SECRET DECISIONS THAT ALTERED THE VIETNAM WAR

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-01601R000300360112-9
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RIPPUB
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K
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5
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 17, 2000
Sequence Number: 
112
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Publication Date: 
June 28, 1971
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MAGAZINE
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STATINTL '%'ORLD Pr,PO) T JUN IT11 Approved For Release 2001103/04: CIA-RDP80-016 Stornn Over Leak. Docum nt . . C L1 tl Lea All I f " I IB`., VR~ - ., E". V 111 Ez' *~ Fl" M . Impact of Pentagon's massive analysis of the Government's policy'-making processes on Vietnain?--disclosed by "The New York Times" -extends far beyond the war itself. '/~- ISTATINTL In the published c!ocuments: recommend - tions and judgments at high levels, showing how the nation's vast n-military commitments in the Indo-China conflict took shape. ~f~.,~.T Fy.~~S"4T~R?".ZiH.ti.71e`:.SiC'.^.'.'-?.i'ES~".::#'SL'ST:'a'~i4b;r.:i:-a.~R~.R'4'l'C`::`_:IPL::^''~ '==~iT.'7.iELT..CS^'C'&":3~.^:Rvt:2'Z'R3-4~.'-..2!Y?isR`."Sff55.`_^]Ft"~i~RL^Pw"22:dY.F F9. L^::4'. L"'L: t'~`:!5t?'.'? .^FC~9 of secret decisions on U. S. strategy touched off bursts of anger in Congress and in foreign capitals and brought unprecedented ac- tion by the Nixon Ad- ministration. The Department of jus- tice sou,,-lit an injunction banning further publica- tion of material obtained by "The Times" on the ground that it would cause "irreparable injury to the defense interests of the United States." On June 15, U. S. Dis- trict Judge Murray I. Gur- fcin, in. New York, is- stied a restraining order halting p>AOP$lve cFor ing arguments and a i-ul- .ing on the Government's A FUROR over publication of secret material on step-by-step escalation of the U. S. role in Vietnam has taken on far-reaching proportions. The controversy was triggered on June J3 when "The New York Times" began printing a series of articles based on a Pentagon study of how and why Amcri- can involvement in the Indo-China .var grew to its peak commitment of forces totaling half a million men. The "Times" articles included classi- fied documents submitted to President Johnson by advisers such as Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, Director John A. McCone of the Central Intelli- gence Agency and White house aides McGeorge Bundy and Wall W. Rostow; L also texts of decisions to be implemented 'through the National Security Council and joint Chiefs of Staff. A bombshell effect-which Govern- ment officials now expect to be felt for months-increased with publication, on June 14 and 15, of the second and third articles in a scheduled multipart series. Expanding repercussions. Disclosures a ~ ""=bn :n" n` {~ n .n ~t~ v ruing the 1964 616 step, fen "Se ~rjr lcl4 ~Fj.'S r qr1'03~~mpai n th L'Nlr. _1p1ui- "Times" focused on top-level documents that shaped strategy. demand for a permanent injunction. White House officials said action was taken against "The Tinies" not only be- cause U. S. interests were clamageil, but for the further reason that publication of classified documents, if unchallenged, would set a dangerous precedent. "Responsibility to publish." Gist of the stand taken by "The Times" was ex- pressed in an editorial on June 16, in these words: "A fundamental responsibility of the press in this democracy is to publish information that helps the people of the United Slates to understand the pro- cesses of their own Government, especial- ly when those processes have been clouded over in a veil of public dis- simulation and even deception." While the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation and other arms of the Govern- ment sought to fix responsibility for the leak of the secret material to "The Tinlcs," diplomatic and congressional reverberations continued. Secretary of State William P. Rogers told a news conference on Jude 15 that winning friends with his apparent sincerity and humanity he was, . at the same ` time, provoking North Vietnam into an es- calated war. The Paris newspaper "France Soir" said the "Times" articles show that "in order to attack North Vietnam" IN-Ir. Johnson "misled Congress." On Capitol Hill, sharp comment came from Sen- ator Barry ' 'Gold vatfi? (Rep.), of Arizona, who was Lyndon Johnson's op- ponent in the 1964 presi- delitial race. publication of the articles was a vio- lation of the law on secret documents and a "very serious matter" that would cause a "great deal of difficulty for the U. S. in its relations with foreign governments. Mr. Rogers said that the State De- partment had received diplomatic in- quiries from other governments express- ing concern about the articles and raising questions as to whether those govern- ments could be sure of dealing withh the U. S. on a confidential basis. "Deliberate esculofion.." The Conl- munist world was quick to react. '1'lic Soviet news agency, Tass, asserted that the documents published in the "Times" series "confirm the United States de- liberately escalated and broadened the war in Indo-Cllina, and misled the American public in giving its reasons for doing so." In Australia-wlliclh has contributed troops to the Vietnam war effort-"The Sydney Daily Mirror" declared in ,in editorial that the secret Pentagon papers "show that while President Johnson was [,v2t.:;T54 af:^.X21'e~~.c:?'d'??::1'.!:~ia_Rc'~'T.:PToYi..i^"y',:!~ .:.+.'^"..-`r'1'dfi.~'.L ~i F'!:'~ :f6'~:i.:_A'3:~&S]5fi.'.5.^Y2"~L?~::5."Cl_S.$:C^.GlUStT:i>>: STATINTL lti~ c ' ex L.P I -Y c,- e-( 1L kj e - - profu d FLori4ejeas`e,2001/03tQ4 JPj% DP80-016 e-, 5r-%cre~ T-h o To see the conflict and our part in it as a tragedy without villains, sear crimes without criminals, lies without liars, es- pottses and promulgates a view of pro- cess, roles and motives that is not only grossly mistaken but which underwrites deceits that have served a succession of Presidents. HE, issues were momentous, the sit- uation unprecedented. The most mas- sive leak of secret documents in U.S. history had suddenly exposed the sen- Isitive inner processes whereby the John- !'son Administration had abruptly esca- lated the nation's most unpopular-and unsuccessful-war. The Nixon Govern- ment, battling stubbornly to withdraw from that war at its' own deliberate pace, took the historic step of seeking to suppress articles before publication, and threatened criminal action against JULY 1965: JOHNSON DISCUSSING VIET NAM POLICY BEFORE TELEVISION SPEECH Always the secret option, another notch, but never victory. that the Government 'was fighting so fiercely to protect. Those records af- forded a rare insight into how high of- ficials make decisions affecting the lives of millions as well as the fate of na- tions. The view, however constricted or incomplete, was deeply disconcerting. The records revealed a dismaying de- gree of miscalculation, bureaucratic ar-. rogance and deception. The revelations severely damaged the reputations of some officials, enhanced those of a few, and so angered Senate Majority Lead- er Mike Mansfield--a long-patient Dem- ocrat whose own party was hurt most -that he promised to conduct a Sen- ate investigation of Government decision making. The sensational affair began quietly with the dull thud of the 486-page Sun- day New York Tinies arriving on door- steps and in newsrooms. A dry Page One headline--VIETNAM ARCHIVE PEN- John Mitchell charged that the Times's' disclosures would cause "irreparable in-': jury to the defense of the United States" and obtained a temporary restraining order to stop the series after three in- stallments, worldwide attention was in- evitably assured. A Study Ignored STATINTL The Times had obviously turned up a big story (see ?PREss). Daniel Ells- berg, a former Pentagon analyst and su- perhawk-turned-supeideve, apparently had felt so concerned about his in- volvement in the Viet Nam tragedy that he had somehow conveyed about 40 volumes of an extraordinary Pen- tagon history of. the war to the news- paper. Included were 4,000 pages of documents, 3,000 pages of analysis and 2.5 million words-al] classified as se- cret, top secret or top secret-sensitive. The study was begun in 1967 by See- the nation's most eminent newspaper. TAGON STUDY TRACES 3 DECADES of retary of Defense Robert McNamara, The dramatic collision between the GROWING U.S. INVOLVEMENT--Was fol- who had become disillusioned by the fu- Nixon Administration and first the New lowed by six pages of deliberately low- tility of the war and wanted future his-' York Times, then the Washington Post, key prose and column after gray col- torians to he able to determine what raised in a new and spectacular form umn of official cables, memorandums had gone wrong. For more than 'a year, the unresolved constitutional questions and position papers. The mass of ma- 35 researchers, including Ellsberg, Rand about the Government's right to keep terial seemed to repel readers and even Corporation experts, civilians and uni- its planning papers secret' and the con- other newsmen. Nearly a day went by be- formed Pentagon personnel, worked out Ilicting right of a free press to inform fore the networks and wire services of an office adjoining McNamara's. With the pnbli MQedrF' eI?ase 01'1013/(T4e:.IARiDF"'0i(6 0 1b 0 ? v.1 pble to obtain tioned (secs .story page 17). Yet, even action was to retrain- from comment so en agora ocut~ins._filtihn_hacl tor- --more--fundamental, the.legal -battle _fo.__ns..not..to_giv_e_the_series any greater "ex- _._guments_ within the Truman Adminis- cused natilttention on the records ore." But when Attorney General tration on 'whether the--U.S. should help e(1, C(.vt ? t e Yoe- kT, NEWSW EE:i j G^t ifl_~ ~?~"' and Rusk were against it or a long tlmc,. White House and State Department Teo- the military recommendation on five clif- orcls, which shows they didn't try. very ferent occasions-in November and Do- ords If they honest the comber 1964 and oil Jan. 2, 1965. Final- themselves. they would ly, oil Feb. 7, 1965, with the approval of have diqualied were Some of The New York Times digest concerned, he OK'd the bombing with the idea that it would be a of the Pentagon study was objective. deterrent to the north. [Johnson's recol- But parts of it might have been written lection now is at variance with at least by John Kenneth Galbraith. Over all, one past version. Five years ago, he told. it was dishonest-one distorted and bi-. NL??VS\VEEK'S Charles Roberts, then the ased side of the picture. And all the cir- magazine's White House correspondent, curnstanecs surrounding the leak collie that lie had made, the decision in Octo- close to treason. The danger now is that bur 1964 during the Presidential cam- President Nixon will be pressured to get paign.] He hadn't said in his campaign out of Vietnam before achieving the that he would never commit Americans main objective-getting South Vietnam in to fight in Vietnam. In Now Hampshire, shape to protect itself. be said that Asians should fight their own C 1 O b h d h The man in the eye of the storm, Lyn- don B. Johnson, maintained a calm, and some thought stoic, silence last week, turning away interviewers who wanted his reaction to the top-secret Pentagon study of his stewardship of the war. Froln Austin, he passed the word that all questions" raised by the Pentagon pa- ers %voulcl be answered in his own book, he Vantage Point," to be published next fall and that he was making "no changes" in the galleys to accommodate the-new disclosures. -But behind his si- lence, Johnson was naturally concerned .about the study and its treatment in the press. Those in Austin privy to his feel- ings sketch this picture-. ? lie ghostly hand of Robert Kennedy is ~M on the Pentagon study. Bobby in- deed may well have inspired the report. He. was close to Robert McNamara and oel"v ices Committee, and Arkansas's J. - istration was doing. Russell said so, but challenge to Johnson in 1968. He The-first -Gulf of Tonkin resolution ac- couldn't find any weakness in the John- tually was prepared by Senate leaders. son record on civil rights, race, health, But it was too complicated to be under- education, environment or anything else. standable, and Johnson objected. So the He pinned his hopes on Vietnam, and senators asked the Administration to )re- McNamara was a Kennedy man. In fact, pare a simplified version and said they the whole Pentagon Establishment was would adopt it. They all participated. Kennedy. Johnson left it.intact. He trust- The government had radio intercepts eel. McNamara-in fact told him once that showing that North Vietnam ordered tor- if McNamara quit he would have him ar- pedo attacks on the U.S. destroyers in rested and brought back. Tonkin Gulf. Fulbright has forgotten that, McNamara, while in the process of be- too-now he claims it was all a fraud--but coming disillusioned with the war, went he knew it at the time. The resolution to the Kennedy Center in Cambridge, authorizing Johnson to do what he Mass., and talked with about twenty thought needed doing from then on was Harvard professors around the time he adopted unanimously by the House and 'ordered the study. Some of those twenty with two opposing votes in the Senate. , may be among the authors of the report . The two dissenters may have been mending "no new peace initiatives" on somebody should find out who they are wrong, but they were at least honest ' Vietnam and advocating the callup of and who wrot i cis he has a committed. 1;f --Pl t r ----- '0 iffa104 :, C~1~4fR to - 16 0 1 i c o ammunition-and 1 t i _mw .i any-wan. e o uison on to onib..-pretty goo( pi c o aitihis lec.tive report. They didnt try to get long before he did. But both McNamara book will m ake pretty goozl ttsc o it.-_ ne o Jo inson s ig ea ac es when wars, but in context he wasn't promising he took over the Presidency and the war not to help. effort was the political instability of die government in Saigon following the over- The Deserters throw and murder of President Ng' In January 1965, McNamara and Mc-? Dinh Dian in 1963. One of the first George Bundy were urging strong meas- things Johnson did was to call in MCNa res against North Vietnam. They argued. mara, Dean Rusk, CIA director John McAlat the time had come for full use of Cone and Henry Cabot Lodge-all JFK American power. Either get in or get out, holdovers-and object to what had been they said. At that point, Rusk didn't done. W1 hile JFK was out of 1Vashiugton, agree with them. He wasn't for getting a cable from Roger IIilsman, the State out but neither was he for a big escala- Departnient's director of Intelligence Lion. He finally did agree with McNa- ancl Research, gave "a green light" for niara and Bundy the following June and the coup. That was inexcusable. July, and Johnson issued the orders. Ev- The Senators ' eryb-ody agreed by then. Some became disillusioned even before leaving the Critics now were trying to make it government. Bundy was the first to aban- seem that he had decided in 1964 to don shi and McNamara was next It p . bomb in 1.965, that his campaign was a might have been weakness of character. lie and that lie was trying to put some- Lately Clark Clifford has been saying thing over on Congress. That just wasn't that he had orders from Johnson only to so. There were contingency plans for Vi- find out how to escalate further. But ctnam. There are contingency plans for Johnson has a copy of his order to Clif- bombing Moscow; that doesn't mean that ford-initialed by Clifford when he re- Moscow is going to be bombed. Johnson ceived it- telling him to make a broad y . p about major moves. Georgia's Richard, In, of orders (".liffnrcl gave to suborrli- 'stud of all alternatives He also has co - His own book, in fact, draws - on 31 iillion documents on file at the LBJ several memos from men such as Bundy, Clifford and McNamara, urging a stepped-up war effort. One of his fa- vorites, already surfaced in the Tinies, shows McNamara proposing on March 10, 1964-five months before the Tonkin Gulf incident and eleven months before the Viet Cong attack on Pleiku-that the U.S. should be ready for "retaliation" against North Vietnam on three days' notice. Another shows that Bundy, in Saigon at the time of the Pleiku attack, came back to Washington urging "sus- tained reprisal" bombing attacks against North Vietnam, the policy Johnson adopted. And the former President has a memorandum showing that Clifford -as late as March 4 1968-was reconl- Approved For Release 2001103/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 Q 1 r,~~~M.1 L_ 28 JUN 971 n-oz nomi)er raw in 1965: Early in the war, the U.S. ran out of alternatives to pressure. Ar Th War. Ac c~~~ phi to -tGuu 1-,)) en u on Papers, arhe secret Vietnam study commis- the wartime Johnson era. But even when not-as is often alleged-connive with sioned by Robert McNamara is a his- it concentrates on the L13J years, the Diem to ignore the elections. And al- torian's dream and a statesman's night- Pentagon study is by no means the final though Dwight Eisenhower permitted mare. With the story splashed on page word. It provides a fascinating peek into the military to draw up contingency plans one, A)nericans have for the first time the government's files, but it contains for American intervention in Laos and been able to read sonic of the crucial few White House or State Department Vietnam, he decided against such a step secret documents of a war that is still records of the period. It also draws on when Dulles failed to line up support being fought. The Pentagon papers are, few of the private memorandums that from America's allies. at best, only an incomplete account of McNamara, Rusk and others wrote for By the time Lyndon Johnson took of- America's slide into the Vietnam quag- the President, and it shows no trace of flee, the situation in South Vietnam had mire. But they are also a revealing-arid the many private, soul-searching con- worsened. Diem had been assassinated, deeply disturbing-account of the delu- versations between top officials. Flawed and the sac] series of revolving-door jun- sions, deceptions and honest errors of as a current account, the study is no less tas that followed him were fast losing judgment that propelled the United seriously flawed as a retrospective be- their grip on the country. "We should States into a destructively unpopular war. cause the Pentagon analysts were not watch the situation very carefully," Do- The initial installments published by permitted to interview the principal fense Secretary 'McNamara wrote in Do The New York Times and The Washing- players in the drama, ton Post transfix* some members of Lyn- But despite those shortcomings, the name"runningftscared,srhopinglrfor`Ttl e don Johnson's Administration in a more!- study is invaluable. The Eisenhower era best, but preparing for more forceful less spotlight. McNamara labors on as the material-first printed in The Washing- moves if the situation does not show war's most tireless technocrat even after ton Post-strikes many of the notes that early signs of improvement." This con- he has begun to lose heart for the fight. were to echo throughout America's in- corn was by no means confined to secret Walt Whitman Rostov clings doggedly volvement in Vietnam. There is the government deliberations. By March to the assumption that America is simply strong assumption that the stakes ex- 1964, Sen. J. William Fulbright was too powerful to be thwarted. Maxwell tend beyond Indochina to all of Asia, warning Congress that there were "only Taylor, the humanist general for whom and that the U.S. is embroiled in a proxy two realistic options open to us in. Vict- Robert Kennedy named one of his sons, confrontation with Communist China. nam in the immediate future: the. ex- blusters like a pouty proconsul. And the There are the efforts to solve problems pansion of the conflict in one way or Bundy brothers grind out options to or- by backstage maneuvering. And, above another or a renewed effort to bolster der, while generals and admirals con- all, there is Washington's repeated in- the capacity of the South Vietnamese to, stantly promote the idea that more is ability to make events in Indochina coil- prosecute the war successfully on its butter. form to its desires. present scale." And as the mood of crisis Other reputations gain from the expo- A deepened, many newspapers-includin sure. George Ball's standing as a presci- Vote Against Elections g The New York Times-varied against ent dove is enhanced by the tone of his In 1954, Secretary of State John Poster the possible loss of South Vietnam to the memorandums, and the intelligence serv- Dulles fought hard but unsuccessfully at Communists. ices--particularly the CIA-weigh in with the Geneva conference on Indochina to But although the American people advice that, in retrospect, often seems prevent the scheduling of elections in were well aware that things were going to have been dead right. The spotlight Vietnam which, he feared, "might even- badly in South Vietnam-an awareness skips over still other key policymakers. tually mean unification [of] Vietnam un- that would be heightened during the 1)ean Rusk figures only rarely in most of der Ho Chi Minh." But despite Dulles's Coldwater-Johnson election cam paign-a .the narrative.-And except for brief all- strong stand, the U.S. backed away from whole spectrum of undercover activities. pearances, the most important actor of taking overt action on its own in Tilde- was kept secret from them. The Yenta-', all-Lyndon Johnson-broods alone in the china. In 1955, when South Vietnamese gon papers show that on Feb. 1., 1964, .middle distance. strongman Ngo Dinh Dlenl refused even an elaborate program of covert military The material that was oracle public to consider holding elections, Washin r- , covers a period e r o )orations a li 1C l sja e,,o Forth Vi- over the period r'in-d cY ale lCl lR~P -01 sir #d ode name r 1' c es on agora aua ysrs declares "The U S did O - . . peration Plan 34A. Directed front Approved For Release 2002M3 1(dlA-RDP80-01 `BREACH OF SECU R Y2 WASHINGTON - It is interesting - and -of decision-making at the highest lev- rather wryly amusing-to juxtapose a els of government." Although the couple of editorials that have appeared Times, fortunately, could not know it in The New York Times. One appeared at the time, the article had been read on June 1.6 after a Federal judge or- in advance (anti rather badly edited) dered the Times to suspend publiction by no less an authority on national seen- , the top-secret Pentagon studies of rity than the President of the United the U.S. role in Vietnam. States. It contained no word from any The Times called this. "an unprece- NSC paper, or from any other secret dented example of censorship," which document. - indeed it is. But then, the verbatim ublieation of great masses of top-se- p cret papers is also unprecedented. The writers' reasons for writing the "What was the reason that impelled article were perhaps less lofty than The Times to publish this material in those claimed by the Times in its re- the first place?" the Times asks rhetori- cent editorial. They included a desire cally. "The basic reason is, as was stated to do a good reportorial job (the ac- in our original reply to Mr. Mitchell, count was later confirmed in detail in that we believe `that it is in the interest Robert Kennedy's book on the Cuban of the people of this country to be in- crisis). They even included a desire to formed' ..." The editorial continues on make a bit of money. But like most re- that lofty note: "We publish the docu- porters, we also believed that "it is in meats and related running account not . the interest of the people of this couu to prove any debater's point ... but to try to be informed ..." present to the American public a his- No doubt a desire to inform the peo- tory-admittedly incomplete--of deci- ple was a major reason for the Times's sion-making at the highest levels of decision to publish the secret papers: government ..." But (to adopt the Tinmes's own rhelorf- The other editorial, which was even. cal style) might there not have been more righteously outraged, appeared other reasons too? Does it not matter a in the Times some years ago. It was en- great deal to the Times who does the titled "Breach of Security," and it de- informing? Is it not the Times's criterion nounced an article "purporting to tell that if the Times does the informing, what went on in the executive commit- that is in the national interest, and if tee of the National Security Council ... somebody else does it, that is "a The secrecy of one of the highest or- breach of security"? ,gaus of the United States has been se- And is the Times really indifferent riously breached." to whether or not the information, 'MC CAItTHY TECHNIQUE' which it is "in the interest of the people of this country" to publish, "What kind of advice can the Presi- dent expect to get under such circum- stances?" the Times asked, again rhe- torically. "flow can there be any real ,freedom of discussion or of dissent; how can anyone be expected to advance positions that may be politically unpop- ular or unprofitable? Does no. one in Washington recall the McCarthy era and the McCarthy technique? ... The various positions of the members of the NSC taken during deliberation must remain secret . . . The integrity of the ,National Security Council, and of the advice received 'by the President, is at strike." The article that inspired the Times to this burst of righteous indignation was a Saturday Evening Post piece on he Cuban missile crisis by Charles , V Bartlett and this writer. It too was an Vietnamese to their fate. 'modern history. Yet those who wait this public a "tA pro /iedcl ?~Iko> axe prO0'~ ~vI~at they ~lQ1F in 01 iiar a Flo g wait. I)ar-attemt supports the views of the Times? The article that so enraged the Times pictured the late Adlai Stevenson, then a major Times icon, in a somewhat dubious light, and that perhaps had something to do with the rage. The Times has long passionately supported the cause that the leaking of the Pen- tagon papers was obviously intended to serve. The purloined papers printed by the Times were first offered to Sen. George McGovern and Rep. Paul Mc- Closkey, the leading doves in the Sen- ate and ]louse. Obviously, the purpose of the leak was to prove that this coun- try became involved in Vietnam by a process of stealthy deception; and that therefore the United States should leaving the South withdraw forthwith prove. Allowing for the need for con- tingency planning, and allowing also for Lyndon Johnson's well-known pas= sion for concealment, there is less de- ception of the public in the docu- ments than self-deception. There is the ancient American illu- sion that wars can be won cleanly in the air, rather than bloodily on the ground, of course. But the basic self- deception was the illusion that, if the United States could only find the right combination of sticks and carrots, the Vietnamese Communists would (in. Robert McNamara's phrase) "move to a settlement by negotiation." The un- swerving goal of the Communists, then. and now, was and is the imposition of. Communist rule on all former Trench Indochina. There is no stick short of "bombing then) back to the stone age," and no carrot short of turning Saigon over to their tender mercies, that will divert them from that goal. No American President who was also an honorable and humane man could hit thorn with that stick, or of- fer them that carrot. Yet the illusion that the North Vietnamese are capa- ble of "reasonable" compromise is amazingly persistent, especially among liberal Democrats-its most recent manifestation is the "Clifford Plan," strongly supported by the Times. NONSENSE Despite its ineffable self-righteous- ness, the Times is certainly a great pa- per, though not as great as when it had the Herald Tribune to worry about. Moreover, anyone who has been around Washington for some time knows that a lot of governmental non-' sense has been perpetrated in the name of "security." Most reasonably diligent reporters, including this one, have been investigated by the govern- ment for publishing information the government found it inconvenient to have published. Yet surely there is a problem of security worth worrying about when "the various positions of the members of 'the NSC," as well as National Intel- ligence Estimates and secret' coded messages from foreign governments, are reproduced verbatim in great quantities. Indeed, the Times series,. by the Times's own standards, is the, most serious "breach of security" in tJ