State Department to lecture at col- obtain U.N. supervision of the South tions concerning enforcement of the de- leges and universities in the Far East. Vietnamese elections, the members of the crees. Accordingly, they simply are not During this trip he developed a thriving ICC, Vietnam-India, Canada, and Po- talking about the great issue before the friendship with members of the Japa- land-should be asked to assume that South Vietnamese peoples--that of peace role. and, war. Ward Just reports: Dese National League al Young Liberal One moderate, very highly respected can- and Prefectural Assemblymen Supervision is needed now because didate, who was said to be almost certainly a winner, declared when he was asked about and later entertained this group when it more is involved than observation of the visited California in April of 1964. Re- vote count to see that figures are not the war that "Vietnam wants to negotiate visiting Japan in July and August of falsified or ballot boxes stuffed. with the North." 1964 as a guest of the Japanese Foreign The Government will finance the elec- Would he say that on the election plat- Ministry, Unruh addressed the national tion, print all literature, control adver- form? convention of the League of Young Leg- tising, radio time, and public meetings, "No." islators and presided over meetings of provide or not provide police protection Why not? His translated answer was that "everycan- the Tokyo Conference of Pacific Basin and transportation in the Provinces. didate has the right to express his views on Legislators. Thus it is absolutely essential to an elec- the right things only-not on everything." I am very proud to have Jesse Unruh's tion that would reflect the will of the It was not now "convenient" to speak of ne- assembly district within my own 31st people that Government action be even- gotiations with the North. Congressional District. In past years handed. The question has been asked, how can we have worked together when I served The need for international supervision there be an election with no reference to the in the State assembly; and now, with our to help overcome ingrained suspicion of war and ways to end it-or win it? The answer is that whatever the candi- respective districts overlapping, we re- the validity of the election process was dates may be thinking privately, publicly main very close friends as well as col- emphasized by the following observa- they will be talkin about the constitution, leagues. His cooperation has always tions in Just's reports from Vietnam: the value of legitimate government, the high been of inestimable value to me In my Suspicion of the election results runs so cost of living, and the price of rice. work in the U.S. Congress, for he is a deep that one prominent politician estimates Just, ra- national recognized spokesman for that in Saigon as much as one third of the One nezed this politician, claiming interviewed that by Justa- quality in government. California and electorate may stay away from the polls or mere zed the bye aiming t not t a interested In co Nation are indeed richer f his deliberately spoil , ballots. contributions. Wherever one talked, there was a rippling candidate's position on issues, especially undercurrent of suspicion of government on the issue of the war, but on his record. intentions. Nowhere was there proof of I suspect that Vietnamese voters are fraud, but everywhere there were doubts. much like voters everywhere and want NEWS REPORTS FROM SAIGON EM- "Up to now," said an earnest Vietnamese stands on the PHASIZE THE NEED FOR ACTION politician, "there have been only rumors, know issues. where a The candidate stands reason for the ES MAKE THE SOUTH VIETNAM- but The troublecis,confidence, or the lack of sterile debate and the irrelevant plat- ESE ELECTIONS FREE AND MEAN- it forms that have appeared to date is C;F*IJI, summed up in the following comment: (Mr. REUSS (at the request of Mr. Just goes on to point out that "Bud- Political arrests are not unknown in Viet- EVANS of Colorado) was granted permis- dhist militants"-and presumably others nam, and now-weeks before the election- sion to extend his remarks at this point who are desirous of subverting the elec- there is apprehension that the government's in the REcORD and to include extraneous tions-are playing upon existing suspi- guardians of the ballot may be overzealous matter.) cions to make the success of the elections in screening candidates with alleged Com- even less likely, munist or neutralist tendencies. M Speaker, a week ago today y I spoke poke to the House use to urge ac- Second, the United States should de- Third, the United States should re- tions to, secure the free and meaningful mand the revocation by the Ky govern- quest that the Ky government abandon elections that are desperately needed in ment of decrees which will prevent the the provision allowing it to amend the South Vietnam. South Vietnamese people from choosing constitution adopted the majority of the The central issue posed by the elections freely among the political alternatives elected constituent assembly unless over- of September 11, I said, is whether they available to them. ruled by a two-thirds majority of the will be truly free and honest, an accurate One of these decrees bars from the assembly. reflection of the mind of the South Viet- election all candidates who are "Com- Such power in the hands of a non- namese people, or a more burlesque of munists and pro-Communist neutrals or representative movement embodies the Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17712 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD HOUSE August e6, .1966 threat that even if free elections are "This is the rule of the minority In an miraculously achieved the representative assembly elected to write a constitution," and democratic results will be destroyed says Dr. Than Quang Dan, the highly re- by the decisions of the Ky government heads d an former government :minister who h. "It ox- supported by one-third plus one in the lets heads nowhere else electoral in slate the in world." assembly : Somewhat less controversial is the provi- Among politicians, there is bitterness over sion, said to be unprecedented in Vietnamese Amendment 20 to the electoral law, the pro- politics, that candidates run on a slate in vision that allows the government to amend constituencies where more than one dele- the constiution after it has been written, and gate is to be elected. requires a two-thirds majority of the con- Atituent assembly to overrule it. . "This is the rule of the minority in an ;assembly elected to write a constitution," says Dr. Phan Quang Dan, the highly re- dpected former government minister who heads an electoral slate In Giadinh. ,it exists nowhere else in the world." Free elections are worth the effort needed to bring them about. They offer the possibility, obtainable in no other way, of a viable national government commanding the support of a majority -of the people and of the main social forces in the nation. Such a govern- ment, deriving its powers from the con- sent of the governed, would have a far better chance than the current military rulers of creating the rural development, the social and governmental reform which must underlie the military effort if peace and stability are to be achieved. Let us take the actions that are needed. In the July 30, 1966, issue of the Econo- mist, the Saigon correspondent com- mented on the outlook for the constitu- ent assembly that will result from the present electoral process: In fact nothing would have been sub- stantially different if the government had simply appointed a committee to draft the Constitution. IT this dire judgment is confirmed by events, we-as well as the South Viet- namese-will be the losers. The articles by Ward Just follow: [From the Washington Post, Aug. 5, 1966] POLITICIANS ARE SKEPTICAL, PUBLIC, ON SOUTH VIET ELECTION (By Ward Just) SAIGON, August 4.--The election of an as- sembly to write a constitution for South Vietnam is barely five weeks away, and pro- fessional politicians here are skeptical and the public largely indifferent. Suspicton of the election results runs so deep that one prominent politician esti- mates that In Saigon as much as one-third of the electorate may stay away from the polls or deliberately spoil ballots. These views emerged from interviews with Candidates, journalists and qualified observ- ers of politics in Saigon and the neighbor- ing province of Gfadinh, which together will elect 26 of the 117 delegates to the assem- bly. The interviews were restricted to Viet- namese. Nearly all those interviewed agreed that The intricate, complicated device of a slate was intended, by one account, to prevent Communists or neutralists from running for the assembly. An authentic nationalist, the argument went, would think twice before including on his slate a Communist who would almost certainly doom the entire slate to defeat. If there are four slates composed of five men each contesting a five-seat constituency, and the front-running slate gets 60 per cent of the vote, the top three names on that slate are elected. The remaining two seats go to, the top men on the next most popular slate, or slates, depending on the vote. It appears to be an exercise in higher Viet- namese mathematics, but what the proce- dure does, in effect, is place a premium on being the top man on the slate. Already there are charges, unsubstantiated by proof but widely believed, that wealthy men have bought the top place on certain slates by promising to pay the campaign ex- penses of their slatemates. Anyone can get together a slate (there are 248 of them nationwide in the September election; 133 candidates are running on sin- gle tickets in districts where only one dele- gate will be elected), and the theory was that the most popular and highly respected would head the slate. Some dissenters contend that the slates will promote harmony among candidates, but others are not so sure. The political rule of thumb in Vietnam is that if you have two men on a streetcorner you have two political parties. If you have three, you have two parties and a faction. Whenever one talked, there was a rippling undercurrent of suspicion of government in- tentions. Nowhere was there proof of fraud, but everywhere there were doubts. "Up to now," said an earnest Vietnamese poli- tician, "there have been only rumors, but no evidence." " Feeding the rumors are the Buddhist mili- tants. with leaflets and handbill's and gossip. The Vietnamese, according to Than Khac Suu, the former chief of state In the Huong and Quat civilian governments, have been "victimized" so long by, their leaders- President Ngo Dinh Diem's rubber-stamp congresses, for example-that it is easy for the Buddhists to subvert confidence, which Suu says they are doing with great skill. Suu's view of a deeply suspicious electorate egged on by Buddhist propaganda is proba- bly the majority view here, although some would differ. One who does is Dr. Dan. He argues that while the electorate may be suspicious and indifferent, the Vien Hoa Dab (the Buddhist Institute) does not even represent a major- ity of Buddhists, much less a majority of Vietn;unese (a point with which most inde- pendent observers would a r Ithe I th g e). n e June devaluation of the piastre. The pub- end, Dr. Dan says, most Vietnamese will go He is largely Indifferent to the election (the to polls. formal campaign period does not begin until The trouble is confidence, or the lack of it. Aug. 26), and that indifference is reinforced A young government civil servant, who by what one observer called traditional sus- demonstrated in the Hue against U.S sup- picions and sniping from the sidelines by port of Prime Minister Ky and for civilian Buddhist militants who have vowed to boy- rule under elections, now says the constit- cott the balloting. uent assembly elections are wrong. Why? Among politicians, there is bitterness over "Not suitable," he says vaguely. "They will Amendment 20 to the electoral law, the pro- solve nothing." vIslon that allows the government to amend What the Vietnamese expect to emerge the constitution after it has been written, from the election is elusive. The poll- and requires a two-thirds majority of the ticians, after paying homage to doubt and constituent assembly to overrule it. suspicion, appear to be anxious to test the levers of power, even under a government which would probably (under Amendment 20) hold a veto. Prognostications differ widely. Dr. Dan Van Sung, the editor and pub- lisher of the Saigon daily Chinh Luan and no friend of the Ky regime, who Is a candi- date for the assembly, predicts that as many as 80 of the 117 delegates will be supporters of the government. But he also says the minority will be vigorous, and places as his aim the creation of a legal opposition. Former Chief of State Suu, an old Viet- namese political pro, says flatly: "If a candi- date in this election supports the govern- ment, surely he will be defeated." At least part of the problem revolves around the programs of the candidates. If the interviews are any indication, the men who face the electorate will talk about the constitution, the value of legitimate govern- ment, the high cost of living, the price of rice. One moderate, very highly respected candi- date who was said to be almost certainly a winner, declared when he was asked about the war that "Vietnam wants to negotiate with the North." Would he say that on the election plat- form? Why not? His translated answer was that "every candidate has the right to express his views on the right things only-not on every- thing." It was not now "convenient" to speak of negotiation with the North. [From the Washington Post. Aug. 6, 1966] PAST RECORDS CALLED KEY TO VIET ELECTION (By Ward Just) SAIGON, August 5.-Vietnam has, been at war for 20 years, and the impression is that the war is the dominant fact in the lives of nearly all Vietnamese. Yet that is not quite so, if interviews with informed Vietnamese are any guide. The point is important In any discussion of the September election to choose an as- sembly to write a Vietnamese constitution. Because the election is the result of three months of political upheaval, it has strong emotional antecedents. The question has been asked, how can there be an election with no reference to the war and ways to end it-or win it? The answer is that whatever the candidates may be thinking privately, publicly they will be talking about the constitution, the value of legitimate government, the high cost of living and the price of rice. RECORD EMPHASIZED Dr. Phan Quang Dan, the highly respected Gia Dinh physician who is heading an elec- toral slate, intends to base his campaign on his own highly visible qualifications, with references to what the constitution ought to be and how the Vietnamese economy ought to be improved to help the people. Dr. Dan indicated that most Saigon voters would vote for the man and his record, not what was said on the platform. In any case, according to interviews with Vietnamese politicians, journalists and in- formed observers, the war to the mass of the people has lost its singularity, if it ever had it. It is as much a part of Vietnamese life as the heat. It penetrates everything and nothing, and references to it in the cam- paign, according to one politician, would more likely than not stir suspicion and dis- like. In the absence of a real political dialogue, then, on what basis will the Vietnamese choose their candidates? What will be the criteria? What follows is tentative. It is the view of one veteran Vietnamese politician, a mod- Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August-8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE 17713 erate, a senior civilian cabinet member In the government. He was interviewed in English. MANIFESTOS IGNORED The point about the Vietnamese, the official said, is that words mean very little. Campaign manifestos, promises and exhorta- tions-even promises to end the war, or win it-are given scant credit. What counts is a candidate's record. "They will look at Dr. Dan," the official said, "and they will say: fought against the French. Was against Diem. Was jailed by Diem. Is a good doctor, well-educated. And they'll vote for him." Neither is ideology, or "platform," impor- tant or especially relevant to the political parties. For example, the Vietnam Quoc Dan Dang (VNQDD) a nationalist party con- sidered the largest of all Vietnamese political parties, is splintered into three regional groups-northern refugees, central Vietnam- ese and southern Vietnamese-and at least a half a dozen factions. Ideology appears to play no part in the splits. The official said that the easiest way to dif- erentiate between the various factions with- in the Hoa Hao, a religious sect-cum-politi- cal party, is to view it as a series of concen- tric circles working outwards from the gov- ernment in power, The factions can be dis- tinguished by their degree of disaffection to the "ins," whoever the "ins" happen to be. They have no particular relation one to the other but only in their attitude toward the government. (Mr. GONZALEZ (at the request of Mr. new levels in food basket items. A 6-per- EVANS of Colorado) was granted permis- cent rise in meat prices over the May level sion to extend his remarks at this point accompanied by an overall increase of in the RECORD and to include extraneous 2 percent on food items simply contri- matter.) buted more fat into the raging fire of [Mr. GONZALEZ' remarks will appear hereafter in the Appendix.] (Mr. GONZALEZ (at the request of Mr. EVANS of Colorado) was granted permis- sion to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous matter.) [Mr. GONZALEZ' remarks will appear hereafter in the Appendix.] THE INFLATIONARY NATURE OF OUR ECONOMY (Mr. ST GERMAIN (at the request of Mr. EVANS of Colorado) was granted per- mission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include ex- traneous matter.) Mr. ST GERMAIN. Mr. Speaker, though our gross national product now exceeds $700 billion and our affluence has been well manifested, most Americans are nevertheless much concerned with the inflationary nature of our economy and the threat it poses to our well-being. As representatives of the people, I think that we must seek every possible solution to suppress the mounting infla- tionary forces. At the moment we are particularly confronted with the problem of a con- tinual rise in food prices which, if un- checked, will no doubt serve to under- mine most of what we are attempting to do in other areas of our economy. While we attempt to lift the standards of living of our most needy Americans on one front, we seem about to be overrun by unchecked price increases. These in- creases affect the poor man more than anyone else as he must dig deeper into whatever meager funds he has to sustain himself. It seems contradictory that we should wage a strong battle, involving billions of dollars, to help the needy and then allow rising prices to overcome whatever prog- ress is made. Mr. Speaker, we can no longer remain idle with respect to the problem of rising food prices. An investigation must be undertaken in the very near future to as- certain the how and why of food price increases. We must come to the assistance of those who contribute the major portion of their income to the market basket and, therefore, are the people most af- fected by this problem. It was anticipated that the recent Fed- eral excise tax cut would be reflected in inflation. Mr. Speaker, we must determine the reason and remedies for runaway prices of meat and other items contributing to this dangerous condition. HOW A NONPARTISAN OBSERVER VIEWS THE NATION'S ECONOMY (Mr. HANSEN of Iowa (at the request of Mr. EVANS of Colorado) was granted permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include ex- traneous matter.) Mr. HANSEN of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, when any nation experiences continuous and rapid economic growth, there are bound to be periods of uncertainty or inflation. And yet, the unprecedented expansion of our nation's economy in recent years has not resulted in the ex- pected instability or inflation, and shows every indication of continuing in this vein. It is encouraging to me to see that the healthy condition of our economy is rec- ognized by such established economic au- thorities as the First National City Bank of New York. These people, who, in the past, have not always been in agreement with the administration's fiscal and monetary policy, now realize the strength of our Nation's economy. It is impor- tant to note that the following article represents the opinion of experts, who are concerned not with partisan politics, but with purely economic considerations. I now offer the article from the First National City Bank's Monthly Economic Letter for the consideration of my col- leagues : GENERAL BUSINESS CONDITIONS NO PAST-NO FUTURE What appears to count is the degree of estrangement from the status quo: that, and in the case of the individual candidate, a record. "If a man has no past," the official said, "then for me he has no future." Many Vietnamese have been careful with their records over the years. Political ar- rests are not unknown in Vietnam, and now-weeks before the election-there is ap- prehension that the government's guardians of the ballot may be overzealous in screen- ing candidates with alleged Communists or neutralist tendencies. Those whose suspicions are darkest about the intentions of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's are currently looking with interest at the case of Ho Ngoc Cu, a Saigon journalist who is running for the constitutent assembly from Vinhlong province (according to the electoral law, a Vietnamese may run from any constituency he wishes, there is no resi- dency requirement.) Cu is associated with Dan Van Sung, the editor and publisher of the Saigon daily Chinh Luan (and also a candidate). Last week, one of Cu's opponents in the election, a Hoa Hao named Ngyun Van Vi, accused him of Communist sympathies and de- manded that his name be withdrawn from the ballot. The case is now up before the Central Election Committee-composed of a judge, and four members of the people and armed forces council-for action. RECORD SCRUTINIZED Cu's record, which is now under scrutiny by the Committee, includes an arrest by the Diem regime in 1956. Cu says he was kid- napped by Diem's police, jailed and pre- vented from running in the congressional election that year.. But more important than that, Cu believes that he had a brother in the Vietcong. He says he has not heard from the brother for years, and believes him to be dead. Sung says that the charges against Cu are absurd. Perhaps so, Cu says, but one of the members of the Citizens and Armed Forces Council Is a Hon Hao. "I think he will sup- port his comrade," Cu says. "If they think I am a Communist," Cu said today, "they really should provide proof." As business moves into the normally slack summer season, the U.S. economy continues to turn in a highly impressive performance. With the slowing of the rate of expansion since March, business has settled back from an unsustainable burst of acceleration to a cruising speed less damaging to the economic mechanism. Much to the relief of both Washington and Wall Street, evidences of inflationary pressures have become less vis- ible, thereby deflating talk of a tax increase before fall.. Backlogs of orders have con- tinued to increase, and industry generally- with the notable exception of autos and homebuilding-still faces a very hot sum- mer, with production in many lines limited only by the availability of regular hands during the vacation period. It is not the immediate outlook that divides economic observers and investors so much as the prospects farther down the road. Except for food prices-which have largely reflected swings in meat output- the inflation experienced so far has been a lower consumer price index at this milder than might be expected during a time. Much to my dismay, this has not fairly large-scale war which coincides with a been realized. In the month of June we powerful capital goods boom amidst the note the largest increase in consumer longest and greatest economic expansion in prices for any month during the past 2 recent history. The enormous financing burdens imposed Our expectations of lower prices mposed on the money and capital markets by both the government and private fortunately were fulfilled in the de- borrowers have been absorbed so far without creased lists for automobiles and air con- the severe liquidity squeeze that many have ditioners. However, this in no way Com- feared. Along with wages and farm incomes, pensated for the grave and intolerable corporate earnings have been well sustained Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17714 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE Augus#:3, 1966 ? despite concerns about a possible profits squeeze. And with the decline of Buddhist dissidence and the bombing of the Hanoi- Haiphong oil depots, the situation in Viet- nam has, if not improved, at least become less confusing. CONSUMER BUYING AND PRICE TRENDS At the moment, the sharp cutback in out- put of 66 model cars has eased some of the pressure in the metals industries, and auto manufacturers' rebates to dealers are being passed on to new car buyers in lower prices. But the negative impact of high food prices, stepped-up Social Security taxes and higher tax withholding rates-which con- tributed to the slackening in consumer spending after April-will wear off progres- sively in the coming months. Moreover, spending under Medicare, starting this month, is expected to run at an annual rate of about $3 billion. In addition to this di- rect spending, people over 65-and in many cases, their supporting children or relatives- will be able to spend for other things the money previously saved or used for these medical expenses. These factors should help restore some vigor to retail sales. But looking further ahead, there are a good many question marks. Foremost are the material and financial requirements of the Vietnam war. While hopes for an early and acceptable end to the conflict are again on an upswing, businessmen must calculate the probabilities of increased defense orders and appropriations and-if these are large enough to threaten price stability-a possible tax increase next year if not In 1966. Under the influence of higher costs of services and some nondurable goods, the rise of consumer prices other than food. may speed up over the next few months. Medical costs in particu- lar-already climbing fast-are expected to go up even more under the impact of the Medicare program. Businessmen and investors, viewing the heady gains in volume and profits over the past 24 months, understandably feel the pace cannot be maintained indefinitely, particu- larly while inflation, shortages and bottle- necks remain as the immediate problems. Thus, the remarkable performance of the economy, as it continues, comes more and more to inhibit expectations for future expansion. The cutback In auto production has drawn attention away from the Continued strong performance elsewhere. For example, while a rebound from the April coal strike figured in the 0.8 percent May advance in the sea- sonally adjusted Federal Reserve index of in- dustrial production, the steel, business capi- tal equipment and aircraft industries were also major contributors. If the wide fluctua- tions in the steel and auto industries are separated out, as shown in the accompanying chart, there has been no slowdown among industries which make up about 90 percent of industrial activity. In May, the index of "other production" rose at an annual rate of 11 percent, the same as in the first quarter and somewhat greater than the 9 percent gain during 1965. Cutbacks caused by lagging sales and high time oft will be staggered or workers will re- ceive vacation pay in addition to their regu- lar wages. EMPHASIS ON EXPANSION With heavy civilian and military demands, it is not surprising that expenditures for ex- panding capacity are growing faster than those for replacing and modernizing existing facilities. The McGraw-Hill survey of plant and equipment spending plans in April indi- cated that manufacturers' outlays for expan- sion in 1966 will be about $13 billion, 48 per cent of total outlays, or about 28 per cent more than in 1965. Plans for modernization and replacement call for an increase of about 14 per cent over last year. In May, the SEC and the Department of Commerce reported that businessmen were planning total plant and equipment expendi- tures of $60.8 billion in 1966--a 17 per cent increase over 1965. Manufacturers antici- pated outlays of $27 billion, up 20 per cent. Even these plans do not accurately measure the full extent of investment wants because construction delays and postponed delivery dates are preventing businessmen from spending money this year as fast as they had planned to earlier. The consistently high level of capital ex- penditures In the past few years has been a potent anti-inflationary force in the econ- omy. The sharply higher cost of living this year has been concentrated in foods and serv- ices. There is little doubt that other con- sumer goods would also have had much higher price tags if we had not had heavy expenditures on plant and equipment in earlier years. Increased capacity has made it easier to meet rising demand, while improved technology has helped hold down costs. MONEY MARKET MEETS THE TEST The money and capital markets success. fully Weathered a period of unusual strain last month as extraordinary borrowing de- mands of governments and corporations coincided. However, changes of interest rates helped pull funds to where demands were greater, and the Federal Reserve System provided a substantial volume of reserves late in the month, thus facilitating banks' efforts to accommodate loan demands. Much of the tension in the money market stemmed from fiscal devices employed to pare the Federal budget deficit for the 1966 fiscal year ended June 30. Corporations had to borrow more than usual, and convert more liquid assets to cash, because their tax payments had been bunched to add about $2.5 billion to fiscal '66 Federal revenues. In effect. the corporations were borrowing money for the Treasury. Similarly, the large issu- ance of Federal agency obligations and the sale of participations in governunent-owned loans merely served as substitutes for regular Treasury debt issues. All told, corporation income taxes paid on June 15 were probably one third larger than a year earlier. Additional tax revenues were shifted forward into fiscal '66 by requiring .large corporations to make payments of with- held income and Social Security taxes semi- monthly rather than monthly. As a result, corporations paid an estimated $1.5 billion in tax l t es as month that would not have index for passenger cars by 7 percent in May. been due until the end of July under the The bulk of the 300,000 car cutback in '66 old schedule. model output will be concentrated in the All this was reflected in a rise Of $2.9 billion summer months. Third quarter schedules in bank loans in the middle two weeks of for '67 models have been stepped up, and June. This compares with an Increase of although July assemblies will be 37 percent $1.9 billion in the like period of June 1965 less than last year, August and September and $1.4 billion in 1964. Corporations also output will be up 6 percent from a year raised cash by running off $635 million of earlier. . i Hard on the heels of $1.2 billion in new cash raised in May, Federal agencies bor- rowed $1.6 billion in June, including $925 million through sales of loan participation certificates. Because of the congestion in the market, some agency issues had to be offered at 5% per cent. The most important question facing the financial markets concerns the direction of monetary policy, and here the major de- velopments have been somewhat obscured by the pressures of the June tax date. Total member bank reserves (seasonally adjusted), which had climbed at a rapid pace through April, showed a downward trend through mid-June. Nevertheless, the public's hold- ings of cash balances in June were up sub- stantially from a year earlier. Late In the month, the Federal Reserve in- creased reserve requirements from 4 per cent to 5 per cent on that portion of a member bank's total time deposits (other than sav- ings accounts) exceeding $5 million. This was apparently a response to the House Banking Committee, which had adopted a resolution urging the Federal Reserve Board to "take action" within 30 days to reduce bank competition with savings and loan associations for individual savings,. The ac- tion taken will increase the effective cost to banks of CD funds by about six basis points and was a clear sign that the Federal Re- serve was taking a more restrictive stance. Commercial banks followed by increasing from 511/2 to 53/4 per cent the minimum rate on loans to business borrowers. INDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT: THE NEW PARTNERSHIP (Mr. SCHEUER (at the request of Mr. EVANS of Colorado) was granted permis- sion to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous matter.) Mr. SCHEUER. Mr. Speaker, through- out our history there has often been a clash of interest between business and government in the field of social progress and reform. Too often, these two great sectors of our Nation have worked in conflict rather than in harmony; indeed, some have seen the rise of big govern- ment as a counterforce to big business. Today, happily, industry and govern- ment are working together, in harmony, to mitigate some of the social evils which currently plague our Nation. Several of our Job Corps centers, for example, are being effectively operated by private firms. To illustrate an emerging trend toward a "social-industrial complex," I should like to insert in the RECORD a thought-provoking address by Lyle M. Spencer, president of Science Research Associates, Inc., a subsidiary of IBM. THE NEW SOCIAL-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX (An address by Lyle M. Spencer, president, Science Research Associates, Inc., a sub- sidiary of IBM) Little more than five years ago, Dwight Eisenhower, in his last message as President, warned of the growth of a military-industrial complex that could endanger American free- doms. It was an important warning. Com- mentators now and then honor it by repeti- tion, but no one has yet suggested what to do about it. down opti- n production will be less than usual much as in March 1966. Banks Zr: able to misticonigni; note. w I wa to to describenthe early this summer. Durable goods manufacturers meet these heavy demands by offering un- growth of a new complex in which industry report that order backlogs grew 22 per cent usually attractive rates to replace the large and government also are intertwined, but in the year ended May 31, As a result, many volume of maturing CDs. Finance companies towards a far different end. It might be firms are foregoing the usual plant-wide va- similarly raised their rates in order to replace called a "social-industrial complex." With cation shutdowns this year; In such cases maturing paper, the government acting as broker, a number Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE nese ore from the national stockpile and the supplemental stockpile was consid- ered, ordered to a third reading, read the third time, and passed. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the re- port (No. 1431), explaining the purposes of the bill. There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed In the RECORD, as follows: PURPOSE OF THE BILL This bill would grant congressional ap- proval to the disposal of approximately 1.9 million short dry tons of metallurgical grade manganese ore from the national stockpile and the supplemental stockpile, and waive the 6-month waiting period normally re- quired before such disposal could be started. EXPLANATION OF THE BILL Why congressional approval is required Under existing law, congressional approval is required for the disposal of materials in both the national stockpile and the sup- plemental stockpile except In those instances where the proposed disposal action is based on a determination that the material has become obsolescent for use during time of war. Since the proposed disposal of these ma- terials is not based on obsolescence, the pro- posed disposal requires the express approval of the Congress. In addition, the bill would waive the pro- cedural requirements of section 3 of the Stock Piling Act (50 U.S.C. 98b), with re- spect to publication and transmittal of no- tice and the 6-month waiting period. The bill would, however preserve the substantive requirements of section 3 with respect to the protection of the United States against avoid- able loss and the protection of producers, processors, and consumers against avoidable disruption of their usual markets. Thus, the waiver will permit the immeditae disposal of metallurgical grade manganese ore upon enactment of H.R. 13772. Why disposal is proposed The metallurgical grade manganese ore to be disposed of from the national and supple- mental stockpiles is surplus to the stockpile requirements. The objective inventory is composed of ore and upgraded forms of manganese. The ore Component of the manganese objective is ap- proximately 6.6 million short tons. As of March 31, 1966, the excess Inventory over the objective amounted to about 3.8 million short tons of which approximately 1.7 million tons in the Defense Production Act inventory has been authorized previously for sale. Much of this DPA material is of such low quality grade that the General Services Administration has encountered difficulty in disposing of it pend- ing the availability of higher grade ore to offer simultaneously. The bill under con- sideration accounts for the remainder of the excess except for that quantity which is being retained temporarily for strategic stor- age purposes. Information on metallurgical grade manganese ore Metallurgical grade manganese is primarily used in the production of steel as a desulfu- rizer and deoxidizer. It is also used to im- part one or more of the properties of strength, toughness, and hardness to some steels. For these applications, manganese is usually in- troduced in the form of ferromanganese. - The United States imports metallurgical grade manganese ore chiefly from India, Brazil, the Republic of the Congo, Union of South Africa, Ghana, and Mexico. FISCAL DATA The average acquisition cost per short dry ton of the metallurgical grade manganese ore in the national stockpile was $39.60 and in the supplemental stockpile was $43.09. The current market price is about $34.25 per short dry ton. DIRECTION TO THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR TO ADJUDICATE A CLAIM TO CERTAIN LAND The bill (S. 1684) to direct the Secre- tary of the Interior to adjudicate a claim to certain land in Marengo County, Ala., was considered, ordered to be engrossed for a third reading, read the third time, and passed, as follows: 8.1684 A bill to direct the Secretary of the Interior to adjudicate a claim to certain land in Ma- rengo County, Alabama Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of the Interior is directed to ad- judicate the claim of B. A. Cogle of Thomas- ville, Alabama, under the Color of Title Act of December 22, 1928 (45 Stat. 1069), as amended by the Act of July 28, 1953 (67 Stat. 2276 43 U.S.C. 1068-1068b), to the lands de- scribed in section 2 of this Act. If the Secre- tary shall determine that the said B. A. Cogle has otherwise satisfied the requirements of the Color of Title Act, he may issue a patent under such Act to such lands without regard to the acreage limitation imposed in such Act. SEc. 2. The lands subject to this Act are the following-described tracts of land all sit- uated in Marengo County, Alabama, and described with respect to St. Stephens me- ridian: (1) the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 3, township 13 north, range 2 east; (2) the southwest quarter of the south- west quarter of section 26, township 13 north, range 3 east; (3) the south half of the southeast quarter of section 35, township 13 north, range 3 east; and (4) the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 19 township 14 north, range 2 east. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the re- port (No. 1432), explaining the purposes of the bill. There being no objectiion, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: PURPOSE This bill directs the Secretary of the In- terior to adjudicate, under the Color of Title ?Act of December 22, 1928, 45 Stat. 1069, as amended, 43 U.S.C. 1068-1068b, a claim of B. A. Cogle to approximately 234.90 acres of land, without regard to the 160-acre lim- itation in the act. In essence, the bill authorizes the Secre- tary to determine whether B. A. Cogle other- wise satisfies the requirements of the Color of Title Act and to issue a patent to the land described in the bill, if the Secretary is satisfied as to such compliance. BACKGROUND Mr. Cogle previously received patent under the Color of Title Act for 159.88 acres of pub- lic land in Alabama. He has occupied the land since 1923, and 17737 the committee accepts the fact that he was a bona fide purchaser of the land in ques- tion, and that for each parcel of land there is a chain of titles showing that many in- dividuals thought they owned the parcel which they later sold, and which ultimately passed to Mr. Cogle-and that during all this time, the United States did nothing to as- sert its claim of ownership. The Department of Interior report, agreed upon by the Bureau of the Budget, raises no objection to enactment of the bill if the Con- gress finds "there is justification for special consideration of Mr. Cogle's claim." An appraisal made in May 1965, values the land at $26,320. The Geological Survey says the land is prospectively valuable for oil and gas, and a portion of it for sodium. The In- terior report says there is no known Federal need for the land. There is some commercial timber on the land. The House passed a similar bill, H.R. 2942 in 1963, but the bill did not get out of Senate committee, purportedly because the commit- tee did not want to act on the bill without assurance that the Interior Department would allow Mr. Cogle's application. On June 11, 1964, the Department advised the committee that If the bill were enacted into law, the applications would be deemed "to be allowable ones." Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may pro- ceed for 6 or 7 minutes. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. VA) Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, during the past few days, a number of developments have occurred in connec- tion with Vietnam which should not be overlooked by the Senate. Suggestions relative to the restoration of peace have been made in various Asian quarters. Whether they lead to any specific prog- ress in that direction in the days ahead is another matter. In themselves, the Asian suggestions for peace are only straws which have yet to be picked up by the wind. If there Is to be any prog- ress beyond them, toward peace, it will depend on subsequent responses and ini- tiatives. The experienced and astute Foreign Minister of Thailand, Thanat Khoman, has advanced the suggestion that the Asian nations themselves should seize the reins of the Vietnamese and other problems of their continent. He has urged that a peace conference be held, not in Geneva, but in Asia, and by the parties concerned. Similar suggestions have been made by others in the past but not with nearly the clarity or the directness of the sugges- tions of the able Thai Foreign Minister. What Thanat Khoman is saying, in ef- fect, is that there should be a meeting of Asian leaders, whether of South Viet- nam or North, of Thailand or Burma, of the Philippines or Cambodia, of Peking or Tokyo or wherever. If the press in- terprets him correctly, he wants these leaders to get together somewhere in Asia and try to end the war in Vietnam before its spreading devastation puts an end to the remaining stability of that continent, including almost inevitably at some point, the stability of Thailand. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : ,CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17738 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE That is an admirable suggestion, Mr. President, and I see no reason why it should not have the support of all con- cerned. Certainly, if greater progress toward peace in Asia is promised by a conference of Asians who are intimately concerned with this problem rather than by a meeting in Geneva by nations, many of which are only remotely concerned, then let it be called in Rangoon or Bang- kok, in Manila or Phnom Penh or, for that matter, even in Peking. I do not believe the Thai Foreign Min- ister made mention of a U.N. role in con- nection with the Asian conference which he has proposed, Nevertheless, Mr. U Thant, the Secretary General of the United Nations, has set forth a basis on which he believes peace might be estab- lished in Vietnam. He has advanced three points as preconditions for settle- ment. These points are: First, cessation of the bombing of North Vietnam; sec- ond, reciprocal scaling down of military activities in the south and then a cease- fire on all sides; and, third, willingness to enter into discussion with those who are "actually fighting." This latter cat- egory has subsequently been defined, ob- viously, to include not only the Hanoi and Saigon Governments but also the National Liberation Front in South Viet- nam, whose leadership is, in fact, com- posed of southern Vietnamese. ,In the latter connection, it is interest- ing to note that Prince Sihanouk of Cambodia, in a recent interview with an American correspondent, went so far as to suggest that the key to peace might lie not in Hanoi or. Peking at all but rather in direct conversations between Saigon and the latter group; that is, the South Vietnamese National Liberation Front. May I say from personal knowledge that Prince Sihanouk's observations on Indochina are those of one of the most active participants and effective national leaders in the great wave of change which has engulfed former Indochina as well as the rest of southeast Asia during the past decade and a half. In my judg- ment, Prince Sihanouk not only has a high sense of the needs of his own people but also a sharp perception of realities in Vietnam and elsewhere in Asia. His views as to where the key to peace in Vietnam may lie should be explored. I am delighted that Ambassador Harriman will be visiting with the Cambodian lead- er next month. Finally, Mr. President, I should like to make reference to the recent suggestion of. the distinguished Prime Minister of India, Mrs. Indira Gandhi. It was her view that the International Control Commission in Vietnam should be strengthened in order to patrol the de- militarized zone at the 17th parallel and thereby forestall a further spread of hos- tilities. In my judgment, it would be desirable to enlarge the Commission to the point where it will be able not only to patrol the demilitarized zone but also to extend its operations along the Cam- bodian border. Prince Sihanouk has long advocated this course and the United States has recently concurred in his view that the Commission would be most helpful in the preservation of Cam- bodian neutrality and in prevention of the spread of the war. For whatever the reasons, the Soviet Union, as a cochair- man, has been unwilling to join with the United Kingdom in reconvening the Ge- neva Conference in order to take up this proposition. That would appear to be one more reason for giving every possible and prompt consideration to a convening of an Asian conference In Asia. If I may summarize, then, Mr. Presi- dent, it would seem to me that these recent suggestions relative to Vietnam which have emanated from Asian sources, notably from the Foreign Min- ister of Thailand and the Prime Min- isters of India and Cambodia, and from the Secretary Generanl of the United Nations, Mr. U Thant, are most helpful. It would be my hope that there promise, such as it may be, will not be permitted to fade through inertia on the part of any nation. I am delighted that the Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, has already seen fit to respond to them in a most constructive fashion. indeed, in a recent press conference, he gave every indication of the U.S. readiness to pursue any or all of these suggestions. I would certainly expect, therefore, that U.S. di- plomacy, whether at the United Nations or down the line here in Washington or in nations abroad where it might can.- ceivably be useful, will pursue and under- score the constructive responses of the Secretary of State to these excellent Asian initiatives. I do not think it is too much to say that this Nation not only supports fully the search for acceptable Vietnamese and Asian solutions by Asians? but that, in all probability, we would find accept- able a solution on which the Asian na- tions themselves and the Vietnamese people, north and south, can generally agree. I ask unanimous consent, Mr. Presi- dent, to include at this point in the RECORD pertinent extracts from the transcript of a recent press conference of the Secretary of State and a state- ment I made on Vietnam on April 18, 1966, on the Senate floor. There being no objection, the extracts and the statement were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: {From the New York Times, Aug.. 6, 1966] EXCERPTS FROM RUSK NEWS CONFERENCE Question. Mr. Secretary, the Soviet Union has charged that the United States planes have attacked its ships in the Haiphong har- bor. Has this occurred? And what is U.S. policy on. this question? Answer. We have no information at all that would support the charge that we have at- tacked any shipping in the Haiphong harbor. Our strikes on the P.O.L. (petroleum, oil and lubricants) installations there were for that purpose, and that purpose alone. Indications from the strikes are that all of the bombs were in the target area. There was no indica- tion that attacks on Soviet shipping occurred. Question. You spoke of bombs, I think the Soviet note charged that this vessel, the Medyn, was hit by large caliber bullets, Answer. We have no information at all on that. In an earlier incident, when such a charge was made, our judgment was that if anything at all reached a Soviet ship, that it might well have been North Vietnamese anti- aircraft or something the North Vietnamese were doing. But it was not U.S. bombs that had anything to do with it. Question. India is reported to be consider- August 8, 1966 ing asking that the I.C.C. (International Control Commission) be expanded to control and observe in the demilitarized zone more thoroughly. What do you think of such an idea? Answer. We would be very much in favor of a strengthening of the I.C.C. to do any of the jobs that are its responsibility, Including the assurance that the demilitarized zone is in fact demilitarized. Very substantial North Vietnamese forces have come through the demilitarized zone, and have been engaged by our Marine and South Vietnamese forces in the northern part of South Vietnam. Those North Vietnamese forces are back in the demilitarized zone, contrary to the understandings reached in 1954. Another Instance of I.C.C. activity that we would welcome would be to assure the neu- trality and territorial integrity of Cambodia. As you know, Prince Sihanouk has requested that that be done. We would be glad to see that that would be done. ATTITUDE OF POLISH MEMBER Question. Is it true that the Polish mem- ber of the I.C.C. Is resisting proposals or efforts to get that commission into the zone to investigate conditions there? Answer. Quite frankly, I don't have precise information on that point. I think probably we will know very shortly more specifically what their attitude is. As you know, the South Vietnamese Gov- ernment has repeatedly called the attention of the I.C.C. to violations of the demilitarized zone. Now Hanoi has put in a protest to the I.C.C. All right. Let's do something about It. Let's get going. And I would hope that the three members of the I.C.C. could agree that they would assure the demilitarization of that zone. And I can assure you that any efforts on their side in that direction would be met with complete response by us, and that we would do everything we could to co- operate. We would hope the other side would. Question. On another aspect of the Viet- namese question, Thailand has proposed an all-Asian conference on the problem of try- ing to reach peace in Vietnam, and has pro- posed that all the principals participate in such a conference. What would be your view on that, air? Answer. We feel that this is a constructive suggestion. I found when I was in Asia recently that the Asian countries were very much concerned about the possibilities of peace in Southeast Asia, and the ability of these smaller countries to live unmolested. We would hope that this suggestion might result in some constructive action. As you know, we have been prepared for negotiations, discussions, conferences? con- tacts, through any channels: 17 nonaligned nations; the two co-chairmen of the I.C.C. or any of the other many third parties who have come forward to try to establish some contact between the two sides; or direct bilateral dis- cussions between ourselves and, say, Hanoi or Peking. I think this idea-that the nations who are really most immediately concerned, the Asian nations, might take some useful initiative- is a constructive one, and we will follow with great interest what results from it. USE OF FORCES IN ZONE Question. Is there a policy inhibition on the possible use of American ground forces in the demilitarized zone if the North Viet- gamese continue to use it? Answer. We have not wanted to go into the zone or cross the 17th Parallel. Our attitude has been that we don't want any shooting by anybody at anyone, and that we would be glad to see all of the shooting come to an end straightaway. We have no desire to destroy the regime in North Vietnam; we Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29: CIA-RDP67BA0446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE have no desire to drop any bombs on North Vietnam, Question. There are reports that the North Vietnamese are stepping up their infiltration into South Vietnam despite the bombing of petroleum installations. What can you say about this? Answer. Well, their infiltration continues. There are some time lags between their infil- tration and our precise knowledge about just how much it Is, and what It is. But I think It would be a mistake to suppose that since Infiltration is continuing, therefore, the bombing has no point. Because that over- looks what might have happened in terms of infiltration had the bombing not occurred. QUESTION FOR THE FUTURE We know that the bombing has made infil- tration substantially more difficult; that many supplies, military supplies, that have come down the trails have been destroyed by the bombing; that there is much less P.O.L. to support the trucks that bring men and arms into the South than there was be- fore. We know that there are fewer trucks to bring men and arms down into South Vietnam. So the problem is not whether the bombing has stopped the infiltration, but what the infiltration might have been with- out it; and whether the bombing has made it more difficult and costly for the other side. Question. Do we draw any policy distinc- tion between possible use of ground troops in the southern part of the demilitarized zone and moving troops over into North Vietnam? Answer. I think that that, is a matter that is for the future, and would turn on events. As far as the immediate local, close-in situation is concerned, a commander will have to do those things that are neces- sary for the security and preservation of his own units, his own forces. But there need be no fighting whatever in the de- militarized zone, no bombing in the de- militarized zone, if North Vietnam would keep its troops out of there and not use that as a major infiltration route into South Vietnam. And we hope that they would realize that this would be an important thing to do in terms of a further buildup of the violence. We would like to see this violence reduced just as quickly as possible. Question. Is there currently growing ten- sion between the United States and the Soviet Union over this issue? The tickers from Moscow this morning report that the United States has refused to accept the So- viet protest note on grounds that it's in- accurate and abusive. Answer. I think the principal word there is not the inaccuracy, because Governments are quite familiar with the process of sending inaccurate messages to each other. But the abusiveness of the note is not in accord with diplomatic practice, and so we did not accept it on that basis. I really didn't answer your main question, which was growing tension. I would have to say that the Soviet position, with respect to bilateral relations and the general situa- tion, Is a difficult one under the circum- stances of the Vietnam situation. We regret that. We would like to find ways to im- prove our bilateral relations with the So- viet Union, but we cannot do so by giving away South Vietnam. What we would' like to see is the use of the available machinery to bring peace to Southeast Asia. The Soviet Union, as a co- chairman, has not been willing to move with its British co-chairman to convene a confer- ence or to take an active role in moving toward peace out there, not even with re- spect to Prince Sihanouk's request that the I.C.C. step up its action to assist Cambodia. ESCALATION LAID TO HANOI There is a crisis in Southeast Asia which cannot help but affect bilateral relations. We would like to see that crisis moved to a peaceful settlement. But we can't do that without some. help from others, primarily, in the first instance, Hanoi, but others who have an interest in this and are concerned about It. Question. Do you consider that there has been a continued escalation on the part of the North Vietnamese and possibly encour- agement from Communist China to sending additional workers into North Vietnam to free their soldiers? Answer. There has been a steady escala- tion of this problem by North Vietnam for the past five or even six years, despite the fact that for four or five years there was no bombing of North Vietnam, despite the major efforts made to find a political settle- ment in Southeast Asia. A full division of the North Vietnamese Regular Army moved into South Vietnam before there was U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, except for the strike in connection with the Gulf of Tonkin incident. The demilitarized zone became an Issue be- cause a division of the North Vietnamese regular forces moved through the demili- tarized zone into South Vietnam. Now, when you look at the chronology of escalation, it is based upon the fact that they keep coming. And this effort to seize South Vietnam by force is the thing which the United States and its allies cannot accept. If that ceases to be the problem, then peace can come very quickly. Question. You spoke of willingness to try any kind of negotiations, including bilateral. In that connection, would you care to tell us what you think about Prince Sihanouk's proposal, in an interview with The New York Times, that the United States try getting in touch with the Vietcong and net looking to Hanoi and Peiping? It was answered in gen- eral terms here yesterday by your spokesman, but I wonder if you would address yourself more specifically to that idea. Answer. I think I had better stay to the general language, because there is no in- dication from those who have the real influ- ence on the other side that they are prepared for serious talks. I have said to you many times that there has never been a problem here of lack of contact with the other side. That is a pretty comprehensive statement. The National Liberation Front has an in- terest in peace. So the problem of contact is not the problem. Question. One of the issues discussed be- fare the bombing of the P.U.L. Installations started was the question of foreign shipping in the harbor of Haiphong. Can you tell us what the volume of that shipping is-and what sort of U.S. policy applies to military flights over or combat operations over the harbor area? Answer. We have not been hitting shipping in the Haiphong harbor. I don't have the etxact figures on the shipping that might have been in the area at the time of our strikes. But that shipping was not in the area of the strikes and not in the target area, and was not hit. There has been consider- able reduction in the free-world shipping into Haiphong. I think last month there was only one ship, the month before there were only five ships. But we have not undertaken a campaign against the shipping in Haiphong harbor and, on the basis of the most accurate in- formation we have-and to me it is utterly convincing that we have not been striking such shipping. SOLDIERS OR DIPLOMATS Question. There is a continuing clamor in some Communist countries on readiness to send volunteers to Vietnam If they are re- quested. How do you read the prospects that such volunteers might be requested and that, indeed, they would go? Answer. I can't be a prophet on that point. What we would prefer is that they send some negotiators to Geneva and I will 17739 be there. That is the way to avoid the neces- sity of sending volunteers or to let this mat- ter become further inflamed. What we want are some people in striped pants, not people in uniform. And I will be there to talk about peace in Southeast Asia-perhaps not with striped pants. Question. In relation to what you said about Prince Sihanouk's proposal before, if the Vietcong did show some indication that it was willing to sit down and talk with the United States, would the United States show a similar willingness? Answer. You're familiar with what Presi- dent Johnson said about this in July of last year. This is not a question that can be dis- cussed with those who can't stop the shoot- ing, and I could sit here and negotiate that point with you, but I would much prefer to negotiate it with somebody who can stop the shooting. The President said there would be no insuperable obstacle to obtain- ing the views of the National Liberation Front if this issue of aggression was brought under control. [From the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. pp. 7844- 7845, Apr. 18, 1966] STATEMENT OF SENATOR MIKE MANSFIELD, DEMOCRAT, OF MONTANA Mr. President, during the past year, our Armed Forces, by their sacrifices, gave a new lease on life to the non-Communist military and political structure of South Viet Nam. But let us not delude ourselves. That new lease on life runs only so long as U.S, sup- port continues and, in present circumstances, continues to grow. Indeed, the price may be expected to rise once again as a result of the current chain of developments. Certainly, political changes since the death of President Ngo Dinh Diem have tended to increase the cost of support in terms of U.S. lives and aid. It has been said that the French lost the war not in Indochina, but in Paris. It has been implied, in parallel oversimplification of this most complex problem that if the present war is lost, it will not be lost in Indochina but in the United States and, more specifically, in Washington, and per- haps even in the Senate of the United States. I think it is about time to dispense once and for all with glib assertions of that kind. The great need is to probe for the dimensions of this complex and changing situation and for a rational role for the United States. The reality is that if Indochina is lost it cannot be lost by the United States which has never possessed it, does not possess it now, and would not possess it if it could. The reality is that, in any meaningful sense, Viet Nam cannot be won or lost in the United States or Washington. Nor can It be won, in a final or an enduring sense by Americans in Viet Nam who have carried their difficult tasks at such great sacrifice. But if it comes to that, the future of Viet Nam can be won or lost in Saigon by a failure of Vietnamese leadership and by the continuing inadequacies of the present politico-military structure. It can be lost in Saigon, too, if we do not exercise in this matter a wise restraint against over-eager- ness to help and in this recent crisis Presi- dent Johnson has acted most commendably. It cannot be said too Often that in this day and age, and in matters of political leader- ship in particular, our efforts cannot be substituted for the efforts which must come from others on behalf of their own peoples. To sum up, whatever their outcome, re- cent events tell us that there is trouble in Viet Nam, It is deeper and more complex than we have heretofore been prepared to acknowledge. We will do well, now, to face up to that fact and to the fact that we a. e deeply enmeshed in the trouble. We may be prepared to let alone these inner conflicts Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17740 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE Augus& 8, 1966 in South Viet Nam but they will not let us alone. They may appear peripheral to us in View of the emphasis which has been given to other aspects of the problem. In fact, they may have very little to do with the war in which our forces are engaged. But the fact is, too, that they are Inseparable from that war from the Vietnamese point of view. In- deed, for many In South Viet Nam, the present difficulties are more central to the problems of Viet Nam than the war. We can ignore these considerations only at the risk of turning the war in Viet Nam into one which is, at best, Irrelevant to the people of Viet Nam and, at worst, one in which their hostility may readily be enlisted against us. We had better recognize, instead, that these recent manifestations of schisms in Viet Nam lend added emphasis to the validity of the President's policy. He has designed that policy to serve U.S. Interests by an active and continuing search for negotiations in an effort to end the war and so contain our in- volvement in Viet Nam within reasonable limits. It bears repeating, therefore, at this time that there is only one really basic factor which from the point of view of U.S. policy is essential to a prompt end to the conflict by negotiations and to the withdrawal of U.S. forces. That factor has been described, in effect, time and again by the President, and without 'ifs," and "and," or "buts." That factor is the establishment of conditions, through negotiations, which will assure and safeguard an authentic and free choice to the people of South Viet Nam as to their political future and as to their ultimate rela- tionship with North Viet Nam. That and that alone Is the objective of the United States military effort and the President's policy. It is most unfortunate that neither the United Nations nor the co-chairmen of the Geneva Conferences--that is the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union-or other participants therein have been able to bring about negotiations looking to a peaceful solution along these lines. It may be, as the Soviet Union and others have said, that con- ditions do not exist at this time which per- mit them to take an initiative for negotia- tions. But it may also be that efforts to bring about negotiations may be pressed more usefully elsewhere than either through the Geneva Conferees or the United Nations. It may be that negotiations should be sought with greater vigor precisely in the region where the proximity of the conflict lends a greater sense of urgency to the neces- sity for its settlement. It has been said many times and, in my judgment, correctly that a just settlement of the Vietnamese conflict by negotiations would serve the interests of this nation as Well as other nations which are either pain- fully Involved or threatened with involve- ment, If that is the case then perhaps there is something to be said for a direct con- frontation across a peace table between our- selves and Hanoi, Peking, and such elements In South Viet Nam as may be essential to the making and keeping of a peaceful settlement in that region. Certainly, there would be no better place to locate a peace table of this kind than in Japan or Burma or some other proximate and appropriate Asian setting. It is not in Europe but in Asia and the United States where the pain of the war is felt, It Is In Asia where the implications of this war are most grim.. It Is in Asia where other na- tions are immediately threatened by its spread. It is, in short, in Asia where the peace must be made and kept. It may well be, therefore, that it is In Asia where peace must now be-directly and vigorously-- sought. Mr. AIKEN. Mr. President, as 1lis- tened to the remarks of the majority leader, I hoped inwardly that' everybody, particularly officials In Washington, would give heed to those remarks when it becomes apparent, as it is now, the great difficulties which the United States will have even if we use all of our man- power and even if we use all of our re- sources in settling the affairs and restor- ing stability to the countries of southeast Asia. Then, it seems that if southeast Asian countries themselves are willing to un- dertake this job of restoring peace and stability to that area, we should give them every opportunity to do so and every bit of our assistance, which can be interpreted as not being unwarranted interference with their affairs. On Tuesday, July 26, in an exchange of views with the majority leader an the subject of General Ky and his willingness to assume leadership for the western democracies, I commented that I did not know whether to "swell with pride or to tremble with apprehension." Lest there be doubt, I now tremble with some apprehension. I had grave misgivings as to the mo- tivation of General Ky when he proposed to go into North Vietnam to destroy communism "in its lair." Was he speaking only for himself? I hoped so. Was he speaking for some of his advisers? If so, I hoped none of them were Americans. Yet, my hopes turned to doubt when I read in the press on August 6, that our Secretary of State did not rule out a ground invasion of North Vietnam. In this connection, I came across an interesting article in the London Econ- omist for July 9, 1966, entitled "How Not To Influence the Americans." The Econ- omist, I may say, has not been dovelike. Nevertheless, one paragraph puts the sit- uation posed by General Ky, and people who think like him, into such clear per- spective that I wish to read it into the RECORD. In commenting on the expan- sion of bombings to the north, this para- graph reads: The reaction of China and Russia has been equally undramatic. They have done noth- ing since the bombing that they were not doing before. No doubt Russia and the other European communists will send more oil and lorries and anti-aircraft guns; no doubt the Chinese will issue more denuncia- tions to add to the pile of 400-odd "grave warnings" they have already uttered on a variety of subjects. But it is still unlikely that either China or Russia will risk a direct clash with the United States unless America seems to be threatening the very existence of communist North Vietnam. They might risk a world war to keep communists in power in Hanoi; they will probably not risk one to put communists into power in Saigon. It is the difference between losing something you have, and failing to acquire something you haven't. The first is much worse. So longs as the Americans make it clear that they are limiting themselves to the defensive aim of trying to preserve an independent South Vietnam-no more than that-the odds are that the war itself can be kept lim- ited and local. (Italic supplied.) I trust the President will impress on our erstwhile ally in Saigon and those of our own ambitious militarists that the sole aim of the United States is, in the words of the Economist: "to preserve an independent South Vietnam-no more than that." I ask unanimous consent to have the entire Economist editorial and also an editorial from the St. Louis Post-Dis- patch entitled "Stop the Invasion Talk" printed in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the editor- ials were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Economist, July 9, 19661 HOW NOT To INFLUENCE: AMERICANS In the last ten days Britain has cone within an ace of chucking away its power to influence the actions of the United States. It does not have all that much power left; but it nearly lost what it has. This is what the revolt in the Labour party against Amer- ican policy In Vietnam almost managed to achieve, Mr. Wilson has appeased his left wing by going to Moscow to see Mr. Kosygin; it is a trick that should be good right the way through to the party conference in October. But this is dodging the left wing, not fight- ing it. The trip to Moscow is little more than a delaying device: Mr. Kosygin is un- likely to give his blessing to negotiations that North Vietnam is still not ready to accept. Mr. Wilson side-stepped the real issue by refusing to take his stand on clear- cut support of the American position in Vietnam. His negotiating power in Wash- ington is thereby diminished; and cutting the left wing down to 30 abstainers on Thursday night by no means makes up for that. If the British want to, they can give up the attempt to influence American policy. They can retire to the sidelines and blow raspberries instead. It is what the Labour left wing and the Tory right wing would like to do; it is what General de Gaulle has done. They will then be treated the way barrackers usually are treated, by being ignored. But if the British want to keep any influence over what the United States does, they must remember the basic rule for the only sort of relationship that gives Britain any pull in Washington, The rule Is that Britain goes along with the main alms of American for- eign policy in return for the right to nudge the Americans back on course when they seem to be deviating from those aims. It is a fair exchange. None of the main things the Americans want to do in the world con- flicts with the main things Britain wants to do: in almost every respect except direct commercial competition, the two countries' interests run parallel. Mr. Attlee followed this basic rule in. 1950: he edged the Americans back on course when they were in danger of forgetting that their main aim was to defend South Korea, not to have a showdown with the newly emerged power of communist China. So did Mr.. Mac- millan in 1959 when he manoeuvred the Americans towards the necessary detente with Russia. And so did Mr. Wilson in 1964, when the scheme for' a Nato nuclear fleet was in danger of snarling up relations with Russia: he reminded the Americans that relations with Russia came first, This right to dig the elbow into the Americans' ribs at critical moments is extremely valuable. But ony good allies get It; and it depends on picking the right critical moments. The bombing of the Hanoi and Haiphong oil dumps was not one of them. The reconnais- sance photographs are now in; and once again, as in the Cuba crisis of 1962, the photographs bear out what the Americans said and what their critics refused to believe until the evidence stared them in the face. What happened on June 29th was that a smallish force of planes-46 light bombers, not the big strategic sorts-dropped a rela- tively modest 9ltons of bombs with pain- staking precision on two undeniably military targets in the soggy riverside area outside Hanoi and Haiphong. That is all. It bore as Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE 17741 STtohPe STHE t. Louis Post-Dispatch] much relation to a mass attack on centres of Vietnam." There two different definitions [From r population as a surgeon nicking out a poly- of what the phrase could mean and there- Rusk's discussion of the pus bears to a slaughterhouse. The available fore two different courses of action that the Secretary possibility of that A State American troops might the photographs suggest that the, id caused no rigorousn of the possibilities open to them is vade North Viet Nam is frightening. It is more eround sgg more civilian casualties than a Vietcong a Korean-style solution. It implies that the difficult to believe that the United States bombing in Saigon, and a great deal fewer South Vietnam which would emerge from would commit such a tragic blunder, and it than when a Vietcong unit in the south the war would be like South Korea after 1953. Is true that Mr. Rusk said, "There is no opens fire on American troops from the cover It would be a country in which the com- policy desire to move into North Viet Nam of a village. The Americans had already munists had been totally defeated, and in or the demilitarized zone" between North bombed about a dozen other oil dumps in whose political life they and their friends and South at the Seventeenth parallel. similar physical surroundings in North Viet- would be allowed to play no part whatso- But Mr. Rusk's discussion of the matter nam without anybody saying that this was ever. It would be a country tied to the at a press conference indicated that an in- the time to break with American policy. United States by a military alliance, and by vasion, urged a few days ago by Premier Ky The only difference on June 29th was that the presence of an American garrison on its of South Viet Nam, was not out of the ques- they moved inside the inviable dotted line soil. The military implications for the pres- of It will depend, Mr. Rusk said, "on the ea of ent ,oar are obvious. To achieve a solution turn of events: the commander will have to So much for the "indescribably wicked" event (Lord Soper) that "overshadowed the whole planet" (Mr. Michael Foot), and which the BBC in one broadcast reported as having set fifty square miles on fire. There are seeds of hysteria in Britain to- day. True, the bombing will not bring North Vietnam's leaders running to the negotiating table. It is almost certainly nonsense to hope, as some Americans hope, that it will change North Vietnam's mind about the desirability of doing what it can to equip and reinforce the rebellion in the that But it is equal nonsense to suppose chances of negotiation are today actually less than they were before the bombing, when the business of helping the Vietcong was easier than it is now. The North Vietnamese have probably stock of fuel. lost They willt buy more, nd con- ceal it better. But at the very least there will a few weeks or wnt the Ho which Chi Minh lorries will bump trail, and the communist forces In the south will be correspondingly weaker. Itis tone he factor which may eventually persuade North Vietnamese that they are not going to win the battle in the south. If they come to doubt their chances of winning, and if the Americans then offer them some face- me stage agree t so saving formula, they may a .to talk. It is as undramatic as that. permitted to return, in a carefully controlled The reaction of China and Russia has been way, into the political life of the country. equally undramatic. They have done noth- They are still -not allowed to organize their ing since the bombing that they doubt were Runot own s- to make party. their But own point doing of view felt through doing before (see age ge 140). No European communists will the theoretically non-communist Union of sib and the other page send more oil and lorries and anti-aircraft the Democratic Left. Through this party, been in G factor a olitic guns; no doubt the Chinese will of 400-odd havelations ever since the earlyr1950's. Most grave they have already uttered people would prefer to see the problem of "grave warnings" a add to the pile on a variety of subjects. But it is still un- the communist-led rebels in Vietnam likely that either China or Russia will risk handled In the same way. The war will a direct clash with the United States unless probably have to go on until they accept that America seems to be threatening the very they represent only an active minority of the existence of communist North Vietnam. South Vietnamese. Even then, they will have They might risk a world war to keep com- to be prevented from making another attempt munists in power in Hanoi; they will prob- to seize power by armed rebellion. This will ably not risk one to put communists into require some pretty powerful outside super- power in Saigon. it is the difference be- vision. It is not a fool-proof solution. But tween losing something you have, and failing it does hold out the hope of meaningful ve- to acquire something you haven't. The first gotiations. It gives a chance of ending the is much worse. So long as the Americans war sooner than it could be ended by a pol-. And in t make it clear that they are limiting them- icy itotal suppression followed by ahe eod of selves to the defensive aim of trying to pre- . peace serve an independent South Vietnam-no stability in south-east Asia, is could pave the more than that-the odds are that the war way for a national recohcllation in Vietnam. itself can be kept limited and local. Mr. Wilson will almost certainly want to And this is the crux of the matter. For argue for a Greek-style solution rather than to all the influen a he can bring point there are mons, that signs, serious outside international debate pis orean-style one. To make his This alms is a the bear sort of athingtthat Mr. Attlee did in 1950. now opening u of American policyoin Vietnam. underlying far more important subject than the fiddling This is what the whole business of British argument about the difference between a influence with America is about. What the precision job three miles from Hanoi and irrelevent have ructions is about Hanoi and hHai- another precision job 15 miles from it. It is phong to endanger his c a subject on which Mr. Wilson will want to of getting a serious hearing. Who is going put his views Mr. Johnson when he sees to Washington? Is it Harold, the welcome hin Washington on July 2 29th. confident whose ideas are worth listening to? him i The argument is about exactly what the Or is it General de Wilson, the Irritating Americans mean by an "independent South pontificator ripe for a brush-off? on fighting until pretty well everybody In the National Liberation Front had surren- dered or been killed. it would rule out ne- otiations with the communists in the south, g and so with North Vietnam too, except on the terms of Vietcong's capitulation. This is the "military solution" people have been talking about, and Mr. Jgqm~nson is plainly very tempted by it. It would be the safest solution if It could be achieved with- out paying an excessive price. But most people In Europe-including most of Mr. Johnson's best friends-doubt whether It can. It would call for a longer war and more blood-letting than a less ambitious policy would. It would mean more hysteria from the anti-Americans, and more doubts among the pro-Americans, and more fraying of the links between the United States and its allies. Above all, it would mean ignoring the one hard fact that has emerged from the fight- ing. This is that the National Liberation Front, which includes both communists and some non-communists, does represent the frustrations and hopes of a good many South Vietnamese. It could not have put up such a fight if it had not. The alternative is a solution on the lines not of Korea, but of Greece. The Greek com- munists were beaten in the civil war that security of his troops." We concede that a field commander has this obligation. But his superiors have the obligation of instructing him to keep his men out of areas where such a course might appear necessary to him. A movement of infantry across the parallel would involve another drastic change in the nature of the war. It would be similar to the movement that brought the Chinese into the Korean war. It would alienate international opinion still further from United States policies. Ultimately, it might mean disaster. The United States has recently been bomb- ing not only North Viet Nam but the buffer zone in the vicinity of the Cambodian border, across which North Viet Namese troops are said to flee to sanctuaries. These raids, dif- ferent in kind from an invasion, are taking place as Ambassador Harriman prepares to go to Cambodia to seek ways of keeping that peaceful little country out of the Indochina conflict. We earnestly hope he succeeds. Standing alone, Mr. Rusk's remarks are not so disquieting as when placed in con- junction with what Premier Ky said on two occasions within the last two weeks. In ef- fect Ky posed the alternative of a war of five to 10 years duration or an invasion of the North, which he said he did not think would mean Chinese intervention. The State De- partment refused to repudiate Ky's state- ments; instead, it tried to dissociate itself from Ky's proposals without appearing to offend Ky. Unfortunately, the history of United States involvement in Viet Nam is one of escalation, and so there are additional reasons for view- ing the Rusk and Ky remarks with trepida- tion. Perhaps this is mitigated to some ex- tent by Mr. Rusk's repeated assertion of his desire for peace in Southeast Asia, and his willingness to negotiate for it. Any chance of negotiation would be fur- ther jeopardized, however, if not destroyed, by an invasion, and the Administration ought at once to put a stop to any idea that it could take place. Talk has a way of cre- ating a climate of acceptance; it should be terminated by firm assurance that invasion is unthinkable. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. AIKEN. I yield. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I wish to commend the distinguished sen- ior Senator from Vermont, the ranking Republican in this body, for the pertinent remarks which he has just made. As ,al- ways, he is quite conservative in his use of words but he gets 'to the point rather quickly so that no one can misunder- stand. As I interpret correctly what the dis- tinguished Senator is saying, effect, quoting the Economist, is that the best way to carry on the war is to keep it limited and to try to prevent it from be- coming open ended. If it does become Approved For. Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 -17742 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 CONGRESSIONAL; RECORD - SENATE Augulst 8, 1966 ,open ended, then, of course, all bets are Montana in their expressions of hope this subject on three different occasions: off and the dire possibilities are tremen- that we can, somehow, keep this terrible First, in 1962 (S. 3304) ; second, in 1963 dous. catastrophe in southeast Asia as limited (S. 1013) ; and third, again in 1965 (S. I would hope that this admonition as possible, consistent, of course, with 368). Finally, in 1965, the contents of would be kept in mind and that we would achieving the prospect of independence my bill were incorporated as an amend- keep our eye on the ball at all times and for South Vietnam. ment to S. 3 and became section 205(c) be aware of the limited objectives, which of the Appalachian bill, which ;passed the .we have because the President has stated Congress and was signed into law in time and time again that that is the na- STRIP MINE STUDY March of that year and is now known ture of our engagement in that part of Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, I have as Public Law 89-4. the world. -- had the pleasure of reading an advance While my bills provided for a, thorough Mr. AIKEN. I thank the Senator copy of an interim Report by the Secre- study of strip and surface mining activi- from Montana. I try to view the war in tary of the Interior to the Appalachian ties and problems relative to all minerals southeast Asia in a practical manner. Regional Commission dealing with the and all States, this interim report deals When I realize the extent to which we problem created by the strip mining of with the Appalachia States only, where have already gone in expending our re- land to dig coal out of the earth. I com- the problems are most acute and serious. sources and manpower, and the extent mend Mr. Udall and all others who are Section 205 (c) provides for a nationwide to which we will likely be called upon to participating in this study. study which will be reported in the Sec- go, in the event the war is not limited- In the past, I have introduced three retary's final report to the Congress. certainly not beyond its present extent- different bills calling for a study and EFFECTS of STRIP MINING then I realize the devastating effect on asking that a determination be made by Mr. President, the magnitude of coal our country which an expansion of the the Government concerning what part stripping and land desecration in the 12 war may have on its economy, I know the U.S. Government should take in reg- Appalachia coal producing States is re- that we have already gone so. far that a uiating the operations in which the sur- vealed in an up-to-date table contained great many people will have to pay a high face of the land is stripped, the trees and in the interim report. I ask unanimous price for the cost of this venture in grass removed, the coal excavated, and, consent that the table be printed in the southeast Asia, provided we go no fur- finally, the land left useless and sterile. RECORD at this point as a part of my re- ther. In many instances neither vegetation marks. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, will the nor wildlife is on the land when the strip There being no objection, the tabula- Senator from Vermont yield? miners get through with it. tion was ordered to be Mr. AIKEN. I yield. As I pointed out, I introduced bills on RECORD, as follows: printed in the Mr. COOPER. The two speeches we have just heard, one by the majority TABLE 1.-Status of strip and surface mined coal lands in Appalachia as of Jan. 1, 1965, leader and the other by the ranking Re- in acres, as reported by State authorities publican Member, are very timely. They should be read with great interest and State I Unreclahned Partially Completely Total concern by the Senate and the people of reclaimed reclahned disturbed 1 the United States. Yesterday, I read a statement by a Alabama_________________________________________________ 2,200 11,700 51 000 18,900 writer in one of the newspapers that the Georgia --------------------------------------------------- -------- _ _-_ 75 225 300 M ntucky --------------------------------------------- ___ 31,487 4,439 12,363 48,289 war in southeast Asia might last for $ Ke aryland---------------------------------------------- 494 753 995 2,242 years, and that it might involve the in- New Yorlr--------- ------------------------------------ ------------- -------- ---- ----------- troduction of American troops into Viet- Nortb Carolina ----------------------- ._______________-- -__------ ------21 90-- -------------- -------------- nani to a total of 750,000 men. Of course, oh,o_ ----------------------------------------------------- 33, 640 21, , soo 9 rz3, Bis 17s, 25s this is speculation. But, no one can fore- Pennsylvania: Bituminous----------------------------------------- 158,500 83,600 242,100 see the future, and the prospect ought Anthracite ------------------------------------------- 50,000 9,000 50,000 to lead to increased eff orts for negotia- tion. Total,Pennsylvania__________________________,____ 4208,500 92,600 301,100 - The majority leader has brought to our South Carolina_ ___________________________________ ------- ___ _____ ---_ - ----------, 760 attention that movements seem to be un- Tennessee__________________________________________25,387 275 1,098 26, 7so Virginia ------------------------------------------------- 15,014 13,549 derway at the present time by countries West`irginia___________________________________________ +145718 46,3503 20 29,088 192,038 in southeast Asia toward some sort of --- --- negotiation. Total a------------------------------------------------- ---- 4354' 21 52,891 ---------------- ------ ----- ___________-------------- I thought it was interesting that two i 218 282, 920 797,951 of the foreign ministers at the recent ' Frem inception of stripping to Jan. 1, 1965, unless otherwise noted. Thailand, represented countries which ; Represents disturbed acreage 1914-68.- No breakdown reforted b St t y e. a are among our closest friends. At ? Represents disturbed acreage to Jan. 1. 1966. times it may appear that there is little prospect of negotiation-and I am Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, in the of the last cut or highwall of the areas aware of the efforts of the administra- tabulation of the States in which the inspected has not been substantially re- tion to obtain negotiations-but the cur- most extensive strip mining has been duced by back filling and grading off, rent efforts of Asian nations are impor- done contained in the report of the See- then I say the reclamation project is not tant. They should be watched carefully :retary of the Interior, Pennsylvania complete. The Secretary of the Interior and encouraged by the administration. seems to lead the list. I regret very and his staff should pay particular at- Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I, much to say that Ohio is second in this tention to this phase of reclamation, for too, should like to commend the distin- grim treatment and abuse of the. land, exposed seams of coal at the face of the guished Senator from Vermont [Mr. I call attention in particular to the highwall are the source of most pollu- AIxEN] and the distinguished Senator situation in Ohio where under law en- tion and the ungraded highwall itself is from Montana [Mr. MANSFIELD] on their acted while I was Governor of that State the greatest potential for landslides, statements today. some reclamation admittedly has been highway destruction, and damage to ad- It is most significant that these two accomplished, but it has been far too lit- jacent unstripped lands. outstanding leaders of the Senate have tie. Of the total 179,256 disturbed acres, Communities in unreclaimed spoil :expressed their enthusiastic support of 33,540 are unreclaimed; 21,900 are par- bank areas too suffer from blight, re- efforts to have the southeast Asian na- tially reclaimed; and 123,816 are com- duced tax revenues, and general deteri- tions try to, achieve peace, and to support pletely reclaimed. oration. The Federal Government can U Thant and the United Nations, in their The interim report of the. Secretary no longer close Its eyes to this spreading initiative to achieve this. does not distinguish the difference be- cancerous situation. While I continue Mr. President, I also support the Sena- tween partially reclaimed and com- to emphasize that the ultimate and tor from Vermont and the Senator from pletely reclaimed land, If any portion whole responsibility for adequate land Approved For Release 2005/06/29 CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29: CIA-RDP67B0 46R000400100018-8 -A 4 O rnvrrRPccTnwAT. RECORD - SE A construction performance bond on the Washington, D.C., Stadium for his son- in-law's insurance firm. In addition, it has been charged Mc- Closkey is involved in three housing projects in Florida which were covered by Federal Housing Administration loans totaling $28.8 million, which loans were subsequently defaulted. I would like to call attention to an edi- torial which appeared in the Albuquer- que Journal of July 21, and an article -which appeared in the Scripps-Howard newspapers on July 20. The Albuquerque Journal editorial states: Sen. MILwARD SIMPSON, R., Wyoming, has solid grounds for protesting the award of a $12.6 million contract for a new Philadelphia mint to Matthew McCloskey, former Demo- cratic national Treasurer. At the end of the editorial it is stated: Senator SIMPSON has lined up a formidable array of arguments against the McCloskey contract award. But in view of McCloskey's powerful party connections, it appears likely his protest has come too late. I hope this is not so. I hope the Gen- eral Services Administration will recon- sider the awarding of the contract in view of the conduct of McCloskey in his work and other questions which have been raised. For the purpose of informing Senators who may be interested I ask unanimous consent that the editorial and article to which I have referred be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial and article were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Albuquerque (N. Max.) Journal, July A TIMELY PROTESTI Sen. MrLwARD SIMPSON R-Wyoming, has solid grounds for protesting the award of a $12.6 million contract for a new Philadelphia mint to Matthew McCloskey, former Demo- cratic national treasurer. STIMSON's protest, aimed at General Serv- ices Administration, holds no contracts should be awarded McCloskey "until ques- tions relating to the man's ethical and pro- fessional standards are clarified." The questions SIMPSON referred to in- clude : -A federal court suit seeking to recover damages resulting from "incompetent work" on a Veterans Hospital near Boston-siding on the hospital peeled off the day following completion of the project by McCloskey & Co.; -McCloskey "has been accused of making an illegal $25,000 campaign contribution to Democrat war chests;" -"He also has been accused of paying a $10,000 kickback so he could obtain the con- struction performance bond on the Washing- ton D.C. stadium for his son-in-law's insur- ance firm;" -McCloskey & Co. is involved in three Florida housing projects, covered by FHA- insured loans totaling $28.8 million-loans subsequently defaulted; -McCloskey & Co. "constructed the most expensive office building in the world, the Rayburn House Office Bldg., at twice its origi-11 nal price ... In his letter to Lawson B. Knott, GSA head, SIMPSON also noted it is "quite pos- sible" pending, court action against Bobby Baker-former Senate majority secretary- "will involve Matthew McCloskey." No. 129-13 Senator SIMPSON has lined up a formidable array of arguments against the McCloskey contract award. But in view of McCloskey's powerful party connections, it appears likely his protest has come too late. . MCCLOSKEY MINT JOB DRAWS FIRE WASHINGTON, July 20.-Sen. MILWARD SIMPSON, R-Wyo., has protested awarding of a $12.6 million contract for construction on the new Philadelphia mint to Matthew Mc- Closkey, former Democratic national treas- urer. SIMPSON has written Lawson B. Knott, head of the General Services Administration (GSA), charging that no federal contracts should be awarded to McCloskey and Co. of Philadelphia "until questions relating to the man's ethical and professional standards are clarified." The letter to Knott was placed in the Senate record. "I remind you that a civil suit is pending in federal court to recover damages brought about by `incompetent work' on the Veter- ans Administration Hospital near Boston," SIMPSON said. SIDING PEELED OFF He said the siding on the hospital peeled off one day following completion of the proj- ect by McCloskey and Co. SIMPSON referred to McCloskey and Co. as "politically powerful" and reminded Knott that McCloskey "has been accused of mak- ing an illegal $25,000 campaign contribution 'to Democrat war chests." "He also has been accused of paying a $10,000 kickback so he could obtain the con- struction performance bond on the Wash- ington, D.C. stadium for his son-in-law's insurance firm," SIMPSON wrote. PROJECTS DEFAULTED In addition, the senator charged, McClos- key and Co. is involved in three housing projects in Florida which were covered by Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans totaling $28.8 million and were subse- quently defaulted. "I'm sure you are aware also that it was McCloskey and Co. that constructed the most expensive office building in the world, the Rayburn House Office Building, at twice its original contract price," SIMPSON said. He told Knott it is "quite possible" pend- ing court action against former Se ate Sec- retary Bobby Baker "will inXo a )Matthew 17745 Figuratively speaking, the extraordinary American economy is carrying the war on its little finger, although the finger is hurt- ing a little. The article continues: The best evidence that the war is not caus- ing a drastic change in the Government's financial situation is in the magnitude of the Treasury's planned borrowing, which is actually a little less in the last half of this year than had been estimated several months ago. Meanwhile, Industry is adding to its plant and equipment at the record rate of $60.8- billion this year. This means that the ca- pacity of the economy to meet the demands of defense without cutting back on the civil- ian economy is growing in line with the ex- panding defense expenditures, and possibly faster. In any event, almost no one foresees what has been associated with war in the past- shortages of consumer goods, raging infla- tion, enormous Government budget deficits and the like. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in the RECORD the article entitled "Vietnam War's Impact: Economy Is Hardly Hurt," written by Edwin L. Dale, Jr., and published in the New York Times for today, Monday, Au- gust 8, 1966. There being no abjection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: VIETNAM WAR's IMPACT: ECONOMY Is HARDLY HURT (NOTE.-This is the first of four articles in which correspondents of The New York Times have attempted to estimate the impact of the Vietnam war on the American economy, the nation's politics, the lives of its citizens and foreign policy.) (By Edwin L, Dale, Jr., special to the New York Times) WASHINGTON, August 7.-In the first six months of this year sportsmen and business executives bought more than 8,000 private airplanes, easily a record and nearly half again as many as those purchased last year. This footnote to the American economy in 1966 illustrates a major truth about the war in Vietnam. The war has had distinct effects on the economy and on the people and businesses that make it up, but the effects have been far less than in any other war in modern times. Figuratively speaking, the extraordinary American economy is carrying the war on its little finger, although the finger hurts a bit. Guitar strings have been reported in short supply in some music stores around the nation, and some retailers of men's suits complain that there have been delays in de- liveries of a few sizes and models of fall suits because of the Government's demand for military uniforms. As everyone knows, however, there has been nothing remotely resembling a shortage of consumer goods, as has occurred in past wars. From air-conditioners to gasoline, from swimsuits to rugs, the effort has been to sell rather than to turn customers away. Auto- mobile dealers have the biggest unsold stocks of cars in history. Prices have gone up-housewives are con- scious of paying about 8 per cent more for meat than a year ago-and the costs of medi- cal care have soared. Last week President Johnson lost a battle with the steel industry over a price increase, and investigators sprouted over higher prices for the con- sumer staples, bread and milk. However, the inflation has been very small by comparison with the zooming price in- VIETNAM WAR IMPACT ON ECON- OMY FAR LESS THAN IN PAST WARS Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, per- haps the most common economic fallacy in Congress and out is that the Vietnam war is feeding the fires of inflation, Or is likely to do so soon, in a big and dev- astating way. This notion is a fallacy because our economy has grown so immensely in the 15 years since our last war in Korea that it is able to take the current burden of belligerence-with all its heavy cost- without even using up all its economic slack: One of the ablest economic commenta- tors in the Nation is Edwin Dale, of the New York Times. In the first of a series on the impact of Vietnam on the econ- omy, Mr. Dale writes this morning that- The war has had distinct effects on the economy and on the people and businesses that make it up, but the effects have been far less than in any other war in modern times. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17746 Approved For Release 2005/06/29,: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE August 8, 1,966 creases of the Korean War, World War II or even World War I. For example, measured by the Govern- ment's Consumer Price Index, the rise in prices of the last 12 months of 2.5 per cent was only one-fourth as great as in the first year of the Korean War. Some items, such as automobiles, are cheaper now than they were a year ago. FOOD PRICES CITED Much of the price increase, and the hurt for the consumer, has been in food, where overall prices are up nearly 4 percent from a year ago. However, a reduced baby pig crop, drought and a smaller number,of dairy cows have had far more to do with this rise than the war. As for steel, prices have gone up much less than in the last peacetime inflation, in 1956-58. Over-all, wholesale and retail prices have risen in the first half of this year at an annual pace of 3.5 per cent, enough to worry seriously both consumers and the Govern- ment, but less than in nearly all other indus- trial countries, which are not at war. Taxes have gone up. The Government took away in April the reduction in the ex- cise tax on telephone bills it had given in January, and it did the same for a 1 per cent tax on automobiles, amounting to from $20 to $35 a car. These increases, however, are minor by comparison with the big cuts in income and excise taxes of 1964 and 1965, and by com- parison with the tax increases of previous wars. The main change has been merely a speed-up in tax collections, including gradu- iited withholding taxes that had long been advocated on their own merit. TAX CUT CONJECTURED What is more, there are reputable econ- omists who think the Government will be considering another tax cut next year, with the war still going strong. Interest rates have gone up-indeed, one of the steepest increases on record. Many individuals trying to buy a home have found a mortage difficult to obtain, and new homebuilding has slowed. This "tight money" situation, not alto- gether caused by the war, has not, however, prevented a record expansion of total lend- ing in the economy. The Individual with a reasonable credit standing who could not get a personal loan has yet to turn up, and one personal finance company is drawing up business by sponsoring the Washington Sena- tors' baseball games. Business loans by banks have grown more rapidly in the last six months than in all but one or two years in the last 20. Even mort- gage financing has only slowed, not stopped. The war has worsened supply troubles in a few metals, such as copper and molybde- num. Some types of aluminum are on a delayed delivery basis and electric wire has been hard to acquire in the quantities manu- facturers have wanted. As noted, textile and apparel mills have been hard put to fill Gov- ernment orders at a time of booming civilian business, and some use of direct priority orders has been required. There is a severe shortage of skilled man- power in the precision machining industry. As an example of how the problem can be made worse, nine out of the 23 apprentices in Muskegon, Mich., being especially trained to fill the gap, with Federal training funds, have been taken away by the local draft board. only a system of priorities for defense and one or two nondefense purposes, limited to steel, copper, aluminum and nickel. The "set-aside" of steel production for military purposes is only 6 per cent of total produc- tion, of copper and aluminum 13 per cent. Autos, highway bridges, color television sets and pleasure boats are jointly consuming far more of these metals than the war. Moreover, in a telling illustration of the total picture, a spokesman for the precision machining industry, after describing the desperate labor shortage, recently told a House subcommittee on small businesses that was investigating problems of related indus-? tries that if the war should "dry up" tomor- row, the machine tool industry would still. have nearly as great a problem. The war has cost the Government money, and thus has reduced the availability of funds for domestic purposes. The Presi- dent's budget last January cut $1.6-billion from the amount authorized in about 25 new Great Society programs in health, education, antipollution and the like. In addition, only minor increases were per- mitted in two of the most important new pro- grams-antipoverty and aid for elementary and secondary education. Such promising new ideas as automatic sharing of part of the Federal income tax with the states and di- rect income transfers to the poor were pigeon- holed because of the $10.5-billion war cost estimated for the fiscal year 1967, which be- gan on July 1. The new welfare programs are not the only ones affected. Government public works starts were cut in half in the new budget, and the space agency, although still given the sizeable sum of $5-billion, was denied a few glamorous items, such as an advanced orbit- ing solar observatory, and suffered a reduc- tion of planning funds for what comes after the first landing on the moon. SOCIETY PROJECTS ON INCREASE This is only part of the picture, however. In dramatic contrast with the past? spending on the new Great Society programs, although less than the full amount authorized by Con- gress is actually increasing in this fiscal year by more than $3-billion-and this does not take into account the start of the expensive new Medicare program. in the last fiscal year, with defense outlays building up, total domestic spending, in- cluding Social Security, far from declining, rose $7.5-billion from the previous year. Also in. contrast with the past, the budget deficit has declined despite the war, and there is a chgnce that the budget will have a surplus in the current fiscal year. Prices, taxes, credit, Government spending, shortages-all tell the same story. The war has hand an effect, but an astonishingly small one. TWO REASONS GIVEN The explanation for this picture is agreed to by most economic analysts in and out of of the Government. It has two parts. Both are in a sense obvious, but they do not appear to be altogether appreciated by the public. One is that this is the first time the United States has entered a major war with a very large existing defense establishment. This means, simply, that the needed build-up has been comparatively small. When the Korean war broke out, total. military Personnel numbered only 1.5 mil- lion and this jumped to 3.3 million in a year, or a rise of more than 100 per cent. Equip- ment and weapons requirements increased proportionately. CONTROLS SYSTEM LACKING This time the build-up in a year has been Despite these and other examples, and from 2.7 million men to 3.1 million, or about in sharp contrast to prior wars, there is no 15 per cent increase. No conceivable increase system of general allocations controls over will equal or approach the Korean experience. materials or manpower, simply because one The defense budget more than doubled the is not needed. In contrast with World War first year of the Korean War from $12.5-bil- II and the Korean War, when every pound of lion to $30.5-billion, and it rose to $47-billion the key metals and other materials was allo- in the next 12 months. This time the in- Cated by the Government, this time there is crease in the first year was about $7-billion, 41 to $54-billion, or only 15 per cent, and the next year's increase is likely to be about the same. A MATTER OF SIZE The second reason given for the relatively small impact of the war on the economy is the size of the American economy. In the first year of the war since the major commitment began last July the gross na- tional product-the total output of goods and services, and the best measure of the over-all output of the economy-has aver- aged $711-billion. The-$6-billion cost of the war in that period represents the amazingly small amount of eight-tenths of 1 per cent. The entire defense outlay, war costs in- cluded, ran less than 8 per cent of the gross national product by the second quarter of this year, less than some recent peacetime years when the gross national product was smaller. By contrast in the Korean War this propor- tion zomed from 4.5 per cent before the war started to 11.3 per cent a year later and event- ually to 13.6 per cent. This single figure-a war cost of less than 1 per cent of the gross national product up to now-tells why the impact of the war, relatively speaking, has been so slight on the normal life of the economy. A $6-billion war in any other economy would have a far greater effect. The cost of the war, of course, is still rising. At present it is probably running at an an- nual rate of about $12-billion or a little more, with total defense outlays now at a rate of about $60-billion. However, the gross national product is also rising-hence the capacity to absorb the war with little strain. Unless the nature of the war changes-to an all-out conflict with Communist China, for example--the cost of the war above "normal" defense spending is unlikely ever to rise above 2 percent of the gross national product. It is now about 1.5 per cent: EFFECT ON EMPLOYMENT The relatively small impact of the war as measured against the total size of the econ- omy has had its counterpart in unemploy- ment figures. In past wars the economy quickly moved to full employment-and a manpower short- age. This time, too, the war has spurred an economy already nearing full employment and added to the number working. However, the improvement, seen in per- spective, has not been spectacular. In the 12 months from June, 1964, to June, 1965, as the economy was roaring ahead un- der the impetus of the big tax cut of 1964, the unemployment rate was reduced from 5.4 per cent of the labor force to 4.7 per cent. In the next 12 months, with the war pro- viding the additional stimulus, the rate dropped from 4.7 per cent to -4 per cent- exactly the same decline. There were still 3.1 million persons out of work in June, even after allowing for thenormal rise at the end of the school year., A DRAIN ON GOLD In specific communities, of course, defense spending has had a much bigger impact than in the nation as a whole. For example, un- employment has been sharply reduced in the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia because of expanded helicopter production by the Fairchild Aircraft Company at nearby Hag- erstown, Md. Jobs attributable to defense, however, re- main less than 10 per cent of the total, and the increase in jobs because of additional de- fense spending caused by the war appears to be no more than 2 per cent of the total. This does not count the 400,000 additional men in uniform. Despite the relatively small impact of the war at home, it has had one serious economic cost not felt by the ordinary citizen: It is directly responsible for sharply worsening the deficit in the balance of international Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67Bp0446R000400100018-8 AA,ust 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 17747 payments after a heartening improvement pacity of the economy 'to meet the demands special projects of professional development. in 1965. of defense without cutting back on the civil- Fulbright scholars in Greece worked on the The direct foreign exchange cost of the fan economy is growing in line with the restoration of the Agora, beneath the tower- Operations in Vietnam will be an estimated expanding defense expenditures, and possi- ing heights of the Acropolis. A Fuibright total of $750-million this year. What is bly faster. grantee helped developed a canning industry in the Shan states of Burma and showed the more serious, an unknown number of these NO SHORTAGES FORESEEN people how to make sauerkraut from dis- dollars are finding their way to France, In any event, almost no one foresees what paeoded surplus cabbages. which now converts every dollar it receives has been associated with war in the past- The surplus hi a critical period in the into gold at the United States Treasury. shortages of consumer goods, raging infla- early fifties. Sources of foreign currency The worsening of the balance of payments tion, enormous Government budget deficits wessential to icontinuation were drying were r its with its continuation w re has not brought on any financial crisis, nor and the like. which does it threaten to do so, but it has delayed. Some economists, such as Oscar Gass of dr dryingup McCarthyism, al to of Cinfiltration, focused the day when the gold outflow will be Washington, believe that economic capacity on charges the Fulfor a time. For- stopped. from now on will grow faster than total de- on t br o Communist ni effort r and e. For- In d and it Congre 1961, the program sense going. prevailed What if the war should end? What then mand, including demand from war spending. tunately, for the economy? In this picture, unemployment would be its most significant endorsement with pas- national R. Hoff a, the president of the inter- rising a little by the end of the year, with national brotherhood of Teamsters, has the war going full blast, and the Govern- sage of the Fulbright-Hays act. That meas- forecast a sharp jump in unemployment and, ure confirmed the program's rationale, ex- a consequent ent weakening stimulate well be considering a tax cut to tended many of its features, gave it a broader among other things, the economy. field of action and more financial support. in union bargaining power. There can be If this happened, or if the President felt The foreign teachers and lecturers who little doubt that millions of citizens in- called upon to propose an increase of from came here reached 311,725 American Stu- that peace e present would uld is a $5-billion to $10-billion in domestic spend- dents, and American teachers returned here result of tivflt e the war that and the resula bring ing, it would be the most dramatic evidence economic trouble. yet of how readily a three-quarter-trillion have reached the lives of some 3.2 million Once again, however, most experts dis- students going through elementary and see- dollar economy can cope with what is, after ondary schools. Thus our educational sys- agree. Defense spending, to begin with, would all, a sizable war. tem has been enriched, and we have helped not decline abruptly but would taper off, enrich education abroad. The Fulbright pro- they say. Some part of the reduction, they MILWAUKEE JOURNAL HAILS 20TH gram has made it a smaller and better world. -4xplain, would be replaced by the economic most of reconstruction in Vietnam, possibly ANNIVERSARY OF FULBRIGHT SCHOOL MILK PROGRAM ESSENTIAL in both north and south, which could run $1-billion a year or even more. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, yes- FOR GOOD SCHOLARSHIP manpower-- terday the Milwaukee Journal saluted Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, leg- Tense Regardless outltays sof how -and and much aeiensee how little decline, the economic impact can be readily the distinguished Senator from Arkan- islation extending the special milk pro- offset in either or both of two ways. sas, Mr. FULBRIGHT, on the 20th anniver- gram for schoolchildren an additional 4 One is a tax reduction, which in effect sary of his great program of Fuibright years as well as an appropriations meas- simply replaces Government spending with scholarships. ure funding the program for fiscal 1967 is private spending. The total demand of I ask unanimous consent that this still being considered here in Congress. goods and services is unimpaired, although thoughtful tribute from one of the Na- Those who were so eager to see the school some individual, businesses gain orders and tion's finest newspapers to the remark- milk program continue on as it has so others lose them. The other offsetting factor is an expansion able chairman of the Foreign Relations successfully in the past now assume that of Federal domestic spending. There is no Committee, an editorial entitled "20 victory is theirs. It is true that the bill lack of ideas for enormous expansion of out- Years of Fulbrights," published in the appropriating funds for the program for lays on the home front, ranging from direct Milwaukee Journal of August 7, 1966, be fiscal 1967 has passed both Houses. The transfer of income to the poor to a huge as- printed in the RECORD at this point. only step that remains is for the House Sault on the educational deficiencies of There being no objection, the editorial and Senate conferees to agree to resolve her of Northern Federal am s areas. programs has Spending been on a nnm curtailed-, was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, the difference between the House and e although not reduced, by the war, and ex- as follows: Senate passed versions of the bill. It is pansion could come quickly. TWENTY YEARS OF FULBRIGHTS also true that legislation extending the "I am convinced," said one respected Wall Sen. FULBRIGIT (D-Ark.), embattled over school milk program has been passed by Street analyst the other day, "that peace Vietnam and the foreign aid bill, must have the Senate and reported by two House would be bullish-bullish for the economy enjoyed a moment's respite Monday. when committees. and bullish for the stock market." he was able to mark the 20th anniversary of However, this is no time to rest on our Many economists agree. his brilliantly conceived and highly success- laurels. We must make the final push FUTURE IS WEIGHED ful Fulbright program. Just two decades now if we are to insure the continuance Assuming no early peace, is the strain on ago President Truman signed the Fulbright the economy likely to increase as spending act, providing for international educational of a healthy school milk program. The on the war continues to rise? exchange. doubt and uncertainty that failure to act The strain might become a little more Since then 14,174 American students have quickly on these two pieces of legislation noticeable, depending on the place at which gone abroad and 33,220 foreign students have will produce in the administrators that defense spending increases. However, al- come to the United States, all on Fuibright set aside State and local funds for the though. the Government has refused- to di- grants. In addition 12,070 foreign lecturers program this fall could substantially vulge its latest estimates on defense outlays, and teachers have come here from abroad damage its effectiveness. officials are now assuming a rate of increase and 11,136 American lecturers and teachers Reduced program effectiveness, more- This greater than in the last 12 months. have gone abroad under the grants. This would mean some further rise in Ironically, China was the first nation to over, could have a direct impact on the scholarship of the poorer children among defense costs in relation to the national agree to participate in the exchange pro- - economy, with the "add-on" caused by the gram-on Nov. 10, 1947. And the first Amer- our school-aged population. For there is war coming to about 2 per cent of the gross ican grantee was a well known Sinologist no gainsaying the fact that you cannot national product in the first half of next from the University of Pennsylvania whose teach a hungry child. The school milk year. Budget expenditures for defense will grant was for research to complete the-sec- program, by providing underprivileged clearly be larger than the $58.3-billion esti- and volume of a history of Chinese philos- children with a midmorning milk break mated in the budget last January for the ophy. That was before the coming of the to take the place of the breakfast they current fiscal year-probably about $5-bil- Communist regime, of course, which has put did not have, has contributed ast tan- lion higher. relations between the two nations in deep Revenues, however, are growing, too, and freeeze. tially to the learning process among the .faster than, estimated. The best evidence Fulbright scholars have gone to all parts very group that stand to gain the most that the war Is not causing a drastic change of the globe. A majority has worked and from this process. Let us not fail these in the Government's financial situation is in studied in Europe, next largest number in children. Let us act now. the magnitude of the Treasury's planned far east and, next in order, in Australia, borrowing, which is actually a little less in New Zealand, near east, Latin America and the last half of this year than had been esti- Africa. A 1962 survey showed that, out of THE VICE PRESIDENT WARNS OF mated several months ago. every 100 American grantees, about 55 FOOD SHORTAGES Meanwhile, industry Is adding to its plant studied, 25 lectured in universities or did and equipment at the record rate of $60.8- research and 20 teachers or school admin- Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, billion this year. This means that the ca- istrators worked in classrooms or undertook speaking in St. Louis, Mo., today to the Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17748 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE August 8, ;x`966 Midcontinent Farmers Association, Vice Since 1960, the cost of things the farmer deter, agricultural development in places PrP.Or1pnf. T-TTTRrIT WTT*,Tnvnr.+v 1,,,o n,T.nr, ? musk buy hwa ages ahead and declared that "next year gradual gains in his net income. We need the help the developing countries age a a year for bringing a s "next year Since 1960, farm productivity per man per with an export of ideas and techniques from hour has increased by nearly one third, coal-. our own experience. But these programs part of reserve acreage out of mothballs" pared with a productivity gain of about 18 must be adapted to their way of doing in the United States. per cent in the rest of our economy. things-adapted to problems of climate and The Vice President points out that We must not lose sight of this: consumers water and social structure. Part of the as- world reserves of wheat are seriously de- benefit from having fair prices paid to sistance we can give is in establishment of pleted; rice is in short supply, soybean farmers, just as farmers benefit from full em- local research institutes, using local staffing ,carryover is minimal, and our feed grain ployment and expansion in the rest of the and resources, to undertake the same kind stocks may be below a safe carryover economy. We all need each other for a full of agricultural research which has Sc) con- and balanced prosperity. tributed to our own productivity. level by October next year. Farmers create millions of jobs in our This is the essence of our new Food for The Vice President's emphasis on the economy. Freedom proposals-to help others help United States and world food supply sit- More than 10 million people have jobs stor- themselves. When President Johnson pro- uation is timely, for decisions on acreage ing, transporting, processing, and merchan- posed the Food for Freedom Program he allotments for 1967, and on incentives to dising the products of agriculture. Nearly said: get our agricultural producers to in- a million and a half have jobs providing the . . The time is not far off when all of the crease their output, are now being con- Supplies farmers use. And thousands in combined production, of all the acres, of all rural communities make their livelihood pro- the agriculturally productive nations, will sidered. viding services to farmers. not meet the food needs of developing na- It is my hope that the allowance and Total Investment in American agriculture tions-unless present trends are changed." the incentives to plant and harvest Is more than 250 billion dollars.. This is Last month I carried this message again, greater acreage will be provided, so our comparable to about three fourths of the as spokesman for our Government to the country will not have to cut back its value of current assets for all corporations Development Assistance Committee of the conduct of the most important war-the in the country. It represents three fifths of Organization for Economic Cooperation and the value of all stocks listed on the New York Development. This committee is composed war against want. Stock Exchange. of m of 820W Because of its great significance, I ask The investment in agriculture represents 30 tr i high-ranking coun ri s that the Sn In - unanimous consent to put Vice Presi- thousand, five hundred dollars for each farm position be oations of - help to is tle s are o dent HUMPHREY's address to the Mid- worker, as Compared with an average invest- areas res of p to the less devEap; ment of 19 thousand, six hundred dollars per I made the it qworld. Continent Farmers Association In the quite clear that President John- RECORD. employee in manufacturing. son has made a commitment on behalf of the There being no objection, the address In 1965, when our farmers realized a gross American people to join with the other de- was ordered to be objection, in the address income of nearly 45 billion dollars, they veloped nations in an all-out effort to eradi- printed spent almost 31 billion dollars to operate cate large-scale famine and hunger from the as follows: their farm businesses. REMARKS OF VICE PRESIDENT HUBERT HUM- Last year they spent more than 3 billion face of the earth. PHREY TO MISSOURI FARMERS ASSOCIATION dollars to buy trucks, tractors, and other American And this abrings me griculture to the next face. of reality AND MIDCONTINENT FARMERS ASSOCIATION farm machinery and agicuw years we all must equipment. They In the past few years we Americans have CONVENTION, COLUMBIA, Mo., ON AUGUST 8, spent about 2 billion dollars to'buy automo- come to know what we call "turnpike "turnpike 1966 biles. trance"-the hynosis of the highway which Today America lives In abundance. Yet, Farming uses more petroleum than any has led to thousands of mishaps and ac- the world around us remains much the same other single industry. In 1965, more than cidents. as President Truman described it in his 3 billion dollars was spent by farmers for I say far too many Americans have also inaugural address 17 years ago. petroleum, fuel, and oil, and repairs and fallen victim to "surplus stare''-the blind "More than half the people of the world," operatio all this motor vehicles and machinery. belief, taken as fact, that our country is he said, "are living in conditions approaching nonile activity Is productivity, all this eco- buried under unnecessary costly tonnages of misery. The food is inadequate. They are Y generated by fewer people food. victims of disease. Their economic life is than live today in the State of California. `Toda the primitive and stagnant. Their poverty is a Our national farm population is today only Already, age of surpluses are all but gone. handicap and a threat both to them and to 12 million. , our food storks ocks pdwindling. Where does American agriculture stand If we look toward for sufficient production more prosperous areas." our own needs, fey our oo com commercial o' commercial ep for Today, then, I want to talk about both our in the world? Ports, Export; of our farm commodities are u and for emergency food assistance for the own American abundance and about the p developing countries, we find ourselves close challenge-and opportunity-facing us in sharply, to the safety mar in. the hungry world outside. This has a major positive effect; on our g First, let us take a hard, clear look at the balance of payments. The world has been eating into its grain realities of our own American agriculture. In fiscal year 1953, exports of farm prod- reserves, sharply reducing the carryovers to The best bargain in the world today is the ucts from the. United States amounted to a point where they should be rebuilt and food basket of the American family. less than 3 billion dollars. By fiscal year restored to prudent levels. This is a reality not fully appreciated by 1966 the export figure had jumped to nearly In the last four years the world has con- those of us who pay for that food basket. 7 billion dollars. Products from 713 million tomes some 200 million bushels of wheat per We are better fed, at less cost, than any acres of american cropland were shipped year more than it has produced. other people in the world. Last year only abroad. More than 75 per cent of these In the last four years it has utilized about 18 per cent of our disposable income went for commodities were sold for dollars. 6 million tons of feed grains more than It food. The market for feed and food grains, oil has harvested. In the last five years, the price of the 11 seeds, protein meals and vegetable oils is In the case of soybeans, we are using all we key foods in the consumer price index has highly competitive. But we can and do com- produce. Carryovers are minimal. risen by less than 9 per cent. During the pete. We can look forward to expansion It is clear that we must raise our produc- same period the weekly earnings, after taxes, of farm exports as the economies of other tion sights in rice. of the single worker in industry, for in- nations grow and their purchasing power increases. Because any plan for agriculture must al- stance, have risen more than 20 per cent. low for ample lead time, we must always be One hour of factory labor earnings in 1965 Seneca once observed that "A hungry peo- deeply concerned about the level of reserves. bought 12.5 pounds of white bread as com- ple listens not to reason nor cares for jus- Weather, as all of us know, is an unpredicta- pared with 11.1 pounds-in 1960; 2.4 pounds tice." of round steak as compared with 2.1 pounds And, in that knowledge, e, we have, under maany hazard. areas of the There are country this oy drought In ,In h year. We do 3 1960; 3,5 pounds of butter compared with the Food for Peace Program, reached and not know what the size of this year's feed pounds; 9.9 quarts of milk compared with helped more than a hundred countries, grain and soybean crops will be. We :hope 8.7 quarts; 5 dozen eggs as compared with 3.9 Under this program we have delivered 150 for the best, but we will all be concerned dozen in 1960. million tons of food, valued at 15 billion until the harvest Is in. If we make comparisons over a longer Pe- dollars, to needy and disaster-struck na- riod, they are truly startling. We find one tions. the It is current now mar ketiarketing arent er the wheatd Sts of hour of factory labor earnings buying two to Our Food for Peace Program reflects the year, ra Our ocks three times as much in key commodities as 10 democratic and humanitarian character of will fall below the desirable rhserve ltrue to 20 years ago. the American people. The same In true for soybeans, where no taus reserve in sight. Our production of milk While the post of farm products has been We will continue to share our abundance insuffiica nt now. That 1a why we we have raised d reduced, the farmer has had to pay more for with people who lack it. But our programs the support level for manufacturing milk to what he buys, of food assistance must support, and not four dollars per hundredweight. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 17753 Applications to Farmers Home Administration for financial assistance for applicants in the State of Arkansas Operating loans ----------------------------------------- Emergency loans------------------------------ - Economic opportunity loans (individual) --------------- Farmownership loans___________________________________ Soil and water loans (individual)________________________ Rural housing loans------------------------------------- Labor housing loans (individual)------------------------ Soil and water association loans and grants: Sewer-water, or both-------------------------------- Recreation------------------------------------------ Grazing- ------------------------------------------ Watershed loans______________ Economic opportunity cooperative loans. --------------- Comprehensive planning grants------------------------- Total--------------------------------------------- Watershed projects, 1967 fiscal year con- struction contribution program Estimated amount Flat Creek---------------------- $44,000 West Fork Point Remove Creew-- 217,300 East Fork Point Remove Creek__ 417,100 Muddy Fork of Illinois River Wa- tershed----------------------- 235,000 Big Creek----------------------- 213,000 Kelso-Rohwer ------------------ 94,000 Poteau River____________________ 829,100 Mud Creek---------------------- 140,700 Lee Phillips___________________ _ 508, 500 Garrett Bridge__________________ 232,500 Upper Crooked Creek ------------ 369,600 Cooper Creek____________________ 347,200 Little Clear Creek_______________ 590,600 Fleschman's Bayou______________ 247, 700 Total---------------------- 4, 286, 600 ARKANSAS: TELEPHONE PROGRAM, APPLICATIONS ON HAND AS OF JUNE 30, 1966 1. Southwest Arkansas Telephone Co- nc., Flippin, Ark., amount: $225,000 for up- grading and expansion. 3, Allied Telephone Company, Fordyce, Ark., amount: $2,000,000 for upgrading and expansion. 4. Mountain View Telephone Company, Mountain View, Ark., amount: $1,000,000 for financing, upgrading and expansion. 5, Perco Telephone Company, Perryville, Ark., amount: $250,000 for upgrading and expansion. ? ARKANSA$ ELECTRIFICATION PROGRAM, APPLICA- TIOST??7'IIAND AS OF JUNE 30, 1966 Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative Corp., Ozark," Ark., amount: $1,345,000 for dis- tributionpurposes. Applications pending June 30, 1966, for scientific research AGRICULVURAL RESEARCH SERVICE niversity" of Arkansas, Fayette- grants ;le, Ark.* -entomology research__ $30, 000 _ COOPERATIVE STATE RESEARCH MIT'_ SERVICE -irst+ experiment station, Fayette- ville, Ark.: Cotton research----------------- 67,000 Dietary research________________ 50,000 'Soybean research (insect, viruses, and environment)------------- 110,172 Soybean research (processing pro- cedures) ---------------------- 141,550 167 18 173 635 29 1,706 1 122 14 2 7 4 13 $745,822 68,130 286,488 5, 376, 545 96,400 11, 327, 840 6,000 11, 224, 504 2,610,364 85, 000 3,932,640 197,000 0 $745,822 68,130 286,488 5,376,545 96, 400 11, 327, 840 6,000 22,364, 655 2,610,364 85,000 1,032,640 197,000 98,300 WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH PROGRAM FOR 1966 Mr. JACKSON. Mr. President, events and developments of recent years have shown that every State of the Union has water problems in one form or another. Therefore, I know that every Member of this body will be interested in the report of the Federal water resources research program for fiscal year 1967, issued by the Office of Science and Technology, which recently was received by the In- terior and Insular Affairs Committee. It will be recalled that the Interior Com- mittee considered and reported S. 2 in the 88th Congress, which became Public Law 88-379 establishing the program. The report summarizes the activities of the Committee on Water Resources Re- search during the past year, and presents a tabulation of 1965 expenditures and fiscal year 1966 appropriations. It also Includes the estimates for fiscal year 1967. The Office of Science and Technology made a major report on achievements and progress in March of this year, en- titled "A 10-year Program of Federal Water Resources Research," so the pres- ent report is rather brief. Both of these reports are for sale by the Superintend- ent of Documents at the Government Printing Office. Mr. President, in view of the national interest in our water resources research program, I ask unanimous consent that the letter of transmittal be included in the RECORD at the end of my remarks. There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: FEDERAL COUNCIL FOR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Washington, D.C., July 25, 1966. Hon. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY, President of the Senate, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR., PRESIDENT: Through its Com- mittee on Water Resources Research, the Federal Council for Science and Technology coordinates the efforts of 18 offices and bu- reaus engaged in water resources research. The Committee has recently completed a re- port which summarizes in a single document the proposed FY 1967 efforts of the agencies as contained In the Administration's budget. I am pleased to transmit a copy of this report entitled, "Federal Water Resources Research Program for Fiscal Year 1967" to you for your information and use. Earlier this year, President Johnson trans- mitted a long-range study of the Committee entitled, "A Ten-year Program of Federal Water Resources Research." The FY 1967 program reflects the recommendations of that long-range study. The total cost of the pro- posed program this year is $107 million. I believe you will find this report useful in the deliberations of the Congress and, to that end, I am sending copies of the report to the chairmen and members of the several committees concerned with water resources research. Sincerely, DONALD F. HORNIG, Chairman. U.S. INTERVENTION IN VIETNAM IS NOT LEGAL Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, that the U.S. intervention in Vietnam Is not legal is the opinion of William L. Stand- ard, of the New York bar, and an eminent attorney expressed in response to an article in the May issue of the American Bar Association Journal. It is an opin- ion that Senator MORSE and I have long held and have expressed for 21/2 years on the Senate floor. In addition to that, we long expressed the opinion that it is not only illegal, but immoral, indefensible, and in every other way disastrous. As our casualties mount, as the death toll both of our fine young boys and of the victims of our unrestricted bombing in both North and South Vietnam in- creases, the folly of our whole policy there will become increasingly apparent. Every passing day deepens my conviction that in all our history, the United States has not committed so grave an error. As I have said again and again, and now repeat, the alleged bases of intervention are false. Many Americans are not aware of it. They believe what has been the official justification. But the facts, which can be fully documented, are oth- erwise. We were not invited In by a friendly country to help it repel aggression. We asked ourselves in. We went half way around the world to inject ourselves into a civil war. When the United States intervened mili- tarily-beginning first with the military mission after the French collapse in 1954; then in 1961, with the increase of the number of military advisers; then in 1965, by sending, for the first time, our troops into combat and starting the bombing of North Vietnam-the only outsiders, the only intruders, were the forces of the United States. All the others were Vietnamese. We have since, by great pressure, man- aged to induce a few token commitn}ents from nations whose governments feel obligated to do so because of our insist- ence upon it and their need to comply. But virtually we are carrying on the fight all alone. Ours are the heavy costs in lives and in money. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17754 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 .CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE August' 8, .T 966 The SEATO treaty does not give us U.S. INTERVENTION IN VIETNAM IS NON LEGAL any authority to do what we have done, (Responding to an article in the May issue as alleged by the official propaganda, of the Journal, Mr. Standard asserts that That too can be documented, the United States intervention in Vietnam It is utterly indefensible to draft our violates the Charter of the United Nations, the Geneva Accords of 1954, the SEATO young men, to send them to fight against treaty and our own Constitution. He and kill people against whom they have urges a cease-fire of at least six months' no grievance, and to die in the process. duration, during which the 1954 accords Last year, in 1965, let me repeat, there should be renegotiated. If this should fail, were 96,000 desertions from the South he declares that "a great power may with- Vietnamese Army. Why should Our boys draw with honor when it admits that it be sent to fight and die for a cause that fudged poorly") has such doubtful support from those (By William L. Standard) whose cause we allege it is? We are Satire and sarcasm often have been weap- supporting now in South Vietnam the ons of effective, if deluding, advocacy. The eighth self-imposed government since aticle by Eberhard P. Deutsch, "Trig Legality the fall of Diem. It has little of the United States Position in Vietnam", popular in the May, 1966, issue of the American Bar support. It has brought about a civil Association Journal (page 436) is a classical wad' within a civil war. It exists only demonstration of this technique. The au- because of United States armed and fl- thor takes issue with the Lawyers Commit- nancial support. It would fall instantly tee on American Policy Towards Vietnam, were that to be withdrawn. We are im- as expressed in its memorandum of law, on posing it on an unhappy, war-torn, dis- the following fundamental questions: (1) The right of self-defense under the United tressed and ravaged people. Nations Charter; (2) Violations of the Ge- The so-called peace offensives and neva Accords; (3) Sanctions by the SEATO professions by the administration of treaty; and (4) Violations of our own Con- eagerness to take the war to the confer- stitution. ence table are meaningless as long as it But the author concludes with the state- reuses to offer to negotiate with those Comm Cent that the memorandum of the Lawyers ittee "is grounded on an emotional al at- who are doing the fighting-the National titude opposed to United States policy, rather Liberation Front or Vietcong. Those_ than on law". lie seeks to demonstrate this peace offensives are valueless as long as we engage in the double talk by which, on the one hand, we allege we are willing to go back to the Geneva Agreements, which stipulate a united Vietnam- North and South-following Vietnam- wide elections, an arrangement we pledged adherence to in the unilateral statement of Walter Bedell Smith, Under Secretary of State, and which we then violated, and on the other hand, insist on an independent South Vietnam. These two positions are utterly contra- dictory and incompatible. Therefore, it is not surprising that we get no response from the adversaries, who are not, as our official position maintains, North Viet- nam and Hanoi, but South Vietnamese fighting the coup-imposed junta of 10 generals, as they have fought the other Saigon regimes, beginning with Diem. What is so indefensible about the U.S. position and illegal is that in invading Vietnam militarily, we violated every treaty to which we had committed our- selves-the United Nations Charter, the SEATO treaty, and the declaration of our po:icy by our Under Secretary of State, Walter Bedell Smith, in which we pledged our support to the Geneva ac- cords and support of elections in 1956 to unite the temporarily separated halves of Vietnam-North and South. I ask unanimous consent that the arti- cle by William L. Standard, entitled: "U,S. Intervention in Vietnam Is Not Legal," which appeared in the July 1966 issue of the American Bar Association Journal be printed at this point in my remarks. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: by quoting the concluding paragraph of a 26-page, carefully documented statement of the applicable law, which in peroration states in the very last sentence: "Should we not spell the end of the system of unilateral action . that has been tried for cen- turies-and has always failed?" The author then wields the weapon of sar- casm by contrasting the Lawyers Committee memorandum with the "temperate state- ment of thirty-one professors of law from leading law schools throughout the United States". The statement of these professors appears in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD of Jan- uary 27, 1966 (page A410), and the entirety of that statement is: "As teachers of international law we wish to affirm that the presence of U.S. forces in South Vietnam at the request of the Govern- ment of that country is lawful under general principles of international law and the United Nations Charter. The engagement of U.S. forces in hostilities at the request of the Government of South Vietnam is a legiti- mate use of force in defense of South Viet- nam against aggression. We believe that the evidence indicates that the United States and South Vietnam are taking action that attacks neither the territorial integrity nor the political independence of the People's Republic of Vietnam-action that seeks only to terminate aggression originating in North Vietnam." This one-paragraph "temperate state- ment" is not buttressed by a single citation or authority. What is particularly deplor- able is that it was issued in November of 1965 as a rebuttal to the committee's memo- randum, which was issued in late September, 1965. The author of the "legality position" ar- ticle then contrasts the Lawyers Committee memorandum with "the simple resolution adopted unanimously on February 21, 1966, by the House of Delegates of the American Bar Association". This resolution, in a con- cluding one-sentence statement, asserts that "the position of the United States in Viet- nam is legal under international law, and is in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations and the South-East Asia Treaty". The House of Delegates' resolu- tion, too, does not support its conclusion with a single citation or authority. When the Harvard Law Record on March 10 contrasted the memorandum of law of the Lawyers Committee with the "simple reso- lution" adopted by the House of Delegates, it had this to say: "Viewed against the back- ground of the sober and erudite Lawyers Committee brief and Arthur Krock's re- search, the ABA resolution contributes little to the national dialogue on Vietnam" (em- phasis supplied). The satirical technique of the author of the "legality position" article is worthy of an undergraduate debater, but not of the respected Chairman of the American Bar Association Committee on Peace and Law Through United Nations. He does, indeed, wrestle earnestly with four basic proposi- tions discussed by the Lawyers Committee, and it is to these propositions that I shall address myself. L UNILATERAL INTERVENTION VIOLATES U.N. CHARTER The writer of the "legality position" ar- ticle discusses the first exception of Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, which reads: "Nothing in the present Char- ter shall impair the inherent right of. indi- vidual or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council has taken the measures necessary to main- tain international peace and security" (em- phasis supplied). He asserts that "A thesis that members of the United Nations are not permitted to participate in collective self-defense to repel aggression, ork the ground that the aggrieved nation is not a member of the United Na- tions, can hardly be supported on its face, in reason, logic or law." He cites as author- ity two distinguished writers? The Lawyers Committee in its memo,. - randum concludes that Article 51 does nC t permit the United States to act unilatera ly in the "collective self-defense" of Vietnm because Article 51 applies only if an arvh1ed attack occurs against a member of the United Nations. This limitation was not inadvertent. It was the result of careful draftsmanship by Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, who "was the principal negotiator in the formulation of this text" of Article 5.1 .2 In a statement of June 13, 1945, before the United Nations Commission that drafted Article 51, Senator Vandenberg said: "We have here recognized the inherent right of self-defense, whether individual or collective, which permits any sovereign state among us [i.e., members of the United Nations] or any qualified regional group of states to ward off attack " 3 Secretary of State Edward It. Stettinius, Jr., noted the following on May 21, 1945: "The parties to any dispute ... should obli- gate themselves first of all to seek a solution 'Bowett,. "Self-defense in International Law," 193--195 (1958), Kelsen, "The Law ra' the United Nations," 793 (1960). 2 The quoted words are from a memao? dum, "Participation in the North At', Treaty of States Not Members of thp''ljnited Nations", dated April 13, 1949, prepared by the Office of the Legal Adviser, Department of State, and reproduced in 5 Whiteman, "Digest of International Law; 1068. 3 Memorandum, op. cit. supra note 2, in 5 Whiteman, "Digest of International Law,- 1068,1072. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE 17755 by negotiation, mediation, conciliation, arbi- tration or judiciary settlement, resort to re- gionaZ agencies or arrangement or other peaceful means of their own choice" (em- phasis in original).' Professor Julius Stone states: "The license [of individual and collective self-defense] does not apparently cover even an 'armed attack' against a non-Member".' Furthermore, the United States has ac- knowledged that the right of "collective self- defense" applies to Vietnam only if it be- comes a member of the United Nations. On September 9, 1957, in arguing before the Se- curity Council for the admission of Vietnam to the United Nations, Henry Cabot Lodge, our representative, stated: "The people of Vietnam . . ask now only ... to enjoy the benefits of collective security, the mu- tual help which membership in the ... United Nations offers." e This does not mean, of course, that a non- member state or entity does not have, the "inherent" right of self-defense or that non- member states may be attacked with im- punity. But it does mean that in case of an attack upon a nonmember state it is for the United Nations to decide upon the nec- essary measures to be taken by its member states and not for any state to decide for itself that it will employ arms for "collective self-defense". During the Suez crisis President Eisen- hower said: "The United Nations is alone charged with the responsibility of securing the peace in the Middle East and throughout the world" (emphasis supplied)? And at the same time; Secretary of State John Foster Dulles characterized as "un- thinkable" a proposal that the United States and the Soviet Union act jointly to restore the peace in that area, saying that that was the function of the United Nations. He said: "Any intervention by the United States and/or Russia or any other action, except by a duly constituted United Nations peace force would be counter to everything the General Assembly and the Secretary-General of the United Nations were charged by the Charter to do in order to secure a United Nations police cease fire." .8 The author of the "legality position" arti- cle confuses the right of an attacked non- member state to defend itself with the lack of right of a member state to participate in that defense in the absence of United Na- tions' authorization. The issue is the lawfulness of the actions of the United States, which is both a non- attacked state and a member of the United Nations. It does not follow that because Vietnam has an "inherent" right to defend itself, the United States has an "Inherent" right to decide for itself to participate unilat- erally in that defense. Professor Hans Kelsen, one of the principal authorities relied upon by Mr. Deutsch, has pointed out this critical distinction: "It is hardly possible to consider the right or the duty of a non- attacked state to assist an attacked state as an 'inherent' right, that Is to say, a right established by natural law."' The, argument also makes the United States its own judge to determine the occur- rence of an "armed attack" in Vietnam, whereas Article 39 of the United Nations Charter provides that "The Security Council 412 Department of State Bull. 949-950 (1945). d Stone, "Legal Controls of International Conflict," 244 (1954). g U.N. Security Council Off. Rec., 790th meeting, 5. 7 4 ""United Nations Action in the Suez Crisis: International Law in the Middle East Crisis" (Tulane Studies in Political Science, vol. IV (1950). 8 New York Times, Nov. 6, 1956. Kelsen, op. cit, supra note 1, at 797. shall determine the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression , . ". But as Philip C. Jessup, now a Judge of the International Court of Justice, has noted: "It would be disastrous to agree that every State may decide for itself which of the two contestants is in the right and may govern its conduct according to its own deci- sion. . The ensuing conflict would be de- structive to the ordered world community which the Charter and any modern law of nations must seek to preserve. State C would be shipping ... war supplies to A, while State A would be assisting State B ... and it would not be long before C and D would be enmeshed in the struggle out of "self- defense" [emphasis supplied]." 40 Acceptance of Mr. Deutsch's argument would destroy the concept of collective peacekeeping, which the Charter embodies, in the case of nonmember states or areas. NO ARMED ATTACK WITHIN MEANING OF THE CHARTER The author of the "legality position" arti- cle also seeks to justify the United States' intervention in Vietnam on the ground that "these attacks [against United States' naval vessels] are part of a deliberate and system- atic campaign of aggression", to quote the Congressional Joint Southeast Asia resolu- tion of August, 1964. The Lawyers Com- mittee on American Policy Towards Vietnam takes the position that the occurrence of an armed attack within the meaning of the United Nations Charter has not been estab- lished. Under the clear text of Article 51 of the charter, the right of self-defense arises only if an "armed attack" has occurred. The phrase "armed attack" has an established meaning in the charter and in international law. It was deliberately employed because it does not easily lend itself to expedient elasticity or to arbitrary ambiguity. "Self-defense" is not justified by every aggression or hostile act, but only in the case of an "armed attack", when the neces- sity for action is "instant, overwhelming, and leaving no moment for deliberation". This definition was classically stated by Sec- retary of State Daniel Webster in "The Caro- line"" and affirmed in the Nuremberg judg- ment. It was codified in the charter by unanimous vote of the General Assembly at its first session?' This strict limitation of permissible self- defense to cases of an "armed attack" was at the time of the framing of the charter being pressed by the United States, the So- viet Union and Great Britain in the Nurem- berg trials. The defense was offered that Germany was compelled to attack Norway to forestall an Allied invasion. In reply, the tribunal said: "It must be remembered that preventive action in foreign territory is justi- fled only in case of an instant and over- whelming necessity for defense, leaving no choice of means, and no moment for de- liberation.' (The Caroline Case, Moore's Digest of International Law, II 412.)"18 Thus, while any hostile act may be an aggression, not every aggression Is an "armed attack", and forceful self-defense is not a permissible response unless there is an "armed attack." On March 4, 1966, the Department of State issued "The Legality of United States Par- ticipation in the Defense of Vietnam". This 1? Jessup, "A Modern Law of Nations," 205 (1948). n 7 Moore, "Digest of International Law," 919 (1906). 12 U.N. Gen. Ass. Off. Rec., let seas., res. 95(I). 13 International Military Tribunal (Nurem- berg) 171 (1946); Bin Chang, "General Prin- ciples of Law," 84 (1953). 52-page memorandum acknowledges that an "armed attack" is an essential condition prec- edent to the use of force in self-defense and that aggression is not enough. Astonish- ingly, however, it glosses over the crucial dis- tinotion between the two. While it alleges the occurrence of an armed attack "before February 1965", it fails to furnish any facts or details concerning such an attack. Indeed, it admits that it is unable to do so. This is not like the situation in Korea, where the Security Council found that an actual, visi- ble, forcible invasion beyond the demarcation line had occurred at a specific time and place by large forces. This memorandum states that because of the "guerrilla war in Viet Nam" (i.e., the indigenous character of the conflict) the State Department is unable to indicate when or where the "armed attack" began. It also admits that 'the critical mili- tary element of the insurgency ... Is unac- knowledged by North Viet Nam". The memo- randum contends that acts of externally sup- ported subversion, the clandestine supply of arms and the infiltration of armed personnel over the "years" preceding the direct inter- vention of the United States, "clearly con- stitutes an 'armed stack' under any reason- able definition". These allegations, even if true (as appears below), indicate acts of aggression, but they do not show the occurrence of an armed at- tack "leaving no choice of means, and no mo- ment for deliberation" 14 Such acts were well known as forms of aggression when the charter was drawn and long before. Nevertheless, the framers of the charter rejected the mass inadequate to jus- tify the unilateral use of force. Except in the limited instance of an armed attack "leaving no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation", they left nations to the peacekeeping procedures of the United Nations for collective redress against aggres- sion. Furthermore, the State Department memo- randum refutes its own charge of the oc- currence of an "armed attack". The long- smoldering conditions of unrest, subversion and infiltration cited in the memorandum are not acts that gave rise to such a need for an immediate response that "no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation" remained. The memorandum does not sustain its charge of external aggression. It indicates that prior to 1964 the "infiltrators" from the North were South Vietnamese who were re- turning to the South. The lumping of "40,000 armed and unarmed guerillas" is not meaningful. Unarmed Vietnamese have an inherent right to move about in their own country. In the absence of the functioning of the International Control Commission, the subsequent movement of Vietnamese from one zone in Vietnam to another zone in Vietnam would appear to be an internal matter, not a violation of international law. The Mansfield report (cited in footnote 14) shows that prior to 1965 infiltration of men from North Vietnam had been going on "for many years", but that this "was confined primarily to political cadres and military leadership until about the end of 1964". On the other hand, it notes, "In 1962, U.S. mili- tary advisers and service forces in South Viet- nam totaled approximately 10,000 men." The Mansfield report makes plain that significant armed personnel were introduced from the North only after the United States had in- 14 See the report of Senators MIKE MANS- FIELD, EDMUND S. MusKIE, DANIEL K. INouyE, GEORGE D. AIKEN and J. CALEB BOGGS, to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, dated January 6, 1966, entitled "The Vietnam Conflict: The Substance and the Shadow", hereafter referred to as the Mansfield report. It is reprinted in 112 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, 140 (1966), Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17756 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE August 8, 1966 tervened to avoid the "total collapse of the of an outside state to participate in another Saigon government's authority [which] ap- estate's civil war." 17 peared imminent in the early months of It cannot be asserted that South Vietnam 1965". The report states: is a separate "country" so far as North Viet- "U.S. combat troops in strength arrived at nam is concerned. The Geneva Accords that point in response to the appeal of the recognized Vietnam as but one country, of Saigon authorities. The Vietcong counter which South Vietnam is only an organic part. response was to Increase their military activ- The accords declared that the temporary Fly with forces strengthened by intensified military line that established the north and local recruitment and infiltration of regular south military zones at the seventeenth par- North Vietnamese troops. With the change allel pending the elections "should not in any in the composition of the opposing forces way be interpreted as a political or territorial the character of the war also changed boundary" (Section 6). And. Section 7 sharply.11 stated that the political settlement should be The introduction of North Vietnamese effected on the basis of "the independence, forces as a counter response is also empha- unity, and territorial integrity" of Vietnam. sized by the observation in the Mansfield But even if North Vietnam and South Viet- report that by May, 1965, about 34,000 United nam are deemed separate entities in inter- States service forces were in Vietnam and national law, the United States may not re- that "Beginning in June [1965] an estimated spond to the intervention of North Vietnam 1,500 North Vietnamese troops per month in the civil war in the South by bombing the have entered South Vietnam . . Sig- North. There is no legal basis to respond to nificant forces from the North thus followed an intervention of one state in a civil war and did not precede the direct involvement by a military attack on the territory of the of the United States. intervening state. - It is sobering to reflect INTERVENTION NOT JUSTIFIED BY "COLLECTIVE SELF-DEFENSE" The State Department memorandum is structured on the wholly untenable assump- tion that the conflict in South Vietnam Is the result of external aggression ("an armed attack from the North") and is not a civil war. For if it is a civil war, the intervention of the United States is a violation of its solemn undertaking not to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries. It is hardly open to dispute that the pres- ent conflict in South Vietnam is essentially a civil war among what James Reston has described as a "tangle of competing indi- viduals, regions, religions and sects . [among] a people who have been torn apart by war and dominated and exploited by Saigon for generations"10 The State Department memorandum itself shows that before 1964 the so-called infil- tration was of South Vietnamese returning to their homeland. Even if they were re- turning for the purpose of participating in the fighting in South Vietnam, that still constitutes civil war by any definition. The Declaration of Honolulu also im- plicitly concedes that the conflict had its origin in the internal situation in Vietnam and not in an external armed attack. The stress which the declaration places on the urgent need for basic social reform is an acknowledgment that the war is essentially a revolt against domestic conditions. To this may be added the existence of a des- perate desire for peace and independence from foreign intervention, which all neutral reporters have observed. The author of the "legality position" ar- ticle also argues that the conflict arises from an external aggression. This is contradicted by his failure to consider the role played by the National Liberation Front; yet it does exist and is unquestionably in actual control of most of South Vietnam and the gover- ment in those areas. The only conceivable justification for the refusal of the United States to acknowledge the existence or the that not even Germany under Hitler or Italy under Mussolini claimed that their inter- vention in behalf of France during the Span- ish Civil War would have vindicated their use of military force upon the territory of another state intervening in behalf of the loyalists. And no country intervening in behalf of Spain's legitimate government as- serted a right to respond by military force against Germany or Italy. Therefore, even if North Vietnam were an intervening state so far as South Vietnam is concerned, under the legal position advanced by Mr. Deutsch, the bombing of the United States by North Vietnam would have as much legitimacy as does the bombing of North Vietnam by the United States. IT. U.S. MILITARY PRESENCE VIOLATES GENEVA ACCORDS The author of the "legality position" article suggests that United States intervention in Vietnam is not in violation of the Geneva Accords on the ground that "since their in- ception these accords have been violated con- tinuously by Hanoi". He states that "It is an accepted principle of international law that a material breach of a treaty by one of the parties thereto dissolves the obligation of the other party, at least to the extent of with- holding compliance until the defaulting party purges Itself." The Lawyers Committee takes the position that United States intervention is not justi- fied by the purported breach of the Geneva Accords by Hanoi. The accords embody two central principles: (1) recognition of the in- dependence and freedom of Vietnam from foreign control and (2) the unification in the elections set in the accords for 1966. In its own pledge to observe the Geneva Accords, the United States recognized that the military participation in Vietnam was temporary and that, in any case, it was not political or geographic. Insofar as the United States referred to that country, it designated it as "Vietnam", not "South Vietnam" or "North Vietnam". The elections thus were to determine not whether North and belligerent status of the National Liberation South Vietnam should be united, but what 'Front is that the front consists of rebels or the government of the single state of Viet- insurgents. If that be so, then they are nam should be. As the time for the arrange- fighting their own government in a civil ments for the elections approached, however, strife and are not foreign aggressors. the Diem regime, which was then in control As stated by Benjamin V. Cohen In the of South Vietnam, announced on July 16, Niles memorial lecture, "The United Nations 1955, that not only would it defy the provi- in Its 20th Year" : "True, the charter does sions calling for national elections, but would not forbid civil war or deny the right to not engage even in negotiations for modali- revolt. But it does not sanction the right ties. The reasons for not agreeing to the elec- tions of 1956 are quite understandable. Pres- ident Eisenhower has told us that the actual reason the elections were not held was be- cause "persons knowledgeable in I:ndo-Chl- nese affairs" believed that "possibly 80 per cent of the population would have voted for the Communist Ho Chi Minh"18 Under the Geneva Accords, the undertak- ing to hold the elections within two years was unconditional. The refusal of Saigon to hold the elections plainly violated one of the two central conditions that had made the Ge- neva Accords acceptable to all parties. That the Vietnam conflict ultimately did resume is, therefore, not surprising. For as George MeT. Kahin and John W. Lewis, professors of government at Cornell University, asked in a question wholly ignored by our State Department, "When the military struggle for power ends on the agreed condition that the competition will be transferred to the political level, can the side which violates the agreed conditions ultimately expect the military struggle will-not be resumed?" 19 The military involvement of the United States In Vietnam also violates the second essential provision of the accords--the pro- hibition against the introduction of foreign troops and the establishment of military bases. Article 4 of the Geneva Accords pro- hibits the "introduction into Vietnam of foreign troops and military personnel", and Article 5 prohibits in Vietnam any "military base under the control of a foreign power". Therefore, it is the presence of 250,000 American troops and the installation in Vietnam of massive military bases under the control of the United States that violate these agreements, not the presence of North Vietnamese in Vietnam. III. U.S. INTERVENTION VIOLATES SEATO TREATY Mr. Deutsch also challenges the conclusion of the Lawyers Committee with respect to sanctions under the SEATO treaty, which was adopted in September, 1954, Article 1 of the treaty provides: "The parties undertake, as set forth in the United Nations Charter, to settle any inter- national disputes in which they may be in- volved, by peaceful means ... and to refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force in any manner incon- sistent with the purposes of the United Nations." It must be pointed out that Article 53 of the United Nations Charter provides that "No enforcement action shall be taken under regional arrangements or by regional agen- cies, without the authority of the Security Council." Furthermore, Article 103 of the, charter provides: In the event of a conflict between the members of the United Nations under the present charter and their obligations under any other International agreement, their obligations under the present charter shall prevail." The use of our ground forces since the spring of 1965 is sought to be justified under the provisions of the SEATO treaty. But extracts from the 1954 Senate debate on the treaty demonstrate the fragility of this claim.' In explaining the commitments under the SEATO treaty to the Senate, Walter F. George, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, made the following statements: The treaty does not call for automatic ac- tion; It calls for consolidation with other signatories. If any course of action shall be agreed . or decided upon, then that action must have the approval of Congress, 17 111 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, 2473 (1965). 18 Eisenhower, "White House Years : Alan- Mansfield report, 112 CONGRESSIONAL He cites Cohen, "The United Nations, Consti- date for Change, 1953-1956," 372 (1963). RECORD, 140, 141 (1966). tutional Developments, Growth and Possi- 1L Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, "The 1 New York Times, Apr. 3, 1966. bilities," 53-54 (1961). United Statesin Vietnam", June 1.965, p. 28. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE because the constitutional process of each signatory government is provided for . It is clear that the threat to territorial integ- rity-and political independence also encom- passes acts of subversion . . but even in that event the United States would not be bound to put it down. I cannot emphasize too strongly that we have no obligation ... to take positive measures of any kind. All we are obligated to do is consult together about it.20 Richard N. Goodwin, a former Deputy As- sistant Secretary of State, in a recent article discussing the significance of our reliance up- on the SEATO agreement as the basis for our intervention in Vietnam, states in part: One can search the many statements of Presidents and diplomats in vain for any mention of the SEATO Treaty. Time after time, President Johnson set forth the reasons for our presence in Vietnam, but he never spoke of the requirements of the treaty, nor did anyone at the State Department suggest that he should, even though they surely re- viewed every draft statement. The treaty argument is, in truth, something a clever advocate conceived a few months ago" 21 Furthermore, the SEATO treaty also clear- ly pledges the parties to respect the Geneva Declaration of 1954, which was agreed upon only a few months before the SEATO treaty. The State Department memorandum of March 4, 1966, referred to above, significantly misquotes the SEATO treaty on essential points. It asserts (Section IV B) that Article 4(l) of SEATO creates an "obliga- tion to meet the common danger in the event of armed aggression". The term "armed aggression" is not to be found in the treaty. Article 4(1) speaks of "aggression by means of armed attack". In case of such "armed attack", "each Party recognizes" that it "would endanger its own peace and safety, and agrees that it will in that event act to meet the common danger in in accord- ance with its constitutional processes." Hence, only in case of an "armed attack" (in the meaning of Article 51 of the United Nations Charter) would the United States have, at most, the right, but no obligation, to assist the "Free Territory of Vietnam" until it was to be unified by July, 1956. The invocation of the SEATO treaty is the latest of the evershifting grounds which the State Department has advanced to sustain the lawfulness of its position. Ar- thur Schlesinger, Jr., has characterized this argument as an "intellectual disgrace". Arthur Krock has described its origin as follows: "The President had utilized the provoca- tion of the Tonkin Gulf attack on the Sev- enth Fleet by North Vietnamese gunboats to get a generalized expression of support from Congress. This worked well enough until it was argued, against the public rec- ord, as approval by Congress of any expan- sion of the war the President might make in an unforeseeable future. Then Rusk shifted the major basis for the claim to the SEATO compact. "But extracts from the 1954 Senate debate on the treaty demonstrate the fragility of this claim." 22 The credibility of the argument that the SEATO treaty furnished a legal justification for the President's action is also refuted by the fact that the State Department in its March, 1965, memorandum, entitled "Legal Basis for United States Actions Against North Vietnam", did not even men- tion SEATO. Significantly, too, President Johnson in a press conference statement on 20101 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, 1051-1052 (1955). . 21 The New Yorker, "Reflections on Viet- nam", Apr. 16, 1966, p. 57, at p. 70. 22 The New York Times, "The Sudden Re- discovery of SEATO", Mar. 6, 1966. July 28, 1965, explaining "why we are in Vietnam,", made no mention of SEATO. This can hardly be squared with the present belated claim that the treaty imposed an obligation upon the President to intervene in Vietnam. Moreover, the invocation of SEATO does not advance the State Department's case. In the first place, Article 1 of the treaty is ex- pressly subordinate to the provisions of the United Nations Charter and Article 6 ex- pressly acknowledges the supremacy of the charter. Article 103 of the charter, quoted above, subordinates all regional treaty com- pacts to the charter, and Article 53 is explicit that "no enforcement action shall be taken under regional arrangements or by regional agencies without the authorization of the Security Council . The United States is no obliged by SEATO to engage in any military undertaking in Vietnam even if it were otherwise permitted to do so under the charter. As noted by Representative MELVIN R. LAIRD, the SEATO treaty was "not a commitment to send Amer- ican troops to fight in southesa Asis. It carefully avoided the kind of automatic re- sponse to egression embodied in the NATO agreement .".28 Representative LAIRD pointed out that in soliciting the advice and consent of the Sen- ate to the treaty, Senator H. ALEXANDER SMITH of New Jersey, who was a member of the United States delegation to the Manila Conference at which the treaty was negoti- ated and who was one of the signers of the treaty for the United States, emphasized that "Nothing in this treaty calls for the use of American ground forces. . On the floor of the Senate on February 1, 1955, he said. "Some of the participants came to Manila with the intention of establishing . . . a compulsory arrangement for our military par- ticipation in case of any attack. Such an organization might have required the com- mitment of American ground forces to the Asian mainland. We carefully avoided any possible implication regarding an arrange- ment of that kind. "We have no purpose of following any such policy as that of having our forces Involved in a ground war. . "For ourselves, the arrangement means that we will have avoided the impracticable overcommitment which would have been in- volved if we attempted to place American ground forces around the perimeter of the area of potential Chinese ingress into south- east Asia. Nothing in this treaty calls for the use of American ground forces in that fashion." 24 Article 4, Section 2, is explicit that if South Vietnam were threatened "in any way other than by armed attack", "the [SEATO] Par- ties shall consult immediately in order to agree on the measures which should be taken for the common defense". SEATO therefore prohibits unilateral as- sistance action. Indeed, the treaty originally required previous agreement among the other seven partners before any SEATO power could take any "measures", including nonmilitary measures, not to mention combat assistance. In 1964 the unanimity requirement was re- interpreted to mean that "measures" could be taken in the absence of a dissenting vote among the SEATO partners. The United States has not convened the SEATO powers because of the certainty of such a dissent. It can hardly claim, therefore, that SEATO obligates it to pusue its present course when in fact it is evading its treaty obligation to obtain collective permission for "collective defense", as even the name of the treaty indicates. Finally, the United States actions also vio- 23 112 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, 5558 (1966). 21101 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, 1052-1054 (1955). 17757 late Article 53 of the United Nations Charter, quoted above, which unequivocally prohibits enforcement action under regional arrange- ments except with previous Security Council authorization. Hence, even if the United States had obtained the required consent from its SEATO partners, it would still need the authorization of the Security Council to make its "measures" legal. Therefore, the United States, far from be- ing obligated, is not permitted by SEATO or by the charter to engage in its military un- dertaking in Vietnam. IV. U.S. INTERVENTION VIOLATES THE CONSTITU- TION The President has repeatedly stated and acknowledged that the United States is at war in Vietnam. The Lawyers Committee on American Policy Towards Vietnam in its memorandum of law took the position that our intervention is violative of our own Con- stitution. The committee predicated its conclusion on the provisions of Article I, Sec- tion 8, Clause II, in which the power to de- clare war is confided exclusively to the Con- gress. Congress alone can make that solemn commitment. The clause granting this power does not read "on the recommendation of the President" or that the "President with the advice and consent of Congress may de- clare war". As former Assistant Secretary of State James Grafton Rogers has observed, "The omission is significant. There was to be no war unless Congress took the initia- tive." 20 The Supreme Court has held that "Nothing in our Constitution is plainer than that declaration of war is entrusted only to Congress.... With all its defects, delays, and Inconveniences, men have discov- ered no technique for long preserving free government except that the executive be un- der the law, and that the law be made by parliamentary deliberations." 27 President Woodrow Wilson underscored the President's lack of power to declare war in his historic statement to a joint session of Congress on April 2, 1917: "I have called the Congress into extraordi- nary session because there are serious, very serious, choices of policy to be made, and made immediately, which it was neither right nor constitutionally permissible that I should assume the responsibility of making." Congress has not declared war in Vietnam and the President does not claim that any declaration of war supports his actions in Vietnam. In fact, the President has been reported to be extremely reluctant to ask Congress to declare war 28 The writer of the "legality position" arti- cle, however, takes the position that the Southeast Asia resolution (Tonkin resolu- tion) of August 10, 1964, is "undoubtedly the clearest and most unequivocal Congres- sional sanction of the President's deployment of United States forces for the defense of South Vietnam." The writer then quotes Senators JOHN SHERMAN COOPER, J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT and WAYNE MORSE during the de- bates on the Tonkin resolution, and he con- cludes that since "the resolution authorizes the President 'to make war,' it surely has the same legal effect as a Congressional 'dec- laration of war' in haec verba would have had." 21 52 Department of State Bulletin, 606, 838 (1965). Arthur Krock, "By Any Other Name, It's Still War", The New York Times, June 10, 1965. 20 Rogers, "World Policing and the Consti- tution," 21 (1945). 27 Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 642, 656 (1952) (Jack- son, J.). 28 The Wall Street Journal, "The United States May Become More Candid on Rising Land-War Involvement", June 17, 1965, p. I. Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17758 CONGRESSIONAL RECOR - August 8, 1966 It would seem that the action of Congress 2. That during the cease-fire period the Mader the conditions that prevailed when Soviet Union and Great Britain (the co- the Ton" resolution was submitted con- chairmen of the Geneva Conference in 1954) stitutes, at most, an ultimatum and not a be requested to reconvene the 1954 con- declaration of war. Terence and invite all the nations which Senator FULBRIGHT in a recent article participated at the "Final Declaration" of stated: the Geneva Conference on July' 21, 1954, to "The joint resolution was a blank check renegotiate the 1954 accord. signed by the Congress in an atmosphere 3. If efforts to negiotiate prove incon- of urgency that seemed at the time to pre- elusive we should resort to the candor urged elude debate. . . . by an eminent political scientist. Emmet '"I myself, as chairman of the Foreign John Hughes, after a searching recent visit Relations Committee, served as floor man- to Vietnam, details his views of the con- ager of the Southeast Asia resolution and did ditions in that country and concludes his all I could to bring about its prompt and report as follows: overwhelming adoption. I did so because I ". . And It means the wisdom to sense was confident that President Johnson would that American repute in Asia is not dignified use our endorsement with wisdom and re- but diminished by untiring war for the ten- straint. I was also influenced by partisan- attainable victory . . . and American honor ship: an election campaign was in progress is not tarnished but brightened when so and I had no wish to make any difficulties for great a power can say, with quiet assurance: the President in his race against' a Repub- we have judged poorly, fought splendidly, lican candidate whose election I thought and survive confidently. Would be a disaster for the country. My role "I can think of no other way that the In the adoption of the resolution of Aug.' 7, leaders of the United States might match the 1964 is a source of neither pleasure nor pride courage of the soldiers they have dis- to me today." 7D patched." (I1 . There have been instances when the Presi- dent has sent United States forces abroad ong. or so ep TREATIES NEED FORCE BEHIND without a declaration of war by Congress. These have ranged from minor engagements THEM What the Bucharest study most plainly between pirates and American ships on the showed, I feel, is that while negotiations are high seas to the dispatch of our Armed Mr. TALMADGE. Mr. President, as preferable to fighting, they should not be Forces to Latin American countries and our the war drags on and on in Vietnam, taken seriously as durable arrangements be- Involvement in Korea. But, except for the there is insistence from many quarters tween the combatants. Korean War, none of these' instances re- that the United States exert every effort A great emphasis has been placed on the motely Involved so massive and dangerous a need for negotiations in Viet Dram, and to achieve negotiations to end this con- President Johnson has spared no effort to And m in military the e Korean undertaking as War the the War United States fliCt. bring about negotiations. In his publicized ea fought under the aegis of the United Na- Of course, the U.S. Government has al- "peace offensive" of last December, an in- knees implored the paralleled campaign was waged to persuade n Since Mr. Deutsch assumes that the Ton- kin resolution does constitute "Congressional declaration of war in haec verbs", em- powering the President to act, it is fitting to recall that on May 6, ' 1954, at a time when the fall of Dien Bien Phu was iinnlnent, then Senator Lyndon B. Johnson criticized the President in these terms: "We will insist upon clear explanations of the policies in which we are asked to co- operate. We will insist that we and the American people be treated as adults-that we have the facts without sugar coating. "The function of Congress is not simply to appropriate money and leave the problem of national security at that." 90 Congress should, therefore, exercise its con- stitutional responsibility' as a co-equal branch of government of checks and balances to determine whether this country shall con- rilil UI}der the rule of law, compliance with the Its assurance cannot rely on man's trust- Yet, that is the objective of the war, and forms and procedures of law' are as impera- worthiness, but only on his fear and respect the Communist forces can end the war at tive as compliance with the substance of law. for power. Treaties are useful, of course, but any time by simply abandoning that objec- WHAT ACTION TO TAILS IN THIS SOLEMN If OUR few nations have ever signed a treaty with a tive and pulling back their units. This is a solemn hour in history. We have potential foe and then dismissed all of its To agree to negotiations would require a moral obligation to history to return to the soldiers and scrapped it guns, content in, North Viet Nam to admit that it is an ag- high purposes and principles of the United the knowledge that a scrap of paper was suf- gressor, and that the Viet Cong are not a Nations. We may be on the threshold of a ficient defense against aggression. group of insurrectionists. , further involvement in Asia. The United So quite possibly there will never be I ask unanimous consent that this nego t in the circumstances which exist in tiations in the Viet Nam conflict. The Nations Charter forbids our unilateral inter- editorial column be printed in its en- war may simply end slowly and without a Vietnam. tirety in the RECORD. dramatic' final confrontation. It may be that the world could be brought There being no objection, the editorial If that happens, its conclusion can none- closer to peace if we agreed to the following: was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, theless be as decisive and enduring as if 1. Declaration of a six months' (or more) as follows: a treaty was drawn up and signed. cease-fire to create conditions for negotia- TREATIES research NEED project FORCE at BEHIND THEM university in Because as the Bucharest study indicated, tions. A treaties only provide breathing spells. di d than about 7 500 -MILLARD GRIMES. vere In the 115 years since 1850, an undeter- mined number of additional treaties have been signed and similarly disposed of in due time. One of the most famous treaties was the Briand-Kellogg Pact of 1928 which pledged its signatories to renounce war as an instru- ment of foreign policy. Less than 12 years later, most of the Pact's participants were engaged in history's worst war. Sadly, one must conclude from. looking back at history that peace is kept by force rather than treaties. Its assurance cannot rely on Man's trustworthiness, but only on his fear and respect for power. Treaties are useful, of course, but few na- tions have ever signed a treaty with a potential foe and then dismissed .all of its soldiers and scrapped its guns, content in the knowledge that a scrap of paper was suf- ficient defense against aggression. Today in Korea, 13 years after the cease- fire, American and South Korean hoops stand guard against any new aggression from North Korea, and presumably, the North Koreans are convinced that their troops are assuring that their country will not be invaded from the south. But peace l k t it f nos on Hanoi regime to come to a conference the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong to agree table and discuss peace, And as we All to negotiations. know, these efforts have been scorned at The campaign failed and the war con- tinued. every turn. Ironically, the ensuing months have Many authorities contend that the way placed the United States and South Viet to achieve peace in Vietnam is to make Nam in a much stronger negotiating posi- such a show of force-in the air and on tion than they enjoyed in January. the sea-that Communist North Vietnam Not only has the military situation im- will realize the futility of aggression. I proved but the Saigon government of Premier Ky appears on firmer footing, and thoroughly concur. By the same token, would be able to go to the negotiating table peace can be maintain by a continued with added confidence. demonstration of force which will have But the North Vietnamese refused to the effect of deterring action by would- negotiate in January for the same reason be aggressors. they continue to refuse. They realize even This point of view was discussed in a if the United States hesitates to admit it, that the only acceptable negotiated peace column on August 2 in the Columbus, would. involve a withdrawal of all Com- Ga., Enquirer by editor Millard Grimes, munist forces from South Viet Nam, and an who points out with great truth: end to the Viet Cong attempt to take over Bucharest has sco W The New York Times Magazine, "The international treaties were signed between Fatal Arrogance of Power". May 15, 1966, 1500 B.C. and 1850 A.D. The average ef- p. 28. This article was based on an address fectiveness of these treaties was found to be at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced about two years, although the terms of all Studies. of them called for the treaties to remain 80 Jackson, "The Role and Problems of Con- binding for "eternity." gress with Reference to Atomic War," publi- ', cation No. L 54-136, Industrial College of the Armed Forces (1954). OFFICE OF ECONOMIC OPPORTU- NITY PROGRESS IN THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, since the establishment of the Office of Eco- nomic Opportunity in the 88th Congress, Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 177'62 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE August 8, 1966 NATO. On the other hand, many recalled PROPELLER CLUB STATES POSI- The present cost-equalization parity con- how bitterly he opposed negotiations with TION ON IMPLEMENTATION OF cept of operation subsidy as distinguished the Soviets following Khrushchev's threat to from untried and unproven theoretical con- the Berlin Corridor in late 1961. He had said NATIONAL MARITIME POLICY cepts of government support. at that time that he would refuse to enter The existing essential trade route concept Mr. BREWSTER. Mr. President, the of our national maritime policy with such to since we would were thsug- ere Propeller Club of the United States is a reasonable liberalization as is necessary for g into right any "and negotiations" negotiate u to strong, active association dedicated to greater promotion of United States foreign gest to the Soviets an intent on n our part t to give something away that was rightfully ours. promoting and supporting the American commerce. The remarkable thing about his trip, there- merchant marine. For some years now, The present basic arrangements for par- fore, was that he so skillfully avoided leav- I have derived considerable enjoyment ticipation of American flag liners in confer- in an impressions that he was negotiating ences with any necessary corrective measures g any and edification from membership in the contingent upon a study by a special govern- ther Weet Gor talk despite the desire of Propeller Club of Washington; this or- ment commission. European rite." At tt to ta same lk time about he was was able 's also also to ganization provides a valuable forum in A construction subsidy program to replace finesse Soviet suggestions of the need to dis- which the problems of our merchant ma- current tonnage and capacity of existing un- cuss recognition of East Germany. On the rine can be discussed with candor and subsidized liner fleets, coupled with operating positive side, agreements were reached on authority. subsidy arrangements contingent upon: (a) technological, cultural and scientific ex- When the Propeller Club takes a pub- compliance with existing subsidy regulations, (b) agreement on fleet replacement, and (c) changes. Since current French economic lie stand, it deserves to be heeded by divestiture of all foreign flag operations. wade with al cka et epre is sents goings everyone involved with the merchant A construction subsidy program with neces-ell, achiveve e eatment. . pac The kage ultimate esout outcome the Propeller Club achiome of his marine. Recently, rare attendant benefits including the estab- visit, therefore, could have profound military has taken a position on the implementa- lishment of a Construction Reserve Fund significance, tion of our national maritime policy and provision for accelerated depreciation, For some years the United States has ex- which :s, I think, realistic and construe- to encouge dthe building in ry bulk fleet U.S. shipyards Olin U.S.- changed visits of artists, athletes, and acad- tive. It is a position which I endorse a subatadrial portion of tpa s bulk trade. emicians as part of a program that had as its wholeheartedly; therefore, I should like g a S The continuation of cargo preference laws. goal the relaxation of tension between the to commend it to the attention of my which provide cargo for U.S.-flag flag ships and United States and the U.S.S.R. The time now has come to encourage the visits of business- colleagues in the Senate. combat traditional foreign flag routing pref- men between both countries, and to encour- Mr. President, I ask unanimous eon- erences and discriminatory practices. sup- age our trade with the U.S.S.R. and its satel- sent that the position on the implemen- A s nt ut i n make program with shipyard Marip- lites. To an increasing extent, the profit mo- tation of our national maritime policy port sufficient more seffectivo instrumour ent Merchant in our water- tive is playing a significant role in the Soviet of the Propeller Club of the United States commerce and to din in the water- economy, and the Soviets are trading exten- be printed in the RECORD. borne defense though expansion of II.S.-flea meal lively with our Allies. Our President, in his There being no objection, the State- chant fleet construction and repair in U.S. State of the Union Message this year, urged ment was ordered to be printed in the shipyards. C to o enabl to pass et necessary a legislation ncreasedd RECORD, as follows: Establishment of a joint government-in- enable to should on done an Increase dustry national research program to explore for n This trade be done without delay, THE TON CLUB THE UNITED OUR NA- STATES new technology for improving the U.S.-flag for increased tradde will not only reduce ten- POSITION ON oN IMPLEMENTATION OF OuR N merchant flee sion, but will increase the standard of living TIONAL MARITIME POLICY application of our current non- - partisan national maritime policy current and improve the social and economic pros- BACKGROUND Vigorous pects of people wherever the trading is done. At its National Convention in 1965 at pressed in the Merchant Marine Act of 1936 Conspicuous by its absence from this dis- Galveston, Texas, the Propeller Club of the in order to best serve the commerci 1 and cussion is the problem of the unification of United States adopted the following lan- defense needs of-the nation. , lh economic and political relations Between - "The Propeller Club urges the continued Western Europe and the Soviet bloc are im- development and vigorous application of a proved, there is little prospect of finding an permanent, non-partisan, high level Admin- acceptable reunification formula. istration policy which is firm in the convic- In the past two decades, the world has tion that this nation must have a strong and changed from a community of many in- active U.S.-flag Merchant Marine to serve the dependent nations, frequently remote from commerce and defense needs of the country. one another, to one small world community. The Propeller Club urges maritime agencies It will look with great apprehension on any of the government to re-double their efforts indiscriminate use of military power. In the in support of practices and procedures in meantime, from an unprecedented abund- consonance with the provisions of basic ance of scientific and technological knowl- maritime law and the expressed will of Con- edge, man has acquired the potential for gress and calls upon such agencies to join tremendous good and tremendous harm. in a forceful program to promote U.S.-flag This new knowledge must be channeled into shipping in a troubled world which vitally the areas where the greatest good for the requires it for progress and survival." most can be realized: to help our Great So- Subsequent thereto concepts have been ciety at home and to help the emerging na- advanced and policies advocated which are tions abroad. The most influential force in in direct conflict with our national maritime world affairs today is the economy of the policy, our basic maritime laws and proven United States. It should be sustained and shipping practices. enriched as a matter of sound strategic The very purposes, which the National policy. Resolution of the Propeller Club was in- Tactical engagements that do occur should tended to serve, are being hindered by varied not be permitted to grow as uncontrollably and sundry proposals that would weaken as a malignant cancer. Fighting will cer- rather than advance the cause of achieving a tainly occur, from time to time, at any point strong American Merchant Marine. along the abrasive interface between the It therefore becomes a matter of the high- Communist nations and the Free World. Our est importance that the Propeller Club of the power must be used to persuade those who United States reaffirm and implement its seek to improve their position through ag- position on "high level Administrative gressive attacks upon their neighbors that policy" as expressed in the resolution they will be deterred and cannot possibly adopted at its last National Convention. succeed. Concurrently, we should make clear POSITION FOREIGN SUPPORT OF U.S. DEFENSE OF FREEDOM IN VIETNAM Mr: THURMOND. Mr. President, we hear a great deal about the existing lack of support in foreign lands of the U.S. defense of freedom in Vietnam. What we do not hear is the fact that there are widespread areas of support and, in many instances, even more detailed and perceptive information published about the brutal Communist efforts to overrun freedom in some of the foreign press than is generally found in our own. in this regard, the July 17 issue of the Italian newspaper, Lo Specchio, has been ' brought to my attention. Lo Specchio-the Mirror-is the most pro-American weekly magazine in Italy and among the most pro-American in all Europe. Its publisher is George Nel- son Page, an American-Italian who is the nephew of Thomas Nelson Page, U.S. Ambassador to Rome in the Woodrow Wilson administration. Published in Rome and enjoying a nationwide readership, Lo Specchio has vigorously supported President Johnson and the Americans fighting in Vietnam. Especially is this true of its July 17 issue. our intention and ability to maintain a of this issue dominant position in global affairs. Our The Propeller Club of the United States containsntarepicture cofetwo American global power must be exercised with restraint vigorously reaffirms the principles of our Na- and wisdom. At a time of Great Britain's tional Maritime policy as expressed in the fliers being paraded through the streets greatness, Disraeli said, "All power is a Merchant Marine Act of 1936 and In imple- of Hanoi with the heading of "Vietnam- trust-and we are accountable for its exer- mentation thereof calls upon the Congress, Communist Torture for USA Pilots." cise." Now, we too are accountable, not only interested maritime agencies and maritime The magazine carried a two-page to the American people but to people of the labor and management to the particular spread of a story from Washington de- community of nations. and continued support Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE 11761 lished despite the fact that we have steadily Equally as important as directing the in- be the restoration of stability within the At- reduced the amount of foreign aid until to- tellectual energies of our young people into lantic Alliance. We have insisted for too day, in 1966, it is but .48 per cent of our Gross useful channels is the problem of helping long on maintaining the status quo in NATO, National Product, compared to 1.75 per cent them to develop their physical talents. Very ignoring the powerful trend toward Euro- at its inception in the late 1940's. few countries do not have national amateur peanism and the towering strength of the There is an old combat maxim that one sports programs assisted and guided by a European Common Market. Profound should reinforce success; this we are not do- national council; the United States is one of changes have taken place in Europe since ing. In speaking at the Boston University them. It was the'hope of our late President, NATO was originally established, and our Commencement exercises In June of this John F. Kennedy, that some day every boy policy does not reflect an awareness of these year, Lady Barbara Ward Jackson recom- and girl, regardless of race or economic back- changes. At times we seem more preoccupied mended that the "have" ,nations such as the ground, would be given an opportunity to with isolating de Gaulle than with making United States, contribute 1 per cent of their achieve excellence in competitive amateur positive proposals to which our European Gross National Product to help the under- sports. President. Johnson directed a study allies could adhere. privileged and underdeveloped countries. to this and some time ago, and, it is hoped, a The most significant change that has Some attribute our unwillingness to do so program will be under way this year. The taken place has been the growth of the Eu- to the cost of the Vietnam war. If so, this solution of this problem is intimately related ropean Common Market. Although con- at least raises the question of whether or not to the pooblems typified by Watts. ceived as an economic organization, it is we may now be following a course inimical Now, what does this discussion on the re- rapidly assuming all aspects of a powerful to our long-term strategic interests. lationship between military power and eco- military and political bloc. Purists will Another area in which Americans have nomic programs mean when applied to prob- argue this point, pointing out that the achieved great success has been in the ex- lems of today? What, for example, does it Fouchet Mission to Brussels of five years ago portation of products and business know- mean in terms of Vietnam? failed in its efforts to have the members of how. Our exports, which amounted to ap- I think that we would all agree that we the Common Market agree on a common- proximately $37 billion in 1950, have grown should not be in the predicament that we are ality of political, military, and cultural ob- to well in excess of $100 billion in the mid- in in Vietnam, but the fact is that we are jectives. But the fact is that the European Sixties. Our direct investment abroad has there. The problem now is to handle our Common Market represents growing poll- increased from $26 billion to $50 billion in resources--men, weapons, aircraft, etc.-in tical and military strength. The need, there- the same period of time. In addition to this such a manner as to neither impair our stra- fore, is for a recognition of this within the direct investment, we have indirectly in- tegic efforts in other areas nor our tactical structure of the Atlantic Alliance. vested $20 billion through stocks and port- prospects in future conflicts. The cost of There are those who fear such a Europe folio holdings. Our direct investment abroad the Vietnamese involvement now is on the as a third power, but now is not the time is now increasing at an average of more than order of $16 to $18 billion a year. This has for such fear; it is a time for an under- $10,000,000 a day. With this investment we already made it necessary for us to curtail standing of Europe as a strong partner. have exported entrepreneurial skills and the flow of dollars overseas. We have also Furthermore, Great Britain is part of Europe management techniques that have proven to continued to cut back on our foreign aid pro- and must play a significant role in the affairs be very attractive to the Western world. So grams. Our domestic economy is beginning of Europe. Our reaction to de Gaulle's with- successful has this been that the return on to show the impact of the Vietnam struggle. drawal of his armed forces from NATO has our investments abroad today amounts to Obviously, we have reached the point been to orient our attention more toward $4 billion annually. where further escalation could seriously lm- Germany as the leading power on the Con- This has all been possible because of a pair our strategic commitments-our expor- tinent. This policy has in it the seeds of burgeoning economy at home and the ag- tatton of capital and management skills, our disaster, for a German-dominated Europe gressive drive of our businessmen to find foreign aid programs, and our science and would never be accepted by our allies and markets and business opportunities abroad. technology programs-and our social pro- would be bitterly opposed by the U.S.S.R. and At the same time, businessmen have sought grams at home. Perhaps we have passed its satellites. A Europe without Great Brit- to raise the standards of living wherever this point. Futhermore, we should antici- afn's participation in its economic and po- they have marketed their products and serv- pate and be ready for a vary serious struggle litical affairs will be an unending source of ices. In this they have been, by and large, for Thailand and the Kra Peninsula. And if irritation and trouble for us. It is impera- very successful. There is nothing that the Our involvement plunges us deeper into war tive, therefore, that we assist in any way that Communists have done, or so far can do, that in Southeast Asia, we should be prepared we can Great Britain's entry into the Com- can compare with this. It is with great un- for a'reopening of the Korean front. It is non Market. easiness, therefore, that thoughtful bust.- important, therefore, that we accelerate the This should begin with an understanding nessmen consider restrictions on the flow of measures to bring the Vietnam situation un- on our part of the need for Great Britain dollars overseas. dollars overseas. For the export of our en- der control. Certainly, we should not will- to sever her special nuclear relationship with trepreneurial skills and products has been tngly allow it to escalate. us, and for her to enter into frank discus- one of the most successful undertakings of For example, our present position in Viet- sions on the problems of nuclear weapons foreign affairs in the history of our country, nam is based upon the need to defeat the and the Common Market area. Based upon and the most productive of good in our con- North Vietnamese aggressors who have car- numerous conversations that I have had with irontation with the Communist bloc. No ried their attack into South Vietnam. What responsible members of the de Gaulle gov- tactical conflict, whether it be undeclared is the nature of the aggressor's forces coming ernment, including the General himself, I war or not, should be allowed to expand at from North Vietnam, in weapons, size of am convinced that Great Britain would be their xnense. forces, and current rate of buildup? Are welcomed into the Common Market if she Maintenance of our position in the world they as numerous and as well equipped as we were willing to come in, bombs and all, and community e a Sc based not only on those pro- allege? It seems to me that answers to these meet all the provisions of the Rome Treaty. grams roams that is basedt abroad, but also those the questions should be obtained as a matter of Among other things, this will require a mini- a sexport have at home. also highest priority, mum period for the transition of the Corn- kin opinion will society i formed by not h m the pros One of the outcomes of the 1954 Geneva monwealth nations out of their special rela- opinion and will be r standard by of only that we Conference was the establishment of an In- tionship to the U.K. economy. can help other nations achieve, but also b ternational Control Commission. This Com- As the strength of Europe increases, the y rnissicn should be abundantly equipped with need for U.S. military forces on the Con- what the world knows that we are able to do helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft, and up-to- tinent will diminish. Our present commit- in our own society. Through our ability to date communictaions equipment if it is to ment is based more on diplomatic than mili- manage our own internal affairs, we export do its job. The staff supporting it should tary need. A significant reduction of our an image of America and of our way of life. also be increased until it is capable of carry- troop strength, in my opinion, would im- And in this area there is much to be done. tog out its intended task. It is not capable prove our economic situation worldwide and We have made progress in dealing with of doing this today. If we were to spend but thus add to our global strategic strength some of the problems of the aged and of a small part of what we are expending in without increasing the military risk in the very young, but, In my opinion, we have combatting the North. Vietnamese to deter- Europe. not yet begun to deal adequately with the mine with accuracy the nature and c:ompo- General de Gaulle's recent visit to the problems of the teen-agers and the near teen- sition of their forces, we could probably make U.S.S.R. was a remarkable tour de force. agers. We must completely revitalize our a significant contribution to the ultimate Although generally denigrated in the Ameri- educational system by bringing together the resolution of the problem. Concurrently can press, the General's achievements were vast industrial, scientific, and technological 'with this improvement in the capability of noteworthy. There were many who remem- resources of this country with our educators, the International Control Commission, we bered that the General had written in his to the end that we can significantly improve should. ask for a reopening of the 1954 Gen- memoirs, published In 1959, that it was his the education and technical training of our eva meeting to determine if other measures intent to insure the security of France by young. In adddition, we must provide op- can be taken to bring the situation under making arrangements with either the East portunities for those out of school for some control, and hopefully find a formula for or the West; hence, there was concern lest he time to return to educational centers to up- resolving the conflict. enter into a conventional military pact fol- date their knowledge and to learn new skills.- High on the list of national priorities must lowing the withdrawal of French forces from No. 129-15 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL scribing the great support from the American public which President John- son received after the bombing of the oil depots on the perimeters of Hanoi and Haiphong on June 29; it devoted four pages of a story and pictures of Com- munist atrocities from its correspondent In Saigon; a page containing the pic- ture of Communist-led demonstrators in St. Peter's Square demanding "peace" in Vietnam; it devoted one page to the pacification program the United States is waging in South Vietnam villages, and carried an editorial by the publisher com- menting on the'plight of the American fliers held prisoners by Hanoi and threatened with trials as war criminals. Certainly we Americans should be thankful for Lo Specchio's bringing the truth of the war In Vietnam so forcefully to its Italian readers. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that a translation of Mr. Page's editorial be printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks. There being no objection, the transla- tion of the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: (Translation of editorial by George Nelson Page, publisher of Lo Specchio-the Mir- ror-magazine, Rome, Italy, July 17, 19661 THE HANOI SAVAGES No one knows what cruelties have been committed against the American flyers who fell into the hands of the Communist North Vietnamese, but pictures we have seen seem to justify the deepest pessimism. Moreover, the statements attributed by Hanoi to Cap- tain David Hatcher and Commander Muligan show the moral standard-certainly below that of savages-of the North Vietnamese rulers who are no more than loyal followers of the Communist tyrants specialized in brainwashing and psychological murder which so often precedes the physical murder of their victims. The shameful farce has already begun. According to the tradition of the totalitarian regimes, the mobs have been mobilized and ordered to claim death sentence. The Italian "vestals" of our time, usually ready to rush to Piazza San Giovanni in Rome to cheer the speakers of the Commu- nist Party who harangue in "defense of civ)1- ization" being threatend by American ag- gressors, keep silent. When Daniel and Sinyavski were found guilty of writing without authorization by the Soviet Inquisition and convicted to penal servitude, those 'same "vestal virgins" were compelled-against their will-to say some- thing in favor of the two Russian writers. On the other hand, our progressive "vestals" .have not gathered their energies to protest the plight of the American pilots whose treatment is against any humanitarian prin- ciple and represents a violation of all rules on the status of war prisoners. The impartial behavior of the Communists and their fellow travelers is really admirable; the gravity of a crime is judged according to who commits the crime! Stalin's murders, justified as a necessary purge when he was the leader of the Communist world, became crimes only after his post-mortem degrada- tion by the bosses of the new regime. The same is now happening in Vietnam; American war operations, even if carried out in full respect of international rules accepted by all civilized nations, are "criminal ac- tions" while there is nothing wrong or, at least, deserving too much consideration, with torturing and'killing soldiers taken prisoner in the accomplishment of war missions. Luigi Longo (Italian Communist leader) will tell us whether and when tortures and RECORD- SENATE 17763 murder deserve a written and verbal disap- proval. Until that day we will not know. Up to now the American authorities have been cautious in commenting on the bar- baric behavior of the Asian Communists, probably because of the necessary delicate handling of wild beasts capable of the worst crimes. But the reaction of the American people is such that they cannot ignore it, just as they could not, in World War 1, ignore the sinking of the Lusitania by German sub- marines, causing the United States to enter the war against Germany. Likewise, it was an aroused American public which caused the declaration of war 24 hours after the attack on Pearl Harbor. History has much to teach, even to the most inattentive ob- servers. The ultimate fate of the American flyers, for whom the "voice" of Hanoi claims a death sentence, cannot be foreseen, but the deepest concern is legitimate. What is beyond doubt is that if the Peking rulers are determined to provoke a reprisal from the greatest indus- trial power In the world with enormous means at its disposal, all they have to do is to ask Hanoi to administer the "justice" an- nounced by the savages disguised as Asian "progressives." TIMPANOGOS CAVE REGISTERS ONE MILLIONTH VISITOR Mr. MOSS. Mr, President, one of the Nation's oldest national monuments under the direction of the National Park .Service has just recorded its one mil- lionth visitor, I speak of Timpanogos Cave National Monument, near Provo, Utah. The Park Service opened Timp Cave, as we refer to it in Utah, in 1922. Since that time, this wonder of nature has been made more accessible, but it is still a short hike up a mountain trail from the new visitor center. Timp Cave Is not on a major highway, but it is only a few minutes drive from either Provo or Salt Lake City. The delicate crystal formations and the in- teresting Park Service tour are memo- rable for the many tourists who visit the monument each year. Mr. President, the Daily Herald news- paper in Provo recently published a fine editorial on the millionth visitor. I ask unanimous consent that the editorial be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Provo (Utah) Daily Herald, Aug. 5, 1966] TIMP CAVE'S MILLIONTH VISITOR Within a week Timpanogos Cave National Monument is due to have its one-millionth visitor since it was opened to the public in 1922. The occasion is a good time to reflect on our good fortune to have a valuable asset like Timpanogos Cave here. Although not as big as a number of other caves in the West and Midwest, Timpanogos Cave is certainly one of the most beautiful, with delicate crystal formations and it "great heart of Timpanogos." The fact that our cave isn't on the main highway and that you have to hike some distance uphill to reach the entrance tend to slow the tempo of tourist visits in com- parison with some other caves more readily accessible. Nevertheless, Timp Cave is seen annually by persons from throughout the country and the tempo of visits seems to be picking up from year to year. Travel to the national monument cur- rently is 23 per cent ahead of that of last year. For the first five days of July over 5000 people visited the cave. This is a far cry from 1934, the first year the cave was managed by the park service, when only 1000 people visited the cave in the entire season. If trends continue as anticipated, another million will likely see it within the next 10- year period. This wonder of nature right In our own county is a fine an attraction as you will see anywhere. Without doubt it is one of our best tourist attractions and could be made even more of a drawing card with wider publicity. Undoubtedly there are people right here in Utah Valley who have not visited the cave. For their benefit, we suggest an outing at an early date. Those who have not had the ex- perience have missed a real treat. RESIGNATION FROM BELGIAN PAR- LIAMENT OF PAUL-HENRI SPAAK Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I wish to call the attention of my col- leagues in the Senate to the recent resig- nation from the Belgian Parliament of a most distinguished politician and diplo- mat, Mr. Paul-Henri Spaak. His was a long and successful career. He served the cause of postwar Western democracy with the dedication equaled by few other men. We in the United States have some- times been critical, and rightly so, of the tendency on the part of some leaders in smaller nations to be irresponsible in the conduct of their official duties, especially with regard to their reluctance to carry a fair share of the burdens of common de- fense and regional economic develop- ment. No such thing can be said about Mr. Spaak. His foresight and per- sausiveness helped to. create an atmos- phere which permitted Europe to recover from the ravages of World War II. Pointing to the past as a lesson not to be repeated, he helped temper those who understandably were hesitant to include Germany in any European partnership, realizing that a prosperous Europe could not exist without a healthy Germany. He was one of the earliest statesmen to recognize the merits of interdependence. As the first President of the. United Nations General Assembly, he warned of the perils of power politics in the atomic age. As Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Belgium, he guided that country into collective economic and military agreements which have per- mitted his people to enjoy prosperity. Mr. Spaak is living testimony to the fact that international affairs are not conducted solely by men who are irre- sponsive to genuine partnership. He has contributed greatly to the mu- tual trust which exists between the United States and our European allies. American diplomats will be among those who will sorely miss his wise counsel when dealing with international prob- lems. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that articles appearing in the New York Times on this European patriot be sub- mitted in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Approved For Release 20,05/06/29,: CIA-RDP67B00446R0004001100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 11764 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE [.From the New York Times, July 28, 19661 BELGIAN STATESMAN--PAUL-HENRI SPARK During the third General Assembly of the United Nations in Paris, Paul-Henri Spaak turned to Andrei Y. Vishinsky, the Soviet delegate, and said : "The Soviet delegate need not look for complicated explanations of our policy. I will tell him the basis for our policy in terms which only the representative of a small na- tion may use. It is fear of you, fear of your Government, fear of your policy." This uncompromising comment character- ized the Belgian statesman who was to be.- Come one of the principal architects of Eu- ropean unity and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The militant Socialist, who had led street deglonstrations in Brussels in his early ca- reer, had been through the fire of World War II. He had seen his country's neutrality vio- lated by the Nazi armies. He saw a prostrate, chaotic Europe as a helpless prey to the ad- vancing tide of Soviet power. Mr. Spaak was one of the Western Euro- pean statesmen to understand what had happened to the established order In Eu- rope as old empires and predatory states col- lapsed, to be replaced by a new and more powerful imperialist state. The starting point for Mr. Speak's philosophy of European unity and of alliance with American power was his recognition that a fragmented, im- poverished, wrecked Western Europe could never hope to build a counterweight to So- viet power. MORE THAN A BELGIAN In this context Mr. Speak was more than a Belgian-he was a European who, in face of the new peril, had no difficulty in finding a common language with Dr. Konrad Ade- nauer, the creator of the West German Fed- eral Republic, and with Jean Monnet and Robert Schuman, the French architects of European unity. As a Belgian, Mr. Spaak, who is 67 years old, combines the qualities of his Flemish and Walloon forebears-an enormous capaci- ty for work, tough-mindedness, a somewhat authoritarian attitude and a great flair for language. He is rated a powerful orator in French. His turbulent 41-year career, the ending of which was announced yesterday, exemplifies the belief that it frequently requires more talent, political creativity, foresight and courage to govern a small country in a world of big, powers than to manage a big power. Great powers can afford risks and mistakes, small ones cannot. ,Mr. Speak was trained for power and lead- ership, His mother was Belgium's first wom- an Senator. His maternal grandfather was Paul Janson, a 19th-century liberal leader. An uncle, Paul-Emile Janson, was a Premier and was known as the Cato of Belgian poli- tics. Mr. Speak's father was a successful author and director of the Brussels Opera. A RANGE OF TALENTS Young Spaak displayed a talent for bridge, versifying, jurisprudence, journalism, repar- tee and statecraft, and in his spectacular career, brought to fruition the diverse quail- ties of his family heritage. Amiable and courtly though he is, Mr. Spaak is also capable of deep-seated political animosities. and enmities, When the Nazi armies overran Belgium, he urged King Leo- pold III to flee to Britain, but the King re- fused, remaining during the Nazi occupation. After the liberation It was Mr. Spaak who led the movement to bar Leopold from the throne. Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, who took the bitter road of exile, returned in tri- umph to her country, but King Leopold's postwar insistence on retaining his throne was greeted with antiroyalist riots and dem- onstrations. He was compelled to abdicate in favor of his son, Baudouin. Interrupting an active career in successive postwar Governments, which he served as Foreign Minister and Premier, Mr. Speak be- came Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in 1957. In his five years in Paris he sought to establish politi- cal consultation among the members and to head off conflict. However, he has been highly critical of President de Gazelle's oppo- sition to the unified NATO command and to British membership in the European Eco- nomic Community. Showing the flexibility of the great states- man, Mr. Spaak, despite his fear of the Rus- sians, believed that efforts should be made to build bridges between East and West al- though he was convinced that little rapport existed between them. EDUCATED FOR THE LAW Born in 1899, Mr. Spaak was educated for the law, a profession he practiced for a rela- tively short time. lie was elected as a So- cialist member of Parliament in 1932 and received his first Cabinet post in 1935 as Minister of Transport and Posts.. He was named Foreign Minister for the first time in 1936 and became Premier two years later. In all he held the Premiership twice and was Foreign Minister six times. Mr. Speak was elected president of the first General Assembly of the United Nations after having played a pre-eminent role at the founding meetings of the world organi- zation in San Francisco in 1945. In 1957, he helped draft the Treaty of Rorne, which established the Common Market. Mr. Speak's first wife, the daughter of a wealthy industrialist, died in 1964. They had three children. He remarried last year. SPA.AIc IS ENDING POLITICAL CAREER:-LEADER OF UNITY MOVEMENT IN EUROPE QUITS PARLIAMENT BRUSSEr,s, July 27.-Paul-Henri Spaak, Bel- gian statesman and one of the founders of the European Common Market, has decided to retire from political life, it was announced today. Mr. Spaak, 67 years old, has sent a letter resigning his parliamentary seat to the presi- dent of the Chamber of Representatives (lower house), Achille van Acker. After having served his country six times as Foreign Minister and twice as Premier, Mr. Spaak left the Government last year. He began public life in 1925 as political secretary to the then Minister of Labor, M. J. Wauters, a Socialist. He became known as an international fig- ure as a result of his eloquent speeches at the founding meeting of the United Na- tions in San Francisco in 1945. He was the first president of the United Nations General Assembly. Mr. Speak's outstanding achievement was in his postwar contributions to European unity. He played a leading role in the nego- tiations on the treaties creating the Euro- pean Common Market and Atomic Energy Agency in 1957. He was said to be planning to resume a law career as defense counsel in a murder case In the fall. He is also writing his memoirs. PROCEDURAL ASPECTS OF CONSTI- TUTIONAL BAN ON UNREASON- ABLE SEARCH AND SEIZURE Mr. BREWSTER. Mr. President, one of the leading attorneys in the State of Maryland, and one of the outstanding authorities on criminal procedure, is William W. Greenhalgh. Bill Greenhalgh is currently professor of law at the Georgetown Law Center. He directs the legal internship program there, providing counsel, for indigent August 8,, 1966 criminal defendants in the District of Columbia-a pioneer program which has won praise across the country. Professor Greenhalgh was recently in- vited to address the National Bar Asso- ciation Convention on the procedural as- pects of the fourth amendment ban on unreasonable search and seizure. Since this is a matter of some importance to everyone concerned with problems of law enforcement, I ask unanimous consent that Professor Greenhalgh's lecture be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the lecture was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: PROF. WILLIAM W. GREENIIALGH, GEORGE- TOWN UNIVERSITY LAW CENTER, LECTURE TO NATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION, AUGUST 4, 1966, DETROIT, MICH. 1. PROBABLE CAUSE FOR ARREST WITHOUT A WARRANT IVth Amendment provides: "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized." An arrest may occur where either: A. Circumstances known to a reasonably prudent police officer by personal observation amount to a felony or misdemeanor com- mitted, or attempted, in his presence or view (McDonald v. United States, 335 U.S. 451 (1948)), or B. Information received is such as would justify a reasonably prudent police officer that a felony or excepted misdemeanor has been committed or is being committed (John- son v. United States, 333 U.S. 10 (1948) ). 1. Although probable cause may be based on hearsay information and need not reflect the direct personal observations of the police officer, he must possess some of the underly- ing circumstances from which the source of the information concluded that a crime had been or was being committed as well as some of the underlying circumstances from which the officer concluded that the source of in- formation (whose identity need not be dis- closed) was credible, or his information re- liable (Aguilar v. Texas 378 U.S. 108, 84 S.Ct. 1509 (1964) ). a. Informant of known reliability. (Draper v. United States, 358 U.S. 307 (1959)). b. Anonymous source of information. (Mills v. United States, 90 U.S. App. D.C. 365, 196 F. 2d 600 (1953)) . Thus, a police officer may not arrest upon mere suspicion (Henry v. United States, 361 U.S. 98 (1959), Beck v. Ohio, 379 U.S. 89 (1964), One 1958 Plymouth v. Pennsylvania, 380 U.S. 693, 14 L. Ed. 2d 170, 85 S. Ct. 1246 (1985)) but only upon probable cause (Ker v. California, 374 U.S. 23 (1963) ). Nor may he arrest for "investigation"; yet he has a duty to approach (Lee v. United States, 221 F. 2d 29, D.C. Cir. 1954), confront and in- terrogate. It is the most useful, most effi- cient, and most effective method of investi- gation. Often it develops probable cause. Remember the validity of the subsequent search and seizure thus turns upon the question when the arrest occurred (Rios v. United States, 364 U.S. 253 (1960) ). in order for there to be an arrest it is not necessary that there be an application of actual force, or manual touching of the body, or physical restraint which may be visible to the eye, or a formal declaration of arrest. It is sufficient if the person arrested under- tands that he is in the power of the One arresting, and submits In consequence. (Kelley v. United States, 298 F. 2d 310 (D.C. Cir. 1961)). In other words, there must be some,detention of the person to consititue Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE point, while we were putting $175 million worth of food through Egypt's front door, Nasser was sending $41 million worth of rice to Russia, Cuba, Red China and other com- munist countries. Another time we delivered $23,700,000 worth of corn for free distribution to Egyptians supposedly suffering a famine due to failure of the local crop. Our General Accounting Office later discovered that there was no evidence of crop failure and that nearly half the corn was not distributed free, but sold for the account of the Egyptian gov- ernment. Congress time and again has adopted legis- lation designed to cut off aid to Nasser. Time and again the executive branch has indi- cated that it would be cut off. Yet in spite of Nasser's deals with the communists, in spite of his telling us to take.our aid and go jump in the sea, our food subsidy still goes to him year in and year out. Blundering administration of our food program has led to waste and worse. The Greek government publicly advised its farm- ers to replace wheat with other cash crops, since Uncle Sam would take care of Greece's wheat needs. One South American country appealed for "temporary" Food for Peace dis- aster relief because of a flood; Instead, It got a massive fivefold increase of food which con- tinues unabated years later. While we fed Italians through Food for Peace charity grants, Italy exported so much macaroni to Britain that London newspapers complained of dumping. Indonesia's Sukarno was able to mortgage his nation's economy to pay for $1.1 billion worth of Soviet arms for military forays, because we were helping to feed his people. COOLEY LOANS Thus many countries neglect their agricul- ture and shift their food needs to Uncle Sam while they divert their own resources to vari- ous economic and military adventures. This results in large part from the mechanism we have used to pass along most of our Food for Peace. We "sell" it for the recipient coun- try's own currency. Then we turn most of this paper back to the same government for Its own use. The futility of this approach led Congress in 1957 to insist that part of this foreign currency be put to work in loans to business- men, both American and native, for agricul- tural and Industrial development. Named after Chairman Harold Cooley of the House Agriculture Committee, these "Cooley loans" have enabled Purina to build an animal-feed plant in Colombia, John Deere to manufac- ture tractors and farm implements in Mex- ico, Pfizer to produce pharmaceuticals in Tai- wan. They have financed manufacture of silos, corrugated board and petroleum bp- products in Israel; fertilizer, steel and tires in Turkey; poultry farming and hotels in Pakistan; cattle ranches in Paraguay. Such loan constitute foreign aid that suc- ceeds where giveaways have failed. But jealous administrators, both American and foreign, eye the Cooley program as competi- tion for their own government-run projects and so fail to enforce it. As of June 30, 1964, only a paltry three percent of the foreign currencies derived from Food for Peace trans- actions had been loaned to businessmen; 65 percent was handed back as gifts or soft loans for pet government spending schemes. Two, years ago the Senate Agriculture Committee angrily noted that "this record is not responsive to expectations." So Con- gress amended the law to require that our food currency be employed "to the maximum usable extent" for Cooley loans. Yet last spring the House Agriculture Committee pro- tested that the intent of Congress had been ignored in case after case. The United States "sold" the Philippine government $12 million worth of food, but offered. only a meager ten percent to busi- nessmen, Nasser has been allowed to get by with just a single free-enterprise loan. A sampling of 19 Food for Peace sales agree- ments showed that none provided more than 15 percent of our foreign currency for private enterprise. IT CAN WORK Clearly, it is time for Congress and the American people to compel realism on the part of our food-aid administrators. Our generosity will prove but a prelude to dis- aster unless we face-and force our food-aid recipients to face-these facts: We are already on the brink of global famine. Thousands of people die of starva- tion and malnutrition every day, and more than half the world goes to bed hungry every night. Yet in five years the world's popula- tion will have increased by another 285 mil- lion, and within 35 years it will have more than doubled, from 3.3 to 7.4 billion, Of these people, six billion will live in countries where already four out of every five subsist on deficient diets. Even the bounty of American agriculture cannot continue to stave off mass starvation. Last March, Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman told a Senate committee that by 1985 the food needs of 68 developing coun- tries will be so great that the United States cannot possibly fill the gap, even if we farm every arable acre at full capacity. Those countries depending on us to make up their food needs must be compelled to devote their principal efforts to development of their own agricultural resources. The United States should not be burdened with the responsibility of determining who starves and who survives. For the good of all, we must insist that in the emerging countries a greater share of our Food for Freedom and foreign aid go for agriculture. They must devote more of their own budgets to food production and agricultural research. We must encourage vocational education to train farmers and agricultural technicians. We must insist that private incentive replace repressive taxation and regulation. We must further urge freedom for private industry so that agriculture will be a part of a balanced, growing economy. To this end, we should require all aid legis- islation and executive action to fulfill the following conditions already defined by the House Agriculture Committee: "A proper climate for private initiative and investment should include, among other things, provi- sion for maximum private ownership and initiative in new and existing industry, non- discriminatory treatment between the public and private sectors, rates of taxation de- signed to promote maximum utilization of private investment capital, and adequate protection of Industrial property rights." Food for Freedom can be made to work, and untold millions of people can be saved. But this is possible only if we keep the executive branch under constant pressure to recommend such economic reforms forcefully and to stand ready to cut off food aid to those countries that ignore them. TRAFFIC CONGESTION IN THE WASHINGTON, D.C., METROPOLI- TAN AREA Mr. BREWSTER. Mr. President, the Washington metropolitan area is en- countering a growing problem of traffic congestion. Anyone who drives to work each morning and struggles to return home every evening can appreciate the difficulties of which I speak. I was a cosponsor of the legislation which authorized a basic rapid rail transit system in the District of Colum- bia. Final planning for this system is now going forward on schedule. Now as the Montgomery County Senti- nel points out, the House and Senate 17767 must act to assure the orderly continu- ation of this system. As a cosponsor, together with my dis- tinguished colleagues from Maryland and Virginia, of legislation which would create the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority I urge the Sen- ate to act favorably on this measure dur- ing this session of Congress. I ask unanimous consent to place this timely editorial in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Montgomery County Sentinel, Aug. 4, 19661 TRAFFIC CHAOS President Johnson on June 9 made the following statement: "In 1950, nearly three quarters of the (Washington Metropolitan) area lived within the boundaries of the District of Columbia. By 1970, however, that situation will be al- most totally reversed. At that time, there will be an estimated 1,688,000 citizens living in our Maryland and Virginia suburbs-67 percent of the area's swelling population. Even today, this shifting population is cre- ating massive traffic problems, with more than L. million automobiles entering and leaving our city every 24 hours. Even with a full mass transit system-on a regional basis-that figure is expected to double by 1985. Without such a system, a complete breakdown in area transportation would be only a matter of time. We simply cannot allow that to happen. Our goal-the goal of both the Congress and the Administra- tion-must continue to be a regional sys- tem of rapid rail transit." The President made the statement in his message to Congress asking approva' of the Interstate Transit Compact which would permit Maryland, Virginia and the District to plan a regional rapid transit system through the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA). Full compliance with the President's re- quest is imperative on the part of Congress if a nightmarish situation is to be avoided here. Any delay on the part of Congress will delay that much longer this critically needed program. If suburbanites ever wrote their Congressmen, now is the time to do it. Traffic strangulation and chaos are ap- proaching unless it is headed off-now. Vi VIETNAM Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, the July 22, 1966, issue of the London Daily Telegraph carries a thoughtful article by Mr. Frank Robertson entitled "Vietnam: Optimism and Reality." Mr. Robertson underscores a number of significant de- velopments in the Vietnamese war in- cluding the following observation: There are now strong indications that the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese are revert- ing to phase one of their three-phase scheme of operations, breaking up into small units most of the time to wage guer- rilla warfare. Mr. Robertson points up the difficulty of waging a successful military effort against the Vietcong guerrillas at a time when economic, political, and social fac- tors in the struggle are so unstable and uncertain. I ask unanimous consent that this article be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Approved For Release 2005/06/29 CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 17768 . CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -.SENATE VIETNAM: OPTIMISM AND REALITY (By Frank Robertson) SAIGON.-America's mid-term elections in November cast a curious shadow over the war in Vietnam. For political purposes President Johnson has generated a degree of optimism over the war's progress that is far from justified. There are now strong indications that the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese are revert- ing to phase one of their three-phase scheme of operations, breaking up into small units most of the time to wage guerrilla warfare. This applies particularly to the Viet Cong, who know the country and its people so much better than the Northern invaders. It Is a pattern that must be particularly disturbing to Gen. Westmoreland, the American commander, massively equipped to fight a more conventional war. Devastating air power and the ability to air-lift three or more battalions count for little unless large bodies of the enemy can be found. American air cavalrymen operating in the central province of Phu Yen found very few Viet Cong or Northerners after punishing weeks combing twisting valleys and steep hills. Yet it is believed that the enemy was assembling a division in this region. QUICK RESULTS The same is true of another long-estab- lished Viet Cong province, Phuoc Tay, north- east of Saigon. Here the Australian task force has turned up only a few score Viet Cong after two months of rigorous effort in swamplands and overgrown rubber planta- tions drenched by heavy rain. In recent weeks Washington has tempered its public optimism. But American military and civilian officials here remain under the heaviest pressure to produce bright results "immediately if not sooner," and inevit- ably this has led to some misrepresentation of the course of events, even to correspond- ents on the scene. It Is a blurred picture at best. The mili- tary segment Is brightest, but this is a purely relative assessment considering the apparent change in Communist tactics. The economy Is in a most precarious state. Public dissatisfaction with the heavy increase in the price of food In recent weeks is wide- spread, and probably felt more keenly than the need to struggle against fellow Viet- namese said to be Communists. This has a direct and disruptive bearing on political stability, the necessary requisite for success. Marshal Sy, the young Prime Minister, has confounded doubters and critics by remaining in power for over a year, but Inflation can only strengthen the posi- tion of the lay and religious politicians working against him, and what is more dan- gerous, increased public apathy. There is no doubt that the American troops, in particular, are doing well, but driv- ing the enemy underground cannot produce victory. The Communists have time on their aide, a fact driven home by the statement of President Ho Chi Minh that the Communists will fight for 20 years if necessary. Allied intelligence puts enemy strength at 157 battalions, each of from 300 to 500 men. Of this number more than 60 battalions are from the North. Last October the North Vietnamese sent thousands of engineers into Laos to improve the road network leading to South Vietnam, and for three or four months before the south-west monsoon began in May 1,500 lorries were In use transporting troops and supplies. It is believed that the infiltration rate then reached a peak of 10,000 men a month. Now it is back around the 4,000 mark. No doubt American raids on lines of communi- cations in the North, and greatly increased attacks on the road in Laos, have had some effect, but bad weather is the principal factor. In the northern provinces of South Viet- nam 60 percent, of the enemy troops are North Vietnamese. In the centre including the highlands, they account for 65 percent, of the so-called main force-that is,. excluding militia. There are no Northerners in the southern delta, and they make up on only 10 percent, of the forces in the provinces around Saigon. By no means all of these are regulars of the calibre of the men who stormed Dien Bien Phu. Many are conscripts, and a lot are homesick lads of 15 or 16. For this rea- son at least one American divisional com- mander believes that seasoned 'Viet Cong units are tougher opponents than the mixed battalions from the North. Morale certainly is lower among the North- ern conscripts, as the rising number of pris- oners testifies. There is a great deal of sick- ness, wounded are not repatriated and there is no system of rotation, which has led to the bitter statement found in not a few diaries: "born in the North to die in the South." It is estimated that supplies, including food, fall 50 per cent short of requirements. This situation can only become worse as the southwest rains increase. TACTICAL SLOGAN Obviously the enemy badly needs a vic- tory to boost morale, preferably against the Americans. Where he will try for this is a matter of conjecture. The main areas of Communist concentra- tion are north of Hub, the central highlands, the two central coastal provinces of Quang Nga:i and Binh Dinh, and the province of Phu Yen, which long has been dominated by the Viet Cong, and is a principal source of rice. It is estimated that the enemy con- trol at least 70 per cent of the nation's rice production. The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese have a tactical slogan known as "four quick and one slow." The slow step involves careful intelligence work and sophisticated plan- ning, stockpiling of ammunition, food and medicine, and meticulous rehearsal. This is followed by a rapid advance and assault, fast clearing of the battlefield and, if necessary, quick withdrawal. Gen. West- moreland's strategy is to search out and strike the enemy during the slow period of preparation, thus keeping him off balance, and this appears to be working. But It is a long slow process, at which the allies work continuously. The American 101st Brigade, for example, has spent only four weeks in base camp since it arrived one year ago. Optimists who predict an end to the war in six months overlook the fact that only 2.4 per cent of the territory that the Communists held a year ago has been re- gained and secured. Nor do the optimists consider the .awfully high civilian casualty rate, possibly because it is not discussed either in Washington or Saigon. In the Da Nang area, for example, the American Marines have killed 2,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese since they ar- rived more than a year ago. During that time the provincial hospital in Da Nang has treated almost 10,000 civilian battle casualties (many of them wounded by Viet Cong mines). The Vietnamese are an astonishingly stoic people, but this casualty rate, coupled with war weariness, certainly does not stiffen the will to fight. At a time when the allies are said to be winning the war, depressed morale has caused increased desertion from South Vietnam's Regular Army. More Government troops are slipping away from their units now than ever before, despite recent pay increases. VARYING QUALITY But here again the picture is not sharply defined. During the first six months of 1966 9,500 Viet Cong soldiers came aver to the Government, against 4,000 for the same pe- riod of 1965. The performance of Government forces is August 8, 1966 uneven. Some battalions are very good in- deed, while others are at the other end of the scale. They have Increased their strength by 30 battalions in the past year, and for what it's worth they have carried out 3,300 operations involving at least one battalion so far this year. But again, the fact that large numbers of the officers and men of the First Division sided with the Buddhists in Hud during the anti-Government demonstrations cannot be overlooked. The Australians are breaking in two new battalions, which include a fairly high per- centage of National Servicemen, and al- though they have been on several operations, they have not really begun to function ef- fectively. Obviously they will be pressed to live up to the reputation established by the professional battalion they replaced. The South Koreans, after a painful first few months adjusting to guerrilla tactics (their war had been fought largely from trenches), have become an efficient fighting force, soon to be augmented by a Second Division. Their civic action programme is one of the best in the country. In purely military terms it Is fair to say that the allies are winning whenever and wherever they find the enemy. Gen. West- moreland accurately assessed the present position when he said: "If the military aspects of the war could be separated from the political, social and economic-and they can't-we've come a long way in a year." On present evidence final victory, if it is possible at all, will take many more years. DOVES VERSUS HAWKS CLARIFIED Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, with all the controversy among doves and hawks these days, I am confident that Members of the Senate will enjoy a pass- ing note by a distinguished ornithologist about the subject. I ask unanimous consent that an ex- cerpt from the Washington Post of Au- gust 8, 1966, be printed at this point in my remarks. There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: DOVES VERSUS HAWKS CLARIFIED Dr. S. Dillon Ripley, secretary of the Smith- sonian Institution and a man who knows his birds, says doves are more bloodthristy than hawks. True hawks, the noted ornithologist said recently, are sensible, full of wisdom and not ferocious. He added that studies of animal behavior show doves to be cruel and in- sensate and far more bloodthirsty. But it is not expected that this latest au- thoritative contribution to the hawk-dove debate on Vietnam will change any congres- sional opinions-or labels. TRIBUTE TO CLAUDE L. CALLE- GARY, COMMANDER OF THE DIS- ABLED AMERICAN VETERANS Mr. BREWSTER. Mr. President of all the groups in this country who deserve our thanks and our attention, perhaps the Disabled American Veterans rank at the top of the list. These men have made a sacrifice for their country-each of them has suffered an injury for his country. Many have lost arms or legs. The retiring commander of the Dis- abled American Veterans is a Balti- morean, an outstanding attorney and citizen, and a good friend of mine. He is Claude L. Callegary, and he has done Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 August 8, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -HOUSE lion; physically and mentally unfit-2 mil- lion.) a Total men and women available for a com- pulsory service corps: 14 million. If each individual in this eight-year (18-26) age span serves for two years, then one- fourth of the 14-million group--4.e., 3.5- million-would be in service at any one time. What would a 3.5-million-strong national service corps cost? Adopting arbitrarily a modest figure of $3,500 per capita to cover training, equipment, maintenance and a token salary, the annual bill would be around $12-billion--exclusive of the undoubtedly heavy cost of tooling up. This is hardly a sum the Congress or the taxpayers are likely to approve at the present time-after all, only $1.5-billion annually has been allocated to the entire Poverty Program. Apart from Its cost, a compulsory program of the size we have projeced is up against the fact that we do not have an adequate plan as yet for using the 3.5-million workers it would provide. And I can think of no surer way to foredoom a potentially admir- able effort than to launch it without careful advance planning. Furthermore, after dis- cussions with young people, educators and thoughtful public officials, I have concluded that- there is an essential conflict between the concepts of conscription and humani- tarian service. I therefore believe that the answer, at least for the present, is a small voluntary national service corps, including both men and women. The response of Americans to well-planned voluntary programs has always been impres- sive. The men's and women's Job Corps, for example, have had to turn down, for budget reasons, nine out of every ten applicants. (There are fewer than 30,000 in the Job Corps today. Well over 500,000 persons-most from deprived backgrounds-have applied to date.) The dedicated service given by vol- unteers in Operation Headstart and other Poverty Program projects is a measure of a huge untapped reservoir of idealism among Americans. Judging by the figures on the 18-26 age group already given, I believe that it would be possible to mobilize at least two million young people in a service corps on a purely voluntary basis. But a corps of two million is still too large for the moment. We are not yet tooled for it. I propose, instead, that Congress create a National Service Agency authorized to mo- bilize 500,000 civilian volunteers, selected initially on the basis of their dedication to and aptitude for the corps' varied missions. The cost would be in the neighborhood of $1.7-billion annually. This, theoretically, is how the corps would be set up: Upon signing in, all volunteers would go to basic-training centers operated by the Army, which would perform the function it did for the C.C.C. The Army also would be requested to operate a classification sys- tem designed to match interests, skills and national needs. Thereafter, volunteers vZould be dispersed to newly established service centers around the country for training and duty. Some would work In conservation camps admin- istered jointly by the Army and by the De- partments of Interior and Agriculture, in the C.C.C. pattern. Many would be assigned to public and private institutions to work as nurse-teacher-librarian aides; mental-health assistants; or in recreation and urban-im- prOvement programs. The National Service Agency would be responsible for setting "~rhese" figures presuppose an eventual re- duction in military forces from the present 3 million; deferments but not exemptions for students; and fewer exemptions for unfit- ness, since national-service qualification re- quirements would be lower than those of the armed forces. No. 129-6 ' standards and maintaining a continuous check on the performance of volunteers and the agencies authorized to supervise them. (Experimentally, I think it would be use- ful to make such voluntary service an alter- nate to military duty for the men. It seems to me unlikely that the armed forces would be shortchanged if this choice were offered. For only a minute proportion of the civilian corps could be accommodated in such "glam- our" agencies as the Peace Corps. The vast majority would face assignment to rugged labor on conservation projects or to the rela- tively drab tasks cited above.) Even before establishing a National Service Agency and embarking on this modest pilot program, however, we should take these steps: (1) Enlarge the Peace Corps and VISTA and the Teachers' Corps to at least double their present size. This is an effort in which the colleges will have to help, as several are already doing. (2) Increase the Job Corps tenfold-to an estimated 400,000. To do this will require a major shift in emphasis-stressing service to human beings and the career opportuni- ties in welfare fields, rather than routine vocational training. This will also require a more democratic mix in Job Corps enroll- ment, with the better-educated volunteers spending at least part of their time as teach- ers of their less-well-equipped colleagues- as is done in Israel. The Job Corps, in effect, should be converted from a rehabilitation program for the poor into an opportunity for democratic service for all. The reconstituted Job Corps-and possibly also the Peace Corps, VISTA and the Teachers' Corps- would be absorbed by the National Service Agency when established. If, as is quite likely, there remains a need for a program of remedial education and vocational train- ing, along the lines of the present Job Corps, it should be set up under educational aus- pices apart from the service program. (3) Compile a national inventory of worthwhile conservation and urban-rehabili- tation projects and of the urgent manpower and womanpower needs of institutions, schools and social agencies across the coun- try. Supplement this listing with a cata- logue of the new services desperately needed by the nation's old people, children, harassed working mothers and the footloose adoles- cents. Such a compilation is by no means beyond the capacity of the nation's social scientists and computers. By thus translating the nation's human needs into perceivable form, I believe we would dramatize the fact that we do have more than five million unfilled jobs. And we would begin to see a national service corps, not merely as an "alternative to the draft" or as a corrective to the draft's "in- equities," but as a tool for alleviating the anguish of neglected patients in our hos- pitals and mental institutions, the misery of lonely old people, the plight of neglected children and the decay of our neglected land and cities-the medieval blights in our af- fluent society. WOMANPOWES It has been fashionable in recent years to deplore the waste of "a great national re- source-womanpower." Chief objects of concern have been the college-educated wom- en who marry too young and languish in sub- urban domesticity. A tour of duty in a national service program might awaken members of this group to the realities of the society in which they live and attract them in increasing numbers to those classic "woman's vocations" which are now so woe- fully shorthanded-notably nursing, teach- ing and social work. However, no more than 10 per cent of the 1.5 to 2 million girls who will reach the age 17689 of 18 annually in the next decade will be- come college graduates. Over 200,000 of the total group will be "nonwhite" and a high proportion of these predictably will come from impoverished; disorganized homes. Little has been done to date to develop the potential of girls who drop out or just make it through high school. The Job Corps, for example, has found room for less than a tenth as many girls as boys. A national service program could open up vast vocational opportunities for this neglected group. Among many needed func- tions, they could help ease the lot of Amer- ican working mothers. According to the latest Women's Bureau survey, there are 3.8 million children under 6 in this country whose mothers are away from home work- ing full time. But in the entire United States there are accommodations for fewer than 300,000 children in licensed public and private day-care facilities. This shocking gap in our social services will be closed only if we mobilize-on all levels-the womanpower which Is indeed now wasted. Since not only child care, but a high proportion of the other tasks of the service corps can best be done}by women, at least half of the enrollrreiJt should be women.-M.K.S. -1/1 FORTHCOMING ELECTION IN VIET- NAM WILL BE AN IMPORTANT EVENT - (Mr. TODD asked and was given per- mission to address the House for 1 min- ute, to revise and extend his remarks, and to include extraneous matter.) Mr. TODD. Mr. Speaker, last Thurs- day, I suggested to this Chamber that the forthcoming election in Vietnam would be an important event, regardless of the outcome: Important if not rigged and honest, as the basis of a viable and independent government; important if rigged and dishonest, as a way of discred- iting whatever Vietnamese regime fol- lows them as well as ourselves; important whether honest or not and whether care- fully evaluated or not, as a source of un- certainty and controversy about their meaning and our own credibility. Whether we like it or not, and whether the administration likes It or not, the statements about the honesty of the elec- tions neither by the Government of South Vietnam nor by our own State Depart- ment will be taken seriously. They should not be. Both sources are inter- ested parties. If events progress at their apparently appointed pace, the elections will be held. Nobody will believe they were representa- tive. They will be the source of endless argument and confusion. And it would be better if they had never occurred. We will have lost an opportunity at least as great as a major military victory. In fact, if we continue to refuse to consider seriously the great importance of the election's credibility, we will be heading, willy-nilly, Into a setback as great as a major military defeat. Why are we doing this? Are we smug? Are we preoccupied with military ac- tions? Do we hope clever propaganda can overcome lack of substance? Have we neither an answer nor a set of alter- natives? I suggested one last week-perhaps the wrong one, but at least a sugges- Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400100018-8 Approved For Release 2005/06/29 : CIA-RDP67BOO446ROO0400100018-8 tion-when I pointed out that the in- who would almost certainly doom the entire ternational press corps could be freed slate to defeat. to assess the election and asked to pre- If there are four slates composed of five pare an evaluation of all its aspects. men each contesting a five-seat constituency, and the front-running slate gets 60 per cent Other suggestions, such as the Interna- tional Control Commission and the U.N. of the vote, the top three names on that slate are elected. The remaining two seats go to are said, unofficially, to be unworkable. the top men on the next most popular slate. Perhaps this suggestion is also. But we or slates, depending on the vote. must have some answer other than the It appears to be an exercise in higher word of Premier Ky and the State De- Vietnamese mathematics, but what the pro- partment, and I exhort them to act now cedure does, in effect, is place a premium on rather than to remain silent so they can being the top man on the slate. give the word later. Already there are charges, unsubstanti- This point has been grasped by the for- aced by prooh but wihtly believed, that mer Vice President, Mr. Nixon, who re- certain slates by promising the top place - yromising to pay the cam cently visited Vietnam and came away paign expenses of their slatemates. with two conclusions: First, the solution Anyone can get together a slate (there are to the conflict must be political as well 248 of them nationwide in the September as military; and second we must have election; 133 candidates are run i August 8, 1966 the interviews are any indication, the men who face the electorate will talk about the constitution, the value of legitimate govern- ment, the high cost of living, the price of rice. One moderate, very highly respected can- didate who was said to be almost certainly a winner, declared when he was asked about the war that "Vietnam wants to negotiate with the North." Would he say that on the election plat- form? "No." _ Why not? His translated answer was that "every can- didate has the right to express his views on the right things only-not on everything." It was not now "convenient" to speak of ne- gotiation with the North. the patience and determination to secure single tickets in districts where only one WHILE ROME BURNS such a solution, delegate will be elected), and the theory was I hope the State Department and that the most popular and highly respected (Mr. WHITTEN asked and was given Premier Ky the would head the slate, permission to address the House for 1 not respond to m sug- and to revise and extend his re- gestions by asserting that we should be- Some promoten harmony contend among that c cthe slates andidates, marks.) lieve whatever they say about the elec- but others are not so sure. The political rule Mr. WHITTEN. Mr. Speaker, the tions. I know I will not. I know some of thumb in Vietnam is that if you have August 8, 1966, issue of the U.S. News & others have grave doubts already. I fear two men on a streetcorner you have two World Report carries an article "Can these doubts will turn out to be merely twoparties a, aIf you three, you have Riots Be Stopped?" The article lists the dew before the deluge. Wherever one talked, there was a rippling every section and many cities of the' To illustrate this, I ask permission to undercurrent of suspicion of government United States where mobs have de- insert a news story from the Washington intentions. Nowhere was there proof of stroyed life and property. The answer, Post of August 5, 1966: fraud, but everywhere there were doubts Mr. Speaker, is that like any other prob- SAIGON ELECTION STIRS SKEPTICISM-PUBLIC "Up to now," said an earnest Vietnamese lem we must determine and then correct INDIFFERENT politician, "there have been only rumors, but the cause. (By Ward Just) no evidence." Law enforcement is the responsibility Feeding the rumors are the Buddhist mill- of and is dependent upon local govern- SAIGON, August 4.-The election of an as- tants, with leaflets and handbills and gossip. sembly to write a constitution for South Viet- The Vietnamese, according to Phan Khae merit, the city, and'its police; the coun- nam is barely five weeks away, and profes- Suu, the former chief of state in the Huong ty and its sheriff; and in emergency, the atonal politicians here are skeptical and the and Quat civilian governments, have been State and its militia. Under present public largely indifferent. "victimized" so long by their leaders-Presi- conditions none of the officers of either Suspicion of the election results runs so dent Ngo Dinh Diem's rubber-stamp con- of these governmental units can fully deep that one prominent politician estimates greases, for example-that it is easy for the perform their functions of law enforce- that in Saigon as much as one third of the Buddhists to subvert confidence, which Suu electorate may stay away from the polls or says they are doing with great skill , meet because the Supreme Court with deliberately spoil ballots. Suu's view of a deeply suspicious electorate other Federal courts following has set up These views emerged from interviews with egged on by Buddhist propaganda is prob- rules which frequently make it impossi- candidates, journalists and qualified observ- ably the majority view here, although some ble for the police and local officers to ers of politics in Saigon and the neighboring would differ. protect the public. The Federal court province of Giadinh, which together will One who does is Dr. Dan. He argues that have been and are supported in this des - elect 26 of the 117 delegates to the assembly. while the electorate may be suspicious and structive course by the Attorney General The interviews were restricted to Vietnamese. indifferent., the Vien Hoa Dao (the Buddhist and the Executive Department of Gov- Nearly all those interviewed agreed that topic .Institute) does not even represent a majority . We can stop rioting but to do A in Saigon today is the economy, specifically of Buddhists, much less a majority of Viet- ernmerit the Inflation which followed the June de- namese (a point with which most independ- so we will have to stop courts from inuz- valuation of the piastre. The public is large- ent observers would agree). In the end, Dr. zling our law enforcement officers by new ly Indifferent to the election (the formal cam- Dan says, most Vietnamese will go to the court-fixed rules governing procedures paign period does not begin until Aug. 26), polls. of local officers and admissibility of evi- and that indifference is reinforced by what The trouble is confidence, or the lack of it. dente. To this end we need the help of one observer called traditional suspicions A young government civil servant, who a responsible press, radio, and televi- and sniping from the sidelines by Buddhist demonstrated in Hue against U.S. support of militants who have vowed to boycott the Prime Minister Ky and for civilian rule under years, been hard frequently been h t t ell past few balloting. elections, now says the constituent assembly yea,it to tell where hon- Among politicians, there is bitterness over elections are wrong. Why? "Not suitable," est news reporting ended and news pro- Amendment 20 to the electoral law, the he says vaguely. "They will solve nothing." motion, almost to the point of inciting a provision that allows the government to What the Vietnamese expect to emerge riot, began. amend ithe constitution after it has been from the election is elusive. The politicians, Last week, I discussed this problem in written, and requires a two-thirds majority after paging homage to doubt and suspicion, of the constituent assembly to overrule it. appear to be anxious to test the levers of some des, it o-called Ci With hts Act "This. is the rule of the minority in an power, even under a government which would before uS the so-called Civil Rights Act assembly elected to write a constitution," probably (under Amendment 20) hold a veto, of 1966, excerpts from which I present says Dr. Phan Quang Dan, the highly re- Prognostications differ widely. here: spected former government minister who Dr. Dan Van Sung, the editor and pub- CRIME INCREASES heads an electoral slate in Giadinh. "It lisher of the Saigon daily Chinh Luan and no Mr. Chairman, like many of my colleagues, exists nowhere else in the world." friend of the Ky regime, who Is a candidate I served as district attorney. I know a ma- Somewhat less controversial is the provi- for the assembly, predicts that as many as jority of the Congress have had experience sion, said to be unprecedented in Vietnamese 80 of the 1.17 delegates will be supporters of in the courtroom. If any Members do not politics, that candidates run on a slate in the government. But he also says the mi- believe it takes a man of a little more than constituencies where more than one dele- narity will be vigorous, and places as his aim average courage to bring in a conviction and gate is to be elected, the creation of a legal opposition. send a fellow man to jail or to the pent- The intricate, complicated device of a Former Chief of State Suu, an old Viet- tentiary, or to punish him, those Members slate was intended, by one account, to pre- rramese political pro, says flatly: "If a can- have not had experience in the courtroom. vent Communists or neutralists from run- didate in this election supports the govern- All recognize that throughout the United ping for the assembly, An authentic nation- ment, surely he will be defeated." States today, it is alist, the argument went, would think twice At least getting , and ave th and tbefore including on his Slate a Communist around the pogagram programs of the the problem candidate. If revolves to stand. convict The criminals, certainty y of have the punishment iconviction p nt is be- Approved For Release 2005/06/29 :-CIA-RDP67BOO446ROO0400100018-8