SENATE TOLD NIXON AID TO LAOS ILLEGAL

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
8
Document Creation Date: 
December 12, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 17, 2001
Sequence Number: 
40
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 1, 1971
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6.pdf901.41 KB
Body: 
S Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 a r. vY .f) 5:.- ~. Cr a O~ P OS : ~.~ t senate `old Nixon Aid to Laos Illegal By Spencer Rich Washington Post Staff Writer Behind barred doors, Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo?) told a rare, 3-hour-and-22,m}nute se- cret session of the Senate yes- 4 1terday that President Nixon `has violated a congressional rr r .c;....,,..; a of foreign mercenary troops t of fighting for the governmen Laos. _ . said he wants the Senate to know au; the open, find ways to env L?_~ ! first authorizes oy -E-11 d that "the volun- it " " , ~ Kennedy an i war not enlarge the details of "the secret war +eii reoortersi - in Laos at the re W no rest link -R wean the - Mint t -ail.--- I Eulbright smear"nt w a s passed I was not It, are of the Thai mercenaries o ruhe B-52 -- assent raids." He added: " wasn't to these ciivities but to interdiction of h,, Chi Minh trails.". Jacob K. Javita (I,?-N.Y.) told reporters the b "+. question a "is ,being raised wF , new war or is really con- nected with wit drawal from Vietnam?" State Depar ,t+?nt sources said later that ti e Thais being used aren't re -rnited on a government - tc - government basis, but were n4ividuals re- cruited from t ,e borderside Tli f 1xti8* . - any bymntsL.,.. ,,,,.,_ lcs,' -_ --- - in Laos before voting quest of the Prime Minister, quest of the Prim n to t the . more funds for it, was quoted dla V. uce an to amendment by senators present as saying procurement authori- Bray read to reporters a let that the administration wants zation defense bill, when it reaches the ter from Assistant Secretary - -- ? hnidife eco-I _r +s+o navid Abshlre to Sen. lion economic and military ab ?-. He said 120 s to $200 on the h ever, Brady, the thrust of the letter sistance. This includes $ ent, ublic Sunday by Ken financing a covert added expendi- de a tra p r million for would not b CIA military operation in tures for bombing the Ho Chi head) is that support of the northern Laos that arms some Minh trail in southern Laos Thai troops in Northern Laos ite the Eulbright ther tribes. f North s d n p e d o is legal to interdict the flow o 32,000 Meo a men and now is using some Vietnamese men and supplies amendment, in order to pro- 4,800 troops recruited in Thai- to South Vietnam. tact U.S. withdrawal from land. A key issue in the debate South Vietnam, as allowed in Symington, Clifford P. Case and in a later long-range ex I the amendment. (R .N. j.) and J. W. Eulbright change between senators and Bray also cited an Aug. 20, (D Ark.), among others who the State Department was i, 1970, statement in the Senate by Eulbright that his amend- have urged the administration whether the use of CIA funds bar "what is go- to make public the details 01 - to hire Thais to fight on be- rent doesn't that is, nation's Laotian involvee- half of the Laotian govern ing on in Laos, our as this ment violates the 1970 Ful- bombing of the trail, rent stressed that the figures the , bright amendment. This is a sistance to Laos or what our cited in the closed Senate ses provision of the defense ap people are doing there." Sion were exclusive of the cost propriation bill signed into Eulbright told reporters of B 52 and other air railane ds in. law Jan. 11, 1971, after a fu- the time that at the time U.S. ps Laos conducted by i e flying from Thailand, South rious battle between the ~+en' he was speaking Vietnam, other bases and car- ate and the House. about interdicting the Ho Chi The provision bars the use 'Minh trail in Southern Laos. tiers. Eulbright said after the ses- of defense funds to supp ' He said he didn't even know o -about, and tcertainly sion that his staff calculates "free world forces" in actions not been th condoning, my the cost of bombs alone for suppo t a d assistance to the;-had ad raids in northern the s sup hick were started last year, B-52 Laos, such raids at $500 million a Laos," but specifies b that it i t the financing of Thais to ear. Other Senate s bl y y oba eed figure was pr actions nTT41ght in Northern Laos. r cti s needed said this Earlier, Eulbright had read low, and said the total cost of from taking ac bombing and air activity con ,to insure the safe and orderly I by the-U.S. over Laos vent i to the secret session a state ducted by ts-1r'c>ithea t .rent from William Sullivan a 'ac2iy be up to $2 bil wit hdrawal or d of USe S Ambassador to, lion a year. Their reasoning: Asia Or to `aid in t19e r(.if ;`use n epn y distant ,>! -7i~*,;rans bold as pris"^ elate -`which Fu'. . ,a l*fo1 syming- inyiui `; a fc'' ie senate TesGlmul!J' !;S - . toms Subcommittee on the tei5 per- ti ttmv, Security Agreements acid trion the dis- ap4ai oP Commitments Abroad closed that the bomb load of law has been ebri#rav~ned "The amendment said you planes smaller t of $3,190 $,t1i t) er couldn't spend money to train cost an average and put people of foreign gov- i t n surtie, ornments into Laos or o 11 IM 3 ri,,u v v' ske}ii flown over i.aos,l a"ulbright, too, told reporters ldofg' north and'sdi h, ai'ld with lark- later le thinks the law has and it was his n violated the~b , ee er-load B-52s now in use, bomb and flight cost is between amendment. $1 billion and $2 billion a year. . 1.i ority Whip Robert P. dly .) ator who was pres-i Main (H -Mich s en of One -fI t+afte~r itftfiinedT It the ent said; Symington,, n tion was violating a 1970 co l ban on the hiring of gressiona mercenaries to fight for the { spokesman, aclimifTedged for the first time that t of Laos, angrily I l bli pu y c governmen asserted that "he wouldn't be the United States is financing in the Senate if it wrote laws i; Thai troops to fight in North- eluding the President." Contending these actions "Case was- very effective were "fully consistent with all ietnotioital pertinent legislation," Bray 'also; he made an .. ..4 .n fi ing was the nanc Edward M. Kennedy (u-inass.). Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 Approved For Release 2002/01/10 :CIA-RDP73B00 9i6RO0 0090040-6 ` k-iE NEW YORK TIMES DATE ~1...~)IIJJ r PAG U. S. Defends Support of Thai By JOHN W. FINNEY Specla4 to The New Yorb Times WASHINGTON, June 7-The State Department said today that the financial and material support that the United States was providing Thai "vo?lun- teers" fighting in Laos on be- 1aif of the Laotian Government was "fully consistent with all pertinent legislation." The department's statement for the current fiscal year at the suggestion of Senator Ful- bright. The State Department, in de- claring that the American sup- port of Thai forces in Laos was "fully consistent" with the law, based its case largely on the ground that the program of using "volunteers" in Laos pre- dated enactment of the Ful- bright amendment. One principal point that emerged from the secret ses- came shortly before the Senatejsion, according to Senators, was ti t S t S t rt es ma e y ena or ua Symington, Democrat of Mis- souri, that the United States was spending at least $350-mil- lion annually in support of the Laotian Government in the war in northern Laos against the pro-Communist Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese forces. This would be seven times chore department had informed Sen- ator Fullbright, chairman of l the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Senator Clif- ford P. Case of New Jersey, a Republican member of the com- mittee, that American support of the Thai troops did not vio- late the law. Violation Issue Debated Whether the law was being violated was a key question de- bated in the Senate's secret session today. The legislation in question was an amendment barring the use of mercenaries that had been .igrated into the defense,_ap tions' law Troops in Laos than has been publicly acknowl edged by the Administration. At the State 'Department- Charles W. Bray 3d, the depart meat spokesman, declined to give any estimate of the amount of military and econom- ic aid that the United States was providing the Laotian Gov- ernment or irregular forces in northern Laos. Mr. Bray said the "volunteers were in Laos at the request" o Premier Souvanna Phouma and "the Administration believes support of this program is fully consistent with all pertinen legislation." The only public figure that has been given by the Adminis- tration is $52-million in eco- nomic aid in the current fiscal year. In addition, Congress re- portedly has appropriated some $100-million in military aid. Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 5 Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B000p296R000300090040-6 ~ 1 pti I PAGE THE EVENING STAR "" 1 ..= Symington Proposes Ceiling On U.S.-Aid in North Laos Associated Press Sen. Stuart Symington is seek- ing a $200 million ceiling on American aid to Laos. Symington, D-Mo., said securi- ty classification prevents him from disclosing the amount being spent on U.S. air opera- tions and support of Thai forces fighting Communist units in Laos. But the total was reported by other sources to be at least $250 million a year, and possibly much more. While the Senate met in secret session yesterday to discuss tions that would help promote withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Vietnam, or release of American prisoners of war. The closed session, seventh for the Senate in five years, lasted three hours and 25 minutes, more than twice as long as planned. "I reported to them, in effect, that what was actually going on in Laos was quite different in some details than we have been other air Involvement over the northern part of the country, as well as support of foreign forces. on findings of i vtl Foreign Rela- tions Committh staff men who visited Laos la .t April. That still-cla,s-fied report, by James G. Low _~nstein and Rich- ard Moose, r, portedly tells of Central Intelli ,e rice Agency fi- nancing of a=bout 4,800 Thai troops in Laos. Fulbright said his staff esti- mates the cost of U.S. air raids over Laos at over $500 million a year, not counting the B52 mis- sions only recently disclosed. Sen. Clifford P. Case, R-N.J., estimated the sum involved in operations away from Commu- nist supply routes in the south to be at least $250 million a year. told," said Symington, who proI He said that was $100 million posed the secret session. i more than he had known about. "We believe that quite a few The closed Senate session was Thai people, irregulars and reg- called to hear Symington report Laos the State Department con- firmed the United States is pro- viding financial and other sup- port to forces in Laos. Press officer Charles Bray de- scribed those troops as volun- teers, and said the U.S. support program is consistent with the law. Symington said they are mer- cenaries. "My personal opinion is that the law has been contra- vened." Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., who proposed the amendment forbidding use of U.S. funds to support foreign forces fighting for the governments of Laos and Cambodia, said he thinks that ulars, are fighting in Laos. We think that contravenes the law recently passed by Congress. "We would have known more about it if there had been a ceiling on the money they could have spent, and they would have had to come before us to ask for m o r e authority," Symington said. He said his amendment would forbid. spending more than $200 million a year in Laos, unless I the administration asks specific I authority to spend more. i The ceiling would not apply to cost of U.S. air operations southern Laos, in the area. of the Ho Chi Minh t14. But it sgould The amendment excludes ac- cover B52 bozUb mission and Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 THE EVENING STAR DATE PAC YOLUNTEERS1 BANGKOK.- INSISTS Thais in Laos ldentifid as "Regulars" BY TAMMY ARBUCKIE particular 1 ; th e special to The star have no official sanction from VIENTIANE, Laos - De- Bangkok. spite official statements that (Even the number of troops the Thai forces serving in is in dispute. As a result of Laos are volunteers without U.S. Senate inquiries into the official sanction from the operation, the figure of 4,800 B a n g k o k government, in- troops presently is given in formed sources here say they Washington as the number of are regular Thai army troops. Thai troops on duty in Laos.) The sources said the troops ., The Lao military attributes sent here keep their Thai the official Thai position to army rank and salary as well corruption. They say only cer- as the salary paid by the tain members of the Thai gov- Americans. ernment are pocketing pay- Some Thai units come here ments from the United States, in a group, said the sources, so the entire Thai cabinet may adding that Thailand's 940th not be informed of the entire Battalion presently is garri- U.S. arrangement for Thais to soned on Hill 1663 west of Ban fight in Laos. Na on the southwest rim of the Thai troops have been fight- Plain of Jars in northern Laos. ing in Laos since late 1.964. The The Thais are sent to Laos first Thai unit in Laos was a on temporary detachment for battery of 155mm howitzers six months or a year, the based near Ban Khay village sources said. There are cases in the Plain of Jars. where units are formed from Thai officers and men then Thais of different units who were sent separately to guer- have volunteered for certain rilla units run by the CIA. duties in Laos, the sources On Feb. 1, 1967, a reporter said. However, these units re- met one of these Thais at NAM main part of the Thai army on Bac, Lao fortress 40 miles ff loan to the U.S. Central Intelli- southwest at Dien Bien Phu. gene Agency, the sources The Thai said he was a cap- said. tain in the Thai army and The only voluntary aspect of came from Bangkok. their duty is that Thai soldiers, An American in civilian are anxious for assignment to clothes was commanding his Laos because of the financial unit and was responsible for benefits. payment, he said. Officials of the United States There were at least 20 Thais and Thailand governments in- with the captain at Nam Bac sist the Thai troops in Laos, and Site 217. numbering at least 3,200, are On June 25, 1969, the Thai volunteers. Thai officials, in Artillery unit (which remained years while men were rotated) was overrun when North Viet- nallese tanks broke through the neutralist Lao troops. Following this attack, in which at least 30 Thais were killed, Bangkok insisted on having Thai troops protect the Thai gunners. Thai gunners also were sent to Long Cheng, further south, but this time several hundred - some sources say 800 - Thai infan- trymen were sent to protect the artillery. Part of these units now are at Fire Base Zebra northeast of Long Cheng. Recently Thai troops have served on the Bolovens Pla- teau in southern Laos and on operations against Route Sev- en, the main Hanoi resupply route to its troops in northern Laos. All troops under American control who need medical help are sent to Thailand directly, American officials say, so Thais have no worries if they are sick or wounded. The Communist Lao radio claims over 300 Thais have been killed in action in Laos, but American officials say it's less than 200. The Thai role, according to U.S. officials is to make up for heavy losses among the Meo tribesmen of Gen. Vang Pao, who have been fighting since 1960 against the North Viet- namese, suffering in the last action. The i.a-) army claims it's under s rength and unable to substant aly help Vang Pao because its spread the length of Lao:. facing the enemy. This c1dint, however, is sus- pect. HL alcreds of unemployed young men roam around Vienttia'e on motorbikes. When Gt n. Koupraisith Abhay, the Vientiane military boss, tried to conscript them, he found tli -y are the sons of in- fluential Laotians who protest- ed cone 'r ption and forced Kouprasr h to cease his activi- ties. Also, ? ?veral thousand. Lao troops a e not gainfully em- ployed bit act as bodyguards, chauffeurs, office personnel or are buildin,, new villas for Lao officers. Despite b 1l this, it may be said that L ios still is woefully short of manpower as well as good fief: i officers and some military ? tir,cipline. Therefore, Lao veer. ; help from its ethnic neighbors the Thais. The L 3o however, don't want thtr neighbors in the western ,r-winces of Cham- passac ai ii Sayaboury, which the Thais et'vet nor in Mekong River tov> a where the Thai propensit for the spoils of war may catch that of Saigon troops in Cambodia. There- fore, they xra in the mountains of northe -n Laos where the Thais can dt. the most fighting and the least mischief. Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B002 6R000300040040-6 t4 6r ins Are Bazz d From Spy Raids in Laos By WILLIAM BEECHER S 1. to Thk New Yb1! Rkme. WASHINGTON, June 11 - Senator Stuart Symington The Nixon Administration has the enemy's Infiltration activi- decided that Americans will no longer be permitted to enter southern Laos as leaders of teams keeping watch on enemy movements along the Ho Chi Minh Trails network. Before the South Vietnamese drive into Laos in February and March, Americans had been as- signed to such missions. But they were then barred for fear an embarrassing incident might arise that would appear tol contradict President Nixon's pledge that no American mili- tary men would be involved in ground combat in that Laotian campaign. Well-placed Nixon Adminis- tration sources said that plans to resume the use of Ameri- cans on trail-watching teams after the South Vietnamese drive ended had been vetoed by officials at the White House and the Pentagon. The informants said that the deci- ties has gone down recently as small teams made up of South Vietnamese and of Montagnard tribesmen have taken over the trail-watching missions. But! they said there were otherl means of collecting informa- tion, among them aerial recon- naissance and special sensors planted along the trail. American participation in the missions had come under a secret military unit known officially as the Studies and Observation Group. Established in 1964 as a joint venture of the Central Intelligence Agen- cy and the Army, it has been involved not only in watching trails but also in attempts at rescuing prisoners and other highly sensitive missions in Laos, Cambodia and North Vietnam. After a closed-door briefing 1 sion had been made partly be-1 cause of growing Congression-' al criticism of American mils-i tary activity in Laos and partly because all military missions are being turned over to the South Vietnamese as the Unit- ed States disengages from the .war. ,i , conce&ed :that tht Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 THE N' W YO11K '.Z._iv THE NI:'q YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, ,JUNE 12, 1971 Americans Barred From Laos Spy Raids Continued .From Page 1, Col. 3 A Demilitarized Zone of the Senate earlier this week, Sought for Angkor Area Senator Stuart Symington, Democrat of Missouri, de- clared, "Our activities in Laos have been carried out largely in secret, without Congression- al sanction and outside the normal appropriations proc- ess." Air Strikes a Factor The main focus of Congres- sional concern has been Amer ican support of Thais and Lao- tian tribesmen who, ~lied by Americans working for the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency, have been conducting both combat and surveillance missions against North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao forces in Laos. Ex- tensive American air strikes throughout Laos have also been cited as a source of concern. When the Studies a:nd Ob- servation Group was estab- lished, it was intended primar- ily for missions in and around North Vietnam. Some of its teams are known to have: slipped into North Viet- namese waters in fast boats to kidnap fishermen, who were brought to South Vietnam for interrogation on conditions in the North and then released. Other teams made up of refu- gees from North Vietnam were occasionally sent back by heli- copter on spy or sabotage mis- sions. All such operations required advanced approval in Washing- ton, the informants said. In 1966, the unit was also authorized to watch trails and to spot targets for American bombers. The informants said that these tasks were under- taken by the Army alone, with- out C.I.A. participation. In late 1966 or early 1967, similar ac- tivity reportedl was extended y to include l ainFodia? again PNOMPENH, Cambodia, June 11 (AP)-Cambodia ap- pealed today for a demili- tarized zone encompassing the ancient ruins of Angkor Wat and Angkor Thorn to protect them from battle damage. Cambodia's acting Premier Lieut. Gen. Sisowath Sirik Matak, broadcast an appeal for international control of the temples. Angkor Wat was hit in February. Both sides accused the other of firing on the temple, demolishing part of a gatehouse and damaging one of the long walls depict- ing the history of the ancient Khmer nation. The Premier said Cam- bodia would agree to avoid any action that might lead to a military occupation of Angkor and the surrounding temples near the former tourist center of Siern Reap, 143 miles northwest of Pnompenh. According to the informants,! the teams operated no morel than about 20 to 30 miles in-' side Laos. Any watching of tra beyond that point, it was said, was assigned to special guerrilla units organized in Laosi by the C.I.A. Pentagon and other sources said that with the start of the South Vietnamese thrust into Laos, the leaders of the Studies and Observation Group, were told that the Administration did not want to risk the em- barrassment that would result from the capture of soldiers on an intelligence mission in Laos, even. thouggh, strictly peaking, they would not have been in- volved in combat. . `Still Has Some Missions' After the South Vietnamese pulled out of Laos, the group,~ which has headquarters in Sai-I'l circulated a memorandum I saying that it planned to_ re- sume its trail-watching activi- ties. When the memorandum reached Washington, the group was told that the watching of trails would be carried out ex-J elusively by the South Viet-' namese. "While the group's teams;1 are under specific orders not to get involved in fighting," oneil officer said, "their job is to!,J move in and out undetected.' There are times when they',l have been discovered and have :1 had to exchange fire with. the. enemy as helicopters came in to take them out" The Studies and observation; Group, it' was reported, is not' being disbanded at this point. "It still has some missions," an! official said. He added that the group could still be called upon to stage rescue attempts while American prisoners remain in Southeast Asia. He refused to discuss any other missions. without the participation of C.I.A. Although the size of the trail-watching teams varied, a typical unit consisted of nine men-three Americans and six Vietnamese or Montagnard tribesmen. At the height df this activity, there were as many as 30 teams assigned to the Laos mission, but usually no more than two or three would be operating at any one time. The missions were said to have lasted from several hours to several days. Information was sent by radio to a special aircraft fly- ing along the border for relay to Air Force units and intelli- gence centers in South Viet- nam. GIVE A KID A CAMP. VIA FRESH AIR FUND. Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 E 5876 .. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - Extensions of Remarks June 1-i, 1971 Our world is made up of Individuals, and .I think that in the individual is where any kind of a change or solution must start. it can't stop there, though, because it must eventually reach the top. For example, if a person is happy he won't mind separating his garbage for recycling, giving away some of his food or money, thinking of the other party before he demands more rights or throws a bomb. If he is happy he will have a concern for other people. If everyone did his Individual part in helping to solve such major problems, and took down just one brick that wall would be gone in no time. That is a lot of if's. How can. a person be happy so he will want to do his part? As I've already said, happiness :means different things to different people, but a full stom- ach, a roof over one's head, and a feeling of acceptance and security among one's peers usually helps. For those of us who are lucky enough to have these things already, happi- ness should be helping others to find them, also. Happiness Is contagious, and even if you can't give a person what he needs most, a smile or a hello can sometimes mean just as much. Then maybe he will pass that smile on to another person. Sometimes I have to stop to think, and assure myself that we, the people of this planet, are not going backwards-or be- coming more violent, egotistical, and antag- onistic. I always manage to convince my- self that we aren't although sometimes it ap- pears that way because it's always the nega- tive and not the positive things that we hear about. The number of people who truly care about other people is growing, and man is beginning to spread his concern over a wider circle of humanity. We usually care about our family and friends and we want them to be happy, but as the years go by there are more and more of us who care about the people In our city, state, county, and world as individuals. By caring, I mean wanting each person to be happy and secure and, wanting this bad enough to do something about it. If each inhabitant of this earth cared about the rest of mankind as indi- viduals our brick wall would disappear, and I hope that We can destroy it before it crushes us. I'd just like to see everyone here really happy and able to show it. Sometime-try saying HI to someone you don't know-take off the mask for awhile-really feel the smile you are giving everyone-forget your problems--make someone else happy-and if you can't do that at least you can be happy. Well, I know what I can do to make every- one happy noun-that Is to end this speech so that we can all get out of this wind. Have a happy day tomorrowl and make it happy for someone else too. The world is only what we make it-so let's make it happy! ANNIVERSARY CONGRATULATIONS TO FATHER WALSH HON. PETER W. RODINO, JR. OF NEW JERSEY IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, June 15, 1971 Mr. RODINO. Mr. Speaker, congratu- lations are in order for Father Gerald W. Walsh who celebrated the 25th an- niversary of his ordination to the Holy Priesthood on June 1, 1971. Father Walsh returned to St. Mary's Church in Nutley, N.J. where he had spent his early priest- hood to perform a special mass with St. Mary's pastor, Msgr. John J. Feeley. Father Walsh is an ardent contributor to both his parish and his community. His humane spirit pervades all who know him. Let me offer my warmest thanks for his devoted service and wish him con- tinued personal fulfillment in the future. THAIS "VOLUNTEERS" IN LAOS HON. JEROME R. WALDIE OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, June 15, 1971 Mr. WALDIE. Mr. Speaker, I would like to include in the REcoan a second article by Tammy Arbuckle on his recent findings in Southeast Asia which ap- peared June 7th in the Washington Evening Star. I believe it sheds further light on the :military interests and activities of the Thai Army in Laos and the correspond- ing role of the United States. The article follows: THAIS IN LAOS IDENTIFIED AS REGULARS (By Tammy Arbuckle) VIENTIANE, LAos.-Despite official state- iments that the That forces serving in Laos are volunteers wtihout official sanction from the Bangkok government, informed sources :here say they are regular That army troops. The sources said the troops sent here keep their Thai army rank and salary as well as the salary paid by the Americans. Some That units come here in a group, said the sources, adding that Thailand's 940th Battalion presently Is garrisoned on Hill 1683 west of Ban Na on the southwest rim of the Plain of Jars in northern Laos. The Thais are sent to Laos on temporary detachment for six months or a year, the sources said. There are cases where units are formed from Thais of different units who have volunteered for certain duties in Laos, the sources said. However, these units re- main part of the That army on loan to the J.S. Ce~trw7 teliigence Agency, the Sources The only voluntary aspect of their duty is that That soldiers are anxious for assignment to Laos because of the financial benefits. Officials of the United States and Thailand governments insist the Thai troops in Laos, numbering at least 3,200. are volunteers. ThE d officials, in particular, claim the troops have no official sanction from Bangkok. (Even the number of troops is in dispute. As a result of U.S. Senate inquiries into the operation, the figure of 4,800 troops presently Is given in Washington as the number of Thai troops on duty in Laos.) The Lao military attributes the official Thai position to corruption. They say only certain members of the Thai government are pocket- ing payments from the United States, so the entire Thai cabinet may not be informed of the entire U.S. arrangements for Thais to fight in Laos. That troops have been fighting in Laos s'mce late 1964. The first Thai unit in Laos was a battery of 155mm howitzers based near Ran Khay village in the Plain of Jars. Thai officers and men then were sent sepa- rately to guerilla units run by the CIA. On Feb. 1, 1967, a reporter met one of these Thais at NAM Bac, Lao fortress 40 miles southwest at Dien Bien Phu. The Thal said he was a captain In the Thai army and came from Bangkok. An American in civilian clothes was com- manding his unit and was responsible for payment, he said. There were at least 20 Thais with the cap- tain at Nam sac and Site 217. On June 25, 1969, the Thal Artillery unit (which remained in the same 11-we for five years while men were rotated) was overrun when North Vietnamese tanks ? coke through the neutralist Lao troops. Following this attack, in v itch at least 30 Thais were killed, Bangko;_ Insisted on having Thai troops protect u o Thai gun- ners. Thal gunners also were at to Long Cheng, further south, but thi: t-me several hundred-some sources say 800 -flat infan- trymen were sent to protect t' ,e artillery. Part of these units now are a+. Fire Base Zebra northeast of Long Cheng. Recently That troops have . ,r-'ed on the Bolovens Plateau in southern Li_0S and on operations against Route Sec. n, the main Hanoi resupply route to its tro='R. In north- ern Laos. All troops under American ci.ntrol who need Medical help are sent to l;iailand di- rectly, American officials say, f ? :rhals have no worries if they are sick or v a.nded. The Communist Lao radio ci ants over 300 Thais have been killed in actloi iii Laos, but American officials say it's less t uaa 200. The Thai role, according to 1 S officials is to make up for heavy losses an olig the Meo tribesmen of Gen. Vang Pao, v io have been fighting since 1960 against thr north Viet- namese, suffering In the last th.;:e years over 8,000 killed in action. The Lao army claims it's in der strength and unable to substantially h lp Vang Pao because it's spread the length of Laos, fac- ing the enemy. This claim, ho.;e,.er, is sus- pect. Hundreds of unemployee young men roam around Vientiane in I iotorbikes. When Gen. Koupraisith Abhay, Ii., Vientiane military boss, tried to conscr ,t them, he found they are the sons of intuential Lao- tians who protested conscriptfo i and forced Kouprasith to cease his activitie Also, several thousand Lao ti clops are not gainfully employed but act as bodyguards, chauffeurs, office personnel or are building new villas for Lao officers. Despite all this, It may be s, id that Laos still is woefully short of mane fiver as well as good field officers and some litary dis- cipline. Therefore, Lao needs l ,lg) from its ethnic neighbors, the Thais. The Lao however, don't want their neigh- bors in the western provinces f Champas- sac and Sayaboury, which the Thais covet nor in Mekong River towns wt ?r,~ the Thai propensity for the spoils of wa niay match that of Saigon troops in Camt odia. There- fore, they are in the mountain: o northern Laos where the Thais can do th most fight- ing and the least mischief. HORTON PRAISES MRS DONALD LOETZER FOR HER 3.t'FIRMA- TION OF AMERICA HON. FRANK HOR7 CAN OF NEW YORK IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESIt TATIVES Tuesday, June 15, 1,, 11~ Mr. HORTON. Mr. Speal e):, during these times of protest by o,r Nation's youth, the very philosophies -..p;)n which this country was establishes Pre being questioned. At times, ant - imerican sentiments and acts seem to ,-?vershadow positive feelings for this count ry and our leader's goals. There is little doubt that 1'-e must do what we can to foster respc t for and understanding of this coun..ry among people of all ages, especially rniong our youth. Concerned about the desti:4 of this country and about the young ='e'ple who Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6 Approved June 15, 1971 CONGRESSIONAL tively with the common problems of mod- ern society as reflected by the soldier of today. :I believe the young people of our country are looking for responsibility, chal- lenge, fulfillment, job satisfaction and ad- venture. I believe they are searching for pur- pose and direction as well. The Army can satisfy these asp ations. We are acutely ware that a few of our people have not live up to the high stand- ards of military lead ship, The military is a hard, tough, and d anding profession. So are our standards. WeNeannot afford .. . nor will we tolerate . . anything less than the highest personal and pr essional stand- ards. In this respect, the erican people must not be hasty to judge. ere are too many capable ... dedicated . . nd honor- able men in the military to allo the acts of a few to degrade their standaVs and diminish their pride. \ Despite the occasional departures rom our norms, the Army's performance IN not be defended. The Army has done what't well . in Vietnam and elsewhere. The record is aproud one. Nowhere has this been better demon- strated than in Vietnam, where the Army has fought a difficult, complex war-taking fire at home as well as on the battlefield. We have done essentially what we were asked to do-prevent a communist takeover In the South. I am proud of the job that the Army has done. The record of the Army goes beyond Viet- nam. Although Vietnam has grabbed the lion's share of headlines, the Army has also performed well In other areas of the world. Along the DMZ in Korea and on the Czechoslovakian border where one incident could ignite another war. The Dominican Republic where a com- munist takeover in a smoldering civil war was thwarted. The buildup In Florida during the Cuban missile crisis where land power and the capability to project it on a hostile shore aided in cooling the first nuclear confronta- tion. And the reinforcement of Berlin with a battle group from West Germany demon- strating to the Soviets that we were serious in our commitment to keep land lines of communication open to that city. This is the record of an excellent organiza- tion of dedicated men who have performed admirably in a difficult role-a role that has been widely misunderstood, frequently mis- interpreted, and occasionally misrepresented. Despite this proud record, the Army by serves. If the military continues to rec ive indiscriminate abuse ... if It I. not 4ro- vided adequate resources . . . and If it not supported as an essential and res table profession, we can hardly expect to/attract young Americans to serve in the umbers and quality required. And, the con quences for our Nation's security will b ominous I urge- you, then, to look at s critically but with understanding. The rmy regards constructive criticism as a pos ivecontribu- tion to its forward progress At the same time, its success is continue tin large part on public understanding w ich is balanced, At the beginning, I m ntioned that the members of your profess on and mine were joined in many commo purposes and as- pirations, essentially inted toward the well-being and progre s of the Nation we love. We in the Army ill continue to dedi- cate ourselves to that/end. I would hope, in your role, that you w old assist us in obtain- ing the public un rstanding and funda- mental support which are essential if we are to succeed. RECORD - Extensions of Remarks E 5875 HON. DON H. CLAUSEN OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, June 15, 1971 Mr. DON H. CLAUSEN. Mr. Speaker, recently it was my personal privilege to participate in a graduation ceremony at Ukiah High School in my First Congres- sional District of California. One of the principal speakers of the evening was a lovely and talented young lady, Janet Broaddus, daughter of one of our highly respected judges of the su- perior court of Mendocino County- Judge Broaddus. As I listened to the message being de parents and friends, I kept saying to y- self, "This girl is really on target.'; he ing 1 pressfion on me and pr pted me to res nd following her spe h, by sug- gesting We have too man people that are agai t everything-- at we need are more p'ple who arep r something." I believe tha intellig ce and righteous- ness cannot soly rob] s without love and happiness and as I ok around me I see millions of problem large and small--with millions of solutio all intricately worked out. But all the ligence, power. and money in the wo d are ever going to solve anything, if we are all truggling against each other. Janet's el went works d articulate delivery in de a profound i ression on all who ere in attendance. want to share th se words with my toll goes in the Co ress and also record th ger- mane ly in our official documen the CONG ESSIONAL RECORD, so that otkers who are about to assume expanding leadership roles as, together, we meet the challenges of change. The speech follows: HAVE A HAPPY DAY (By Janet Broaddus) Dr. Coryell; Congressman Clausen, Parents, Ladies and Gentleman, Fellow Graduates,, and members of the band: This is a happy time of year. Everyone Is out of school, the beautiful weather has finally arrived, and, the class of '71 is on Its way to new ad- ventures. Since everyone should be happy, ]. wanted to speak on a topic that is different, refreshing, and happy. I just couldn't sit my.. self down at my desk in a stuffy room and write a speech about the depressing prob-? ]erns of society, social technology in. the seventies, the generation gap, or how the class of '71 plans to save the world. These are all typical topics for a graduation speech, but I wanted to go outside, sit in the warm sun under the bright, blue sky and write about something happy-something that is not depressing. I thought about it and asked myself, "What is happier than happiness?", so I decided to speak tonight aboul, hap., piness. It is not a typical subject to a speech at graduation, but it seems appropriate. First of all, what is happiness? Webster de.. scribes It as "good luck, prosperity, a state of well-being". Charles Schultz says that "hap- piness is a security blanket", "happiness -is having a friend", "happiness is a warm puppy", and on and n. A dictionary can describe the word, b t there is more to it than that. Charlie Crown and his friends can describe the eling, because happiness is in everything, verywhere, and it is what- ever you want to be, or whatever you make it to be. To e happiness is a way of show- ing a freed and of expressing a love for the world nd its people. It is a feeling that can keep a from worrying needlessly. Hap- piness a feeling that everyone should be able t experience all the time, and not just whey they have a stroke of good luck. of our future which cannot be ignored. It is depressing to know that there are millions of starving people in our world, to see the pov- erty and the slums only a couple miles from the White House In Washington, D.C., to see all the prejudice and racial riots, to watch our rnagnificient wilderness become covered with concrete or polluted with deadly chemi- cals. It doesn't make anyone happy to know that there- is still a war in Viet Nam or to open the morning paper to a headline read- ing, "The 24th Body Found." Why am I talking about happiness when all these problems still exist in the world? Because I believe that intelligence and right- eousness cannot solve probeems without love and happiness. These problems have all existed since man was created and we are still struggling to solve them. The brick wall is not being knocked down. It is slowly be- ing chipped at, but new bricks are being laid faster than they can be destroyed. How much longer will they exist? How much longer can we exist with them? As I look around me I see millions of problems- large and small-with millions of solutions- all intricately worked out. But all the Intelli- gence, power, and money in the world are never going to solve anything, if we are all struggling against each other. There is too much bitterness in our world-politicians and 'voters, parents and children, educators and students are all slowly pulling at each other as it each were a section of a rubber band in the hands of a very nervous person. Everyone fights for what he believes is right, and everyone wants more rights than on problem and Then the purpose usually cha es to that of who is able to have his solut n accepted--and the battle goes on while a problem remains. The emphasis today, it just in our country but all over the worl is too much on nationalism In- tead of in'ljvidualism. If it were possible for governmel>,ts to consider the happiness of the individualE involved before the pride of the country, thace of a political party, or what is considers to be "right" for the na- tion, the world, or' the people, I think there would be a lot of uick changes. But the way society and gov nment are structured this is not very easy. or example, in order for everyone at the Part eace Talks to have all those pressures lifts from their shoul- ders there would have to e a revolution in the minds of every sing] person on this earth at exactly the same oment. I'd say that's just a little bit impos bee, but then again nothing worthwhile is e y to accom- If we can't start at the top and ork down, we can start at the bottom and rk up-- start with the individual and rk up through the larger organizations of It an- ity. So far I've been talking about big prob- lems and big governments, but the same is true down the line through state govern- ments, local governments, community orga- nizations, families, all the way to the rela- tionship of two people meeting on the street. Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300090040-6