THE SITUATION IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

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September 15, 1965
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Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 September 15, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Deputy Chief Mowry's public statement that the patrolmen ought not to have arrested the boys. The confidence of various groups in society In the fairness of the police is of course the key to public cooperation. The incident also illustrates the value of a police community relations division under an able and forthright officer like Chief Mowry. It was his first test in a highly de- manding job, and he deserves the commu- nity's confidence. Washington's Metropoli- tan Police constitute one of the most effi- cient forces in the country. It is now show- ing that it understands the value of restraint and tact as well. Mr. PELL. Mr. President, both Deputy Chief Mowry and - Inspector Causey have been captains of the 14th precinct and are good tactitions in com- munity relations work and because of this, enjoy the respect of every segment of the committee. I would hope and expect, and I am sure many of my colleagues would agree, that they will get the fullest coopera- tion in their endeavors for 1. am certain the community will be far better off for their efforts. It is both interesting and pleasing for me to note that Howard Mowry comes from an old and much respected Rhode Island family. So I take this oppor- tunity to wish him well in his new posi- tion and to reiterate my interest and hope for a vigorous effort against crime by those who are charged with the re- sponsibility of law enforcement in the District of Columbia. WHO WILL WATCH THE WATCHMAN? Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, for some time It has been the proud boast of the managers of America's space effort that unlike the Soviets, our experiments are conducted in full view of the public. This, it has been asserted, is character- istic of the differences in our form of gov- ernment and the closed society of the Communist world. Now, a dark cloud has been cast on that claim. Assertions of censorship and news management have been made by the respected science writer of the Wash- ington Evening Star, William Hines. Some of the clumsy attempts at cen- sorship are both silly and stupid. But, more importantly, they seriously undermine not only this Nation's con- fidence, but that of the world, In our ability and determination to tell the of the damaged areas. I was told they were "not available." I asked why U.S. television networks were carrying films by Vietcong photographers but were seemingly unable to obtain footage show- ing the effects of our raids. There was no explanation. And now there are distressing signals that the space program is falling prey to the same dread disease of secrecy. It would be my hope, Mr. President, that the communications media them- selves, which argue so eloquently for the freedom of the press which our Constitu- tion guarantees them, would increase their protests against news management and censorship. Mr. Hines has done a great service both to his craft and to the public in his article which appeared in the September 1 issue of the Star. I ask unanimous con- sent to have it printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Washington (D.C.) Evening Star, Sept. 1, 1965] WHO WILL WATCH THE WATCHMAN? (By William Hines) The Pentagon has surprised almost every- one with its promptness in applying the first squeeze of censorship and news management to its new manned orbiting laboratory (MOL) program. Most people assumed that soon after the military got a manned role In space, it would start classifying it, but few could have fore- seen the rapidity with which restrictions came. The elapsed time from President Johnson's announcement of the start of MOL at his press conference last week to the Pent- agon's first fumbling bit of news manage- ment was exactly 2 hours. The restriction was picayune and worse than pointless: It was unenforcible. Reporters trooping to an MOL briefing at the Pentagon were instructed that they would not be allowed to make tape record- ings or to mention the name of the official (Dr. Albert C. Hall, Deputy Director of Re- search and Engineering), who was briefing them. This exchange then occurred: "Why not?" "Because that's the way we prefer to do It." The briefing was highly technical and con- tained many points that could be misunder- stood by reporters and thus misinterpreted for readers who, in the final analysis, will be paying the expensive tab for MOL. A tape would have been helpful. The briefing was later transmitted by tele- phone to the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations Houston Center, where a large contingent of reporters was covering 22997 traducer of a free news flow. The space agency gives news management the old col- lege try every time a manned spacecraft goes up. Of all the significant news locations in a Gemini flight, the only one not covered by the combined news media (meaning press, radio, and TV) is the most important one of all, the mission control center at Houston. It is not a secret place, nor one in which unnecessary traffic is discouraged. Flight Director Christopher C. Kraft already has stated publicly that he would rather have a Soviet observer In his control center than an American journalist. Further, every clerk and secretary among the 4,600 NASA civil servants who could spare 6 or 10 min- utes from work was encouraged to look in. On one flight the motion picture actor Jimmy Stewart was an interested observer. Even newspaper publishers have been ad- mitted, possibly on the theory that they are not really . "working press," and hence harmless. But neither camera nor tape recorder nor pen-and-paper reporter is allowed In the nonsecret room at any time during a flight. This is a measure of how fax we have come in 20 short years. Even in the supersecret atom bomb project, the national press had a "pool" representative, William L. Laurence of the New York Times. This is not to sug- gest that there has been any "ooverup" to date. In the course of missions, Kraft gives regular, full, and apparently frank accounts of flight activities, and opens himself to detailed questioning. So do his associates. A mission commentary of less consistent accuracy and authenticity Is broadcast. But whether or not there has been sup- pression to date is not the point. All flights so far have ended happily, and nothing suc- ceeds like success. There has been no rea- son for a coverup. The point is that the opportunity for news management definitely exists in mission con- trol-and it is an axiom of political science that where opportunity exists; there are al- ways people waiting to seize it. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. BASS in the chair). Is there further morning business? If not, morning business is closed. SCENIC DEVELOPMENT AND ROAD BEAUTIFICATION OF THE FED- ERAL AID HIGHWAY SYSTEMS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the unfin- ished business be laid before the Senate. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title. The LEGISLATIVE CLERK, A bill (S. 9(Rd) fn r~rnvjAn fnr .-in r7 o.,e,.~..+ 22998 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE September 15, 1965 wit 'Page 1'L, lines 1 and 2, after the word il.sion that billboards were permitted. `pay" in line 1 strike out the words "the We are saying to them that they must Federal pro rata share of". On page 16, line 15, after the word "pay" 1 emove billboards on the 50-50 alloca- strike out the words "the Federal pro rata Von that has always been proposed. share of the". There is a difference in the Interstate Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I would like to explain the purpose of the amend- ment which I have offered for myself and the Senator from Montana [Mr. METCALF]. The committee bill provides that the cost shall be allocated between theFederal Government and the States in the same proportion that costs are al- located for construction of the Inter- state Highway and primary systems?- that is, 90 percent to be paid by the Fed- eral Government and 10 percent by the States, in_ respect to the Interstate High- way System, and 50 percent by the Fed- eral Government and 50 percent by the States with respect to the primary system. I support the objectives of the bill, and voted to report it to the Senate. But yesterday, at the close of the session, I stated my reasons for having presented this amendment in committee, and the reasons which lead me to offer it today. In the subcommittee this amendment was adopted by a large vote, but in the full committee the action of the subcom- mittee was reversed by a vote of 8 to 5. I offer this amendment for two princi- Pal reasons. One reason is that it is a national program, it is so declared by the bill and by the President. The second reason for requiring the full amount to be paid by the Federal Government is that the bill would im- pose a penalty upon States not acceding to its program--the penalty being the denial of all Federal-aid funds for con?- struct4on of highways. With such a penalty, and no State could accept such a penalty, the program proposed in the bill-worthy as it is--cannot be consid- ered a true voluntary-Federal-State aid program. The denial of all funds to a State would amount to millions of dollars to a State 878tem, which is new, which goes through new areas and new territory. We say that under the law we will give tae same proportion of assistance to the State to remove billboards that we gave f,r'r the financing of other highway sys- tuurns, such as under the 90-10 Interstate System. So far as the secondary systems are c4mcerned, we have always had the right to erect billboards. ThisIs a prevailing system in all the States. Yet, we are si ying to the States that they must re- rr ove the billboards or they will not be p ormitted to share in the Federal high- w ry program. It is coercion. We are taking away from the States their police power to remove billboards and we are saying they have to make compensation. This is a national program. We have d,( cided we are going to remove billboards fr)m the interstate and secondary sys- tens. Therefore, I concur that we should pay that cost out of the national bt ciget. We should not force the States to: forgo all of their participation in the interstate program if they do not want to take away a man's livelihood, or a corm's business, which he has had for many years. : feel strongly that the States should use, their funds for secondary road sys- teias and the farm-to-market roads, and for,: the development of primary high- ways on the present allocation, and should not be forced to compensate the billboard operators. I feel strongly that thu cost should come out of the Federal butiget. ..-herefore, ment. In the ease of California it would Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, even a Inu the to a denial of California miition would though the remarks of the distinguished amou In de own State it wouan- ld Senator from Arkansas, the chairman of . my amount to $74 mrlllion. In other States the Foreign Relations Committee [Mr. it would be in similar proportions. - per ding legislation will ont be germane to thk The bill would effectually require the uni For per. ding s consent ( that t the chairman I ask States to accept this program and that the Foreign g consent m e ch[Sena- their legislatures legislatures appropriate money to Relations Coed to sp speak or pay for its cost. It is a worthy program, not ot to exceed ceed 1 1 be allowed to speak for I voted to report it to the Senate, but not to hour. I do not approve its mandatory features. YouNG of Ohio in PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Over 100 Federal-aid programs have objoetjon so the chair). Without of enacted. None mandatorily re- objecti, is so ordered. The rule of le quires State acceptance. If it is to be germaneness is waived. exercised, I believe the Federal Govern- k r, COOPER. Mr. President, I do not ment should pay its full cost. intend to object, but I wish to have the I understand there are others who assurance that the amendment which desire to speak. I shall not speak has been stated will be the pending ques- further at this time.. tion - at the conclusion of the remarks Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, will by the distinguished chairman of the the Senator yield to me for a moment? Pori sign Relations Committee. Mr. COOPER. I yield. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, I con- Chair states to the senior Senator from cur in this amendment for all of the rea- Kentucky that his amendment will be sons outlined. This is a coercive pro- the rending question. gram. Mt. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will We are saying to the States that they the Senator yield briefly without losing have to go into the secondary road sys- his light to the floor? tern where always we have had the pro- Mc. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The ? PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. With- out objectio it is so ordered. THE S R flN IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC . Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, the formation of a provisional government in Santo Domingo under the leadership of Dr. Hector Garcia-Godoy is good news. It provides reason for cautious optimism as to the future and testifies as well to the arduous and patient efforts of the OAS mediating team. I wish to pay tribute especially to Ambassador Bunk- er for his wisdom and patience in han- dling this difficult affair. The forma- tion of a provisional government is not the end of the Dominican crisis, but it does bring to an end a tragic and dan- gerous phase of the crisis. Many prob- lems remain, particularly the problem of establishing the authority of a demo- cratic government over the Dominican military. Nonetheless, the situation now seems to be moving into a less danger- ous and more hopeful, phase. At this time of relative calm it is appropriate, desirable and, I think, necessary to re- view events in the Dominican Repub- lic and the U.S. role in those events. The purpose of such a review-and its only purpose-is to develop guidelines for wise and effective policies in the future. I was In doubt about: the advisability of making a statement on the Domoni- can affair until some of my colleagues made public statements on the floor. Their views on the way in which the committee proceedings were conducted and, indeed, on the Dominican crisis as a whole, are so diametrically opposed to my own that I now consider it my duty to express my personal conclusions drawn from the hearings held by the Committee on Foreign Relations. The suggestions that have been made that the committee was prejudiced in its approach against the administra- tion's policies are, in my opinion, with- out merit. The committee was impar- tial and fair in giving a full and detailed hearing to the administration's point of view, so much so, in fact, that it heard only one witness from outside the Government. U.S. policy in the Dominican crisis was characterized initially by overtimidity and subsequently by overreaction. Throughout the whole affair, it has also been characterized by a lack of candor. These are general conclusions I have reached from a painstaking review of the salient features of the extremely com- plex situation. These judgments are made, of course, with the benefit of hind- sight and, in fairness, it must be con- ceded there were no easy choices avail- able to the United States in the Domini- can Republic. Nonetheless, it is the task Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 a'nt , t,om 1.5 7 965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 22999 of diplomacy to make wise decisions when Another theme that emerges from the such as the recently discredited Came- inican crisis is the occurrence of a lot; these studies claim to be scientific D bl a om y cy they need to be made and U.S. diplom failed to do so in the Dominican crisis. striking change in U.S. policy toward the but beneath their almost unbelieva It cannot be said with assurance that Dominican Republic and the possibility- opaque language lies an unmistakable the United States could have changed the not a certainty, because the signs are military and reactionary bias. course of events by acting differently. ambiguous, but only the possibility-of It is of great importance that the un- What can be said with assurance is that a major change as well in the general certainty as to U.S. aims in Latin Amer- the United States did not take advantage Latin American policies of the United ica be resolved. We cannot successfully of several opportunities in which it might States. Obviously, an important change advance the cause of popular democracy have changed the course of events. The in the official outlook on Dominican af- and at the same time aline ourselves reason appears to be that, very close to fairs occurred between September 1963, with corrupt and reactionary oligarchies; the beginning of the revolution, U.S. when the United States was vigorously yet that is what we seem to be trying to policymakers decided that it should not opposed to the overthrow of Juan Bosch, do. The direction of the Alliance for be allowed to succeed. This decision and April 1965, when the United States Progress is toward social revolution in seems to me to have been based on exag- was either unenthusiastic or actually Mani fan intervention se toward thour e suo- gerated estimates of Communist in- opposed to his return. fluence in the rebel movement in the What happened in that period to pression of revolutionary movements initial stages and on distaste for the re- change the assessment of Bosch from which are supported by Communists or turn to power of Juan Bosch or of a gov- favorable to unfavorable? It is quite suspected of being influenced by Com- ernment controlled by Bosch's party, the true that Bosch as President did not dis- munists. The prospect of an election in PRD-Dominican Revolutionary Party. tinguish himself as an administrator, but 9 months which may conceivably pro- The question of the degree of Commu- that was well known in 1963. It is also duce a strong democratic government is nist influence is of critical importance true, however, and much more to the certainly reassuring on this score, but and I shall comment on it later. The es- point as far as the legitimate interests the fact remains that the reaction of the sential point, however, is that the United of the United States are concerned, that United States at the time of acute crisis States, on the basis of ambiguous evi- Bosch had received 58 percent of the was to intervene forcibly and illegally dence, assumed almost from the begin- votes in a free and honest election and against a revolution which, had we ning that the revolution was Communist that he was presiding over a reform- sought to influence it instead of sup- dominated, or would certainly become so. minded government in tune with the pressing it, might have produced a strong It apparently never occurred to anyone Alliance for Progress. This is a great popular government without foreign that the United States could also attempt deal more than can be said for any other military intervention. Since just about, to influence the course which the revolu- President of the Dominican Republic. every revolutionary movement is likely to tion took. We misread prevailing tend- The question therefore remains as to attract Communist support, at least in encies in Latin America by overlooking how and why the attitude of the U.S. the beginning, the approach followed in or ignoring the fact that any reform Government changed so strikingly be- the Dominican Republic, if consistently movement is likely to attract Commu- tween September 1963 and April 1965. pursued, must inevitably make us the nist support. We thus failed to perceive And the question inevitably arises enemy of all revolutions and therefore that if we are automatically to oppose whether this shift in the administra- the ally of all the unpopular and corrupt any reform movement that Communists tion's attitude toward the Dominican oligarchies of the hemisphere. adhere to, we are likely to end up oppos- Republic is part of a broader shift in We simply cannot have it both ways; ing every reform movement, making our- its attitude toward other Latin Amer- we must choose between the Alliance for selves the prisoners of reactionaries who ican countries, whether, to be specific, Progress and a foredoomed effort to sus- wish to preserve the status quo-and the U.S. Government now views the vig- tain the status quo in Latin America. which e to make is the e unanswered arquest on arising reform movements of Latin good enough. the status quo in many countries is not ica-such as Christian Democracy Amer- in principal The principal reason for the failure Chile, Peru, and Venezuela, APRA in out ofthe unhappy events in the Domini- of American policy in Santo Domingo Peru and Accion Democratica in Vene- can Republic and, indeed, the principal was faulty advice given to the President zuela-as threatening to the interests of unanswered question for the future of by his representatives in the Dominican the United States. And if this is the our relations with Latin America. Republic at the time of acute crisis. case, what kind of Latin American po- It is not surprising that we Americans Much of this advice was based on mis- litical movements would now be regarded are not drawn toward the uncouth revo- judgment of the facts of the situation; as friendly to the United States and We are ries of thenon-Communist left. some of it appears to have been based beneficial to its interests? W not, as we like the ik claim Foueft. rth on inadequate evidence or, in some cases, I should like to make it very clear that of Julyuly speeches, nation most oct truly are, revolu- close earth; y to bthe the simply inaccurate information. On the. I am raising a question not offering an ry, much on basis of the information and counsel he answer. I am frankly puzzled as to the contrary, much t being e earth. o We n received, the President could hardly have current attitude of the U.S. Government ry os sober and satisfied and comfortable acted other than he did. toward reformist movements in Latin are rich; and institutions are stable and I am hopeful, and reasonably con- America. On the one hand, President and and even venerable; and our Revo- fident, that the mistakes made by the Johnson's deep personal commitment to old old and ven venerable; abl that matter, was United States in the Dominican Repub- the philosophy and aims of the Alliance lution of 17 upheaval compared as not to th lit can be retrieved and that it will be for Progress is clear; it was convincingly much and Russian evolutions and to possible to avoid repeating them in the expressed, for example, in his speech to French and Rimpending ussian r revin future. These purposes can be served, the Latin American Ambassadors on the current n America, Asia, and Avo u and t. however, only if the shortcomings of U.S. fourth anniversary of the Alliance for policy are thoroughly reviewed and Progress-a statement in which the Our heritage of stabiilty and conserva- analyzed. I make my remarks today in President compared the Alliance for tism is a great blessing, but it also has the hope of contributing to that process. Progress with his own enlightened pro- the effect of limiting our understanding The development of the Dominican gram for a Great Society at home. On of the character of social revolution and crisis, beginning on April 24, 1965, pro- the other hand, one notes a general tend- sometimes as well of the injustices which vides a classic study of policymaking in ency on the part of our policymakers not spawn them. Our understanding of a fast-changing situation in which each to look beyond a Latin American politi- revolutions and their causes is imperfect decision reduces the range of options cian's anticommunism. One also notes not because of any failures of mind or available for future decisions so that in certain Government agencies, particu- character but because of our good for- errors are compounded and finally, in- larly the Department of Defense, a pre- tune since the Civil War in never having deed, there are few if any options except occupation with counterinsurgency, experienced sustained social injustice to follow through on an ill-conceived which is to say, with the prospect of without hope of legal or more or less course of action. Beyond a certain point revolutions and means of suppressing peaceful remedy. We are called upon, ur sympathy and support to movements the ominican story acquired ne itability of a Greek tagedye of in them. This dubious and costly a research projects, otherefore, to give our unerstanding and Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 23000 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110.032-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE September 15, 1965 which are alien to our experience and I think that in the case of the Domini- willing to support if not positively op- jarring to our preferences and prejudices, can Republic we did close our minds to posed tot osch, We must try to understand social rev- the causes and to the essential legitimacy ]EventsB of the days following April 24 olution and the injustices that give It of revolution In a country in which dem- demonstrated that Reid had so little rise because they are the heart and colic ocratic procedures had failed. That, I popular support that it can reasonably of the experience of the great majority think, is the central fact concerning the be ; argued that there was nothing the of people now living in the world. Ia participation of the United States in the United States could have done short of Latin America we may prefer to assc-6 Dominican revolution and, possibly as armed intervention, to save h(s regime. date with the well-bred, well-dressed well, Its major lesson for the future. I The more interesting question is why businessmen who often hold positions cf turn now to comment on some of the the United States was so reluctant to power, but Latin American reformers events which began last April 24 in Santo see Bosch returned to power. This is regard such men as aliens in their ow: i Domingo, countries who neither Identify with their When the Dominican revolution began at6 a titud of of U.S. the larger ngedtisn much why since own people nor even sympathize with on Saturday, April 24, the United States when had changed so much sinas their aspirations. , Such leaders are re- had there options available. First, it warmly hen Bosch, then a raced was and garded by educated young Latin Amer. could have supported the Reid Cabral supported portrted as and few if any if anLatin American leans as a "consular bourgeoisie," W Latin American government; second, it could have sup- presidents have ever been supported by which they mean business-oriented corgi, ported the revolutionary forces; and the United States. servatives who more nearly represent thin third, it could do nothing. in the interests, of foreign businessmen than The administration chose the last nZ he next cruciao pTue day, April 27, the interests of their own people. Men course. When Donald Reid Cabral when h story came rs, Tuesday, Mona like Donald Reid-who is one of thou: asked for U.S. intervention on Sunday and leaders, including Molina better of this category of leaders-may morning, April 25, he was given no en- Urena and sy seeking Deno, called at the have their merits, but they are not the. couragement. He then resigned, and negotiations. U.S. Embassy At tht mediation and force of the future in Latin America. considerable disagreement ensued over lo At that time the the rebel., military It is the revolutionaries of the non- the nature of the government to succeed situation looked very bad for the or , Communist left who have most of the him. The party of Juan Bosch, the B nnett, whad onhad forces. Ambassador popular support In Latin America? The PRD, or Dominican Revolutionary Party, times to who been instructed fou r fur Radical Party in Chile, for example' asked for a "U.S. presence" at the trans- times r work for a cease fire and for Is full of 19th century - libertarians fer of government power but was given the idr not have a hority y junta, felt whom many North Americans would find no encouragement. Thus, there began mediation, 'dad not have ,;ew, would o mediate; highly congenial, but It was recently at that time a chaotic situation which ,intervention," in his view, wohave been crushed in national elections by a group amounted to civil war in a country with- Mediation at that point of rambunctious, leftist Christian Demo- out an effective government. might have been accomplished quietly crats. It may be argued that the What ha and without in ou-r hours military ftherAm- hristian Democrats are and-United- peened in essence was that film: Twenty-four hours later the - Christand to a ocats arse extent some the Dominican military refused to sup- bassador was pleading for the marines, of tare-more, de now, it may be _ port Reid and were equally opposed to and as we know some 20,000 soldiers noted, them h than mr a the Intervention w, it a Bosch or other PRD leaders as his suc- were landed--American soldiers. the than prior to of cessor. The PRD, which had the support on the afternoon of April 27 General the United States are re the not Dominican Re- O. some military officers, announced that Wessin y Wessin's tanks seemed about public-but and popular not have they y Cm. They. Rafael Molina Urena, who had been to cross the Duarte bridge into the city ar with support. AThey President of the Senate during the Bosch of Santo Domingo and the rebel cause terms have they also copper come to u companies in hith that is regime, would govern as s Provisional appeared hopeless. When the rebels felt something which the predecessot aons' President pending Bosch' return. At themselves rebuffed at the American servativP g which the ,, this point, the military leaders delivered emba s was eces,,o t s y o n ill ?? .. e Unw CULL ing ou April 25 the air force and navy began Domenmulch emoassles in Santo do. firing at the National Palace. Later in Domigo. The e administration has in- The movement .of, the future in :Latin ? the day, PRD leaders asked the U.S. terP"eted this as evidence that the non- The is social revolution, The ques- . ; Embassy to use its Influence to persuade Communist rebels recognized growing tion is whether it is to be Communist or Communist influence in their movement democratic revolution and the choice the air force to stop the attacks. The and were consequently abandoning, the which the Latin Americans make will _ Embassy made it clear it would not In- revolution. Molina, Urena has said sim- dep in hicd heart on how rc Unid States tervene on behalf of the rebels, although ply that he sought asylum because he uses its great influence. It should be on the following day, Monday, April 26, thought the revolutionary cause hope- very clear that the choice is not between the Embassy did persuade the military less. social revolution and conservative oli- to stop air attacks for a limited time. An opportunity was lost on April 27. garchy but whether, by supporting re- This was the first crucial point in the Ambassador Bennett was in a position to form, we bolster the popular non-Cam- crisis. If the United States thought that bring possibly decisive mediating power form, left or whether, by supporting Reid was giving the Dominican Republic to bear for a democratic solution, but he unpopular oligarchies, we drive the ris- the best government it had had or was chose not to do so on the ground that ing generation of. educated and patriotic likely to get, why did the United States the exercise of his good offices at that young Latin Americans to an embittered not react more vigorously to support him? Point would have constituted interven- and hostile form of communism like On the other hand, if the Reid govern- tion. In the words of Washington Post that of Fidel Castro in Chile. ment was thought to be beyond salvation, Writer Murrey Marder-one of the press In my Senate speech of March 25, 1964, why did not the United States offer posi- people who, to the best of my knowledge, I commented as follows on the prospect tive encouragement to the moderate has not been assailed as prejudiced: of revolution: forces involved In the coup, if not by it can be argued with considerable weight I e not predicting violent revolutions in -providing the "U.S. presence" requested that late Tuesday, April 27, the United States Latin America or predicting elsewherp- Still less as I by the PRD, then at least by letting it threw away a fateful opportunity to try to advocating them. I wish only to suggest be known that the United States was not prevent the sequence that produced the that violent social revolutions are a possi- opposed to the prospective change of re- American intervention. It allowed the rela- bility in countries where feudal oligarchies gimes or by encouraging the return of tively leaderless revolt to pass into hands resist all meaningful change by peaceful Juan Bosch to the Dominican. Republic? which it was to allege were Communist.7 mans. We -m steno not, iinsour visi nee b for In fact, according to available evidence, The overriding reason for this mistake e Charter of Punta del Este, close our mi ds to the U.S. Government made no effort to was the conviction of U.S. officials, on the possibility that democratic procedures contact Bosch in the initial days of the the basis of evidence which was frag- may fail in certain countries and that where crisis, mentary at best, that the rebels were democracy does fail violent social convulsions - . The United States was thus at the out- may occur. set unwilling to support Reid and un- 1 Washington Post, June 27, 1965, p. E3. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 September 15, 196-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE dominated by Communists. A related and perhaps equally important reason for the U.S. Embassy's refusal to mediate on April 27 was the desire for and, at that point, expectation of an antirebel vic- tory. They therefore passed up an im- portant opportunity to reduce or even eliminate Communist influence by en- couraging the moderate elements among the rebels and mediating for a demo- cratic solution. Owing to a degree of disorganization and timidity on the part of the anti- rebel forces which no one, including the U.S. Embassy and the rebels themselves, anticipated, the rebels were still fighting on the morning of Wednesday, April 28. Ambassador Bennett thereupon urgently recommended that the antirebels under Air Force General de los Santos be fur- nished 50 walkie-talkies from U.S. De- fense Department stocks in Puerto Rico. Repeating this recommendation later in the day, Bennett said that the issue was one between Castroism and its opponents. The antirebels themselves asked for armed U.S. intervention on their side; this request was refused at that time. During the day, however, the situation deteriorated rapidly, from the point of view of public order in general and of the ant~rebels in particular. In mid- afternoon of April 28 Col. Pedro Bartol- ome Benoit, head of a junta which had been hastily assembled, asked again, this time in writing, for U.S. troops on the ground that this was the only way to prevent a Communist takeover; no men- tion was made of the junta's inability to protect American lives. This request was denied in Washington, and Benoit was thereupon told that the United States would not Intervene unless he said he could not protect American citizens present in the Dominican Republic. Benoit was thus told in effect that if he said American lives were in danger the United States would intervene. And that is precisely what happened. It was at this point, on April 28, that events acquired something of the pre- destiny of a Greek tragedy. Subse- quent events-the failure of the mis- sions of John Bartlow Martin and Mc- George Bundy, the conversion of the U.S. force into an" inter-American force, the enforced stalemate between the reb- els under Caamano Deno and the Imbert junta, the OAS mediation and the tor- tuous negotiations for a provisional gov- ernment-have all been widely reported and were not fully explored in the com- mittee hearings. In any case, the gen- eral direction of events was largely de- termined by the fateful decision of April 28. Once the Marines landed on that day, and especially after they were heavily reinforced in the days immedi- ately following, the die was cast and the United States found itself deeply In- volved in the Dominican civil conflict, with no visible way to extricate itself, and with its hemisphere relations com- plicated in a way that few could have foreseen and no one could have desired. The danger to American lives was more a pretext than a reason for the massive U.S. intervention that began on the evening of April 28. In fact, no American lives were lost in Santo Do- mingo until the Marines began exchang- ing fire with the rebels after April 28; reports of widespread shooting that en- dangered American lives turned out to be exaggerated. Nevertheless, there can be no ques- tion that Santo Domingo was not a par- ticularly safe place to be in the last days of April 1965. There was fighting in the streets, aircraft were strafing parts of the city, and there was indiscriminate shooting. I think that the United States would have been justified in landing a small force for the express purpose of re- moving U.S. citizens and other foreigners from the island. Had such a force been landed and then promptly withdrawn when it had completed its mission, I do not think that any fair-minded observer at home or abroad would have considered the United States to have exceeded its rights and responsibilities. The United States intervened In the Dominican Republic for the purpose of preventing the victory of a revolutionary force which was judged to be Commu- nist dominated. On the basis of Ambas- sador Bennett's messages to Washing- ton, there is no doubt that the threat of communism rather than danger to American lives was his primary reason for recommending military intervention. The question of the degree of Commu- nist influence is therefore crucial, but it cannot be answered with certainty. The weight of the evidence is that Commu- nists did not participate in planning the revolution-indeed, there is some indica- tion that it took them by surprise-but that they very rapidly began to try to take advantage of it and to seize control of it. The evidence does not establish that the Communists at any time ac- tually had control of the revolution. There is little doubt that they had in- fluence within the revolutionary move- ment, but the degree of that influence remains a matter of speculation. The administration, however, assumed almost from the beginning that the revolution was Communist-dominated, or would certainly become so, and that nothing short of forcible opposition could prevent a Communist takeover. In their apprehension lest the Domini- can Republic become another Cuba, some of our officials seem to have forgotten that virtually all reform movements at- tract some Communist support, that there is an important difference between Communist support and Communist control of a political movement, that it is quite possible to compete with the Communists for influence in a reform movement rather than abandon it to them, and, most important of all, that economic development and social jus- tice are themselves the primary and most reliable security against Communist subversion. It is, perhaps, understandable that. administration officials should have felt some sense of panic; after all, the For eign Service officer who had the misfor- tune to be assigned to the Cuban desk at the time of Castro's rise to power has had his career ruined by congressional committees. Furthermore, even with- out this consideration, the decisions re- garding the Dominican Republic had to be made under great pressure and on the basis of Inconclusive Information. In charity, this can be accepted as a reason why the decisions were mistaken; but it does not change the conclusion that they were mistaken. The point I am making is no`--em- phatically not-that there was no Com- munist participation in the Dominican crisis, but simply that the administra- tion acted on the premise that the revolution was controlled by Commu- nists--a premise which it failed to es- tablish at the time and has not estab- lished since. The issue is not whether there was Communist influence in the Dominican revolution but its degree, which is something on which reasonable men can differ. The burden of proof, however, is on those who take action, and the administration has not proven its assertion of Communist control. Intervention on the basis of Commu- nist participation as distinguished from control of the Dominican revolution was a mistake in my opinion which also re- flects a grievous misreading of the tem- per of contemporary Latin American politics. Communists are present in all Latin American countries, and they are going to inject themselves into almost any Latin American revolution and try to seize control of it. If any group or any movement with which the Communists associate themselves is going to be au- tomatically condemned in the eyes of the United States, then we have indeed given up all hope of guiding or influencing even to a marginal degree the revolu- tionary movements and the demands for social change which are sweeping Latin America. Worse, if that is our view, then we have made ourselves the prisoners of the Latin American oligarchs who are engaged in a vain attempt to preserve the status quo-reactionaries who habit- ually use the term "Communist" very loosely, in part out of emotional predi- lection and in part in a calculated effort to scare the United States into support- ing their selfish and discredited aims. If the United States had really been intervening to save American lives, as it had a moral if not a strictly legal right to do, it could have done so promptly and then withdrawn and the incident would soon have been forgotten. But the United States did not intervene primar- ily to save American lives; it intervened to prevent what it conceived to be a Communist takeover. That meant, in the terms in which the United States de- fined the situation, that it was interven- ing against the rebels, who, however heavily they might or might not have been infiltrated by Communists, were also the advocates of the restoration of a freely elected constitutional govern- ment which had been forcibly over- thrown. It also meant that the United States was intervening for the military and the oligarchy-to the detriment of the Dominican people and to the bitter disappointment of those throughout Latin America who had placed their hopes In the United States and the Al- liance for Progress. On the basis of the record, there is am- ple justification for concluding that, at least from the time Reid resigned, U.S. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 23002 policy was directed toward construction of a military junta which hopefully would restore peace and conduct free elections. That is to say that U .S. policy was` directed againstthe return of Bosh and against the success of the revel movement. In this connection It is interesting to recall U.S. policy toward Bosch when he was In power in the Dominican Republic between February and September of 1963. He had been elected, as I hate already mentioned, in the only free and honest election ever held in the Domin.- can Republic, in December 1962, with 58 percent of the votes cast. The United States placed such impor- tance on his success that President Ken, nedy sent the then Vice President John- son and Senator Humphrey, among others, to attend his inauguration in February 1963. In September 1963, whet! he was overthrown in a military coup, the United States made strenuous of forts-which stopped just short of send. ing the Marines-to keep him in power and thereafter the United States waited almost 3 months before recognizing the successor government. Recognition came, by the way, only after the succes- sor government had conducted military operations against a band of alleged Communist guerrillas in the mountains, and there Is a suspicion that the extent of the guerrilla activities was exaggerated by the successor government in order to secure U.S. recognition. It may be granted that Bosch was no great . success as President of the Dominican Republic but, when all his faults have been listed, the fact remains that Bosch was the only freely elected President in Dominican history, the only President who had ever tried, however ineptly, to give the country a decent gov- ernment, and the only President who was unquestionably in tune with the Alliance for Progress. Despite these considerations, the United States was at the very least un- enthusiastic or, more probably, opposed to Bosch's return to power in April 1965. Bosch himself was apparently not eager to return-he 'vacillated in the very early stages and some well-informed persons contend that he positively refused to re- turn to the Dominican Republic. In any ease, he missed a critical opportunity. But the United States was equally adamant against a return to power of Bosch's party, the PRD, which is the nearest thing to a mass-based, well- organized party that has ever existed in the Dominican Republic. The stated reason was that a PRD government would be Communist dominated. This might conceivably have hap- pened, but the evidence by no means sup- ports the conclusion that it would have happened. We based our policy on a possibility rather than on anything ap- proaching a likelihood. Obviously, if we based all our policies on the mere possibility of communism, then we would have to set ourselves against just about every progressive political move- ment in the world, because almost all such movements are subject to at least the theoretical danger of Communist takeover. This approach is not in the lb4NGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE September 15, 1965 national Interest; foreign policy must be based on prospects that seem probable, hopeful and susceptible to constructive influence rather than on merely possible dangers. One is led, therefore, to the conclusion that U.S. policymakers were unduly timid and alarmist in refusing to gamble on the forces of reform and social change. The bitter irony of such ti- midity is that by casting its lot with the forces of the status quo, in the probably vain hope that these forces could be induced to permit at leastsome reform and social change, the United States almost certainly helped the Communists to acquire converts whom they otherwise could not have won. How vain the hopes of U.S. policy- makers were is amply demonstrated by events since April 28. The junta led by Gen. Antonio Imbert, which succeeded the junta led by Colonel Benoit, proved quite intractable and indeed filled the airwaves daily with denunciations of the United States and the Organization of American States for preventing it from wiping out the Communist rebels. These are the same military forces which on April 28 were refusing to fight the rebels and begging for U.S. intervention. Our aim apparently was to use Imbert as a counterpoise to Caamano Deno in the ill-founded hope that non-Communist liberals would be drawn away from the rebel side. In practice, instead of Imbert becom- in our tractable instrument, we, to a Certain extent, became his: he clung tenaciously to the power' we gave him and was at least as intransigent as the rebels in the protracted negotiations for a provisional government. The resignation of Imbert and his -junta provides grounds for hope that a strong popular government may come to power in the Dominican Republic, but thathope must be tempered by the fact that the military continues to wield great power In Dominican pol'tics-power which it probably would not now have if the United States had not intervened to save it from defeat last April 28. Even with a provisional government installed In. Santo Domingo, and with the prospect af an election In 9 months, there remains the basic problem of a deep and wide- s,pread demand for social change. The prospect for such social change is cir- (aimscribed by the fact that the military has not surrendered and cannot be ex- lected voluntarily to surrender its en- trenched position of privilege and out- r ageous corruption. The United States has grossly under- estimated the symbolism of the Bosch c)nstitution of 1963. It can be argued that this contains unrealistic promises, bit it has stirred the hopes and idealism oi' the Dominican people. The real ob- jections to it, the part of conservative Dominicans,. seem to be that it provides far separation of church and state and tt at it provides that Dominican citizens hi,ve the right to live in the Dominican Republic if they so desire-that is, that Dominican citizens who happen also to be Communists cannot be deported. In passing, one may note a similarity to the U.3. Constitution on both of these points. The United States has also misread the dedication of the Dominican miltary to the status quo and to its own powers and privileges. It may be said that the Unit- ed States has overestimated its ability to influence the military while failing to use to the fullest the influence it does have. The act of United States massive mili- tary intervention in the Dominican Re- public was a grievous mistake, but if one is ;going to cross the bridge of interven- tion, with all of the historical ghosts which it calls forth throughout Latin America, then one might as well cross all the way and not stop in the middle. It is too late for the United States to re- frain from Intervention; it is not too late to try to redeem some permanent benefit from that intervention. Specif- ical.ly, I think that the influence of the United States and the Organization of American States should be used to help the Dominican people free themselves from the oppressive weight of a corrupt and privileged military establishment. It is entirely possible, if not likely, that if the military is allowed to retain its power it will overthrow any future gov- ernment that displeases it just as it has done in the past. The OAS mediating teach made a contribution by bringing about the installation of a provisional. government; the OAS can still make a solid contribution to Dominican democ- racy by urging or :insisting that as part of a permanent.solution the Dominican military establishment be substantially reduced in size and some of the more irresponsible generals be pensioned off or sent on lengthy. diplomatic holidays abroad. If the United States and the OAS are going to impose a solution in the Dominican Republic, they might as well impose a good solution as a bad one. Since preparing these remarks, I note in this morning's press that General Wessin has been induced to leave the Dominican Republic. This, I believe, is a step in the right direction. The Foreign Relations Committee's study : of the Dominican crisis leads me to draw certain specific conclusions re- garding American policy in the Domin- ican Republic and also suggests some broader considerations regarding rela- tions between the United States and Latin America. My specific conclusions regarding the crisis in Santo Domingo are as follows: First. The United States intervened forcibly in the Dominican Republic in the last week of April 1965 not primarily to save American lives, as was then con- tended, but to prevent the victory of a revolutionary movement which was judged to be Communist-dominated. The decision to land thousands of ma- rines on. April 28 was based primarily on the fear of "another Cuba" in Santo Domingo. Second. This fear was based on frag- mentary and inadequate evidence. There is no doubt that Communists partici- pated In the Dominican revolution on the rebel side, probably to a greater ex- tent after than before the landing of U.S. marines on April 28, but just as it cannot be proved that the Communists would not have taken over the revolu- Approved For Release 2003/10/15: CIA - 6 00446R000500110032-0 September 15, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - A 23003 tion neither can it be proved that they Western Hemisphere-and its probable would have. There is little basis in the repercussions within the United States evidence offered the committee for the and possible effects on the careers of assertion that the rebels were Commu- those who might be held responsible- nist-dominated or certain to become so; seems to have been the most important on the contrary, the evidence suggests single factor in distorting the judgment a chaotic situation in which no single of otherwise sensible and competent faction was dominant at the outset and men. in which everybody, including the Unit- I turn now to some broader and long- ed States, had opportunities to influence term implications of the Dominican the shape and course of the rebellion. tragedy, first to some considerations Third. The United States let pass its relating to the Organization of Ameri- best opportunities to influence the course can States and its charter, then to the of events. The best opportunities were problem of reaction and revolution in on April 25, when Juan Bosch's party, Latin America, finally to a suggestion for the PRD, requested a "United States a freer and, I believe, healthier relation- presence," and on April 27, when the reb- ship between the United States and els, believing themselves defeated, re- Latin America. quested United States mediation for a Article 15 of the Charter of the Orga- negotiated settlement. Both requests nization of American States says that: were rejected, in the first instance for No state or group of states has the right reasons that are not entirely clear but to intervene, directly or indirectly, for any probably because of United States hostil- reason whatever, in the internal or external ity to the PRD, in the second instance affairs of any other state. because the U.S. Government anticipated and desired a victory of the antirebel forces. Fourth. U.S. policy toward the Do- minican Republic shifted markedly to the right between September 1963 and April 1965. In 1963, the United States strong- ly supported Bosch and the PRD as en- lightened reformers; in 1965 the United States opposed their return to power on the unsubstantiated ground that a Bosch or PRD government would certainly, or almost certainly, become Communist dominated. Thus the United States turned its back on social revolution in Santo Domingo and associated itself with a corrupt and reactionary military oligarchy. Fifth. U.S. policy was marred by a lack of candor and by misinformation. The former is illustrated by official assertions that U.S. military intervention was pri- marily for the purpose of saving Ameri- can lives; the latter is illustrated by ex- aggerated reports of massacres and atrocities by the rebels-reports which no one has been able to verify. It was officially asserted, for example-by the President in a press conference on June 17 according to an official State Depart- ment bulletin-that "some 1,500 inno- cent people were murdered and shot, and their heads cut off." There is no evi- dence to support this statement. A sober examination of such evidence as is available indicates that the Imbert dependence of any American State should be affected by an aggression which is not an armed attack or by an extracontinental or Intracontinental conflict, or by any other fact or situation that might endanger the peace of America, the Organ of Consultation shall meet immediately in order to agree on the measures which must be taken in case of aggression to assist the victim of the aggres- sion or, in any case, the measures which should be taken for the common defense and for the maintenance of the peace and security of the continent. The United States thus had legal re- course when the Dominican crisis broke on April 24, 1965. We could have called an urgent session of the Council of the 'OAS for the purpose of invoking article 6 of the Rio Treaty. But we did not do so. The administration has argued that there was no time to consult the OAS, although there was time to consult-or inform-the congressional leadership. The United States thus intervened in the Dominican Republic unilaterally- and illegally. Advising the Latin American countries of our action after the fact did not con- stitute compliance with the OAS Char- ter or the Rio Treaty; nor, indeed, would advising them before the fact have con- stituted compliance. One does not com- ply with the law by notifying interested parties in advance of one's intent to vio- late it. Inter-American law requires consultation for the purpose of shaping a collective decision. Only on the basis of advance consultation and agreement could we have undertaken a legal inter- vention in the Dominican Republic. It is possible, had we undertaken such consultations, that our Latin American partners would have delayed a decision; it is possible that they would have re- fused to authorize collective interven- tion. My own feeling is that the situa- tion in any case did not justify military intervention except for the limited pur- pose of evacuating U.S. citizens and other foreigners, but even if it seemed to us that it did, we should not have undertaken it without the advance con- sent of our Latin American allies. We should not have done so because the word and the honor of the United States were at stake just as much-at least as much-in the Dominican crisis as they are in Vietnam and Korea and Berlin and all the places around the globe which we have committed ourselves to defend. There is another important reason for compliance with the law. The United States is a conservative power in the world in the sense that most of its vital interests are served by stability and order. Law is the essential foundation of stability and order both within socie- ties and in international relations. A great conference is taking place here in Washington this week on the subject, World Peace Through Law. As a con- servative power the United States has a vital interest in upholding and expanding the reign of law in international ' rela- tions. Insofar as international law is observed, it provides us with stability and order and with a means of predicting the behavior of those with whom we have reciprocal legal obligations. When we The territory of a state is inviolable; it may not be the object, even temporarily, of military occupation or of other measures of force taken by another state, directly or indirectly, on any grounds whatever. These clauses are not ambiguous. They mean that, with one exception to be noted, all forms of forcible intervention are absolutely prohibited among the American States. It may be that we should never have accepted this com- mitment at Bogota in 1948; it is obvious from all the talk one hears these days about the obsoleteness of the principle of nonintervention that some U.S. offi- cials regret our commitment to it. The fact remains that we are committed to it, not partially or temporarily or insofar as we find it compatible with our vital interests but almost absolutely. It represents our word and our bond and our willingness to honor the solemn com- mitments embodied in a treaty which was ratified by the Senate on August 28, 1950. There are those who might concede the point of law but who would also argue that such considerations have to do with our ideals rather than our interests and are therefore of secondary importance. I do not believe that is true. We are currently fighting a war in Vietnam, largely, we are told, because it would be a disaster if the United States failed to honor its word and its commitment; the junta was guilty of at least as many matter, we are told, is one of vital na- atrocities as the rebels. tional interest. I do not see why it is Sixth. Responsibility for the failure any less a matter of vital interest to of American policy in Santo Domingo honor a clear and explicit treaty obliga- lies primarily with those who advised tion in the Americas than it is to honor the President. In the critical days be- the much more ambiguous and less for- tween April 25 and April 28, these offi- mal promises we have made to the South cials sent the President exaggerated re- Vietnamese. ports of the danger of a Communist take- The sole exception to the prohibitions over in Santo Domingo and, on the basis of articles 15 and 17 is spelled out in of these, recommended U.S. massive mil- article 19 of the OAS Charter, which itary intervention. It is not at all states that "measures adopted for the difficult to understand why, on the basis maintenance of peace and security in of such advice, the President made the accordance with existing treaties do not decisions that he made. constitute a violation of the principles Seventh. Underlying the bad advice set forth in articles 15 and 17." Article and unwise actions of the United States 6 of the Rio Treaty states: was the fear of another Cuba. The spec- If the inviolability or the integrity of the ter of a second Communist state in the territory or the sovereignty or political in- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release A-Rpp6 0 4468000500110032- 23004 ~NGIZE SIbNAL REED - SENATE September 15, 196,5 violate the law ourselves, whatever shirt term advantage may be gained, we ire obviously encouraging others to violate the law; we thus encourage disorder and instability and thereby do incalculaile damage to our own long term interef ts. There are those who defend U.S. u:i- lateral intervention in the Dominican Republic on the ground that the prin i- pie of nonintervention as spelled out in the OAS Charter is obsolete. The argu- ment is unfortunate on two grounis. First, the contention of obsoleteness jigs- tifies an effort to bring about changes in the OAS Charter by due process of law, but it does not justify violation of the Charter. Second, the view that the prin- eiple of nonintervention is obsolete is one held by certain U.S. officials; most Lai-in Americans would argue that, far from being obsolete, the principle of nonia- tervention was and remains the hefxt and core of the inter-American system. Insofar as it is honored, it provided the in with something that many in the United States find it hard to believe they could suppose they need: protection from tae United States. Many North Americans seem to be- lieve that, while the United States does indeed participate In Latin American Et- fairs from, time to time, sometimes by force, it is done with the best of inten- tions, usually indeed to protect the Latin Americans from intervention by some- body else, and therefore cannot really be considered Intervention. The trout le with this point of view is that It is not shared by our neighbors to the south. Most of them do think they need protec- tion from the United States and the his- tory of the Monroe Doctrine and tie "Roosevelt corollary" suggest that their fears are not entirely without - founda-tion. "Good intentions" are not a very sound basis for judging the fulfillment of contractual obligations. Just about everybody, including the Communists, believes in his own "good intentions." It is a highly subjective criterion of n)-, tional behavior and has no more than a chance relationship to good resuli. With whatever justice or lack of it, many Latin Americans are afraid of the Uniti=,d States; however much it may hurt air feelings, they prefer to have their sex'; rity based on some more objective stand- and than the good intentions of tire United States. The standard on which they rely most heavily is the principle of nonintervei r- tion; however obsolete it may seem to certain U.S. officials, it remains vital and pertinent in Latin America. When we violate it, we are not overriding the mere letter of the law; we are violating whit to Latin Americans is its vital heart and The inter-American system Is rooted in an implicit contract between the Latin American countries and the United .States. In return for our promise not ;o interfere in their internal affairs they have. accepted a role as members of of it "sphere" and to support, or at least n it to obstruct, our. global policies. In the Dominican. Republic we violated our part of the bargain; it remains to be secti whether Latin Americans will now feel free to violate theirs. In the eyes of educated, energetic and tions in their own countries, whether one patriotic young Latin Americans-which clay they will find themselves facing U.S. is to say, the generation that rill make marines across barricades in their own or break the Alliance for Progress-the home towns. . United States committed a worse offense I, myself, am sure, as I know President in the Dominican Republic than just in- Johnson and, indeed, most. U.S. citizens tervention; it intervened against social are sure, that our country is not now revolution and in support, at least tem- and will not become the enemy of social porarily, of a corrupt, reactionarv :mi.li- tary oligarchy. It is not possible at present to assess the depth and extent of disillusion with the United States on the part of demo- crats and reformers in Latin America. I myself think that it is deep and wide- spread. Nor am I reassured by assertions on the part of administration officials that a number of Latin American govern- ments have secretly expressed sympathy for our actions in the Dominican Repub- lic while explaining that of course they could not be expected to support us openly. Why cannot they support us openly, unless it is because their sym- pathy does not represent the views of their own people and they do not dare to express It openly? In fact, real en- thusiasm for our Dominican venture has been confined largely to military dicta- tors and ruling oligarchies. The tragedy of Santo Domingo is that a policy that purported to defeat com- munism in the short run is more likely to have the effect of promoting It in the long run. Intervention in the Dominican Republic has alienated-temporarily or permanently, depending on our future policies-our real friends in Latin Amer- ica. These, broadly, are the people of the democratic left-the Christian and social democrats in a number of countries, the APRA Party in Peru, the Accion Demo- cratica Party in Venezuela, and their kin- dred spirits throughout the hemisphere. By our intervention on the side of a cor- rupt military oligarchy in the Dominican Republic, we have embarrassed before their own people the democratic re- formers who have counseled trust and partnership with the United States. We have lent credence to the idea that the United States is the enemy of social revo- lution in Latin America and that the only choice Latin Americans have is between communism and reaction. If those are the available alternatives, if there is no democratic left as a third option, then there is no doubt of the choice that honest and patriotic Latin Americans will make: they will choose communism, not because they want it but because U.S. policy will have foreclosed all other avenues of social revolution and, indeed, all other possibilities except the perpetuation of rule by military juntas and economic oligarchies. The dominant force in Latin America is the aspiration of increasing numbers of people to personal and national dig- nity. In the minds of the rising gen- eration there are two principle threats to that aspiration-reaction at home and domination from abroad. As a result of its Dominican actions the United States has allowed itself to become associated with both. We have thereby offended the dignity and self-respect of young and idealistic Latin Americans who must now wonder whether the United States will one day intervene against social revolu- revolution in Latin America. We have made a mistake in the Dominican Re- public, as we did at the Bay of Pigs in 1961, but a single misjudgment does not constitute a doctrine for the conduct of future policy and we remain dedi- cated to the goals of the Alliance for Progress. We know this ourselves but it remains to convince our true friends in Latin America that their social revolutions will have our sympathy and support. It will not be easy to do so, because our in- tervention :in Santo Domingo shook if it did not shatter a confidence in the United States that had been built up over 30 years since the liquidation of the Caribbean protectorates and the initia- tion of the "good neighbor policy." It will be diffl.cult but it can be done. President Johnson took a positive step on the long road back in his statement of rededication to the Alliance for Prog- ress to the Latin American Ambassadors on August 17. It remains for us to elimi- nate the ambiguity between the anti- revolutionary approach symbolized by Project Camelot and the preoccupation with problems of counterinsurgency on the one hand and the creative approach of the Alliance for Progress on the other. If we do this-and I am both sure that we ban and reasonably hopeful that we wall-then :I think that the Dominican affair will be relegated in history to the status of a single unhappy episode on the long road toward the forging of a new and creative and dignified relationship between the United States and Latin America. in conclusion, I suggest that a new and healthier relationship between the United States and Latin America, must be a freer relationship than that of the past. The United' States Is a world power with world responsibilities and to it the inter-American system represents a sen- sible way of maintaining law and order in the region closest to the United States. To the extent that it functions as we want it to function, one of the inter-American system's important advantages is that it stabilizes relations within the western hemisphere and thus frees the United States to act on its worldwide responsi- bilities. To Latin Americans, on the other hand, the inter-.American system is po- litically and psychologically confining. It has the effect, so to speak, of cooping them up in the western hemisphere, giving them the feeling that there is no way to break out of the usually well-in- teritioned but often stifling embrace of the United States. In their hearts, I have no doubt, most Latin Americans would like to be free of us, just as a son or daughter coming of age wishes to be free of an over-protective parent. A great many of those Latin Americans for Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 September 15, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 23005 whom Castro still has some appeal-and Mr. CLARK. Mr. President, will the So far as I am concerned, this was there are now more, I would guess, than Senator yield? simply a matter of whether this country before last April 28-are attracted not, I Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. was going to stand aside and risk an- feel, because they are infatuated with Mr. CLARK. Mr. President, I should other Cuban type Communist take- communism, but because Cuba, albeit at like to express my complete accord with over, or whether we were going to move the price of almost complete dependency the position taken by the Senator in his on the theory that this looked very much on the Soviet Union, has broken out of most interesting and very important as though it might be a Communist take- the orbit of the United States. speech about the Dominican Republic over, and that we would rather take the It is the nature of things that small and the events which have taken place chance of moving when it might not be nations do not live comfortably in the there. necessary, than take the risk-as Presi- shadow of large and powerful nations, It has been my privilege as a junior dent Eisenhower did-that this would be regardless of whether the latter are member of the Committee on Foreign a Communist takeover. benevolent or overbearing. Belgium has Relations to sit through most of the We have information now that the always been uncomfortable about Ger hearings which have been held on the Communists In the Dominican Republic many and France; Ireland has never Dominican Republic and to read that are stronger than Castro was when he been able to work up much affection for part of the testimony which I did not started out to take Cuba. Great Britain. And in recent Years actually hear. We have information, available to the some of the Eastern European govern- I believe that this speech is overdue, Senator from Arkansas, to lead us to ments have demonstrated that, despite sound, and wise. I hope that it will be believe there is a real threat of Commu- the Communist ideology which they given great effect by the policymakers of nist subjugation and conquest of that share with the Soviet Union, they still the executive branch of our Government. island. That we do not wish to see take wish to free themselves as much as they Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, i place. can and as much as they dare from the thank the Senator very much for his I have heard some criticism of the fact overbearing power of Russia. It is natu- comment. that the President sent more troops than ral and inevitable that Latin American Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Presi- were necessary. In Louisiana we had countries should have some of the same dent, the Senator from Arkansas is cer- some contact with this type of problem. feelings toward the United States. tainly entitled to his opinion with regard I recall a time, while my father was a Perhaps, then, the foremost immediate to the action of the President of the prominent official in Louisiana govern- requirement for a new and more friendly United States, as are all Senators. How- ment, when some people who could not relationship between Latin America and ever, I should like to say as a member win an election decided to take charge the United States in the long run is not of the Committee. on Foreign Relations, and organized an army at the airport. closer ties and new institutional bonds I do not believe the Senator from Arkan- The National Guard arrived and the only but a loosening of existing ties and in- sas' remarks reflect the sentiment of fellow who was injured was a man who stitutional bonds. It is an established that committee on this matter. The shot himself with his own shotgun try- psychological principle-or, for that members of the committee were invited ing to get through a barbed wire fence. matter, just common sense-that the by the President to give him advice on At another time, in the city of New strongest and most viable personal bonds the decision to send American troops to Orleans, when the police force was un- are those which are voluntary, a volun- the Dominican Republic. That is true der control of the existing organization, tary bond being, by definition, an ar- of the distinguished chairman of the which was opposed to our group and rangement which one is free to enter committee also. When that decision would not assure our faction an honest or not to enter. I do not see why the was made, not one dissenting voice was election count, we called out the Na- same principle should not operate in heard. The Senator was there. He had tional Guard. After awhile we agreed relations between nations. If it does, an opportunity to advise the President on a procedure to assure a fair election it would follow that the first step toward about what should be done. I believe his and we took out the National Guard. stronger ties between Latin America and advice was taken on that occasion. We got an honest count. the United States would be the creation Mr. FULBRIGHT. I think the Sena- On both occasions the man in charge of a situation in which Latin American tor is mistaken. We were not asked as of the troops did not have to shoot any- countries would be free, and would feel to what action should be taken. We body, but he said: free, to maintain or sever existing ties as were told what had been done. As far The best way to be sure you do not have they see fit and, perhaps more important, as we knew, it had been done. to fight is to have enough troops there so to establish new arrangements, both Mr. LONG of Louisiana. That is not the opposition will know that they cannot among themselves and with nations out- my impression. My impression is that defeat you if there is to be fighting. side the hemisphere, in which the United the Senator attended the meeting at the States would not participate. White House. He was there. I know I President Frei of Chile has taken an was there. initiative to this end. He has visited Mr. FULBRIGHT. I was there. European leaders and apparently indi- Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Not one cated that his Christian Democratic American marine had been landed up to Government is interested in establishing that time. new political, economic, and cultural Mr. FULBRIGHT. But the decision links with European. countries. For the had been made. reasons suggested, I think this is an in- Mr. LONG of Louisiana. I am not go- telligent and constructive step. ing to quote the Senator because that I think further that it would be a fine was a secret meeting and much secret thing if Latin American countries were information was discussed. to undertake a program of their own for My understanding was that the Presi- "building bridges" to the world beyond dent-and I say this with regard to our the western hemisphere-to Europe and Republican friends also-said certain Asia and Africa, and to the Communist things to indicate that he did not want countries if they wish. Such relation- to act until he had consulted with us; ships, to be sure, would involve a loosen- and the decision had not been made. ing of ties to the United States in the My impression of the matter was that immediate future, but in the long run, I the Senator from Arkansas made a sug- feel sure, they would make for both hap- gestion of what should be done. He can pier and stronger bonds with the United use his best judgment on the protocol States-happier because they would be about matters of that sort. But my im- free, -stronger because they would be pression was, insofar as the Senator's dignified and self-respecting as they suggestion, was concerned that it was never had been before. followed. That would be my advice to the Presi- dent. "Do not send 200 or 300 marines and have them exterminated. Send enough boys so that if there is a fight, and the opposition will know that if they start a fight, they will be defeated." The Senator had a different idea than I did in regard to the Bay of Pigs. My thought about the Bay of Pigs was that the idea of helping people to go there and liberating that island was not a bad idea. The only thing was that we did not send enough people to whip Castro. If that were to have been done, that would have been the time to do it, in my judgment. Many people would like to be free of Castro's enslavement on that is- land. If the general philosophy of the Senator's speech had been followed, Castro would have taken not only that island, but the Dominican Republic, also. If we follow the general view that if the Communists attempt to take over, we ought to do what is within our power to keep that from happening, not only would we not have lost the Dominican Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 23006 IcQNGRESSIONALRECORD - SENATE September- Republic to the Communists; we would never have lost Cuba to, the, Communi ats., Suppose President Eisenhower hact, it to do all over again, and he had heird one group argue the Fuibright doctrine: "Do not interfere; you might be criti- cized"; and another group saying, "I1:iis is a Communist takeover; go on in" Suppose President Eisenhower, sincEge, anti-Communist, and good man that he is, had been confronted with suct' a situation again. I believe he would not have taken a chance that there would be a Commurist takeover. He would have gone in. He would have resolved the doubt in an ef- fort to try to save the people from Com- munist subjugation. So far as I know-and I believe thlu is correct-every responsible person Rho had, any contact with the matter urged the President to do what he did; and the President proceeded to do what he thought was best, after explaining the problem as he saw it. He invited eve, g- one, including the distinguished chair- man of the Committee on Foreign Rela- tions [Mr. FULBRIGHTI, to offer advice. I had the opportunity to offer my advice. My advice was: "If you have any thought whatever that. this might be a Comrr.u- nist takeover, please, Mr. President, move, because the American people will never forgive you if you merely sit hire and watch the Communists take that island." Mr. SM:ATHERS. Mr. President, vrill the Senator yield? Mr. LONG of Louisiana. I yield. Mr. SMATHERS. I want to assoeic.te myself with the remarks just made by the distinguished Senator from Loui3i- ana, I am one of those who was pririi- leged to sit in on the particular meeting that has been referred to. There we many there from both sides of the aisle. As I recall, the distinguished minoriy leader [Mr. DIRKSEN] was present, is, of course, was the distinguished char- man of the Committee on Foreign Rela- tions [Mr. FUL$RIGHTI. I believe the overwhelming consensus was that -1ve wanted to be certain that the island of the Dominican Republic was not lost to the Communists. No one was absolutely certain as to what was happening. At this point there was no time for a stu 3y by the Foreign Relations Committee or any other committee. The country was on fire; people were dying; property was being destroyed; Communists were )n hand and chaos was in charge. Some- thing had to be done and it had to be done based on the best information th m available. The President was told 5y our Ambassador, by the representatises of the CIA, the Peace Corps, the USIA, and the Air Force, .the Army, the Ma- rines, and the Navy. All spoke with `a loud and unanimous voice-and they said, "the revolution has been going ')n for 4 days--it is now out of hand and yrlu Mr. President must send ii} troops to save lives and property." It was very clear that at the White House, at that time that the overwhelming consensus was of the belief that we had better see id in enough forces to make certain that the indiscriminate shooting and looti7lg would be stopped, and that the Commi- nists would not take over. I do not agree that too many troops were sent into the Dominican Republic. For that matter, I do not ,believe we are sending too many troops to Vietnam. If one argued the same philosophy as that expressed by the, Senator from Arkansas, perhaps he could say we are sending too many troops to Vietnam, because we are now beginning to win there. Surely no one would argue that we are not supposed to win just because we are opposing Communists, and some misled liberals who are on their side. We are fighting Communists in Vietnam. We are having to oppose them-one way or another, all around the world, and for a certainty they sought to. take over the Dominican Republic just as they did Cuba, and that was a matter of grave concern to us when the President sent in our troops to Santo Domingo. I do not see anything wrong with that, as the distinguished Senator from Louisiana has indicated. What is wrong with try- ing to save a country from communism? We had already lost Cuba to Castro. It has been admitted that there were only about 12 known Communist leaders in Cuba with Castro when he started his revolution. He was acclaimed-when he started out-the greatest social revolu- tionary to come along in modern day. I remember when the New York Times and other newspapers were writing lyri- cal articles about Castro and what a great man he was. I recall his appear- ance before the American Society of Newspaper Publishers . and Editors, where he was lauded and applauded. I also recall when he sat with the Com- mittee on Foreign Relations in the Capi- tol and I asked him, "When are you going to have elections?" Castro replied, "There is no use in having elections, because I will be elected over and over again." Castro made that statement in the Committee on Foreign Relations, and still many thought he was a great demo- cratic leader. Castro proved that it was not necessary to have a large number of Communists present in order to deliver a country to communism. When a coun- try like Cuba falls to communism it costs us hundreds of lives and millions of dollars. So we could not afford to take a chance in the Dominican Republic. I do not understand the philosophy of the Senator from Arkansas in this re- spect. I have the greatest affection and highest respect for my former chairman, the Senator from Arkansas [Mr. FUL- BRIGHT], but I do not understand, for the life of me, what the objection is to send- ing enough troops to the Dominican Re- Public to do the job, or even perhaps sending 200 or 300 more. The job was done. The country has not been lost. It is today moving in the direction of estab- lishing a constitutional government, so that, hopefully, constitutional rights will be in the near future preserved. I again totally associate myself with the remarks of the distinguished Senator from Louisiana. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Presi- dent, if it could be done as the Senator from Arkansas proposes, I would much prefer to treat the Communists with 15, 1965 Christian fellowship, love, and truth, without having to resort to violence. A number of fine people, such as Cardinal Mlndszenty, used that approach, but did not get fair with it. If we are to keep the Communists from taking over, we cannot rely on them to tell the truth; we cannot rely on them to admit that they are Communists; we cannot rely on their regime not to murder and exterminate people who do not agree with commu- rdsm. I would be willing to take a chance on meeting Communists in free elections. Why will they not agree to free elec- tions? They will not agree to them here or anywhere else. About the only time Communists are willing to agree to free elections is when the Communists can- not win by force of arms nor by black- mail, assassination, or brutality. They have yet to win their first free election. A program of good will, kindness, truth, and love they neighbor, while it is fine to be extended toward Communists, is never seen coming from the opposite direction, toward us. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, to try to keep the record straight-and it was not my intention to engage in a gen- eral, running debate on how much we disagree with communism -I assure the Senator from Louisiana that I am not a Communist and. do not wish to promote that system. The policies I am talking about in- volve a judgment as to whether they do or do not promote communism. The only election in the Dominican Republic that we are told was absolutely free and without any threat, was the one that resulted in the election of Mr. Bosch. But he was thrown out by a coup. The Senator from Louisiana is saying that the whole movement of U.S. troops was to prevent Communists from taking over. At the meeting at the White ;house it is my impression-and I believe the press reports will confirm it-that we were told that the movement was to save American lives. Much was said about the saving, of 1,500 American lives and several hundred other lives. It- was put on the basis of saving innocent people, particularly Americans and the nationals of other countries. I said in my speech that I thoroughly agreed with that pro- posal. When a situation endangers the lives of people who had nothing to do with the occurrence, it is quite proper for us to act. That was the theory on which our action was based at the meeting. We were not told that a Communist take- over was in progress. I recall asking-and perhaps someone else asked--what the situation was with respect to communism. We were told that three individuals had been identified as Communists. This is out of several thousand who were engaged in the up- rising. I must say this in all charity to the Director of the CIA, who had been sworn in that very noon, so he could not have been expected to know what had taken place. He had been the Director of the CIA only about 10 hours, perhaps 6 hours. I do not blame him at all for either in- advertence or anything else. About a Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 September 15, 1965 ' ' CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE . 23007 week later, after the situation had been reviewed, it was announced that 55 per- sons were Communists. No one believed that Rafael Molina Urena was a Communist. He had been the President of the Senate under the Bosch regime. Under their Constitu- tion, as I understand it, since Bosch did not return, Molina was what we would consider to be the legitimate successor. I understand that that was the process of succession. He was designated by the party in power, the PRD Party, which is the only legitimate party which had won an election, by 58 percent, in 1962. The party was thrown out by a coup, as the Senator knows. This was an effort to reestablish them- selves. The leaders of this revolution were not accused of being Communists. The Senator is assuming the very fact in controversy. The very fact that I question is that there was any firm and convincing evidence that this was a Com- munist takeover, that the revolutionary power, the revolutionary movement was dominated and controlled by Commu- nists. We had 13 meetings on this matter. To me, there is very little evidence from the testimony of administration wit- nesses. Every witness was an adminis- tration witness except Munoz-Marin, who is certainly no enemy of the admin- istration. He has been a very close friend of this administration. As the Senator knows, he was a long-time Governor of Puerto Rico. There was no serious and convincing evidence, or even anything close to being convincing evidence, that the leaders of the revolution in the be- ginning were Communists. They were members of the PRD Party. They were people who wished to reaffirm their claim to the presidency. They had been thrown out by a coup. The Senator assumes that this was a Communist takeover. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Presi- dent, I decline to yield further. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I raised the point in my speech that there was not any evi- dence to show that it was a Communist plot. I think that it was more likely a PRD revolution. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. The Senator has failed to distinguish between non- Communist liberals who were involved there and the hard-core Castro-trained Communists who were trained to take over. When Castro took over Cuba, knowing the experience we have had if we had followed the Fulbright doctrine, the takeover would have occurred never- theless, because many sincere liberals were opposed to Batista while hard-core Communists were prepared to kill the Socialist or non-Communist liberals and take the place over. That is what they did and they did it as quickly as these honest and sincere people who believed in freedom dis- covered that they had made a mistake and fallen into a trap. The people dis- covered that it was then too late. They could not extricate themselves. Some of those people gave up their lives and were injured and taken prisoners at the Bay of Pigs invasion when they tiled to lib- erate Cuba from Castro. We had enough information to know that the Dominican revolt was a move in the direction of communism. This country had all the justification that it needed to intervene. It had sufficient justification to require our going in there and protecting our citizens and the citi- zens of other countries. Oddly enough, De Gaulle can find more reason to criticize our country, a country which has defended France more than any other country, than any man who has ever had a position of great respon- sibility and power in the free world. Mr. de Gaulle found fault with the United States sending troops to a coun- try to protect human life. However, De Gaulle's Ambassador rushed down and asked that the French Embassy be pro- tected by American troops against irre- sponsible revolutionaries who were run- ning down the corridors with machine- guns and killing people. We took it upon ourselves to protect innocent peo- ple from friendly nations, people who were not a party to the revolt at all. Mr. FULBRIGHT, There is no ques- tion about that. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. The Senator suggests something that is inconsistent, with respect to this Nation contributing troops in this situation. We did not do it when Mr. Bosch was run out of there. As a practical matter, the President was right in taking the position which he did in the military coup which in- volved Mr. Bosch. It was a fight be- tween one crowd of anti-Communists and another crowd. I do not believe that we would have had any right to go in there with troops at that time. However, on the other hand, if this were a Com- munist takeover, or if it had the possibil- ity of being a Communist takeover, if we had the information, which we did, that a great many hard-core Communist Mos- cow-trained or Castro-trained Commu- nists were in there seeking to start a revolution and to take charge and take over the country, we should have at- tempted to frustrate that effort if we could. I believe the record shows that every person whose advice the President sought on Capitol Hill, be he Republi- can or Democrat-and if any Senator wants to question this statement, he can say so-either advised the President to go or did not advise him not to go. I believe that every single person ad- vised the President to go, with the ex- ception of the suggestion made by the Senator from Arkansas, and, to the best of my knowledge, the President followed that advice. Mr. SMATHERS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. LONG of Louisiana. I yield. Mr. SMATHERS. Mr. President, the Senator from Arkansas talks about his recollection with regard to how many Communists we thought were in Santo Domingo. It was all a guess. My recol- lection is that it was approximately 58. And the 58 were Communist leaders. Actually nobody had any idea for a cer- tainty how many Communists were there or how many of the revolutionists were on the Communist side. At the time that Bosch was thrown out by internal revolution, I do not believe that anybody advised the then President of the United States that our people were being fired on and that our property was being destroyed, nor that we should send troops. I do not believe that the then Ambassador, nor the Army, nor the Navy, nor the CIA, nor the Peace Corps gave such advice. I do not believe that any of the people who, on this April 1965 occa- sion, advised the President that we needed troops there to protect our property and the lives of people, advised that we should send troops on that other occasion. When Bosch was forced by a coup to leave Santo Domingo and move to Puerto Rico. I believe that it might be said about that meeting at the White House to which we have been making reference, and I do not believe this will violate to any great extent the rules with regard to keeping such meetings secret-that everybody who was there recalls that when the Pres- ident was advising us as to what he was going to do-a telephone call come through, the fellow who was talking from the Dominican Republic said that he was at that moment under the table and the bullets were coming through the window and surging all around him. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Bullets were whizzing through the window of the Embassy by the Ambassador. Mr. SMATHERS. The Senator is cor- rect. At the very moment of the tele- phone conversation, bullets were coming through the window. What is the Presi- dent supposed to say-"Let us go out and reason with these people?" This was no time to reason. These people were not in a reasoning mood. Something had to be done, and the President was advised to take a firm and courageous course and he took it. At that time, we thought that some 1,560 people were killed in the first few days. Remember the President did not send our troops until the revolution had been going on for 4 days. Everybody's hindsight is better than their foresight. It may be that there were not 1,560 people killed. However, many of them were killed, and millions of dollars worth of property was destroyed. Our Embassy was being fired upon. Other embassies were being looted. Thank God our troops finally showed up. The Senator from Louisiana has pointed out that by virtue of the fact that we had our troops down there, some 5,600 people, nationals of other coun- tries, were safely evacuated. Because of the presence of our troops, there was no great loss of life. If we had delayed; if we had had a study; if the President had vacillated, hundreds and hundreds of other people would have been killed and untold dam- age would have been done. But most importantly that country would be in the hands of the Communists today. One of the significant things that is never talked about when we discuss this Dominican matter is the Organization of American States. At its fourth inter- parliamentary session-in the official meetings or consultations, the Orga- nization of American States directed that one of their groups go to Santo Domingo Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 23008 CQQNGRESSIONAL.RECORD - SEN LTE September 15, 1965 and make a study. These are Latin peo ample, the Senator from Florida [Mr. pie, not from the United States-bu SMATRERS] says 1,560 were killed in the from various countries of Latin America;, first.4 days. The official OAS group concluded tha As of May 8, the Red Cross confirmed the President of the, United States dl a count of 150 dead and 605 wounded in the only sensible and practical thins hostilities, They were not Americans. that could have been done under the cir- ? No American citizens was killed or shot cumstances, when he dispatched troopl or injured until after the Marines were to restore law and order. * landed and. the Marines exeha?!nged shots I repeat these are Latins, familiar witlt with the revolutionists. the area, the conditions, the people. So subsequent events did not confirm They approved the President's action- the advice about the necessity and the It seems to me that what we ought tai danger that came from the Embassy. be doing is applauding the President. Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, a Thank. God that most of the people arty parliamentary inquiry. doing that. The Gallup poll shows tha Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Press- 85 Percent of the people approve. of wha dent, I believe I have the floor. the President did in Santo Domingo. ' Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, who believe that those people who approve of has the floor? the action of the. President are correct, The PRESIDING OFFICER. The And I believe a majority of the membero Senator from Louisiana has the floor at of the Foreign Relations Committee, and this moment, unless he will yield for a a majority of this Senate believe our parliamentary inquiry. President acted correctly and courag&F Mr. LONG, of Louisiana. I have not ously, yielded, Mr. President. I wish to make Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Press- this statement, and I will try to cut it dent, the President had the advice of it short. nine-man American team in Santo Do-- I know the Senator from Arkansas mingo. The team, included those who [Mr. FULBRIGHT] has a responsibility to had responsibility, anybody in charge o: the Senate. He is trying to discharge It. any organization, from the Peace Corp.? I shall try to cooperate with him. up to the Ambassador himself. He had It is one thing to think about these the advice of the State Department, and matters, ask for hearings, bring people the. advice of his own White House staff, in, see what. the record shows, and take which .is supposed to be available to hire: a nice vacation and analyze the matter, for such purpose. Some reference watt and come back in a_week and say, "I am made to the fact that the man from they not sure this was necessary at all." CIA had only been there a short time. But it is quite another thing if the But that man was ;a naval admiral, ant; man is there, and shooting is going on, he was not merely saying what he and he must move now or it will be too learned in 5 days; he was giving the besi, late. He cannot stop to figure whether judgment he could based on the advice, 315 or 575 or 1,500 people have been fe;pert who have years. studying sucL. killed. He must move now. b f ars. _x It is easy to find fault with the Presi- If those who had responsibility to tell = dent of the United States. Senators us how to deal with the Communists ir, ? have, and I am sure they will continue Santo Domingo, and how to deal with the to do so. Communists in the Dominican Republic; But one thing, we cannot say about and all those people, so far as I know the man who is President of the United unanimously-and the record will show- States: We cannot say he cannot move. provided such advice to the President, I say to the Senate that when hurricane who would say that should be done? Betsy hit Louisiana last week, the worst The Senator said when he was there, disaster in our history, I called the Presi- that perhaps he did not advise us not to, dent and said, "Mr. President, the most go because he thought the decision had horrible thing that has ever happened been made. That is my understanding, to Louisiana has just occurred. The My understanding is that the President', people ought to see you and know that had taken the precaution to do what he their Government and their President should have done, that is, to put the car- are interested in their welfare. It will riers in a position so that he would have give them the courage to try to hold out the troops available if the decision was and try to help themselves, if they just made to go in. know that help is on its way, and that Now he has been criticized for going in they have this great country on their with too much. I suppose next year he side." will be criticized for going too soon. That man has on his hands the wax But if we were compelled to move, I in Vietnam, but he called me and said, would want to be able to avoid a com-, 'Be at the White House in 15 minutes. plete Communist takeover. If we had to if you are not at the White House in go in, it was better. to go with too much, 15 minutes, I will be on my way to too soon than to go with too little too. Louisiana by myself." I got there and late. we went down there, and he told those Mr. FULBRIGHT. Will the Senator, people that all of the redtape would be yield? cut, and that help was on its way. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. I yield. We are getting help. If I had to Mr. FULBRIGHT. On the question of choose between one man who thinks it what the record shows, I based my speech might not be all that serious, and says, upon the records of the hearings before "Let us wait and get the report and the committee. Many wild rumors were analyze it and think about it a little published In the newspapers which our longer," and the man who. says, "Wait own people did not confirm. For ex- minute;Sf-we do all this, it might be too late," I think:[ would take the fellow who could move. Many, battles have been lost by waiting to see. The South would be a separate nation today-and I am glad we are not--had it not been that a citizen of Louisiana, Gen. P. G. ? T. Beauregard, waited until the smoke lifted on the first day of the Battle of Shiloh, down in Tennessee. Had that man had the aggressive in- stincts of o& President, he would have pushed Grant's army into the Tennessee River before General Buell was able to bring up a whole new Federal Army to join the fight. On that occasion, Albert Sidney Johnson had bled to death in his saddle pressing the attack. When John- son (lied, and Beauregard found himself in command, he preferred to halt the at- tack and renew it on the following day. By that time Beauregard was facing two Union armies instead of one. Had Beauregard possessed the initia- tive: of our President, he would have run the Union Army into the river on the evening of the first day, and instead of Grant defeating the Southern Army, and proceeding to capture one army at Vicks- burg and another at Appomattox, Grant would have been relieved of duty as an incompetent, and Lincoln would have never found himself a great general. But, Mr. President, we have a Presi- dent who moved. He moved in the tradi- tion of our great country, and in the tradition of all great Americans, who do not believe in waiting until the smoke lift:; in Santo Domingo or until the dust settles in China to do something about these things. Mr. President, I thank the merciful Lord that our President pos- sesses a sense of urgency and that he possesses initiative. I yield the floor. ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, the Senator from West Virginia will cooper- ate, as always, with his colleagues. He knows that the subject matter which has been discussed is important. As the assistant majority leader has stated, legislation is pending in the Chamber. It, too, deals with important subject matter of concern to the American people. I ask unanimous consent, however, that the Senator from Delaware be per- mitted to address the Senators on a subject which is not germane. Mr. ROBERTSON. How long does the Senator from Delaware wish to hold the floor? Mr. RANDOLPH. Approximately 10 minutes. He talked with me about an hour and a half ago about his request. At that time, we (lid not know that the Senator from Arkansas and the Senator from Louisiana would take as much time as they have taken. I, too, wish to go forward with the pending legislation, but I feel that I at least implied to the Senator from Delaware that I would submit this unanimous-consent request, and ,I do so with the understanding that he speak not more than 10 minutes. Approved For Release; 2003/10/15: CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release 2003110k15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 22998 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE September 15, 1965 On page 12, lines 1 and 2, after the word "pay" in line 1 strike out the words "the Federal pro rata share of". On page 16, line 15, after the word "pay" strike out the words "the Federal pro rata share of the". Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I would like to explain the purpose of the amend- ment which I have offered for myself and the Senator from Montana [Mr." METCALF]. The committee bill provides that the cost shall be allocated between the Federal Government and the States in the same proportion that costs are al- located for construction of the Inter- state Highway and primary systems- that is, 90 percent to be paid by the Fed- eral Government and 10 percent by the States, in respect to the Interstate High- way System, and 50 percent by the Fed- eral Government and 50 percent by the States with respect to the primary system. I support the objectives of the bill, and voted to report it to the Senate. But yesterday, at the close of the session, I stated my reasons for having presented this amendment in committee, and the reasons which lead me to offer it today. In the subcommittee this amendment was adopted by a large vote, but in the full committee the action of the subcom- mittee was reversed by a vote of 8 to 5. I offer this amendment for two princi- pal reasons. One reason is that it is a national program. It is so declared by the bill and by the President. The second reason for requiring the full amount to be paid by the Federal Government is that the bill would im- pose a penalty upon States not acceding to its program-the penalty being the denial of all Federal-aid funds for con- struction of highways. With such a penalty, and no State could accept such a penalty, the program proposed in the bill-worthy as it is-cannot be consid- ered a true voluntary Federal-State aid program. The denial of all funds to a State would amount to millions of dollars to a State. In the case of California it would amount to a denial of $336 million an- nually. In my own State it would amount to $74 million. In other States it would be in similar proportions. The bill would effectually require the States to accept this program and that their legislatures appropriate money to pay for its cost. It is a worthy program. I voted to report it to the Senate, but I do not approve its mandatory features. Over 100 Federal-aid programs have been enacted. None mandatorily re- quires State acceptance. If it is to be exercised, I believe the Federal Govern- ment should pay its full cost. I understand there are others who desire to speak. I shall not speak further at this time. Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me for a moment? Mr. COOPER. I yield. Mr. METCALF. Mr. President, I con- cur in this amendment for all of the rea- sons outlined. This is a coercive pro- gram. We are saying to the States that they have to go into the secondary road sys- tem where always we have had the pro- vision that billboards were permitted. We are saying to them that they must remove billboards on the 50-50 alloca- tion that has always been proposed. There is a difference in the Interstate System, which is new, which goes through new areas and new territory. We say that under the law wp will give the same proportion of assistance to the State to remove billboards that we gave for the financing of other highway sys- tems, such as under the 90-10 Interstate System. So far as the secondary systems are concerned, we have always had the right to erect billboards. This is a prevailing system in all the States. Yet, we are saying to the States that they must re- move the billboards or they will not be permitted to share in the Federal high- way program. It is coercion. We are taking away from the States their police power to remove billboards and we are saying they have to make compensation. This is a national program. We have decided we are going to remove billboards from the interstate and secondary sys- tems. Therefore, I concur that we should pay that cost out of the national budget. We should not force the States to forgo all of their participation in the interstate program if they do not want to take away a man's livelihood, or a man's business, which he has had for many years. I feel strongly that the States should use their funds for secondary road sys- tems and the farm-to-market roads, and for the development of primary high- ways on the present allocation, and should not be forced to compensate the billboard operators. I feel strongly that the cost should come out of the Federal budget. Therefore, I concur in the amend- ment. ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, even though the remarks of the distinguished Senator from Arkansas, the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee [Mr. FULBRIGHT], will not be germane to the pending legislation (S. 2084), I ask unanimous consent that the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee [Sena- tor FULBRIGHT] be allowed to speak for not to exceed 1 hour. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. YOUNG of Ohio in the chair). Without objection, it is so ordered. The rule of germaneness is waived. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I do not intend to object, but I wish to have the assurance that the amendment which has been stated will be the pending ques- tion at the conclusion of the remarks by the distinguished chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair states to the senior Senator from Kentucky that his amendment will be the pending question. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield briefly without losing his right to the floor? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. With- out objection, it is so ordered. THE SITUATION IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, the formation of a provisional government in Santo Domingo under the leadership of Dr. Hector Garcia-Godoy is good news. It provides reason for cautious optimism as to the future and testifies as well to the arduous and patient efforts of the OAS mediating team. I wish to pay tribute especially to Ambassador Bunk- er for his wisdom and patience in han- dling this difficult affair. The forma- tion of a provisional government is not the end of the Dominican crisis, but it does bring to an end a tragic and dan- gerous phase of the crisis. Many prob- lems remain, particularly the problem of establishing the authority of a demo- cratic government over the Dominican military. Nonetheless, the situation now seems to be moving into a less danger- ous and more hopeful phase. At this time of relative calm it is appropriate, desirable and, I think, necessary to re- view events in the Dominican Repub- lic and the U.S. role in those events. The purpose of such a review-and its only purpose-is to develop guidelines for wise and effective policies in the future. I was in doubt about the advisability of making a statement on the Domoni- can affair until some of my colleagues made public statements on the floor. Their views on the way in which the committee proceedings were conducted and, indeed, on the Dominican crisis as a whole, are so diametrically opposed to my own that I now consider it my duty to express my personal conclusions drawn from the hearings held by the Committee on Foreign Relations. The suggestions that have been made that the committee was prejudiced in its approach against the administra- tion's policies are, in my opinion, with- out merit. The committee was impar- tial and fair in giving a full and detailed hearing to the administration's point of view, so much so, in fact, that it heard only one witness from outside the Government. U.S. policy in the Dominican crisis was characterized initially by overtimidity and subsequently by overreaction. Throughout the whole affair, it has also been characterized by a lack of candor. These are general conclusions I have reached from a painstaking review of the salient features of the extremely com- plex situation. These judgments are made, of course, with the benefit of hind- sight and, in fairness, it must be con- ceded there were no easy choices avail- able to the United States in the Domini- can Republic. Nonetheless, it is the task Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446RU00500110032-0 ILLEGIB Approved For Release= 2003/10/15 CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 September 15, 1965 COl`TCrRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE (22997 Deputy Chief Mowry's public statement that the patrolmen ought not to have arrested the boys. The confidence of various groups in society in the fairness' of the police is of course the key to public cooperation. The incident also illustrates the value of a police community relations division under an able and forthright officer like Chief Mowry. It was his first test in a highly de- manding job, and he deserves the commu- nity's confidence. Washington's Metropoli- tan Police constitgte one of the most effi- cient forces in the country. It is now show- ing that it understands the value of restraint oJ' the damaged areas. I was told they traducer of a free news flow. The space were "not available." I asked why U.S. agency gives news management the old col- tElevision networks were 'carrying films lege try every time a manned spacecraft goes b:r. Vietcong photographers but were UP. f all the significant news locations in a st-emingly unable to obtain footage show- Gemini flight, the only one not covered by ir$!the effects of our raids. There was the combined news media (meaning press, ni explanation. radio, and TV) is the most important one of And now there are distressing signals all, the mission control center at Houston. that the space program is falling prey to it is not a secret place, nor one in which the same dread disease of secrecy. unnecessary traffic is discouraged. Flight Director. Christopher C. Kraft already has Ott would be my hope, Mr. President, stated that the communications media them- Soviet observe Observer in that his s would rather have a control center than sflves, which argue so eloquently for the an American Journalist. Further, every f7 eedom of the press which our Constitu- clerk and secretary among the 4,600 NASA Mr. PELL. Mr. President, *1th tl3n guarantees them, would increase Deputy Chief Mowry and Inspects their protests against news management Causey have been captains of the 14th aid censorship. precinct and are good tactitions in cone- \ Mr. Hines has done a great service munity relations work and because ofoth to his craft and to the public in his this, enjoy the respect of every segment a*icle which appeared in the September I would hope andF expect, and I am sure many of my colleagues would agree, that they will get the fullest Coopera- tion in their endeavors' for I am certialn the community will be far better off for their efforts. It is both interesting, and pleasing for me to note that Howard Mowry comes from an old and much, respected Rhode Island family. So I take this oppor- tunity to wish him well in his new posi- tion and to reiterate my interest and hope for a vigorous effort against crime by those who are charged with the re- sponsibility of law enforcement in the District of Columbia. WHO WILL WATCH THE WATCHMAN? Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, for some time it has been the proud boast of the managers of America's space effort that unlike the Soviets, our experiments are conducted in full view of the public. This, it has been asserted, is character- istic of the differences in our form of gov- ernment and the closed society of the Communist world. sislt'o have it printed in the RECORD. r a3 follows: [itrom the\Washington (D.C.) Evening Star, Sept. 1. 1965] Wuu0 W ,L WATCB THE WATCHMAN? ($y William Hines) The PentagoA,has surprised almost tc Its new manned orbiting laborato p; 'oaram. lost people assulrcd that so ax ilitarv got a manned role in sli The restriction than pointless: It picayile and worse Now, a dark cloud has been Cast on y'Wh not?" a, a } ins 11 fi l I l h ua vac u? w a, rr as a ys w as 9 na ana "at-F readers who. n t e Some of the clumsy attempts at con- piping the expensive tab for MOL. A tap sorship are both silly and stupid. w uld have been helpful. But, more importantly, they serio y The briefing was later transmitted by tele- undermine not only this Nation's n- p'.iohe to the National Aeronautics and Space fideriCe, but that of the world, i Our Aiministrations Houston Center, where a large contingent of reporters was covering ability and determination to t the tl is flight of Gemini 5. truth. T#e same "no tape, no attribution" rule Since the time of the Bay of Pigs was invoked at Houston, but was ignored by fiasco when Mr. Arthur Sylvester, the a any reporters who refused to be bound by voice of the Pentagon, asserted the Gov- secrecy they knew could not be enforced. ernment's right to lie to save itself, we Txpb recordings were made and freely circu- have seen recurring examples of news Is ted. IYlanagemerit and cover up and censor- The handling of the MOL briefing is by no x> ea.ns unique. The current longstanding ship. We have seen a President reciting ntw gag on Russian space accomplishments cheery little items of economic good tid- is another excellent example. Ings to a national television audience, Soon after the Kennedy administration days before the appropriate Government curie in, the Government ceased reporting bureau would ordinarily release such S iviet space launchings, including attempts news and the sole purpose is to con- that failed. Manifestly the Russians knew teal or counteract such hard and un- when they launched; they also knew we happy facts as the chronic unemploy- knew. The people left in the dark were- and are-those here in the United States who are. paying for the Nation's elaborate and Some time ago, Mr. President, after p:usumably efficient spacecraft detection sys- the Pentagon had claimed smashing VbC- tem. Nobody in the Government defends tortes in our air strikes against the North this policy, yet it persists. Vietnamese, I asked to see photographs The Defense Department is not the only civil servants who could spare 5 or 10 min- utes from work was encouraged to look in. Oil one flight the motion picture actor Jimmy Stewart was an interested observer. Even newspaper publishers have been ad- mitted, possibly on the theory that they are not really "working press," and hence harmless. But neither camera nor tape recorder nor pen--paper reporter is allowed in the no trot room at any time during a flight. a "pool" representative, 'William L. Laurence of the New York Times. This is not to sug- gest that there has been any "cover-up" to date. In the course of missions, Kraft gives regular, full, and apparently frank accounts of flight activities, and opens himself to detailed questioning. So do his associates. A mission Commentary of less consistent accuracy and authenticity is broadcast. But whether or not there has been sup- pression to date is not the point. All flights so far have ended happily, and nothing suc- ceeds like success. There has been no rea- son for it coverup. The point is that the opportunity for news management definitely exists in mission con- trol-and it Is an axiom. of political science that where opportunity exists, there are al- ways people waiting to seize it. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. BASS in. the chair). Is there further morning business? If not, morning business Is closed. SCENIC DEVELOPMENT AND ROAD BEAUTIFICATION OF THE FED- ERAL AID HIGHWAY SYSTEMS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the unfin- ished business be laid before the Senate. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title. The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 2 4) to provide for scenic development a road. beautification of the Federal- aid ighway systems. T PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objet 'on? The being no objection, the Senate resume the consideration of the bill (S. 2084) to ),provide for scenic development and road\beautifi.caticn of the Federal- aid highs systems. ENDMENT NO. 451 Mr. COO. Mr. President, on be- half of :mss f and the Senator from Montana [M METCALF], I send an amendment to h.e desk and ask that it be stated. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The legislative clerk read the amend- ment (No. 451), as follows: Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 September 15, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 22999 of diplomacy to make wise decisions when Another theme that emerges from the such as the recently discredited Came- they need to be made and U.S. diplomacy Dominican crisis is the occurrence of a lot; these studies claim to be scientific failed to do so in the Dominican crisis. striking change in U.S. policy toward the but beneath their almost unbelievably It cannot be said with assurance that Dominican Republic and the possibility- opaque language lies an unmistakable the United States could have changed the not a certainty, because the signs are military and reactionary bias. course of events b ti diff tl y ac ng eren y. ambiguous, but only the possibility-of What can be said with assurance is that a major change as well in the general the United States did not take advantage Latin American policies of the United of several opportunities in which it might States. Obviously, an important change have changed the course of events. The in the official outlook on Dominican af- reason appears to be that, very close to fairs occurred between September 1963, the beginning of the revolution, U.S. when the United States was vigorously policymakers decided that it should not opposed to the overthrow of Juan Bosch, be allowed to succeed. This decision and April 1965, when the United States seems to me to have been based on exag- was either unenthusiastic or actually gerated estimates of Communist in- opposed to his return. fluence in the rebel movement in the What happened in that period to initial stages and on distaste for the re- change the assessment of Bosch from turn to power of Juan Bosch or of a gov- favorable to unfavorable? It is quite ernment controlled by Bosch's party, the true that Bosch as President did not dis- PRD-Dominican Revolutionary Party. tinguish himself as an administrator, but The question of the degree of Commu- that was well known in 1963. It is also nist influence is of critical importance true, however, and much more to the sential point, however, is that the United States, on the basis of ambiguous evi- dence, assumed almost from the begin- ning that the revolution was Communist dominated, or would certainly become so. It apparently never occurred to anyone that the United States could also attempt to influence the course which the revolu- tion took. We misread prevailing tend- encies in Latin America by overlooking or ignoring the fact that any reform movement is likely to attract Commu- nist support. We thus failed to perceive that if we are automatically to oppose any reform movement that Communists adhere to, we are likely to end up oppos- ing every reform movement, making our- selves the prisoners of reactionaries who wish to preserve the status quo-and the status quo in many countries is not good enough. The principal reason for the failure of American policy in Santo Domingo was faulty advice given to the President by his representatives in the Dominican Republic at the time of acute crisis. Much of this advice was based on mis- judgment of the facts of the situation; some of it appears to have been based on inadequate evidence or, in some cases, simply inaccurate information. On the basis of the information and counsel he received, the President could hardly have acted other than he did. I am hopeful, and reasonably con- fident, that the mistakes made by the United States in the Dominican Repub- lic can be retrieved and that it will be point as far as the legitimate interests of the United States are concerned, that Bosch had received 58 percent of the votes in a free and honest election and that he was presiding over a reform- minded government in tune with the Alliance for Progress. This is a great deal more than can be said for any other President of the Dominican Republic. The question therefore remains as to how and why the attitude of the U.S. Government changed so strikingly be- tween September 1963 and April 1965. And the question inevitably arises whether this shift in the administra- tion's attitude toward the Dominican Republic is part of a broader shift in its attitude toward other Latin Amer- ican countries, whether, to be specific, the U.S. Government now views the vig- orous reform movements of Latin Amer- ica-such as Christian Democracy in Chile, Peru, and Venezuela, APRA in Peru and Accion Democratica in Vene- zuela-as threatening to the interests of the United States. And if this is the case, what kind of Latin American po- litical movements would now be regarded as friendly to the United States and beneficial to its interests? I should like to make it very clear that I am raising a question not offering an answer. I am frankly puzzled as to the current attitude of the U.S. Government toward reformist movements in Latin America. On the one hand, President Johnson's deep personal commitment to the philosophy and aims of the Alliance It is of great importance that the un- certainty as to U.S. aims in Latin Amer- ica be resolved. We cannot successfully advance the cause of popular democracy and at the same time aline ourselves with corrupt and reactionary oligarchies; yet that is what we seem to be trying to do. The direction of the Alliance for Progress is toward social revolution in Latin America; the direction of our Do- minican intervention is toward the sup- pression of revolutionary movements which are supported by Communists or suspected of being influenced by Com- munists. The prospect of an election in 9 months which may conceivably pro- duce a strong democratic government is certainly reassuring on this score, but the fact remains that the reaction of the United States at the time of acute crisis was to intervene forcibly and illegally against a revolution which, had we sought to influence it instead of sup- pressing it, might have produced a strong popular government without foreign military intervention. Since just about every revolutionary movement is likely to attract Communist support, at least in the beginning, the approach followed in the Dominican Republic, if consistently pursued, must inevitably make us the enemy of all revolutions and therefore the ally of all the unpopular and corrupt oligarchies of the hemisphere. We simply cannot have it both ways; we must choose between the Alliance for Progress and a foredoomed effort to sus- tain the status quo in Latin America. The choice which we are to make is the principal unanswered question arising out of the unhappy events in the Domini- can Republic and, indeed, the principal unanswered question for the future of our relations with Latin America. It is not surprising that we Americans are not drawn toward the uncouth revo- lutionaries of the non-Communist left. We are not, as we like to claim in Fourth of July speeches, the most truly revolu- tionary nation on earth; we are, on the contrary, much closer to being the most unrevolutionary nation on earth. We are sober and satisfied and comfortable and rich; our institutions are stable and old and even venerable; and our Revo- lution of 1776, for that matter, was not much of an upheaval compared to the p s f .' o example, in his speech to Trench and Russian revolutions and to future. These purposes can be served, in the American Ambassadors on the current and im however, only if the shortcomings of U.S. fourtht annive si d rsary the All ante for Lat n America, a, and Africa. policy are thoroughly reviewed and Progress-a statement in which the Our heritage of stabiilty and conserva- analyzed. I make my remarks today in President compared the Alliance for tism is a great blessing, but it also has the hope of contributing to that process. Progress with his own enlightened pro- the effect of limiting our understanding The development of the Dominican gram for a Great Society at home. On of the character of social revolution and crisis, beginning on April 24, 1965, pro- the other hand, one notes a general tend- sometimes as well of the injustices which vides a classic study of policymaking in ency on the part of our policymakers not spawn them. Our understanding of a fast-changing situation in which each to look beyond a Latin American politi- revolutions and their causes is imperfect decision reduces the range of options cian's anticommunism. One also notes not because of any failures of mind or available for future decisions so that in certain Government agencies, particu- character but because of our good for- errors are compounded and finally, in- larly the Department of Defense, a pre- tune since the Civil War in never having deed, there are few if any options except occupation with counterinsurgency, experienced sustained social injustice to follow through on an ill-conceived which is to say, with the prospect of without hope of legal or more or less course of action. Beyond a certain point revolutions and means of suppressing peaceful remedy. We are called upon, the Dominican story acquired some of them. This preoccupation is manifested therefore, to give our understanding and the inevitability of a Greek tragedy. in dubious and costly research projects, our sympathy and support to movements Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500110032-0 Approved For Release 2003/10/15: CIA-RDP67B00446R00050011003 -0 23000 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE September 15, 1965 which are alien to our experience an i I think that in the case of the Domini- willing to support if not positively op- jarring to our preferences and prejudice;. can Republic we did close our minds to poked to Bosch. We must try to understand social rev- the causes and to the essential legitimacy Events of the days following April 24 olution and the injustices that give it of revolution in a country in which dem- demonstrated that Reid had so little rise because they are the heart and core ocratic procedures had failed. That, I popular support that it can reasonably of the experience of the great majority think, is the central fact concerning the be argued that there was nothing the of. people now living in the world. In participation of the United States in the United States could have done, short of Latin America we may prefer to asst - Dominican revolution and, possibly as armed intervention, to save his regime. ciate with the well-bred, well-dressed well, its major lesson for the future. I The more interesting question is why businessmen who often hold positions of turn now to comment on some of the the United States was so reluctant to power, but Latin American reformers events which began last April 24 in Santo see Bosch returned to power. This is regard such men as aliens in their own Domingo. part of the larger question of why U.S. countries who neither identify with the x When the Dominican revolution began attitudes had changed so much since own people nor even sympathize with on Saturday, April 24, the United States 1963 when Bosch, then in power, was their aspirations. Such leaders are ro- had there options available. First, it warmly and repeatedly embraced and garded by educated young Latin Amer- could have supported the Reid Cabral supported as few if any Latin American scans, as a "consular bourgeoisie," by government; second, it could have sup- presidents have ever been supported by which they mean business-oriented con- ported the revolutionary forces; and the United States. servatives who more nearly represent the third, it could do nothing. 'The next crucial point in the Domi- interests of foreign businessmen then The administration chose the last nican story came on Tuesday, April 27, the interests of their own people. Mc n course. When Donald Reid Cabral when rebel leaders, including Molina like Donald Reid-who is- one of the asked for U.S. intervention on Sunday Uxre:na.and Caaniano Deno, called at the better of this category of leaders--moo morning, April 25, he was given no en- U.S. Embassy seeking mediation and have their merits, but they are not the couragement. He then resigned, and negotiations. At that time the military force of the future in Latin America. considerable disagreement ensued over situation looked very bad for the rebel, It is the revolutionaries of the no31- the nature of the government to succeed or constitutionalist, forces. Ambassador Communist left who have most of the him. The party of Juan Bosch, the Bennett, who had been instructed four popular support in Latin America. The PRD, or Dominican Revolutionary Party, tunes to work for a cease fire and for Radical Party in Chile, for example, asked for a "U.S. presence" at the trans- the formation of a military junta, felt is full of 19th century libertariais fer of government power but was given he did not have authority to mediate; whom many North Americans would find no encouragement. Thus, there began mediation, in his view, would have been highly congenial, but it was recently at that time a chaotic situation which "intervention." Mediation at that point crushed in national elections by a group amounted to civil war in a country with- might have been accomplished quietly of rambunctious, leftist Christian Dem3- out an effective government. and without massive military interven- crats. It may be argued that tae What happened in essence was that tion. Twenty-four hours later the Am- Christian Democrats are anti-United the Dominican military refused to sup- bassador was pleading for the marines, States, and to a considerable extent sorle port Reid and were equally opposed to and as we know some 20,000 soldiers of them are-more so now, it may be Bosch or other PRD leaders as his sue- were landed-American soldiers. noted, than prior to the intervention of cessor. The PRD, which had the support on the afternoon of April 27 General the United States in the Dominican Re- of some military officers, announced that -Aressin Y Wessin's tanks seemed about public-but they are not Communists Rafael Molina Urena, who had been to cross the Duarte bridge into the city and they have popular support. They President of the Senate during the Bosch of Santo Domingo and the rebel cause have also come to terms with the Amor- regime, would govern as Provisional appeared hopeless. When the rebels felt scan copper companies in Chile; that is President pending Bosch's return. At themselves rebuffed at the American something which the predecessor con- this point, the military leaders delivered Embassy, some of their leaders, includ- servative government was unable to do an ultimatum, which the rebels ignored, ixig Molina Urena, sought asylum in and something which a Communist gc v- and at about 4:30 on the afternoon of Latin American embassies in Santo ernment would have been unwilling to April 25 the air force and navy began Domingo. The administration has in- do. firing at the National Palace. Later in terpreted this as evidence that the non- The movement of the future in La do the day, PRD leaders asked the U.S. Communist rebels recognized growing America is social revolution. The VINE- Embassy to use its influence to persuade communist influence in their movement tion is whether it is to be Communist or the air force to stop the attacks. The and were consequently abandoning the democratic revolution and the choice Embassy made it clear it would not in- revolution. Molina Urena has said sim- which the Latin Americans make Still tervene on behalf of the rebels, although ply that he sought asylum because he depend in. part on how the United States on the following day, Monday, April 26, thought the revolutionary cause hope- uses its great influence. It should be the Embassy did persuade the military less. very clear that the choice is not betwoen to stop air attacks for a limited time. An opportunity was lost on April 27. social revolution and conservative sill- This was the first crucial point in the Ambassador Bennett was in a position to garchy but whether, by supporting re- crisis. If the United States thought that bring possibly decisive mediating power form, we bolster the popular non-Co m- Reid was giving the Dominican Republic to bear for a democratic solution, but he munist left or whether, by supporting the best government it had had or was chose not to do so on the ground that unpopular oligarchies, we drive the 31s- likely to get, why did the United States the exercise of his good offices at that ing generation of educated and patriotic not react more vigorously to support him? point would have constituted interven- young Latin Americans to an embittered On the other hand, if the Reid govern- tion. In the words of Washington Post and hostile form of communism like ment was thought to be beyond salvation, Writer Murrey Marder-one of the press that of Fidel Castro in Chile. why did not the United States offer pose- people who, to the best of my knowledge, In my Senate speech of March 25, i