HEROINE: LES POUR VOYEURS (FOREIGN LANGUAGE)

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CIA-RDP80-01601R000800200001-4
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K
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92
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December 9, 2016
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November 13, 2000
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December 3, 1972
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PARIS, LE NOUVEL OBSERVATEUE Approved For Release 2(W1T/Q4~ 81A-W'80-016 LE tique. Le reste passe sur le marche entre les mains des trafiquants qui approvision- nent les fumeurs d'opium et les heroino- manes. Les trafiquants peuvent se fournir a deux sources differentes : 0 1) Les pays dans,lesquels la culture du pavot est legate et controlee par l'Etat, mais ou une partie de la recolte echappe aux autorites administratives. 0 2) Les pays dans lesquels la culture du pavot est en principe interdite, mais qui n'ont pas ies moyens materiels et poli- tiques - ou le desir - de faire respecter cette loi. La Turquie, troisii me producteur mon- dial, entrait dans la premiere categoric. Jusqu'a ce que le gouvernemcnt d'Ankara decide de proscrire ]a , culture du pavot sur tout le territoire turc it partir de 1972, 25 % de la production d'opium etait de- tournee vers le marche clandestin, alors qu'elle aurait du, en principe, titre entiere- ment achetec par 1'Etat. Cc pays n'est pas le soul a connaitre pareil problCme. tine enquete effectuee par le service strategi- que des renseignements du Bureau des' Nar- cotiques americain (B.N.D.D.) donnaij, pour 1971, les chiffres suivants. Michel R. Lamberti et Catherine Lam our ont fait le tour-du monde you remonter tortes les filieres qui menent aux vrais patrons de la drogue c Si sous ne venoms pas a bout de e 11Z,, c'est lui qui viendra a hour de nous >, s'exclamait. le 7 juin 1971, le president Nixon devant es dizaines de millions de telespectateurs. .es Etats-Unis ont, on effet. le triste pri- ilege de compter le plus grand nombre 'heroinomanes du monde plus d'un emi-million actuellement, dont trois cent nille. pour ]a seule ville de New York. 'lus de 50 % des crimes perpetres dans es grandes vilics sont directement lies a la rogue : on tue pour se procurer ]'argent iecessaire a l'achat d'une dose d'heroine. Le phenomene nest pas seulement ameri- :ain : tous les pays europeens voient croitre une vitesse vertigineuse le nombre de curs hero'inomanes. En France, ou la pe- tetration de la drogue n'a etc sensible qu'a oartir de 1968, on en compte deja vinet nille. Et le ministere de la Santa estime lue le pays pourrait compter cent mille teroinomanes en 1976. Couper gin source La drogue n'est plus un simple pro- )leme de police. Partant du principe Cvi- lent, expose dernicrement a un journaliste americain de c U.S. News and World Zeport ~ par l'ancien directeur des Doua- ics americaines, Myles J. Ambrose, et selon equel c on ne petit pas devenir toxico- none si l'on ne trouve pas de stupe- rants *, Washington a decide de remon- `er a ]a source. c'est-a-dire it la produc- :ion' meme de l'opium, dont I'heroine est in derive. Couper la source d'approvisionnement Jes trafiquants, c'est intervenir dans les affaires des pays producteurs : de poli- .iere, la lutte contre ]a toxicomanie est devenue politique. Se posant une fois de plus en c gendarmes du monde : mail, cette fois, pour une cause dont personne ne songe a discuter le bien-fonds, les Etats- Unis se sont lances dans une croisade que d'aucuns jugent d'avance vouee it 1'echec. On produit, en effet, chaque annec. dans le monde, assez d'opium pour approvision- ner les cinq cent Mille heroinomanes ame- ricains pendant cinquante ans : deux a trots Mille tonnes. dont la moitie seule- ment est destinee a l'industrie pharmaccu- 1 T IT STATI NTL Production (1) ecoulee sur le marche Iicite Production ecoulee sur le marche clandestin Turquie . .... 150 35 a 50 Inde .......... 1 200 250. Pakistan . ...... 6 175-200 Iran ........ 150 U.R.S.S. . ...... 115 7 Republique popu- laire de Chine 100 Yougoslavie .... 0,83 1.7 Japon 5 T r i a n g I e d'.or (Thailande - Sir- mania - Laos) 750 Afghanistan .... Mexique ...... (1) En tonnes. JIHIIIVIL STATINTL 100-150 5-15 Contrairement a ce que I'on pourrait penser, les c fuitcs j. no sont pas propor- tionnelles a l'importance de la production licite ni a celle des superficies cultivees en pavot. Elles dependent du plus ot: moans grand sous-developpement adminis? tratif du pays concernc et de la capacity des autorites locales a exercer un controlc effectif sur les paysans;.au moment de! recoltes. Pourtant, meme des controles rigou reux ne suffisent pas a eviter les detour nements, compte tenu do la difference de: prix pratiques sur le marche officiel et sit le marche clandestin. L'exemple de l'Indt le prouve, ou, on depit d'un systeme tit controlc gouvernemental cite en.' exempt, par toutes les instances internationalcs, Ic fuites s'elevent a l3 % de la productiot totale. La Yougoslavie laisserait echa?pe pros de 70 % de sa production. Le Pals tan, enfin, qui produit ie_alement six ton nes d'opium, contribuerait pour pres d. deux cents tonnes a I'approvisionnentcn des trafiquants. Le pavot partout Dans une deuxieme categoric de pay! Ia production de ('opium est illCgale. I n'existe evidemment aucun organism d'Etat charge do controler une productio qui, en principe, n'existe pas. Clandestine la recolte d'opium est entierement ecoule sur le marche parallels. Salon le B.N.D.D ces pays eontribueraient pour huit cent car quante a Mille tonnes a l'approvisionnc ment du trafic. D'autres regions, sur lesquelles on n possede absolument aucune information prod.uisent de l'opium en quantite apprt ciable : le Nepal et, probablement, la Syr: et le Kurdistan irakien. On signale aus ('apparition de champs de pavots en Atrt rique du Sud. Contrairement a cc que I'c a souvent affirms, la culture du pavot r requiert pas de conditions geographiqut ou climatiques exceptionnelles. Elle reclarr seulement une main-d'oeuvre abondante bon marche car la recolte demande beat coup de soins et de minutie. Nombre de pays qui ne sont pas d, producteurs traditionnels d'opium you raient, s'ils le voulaient, se mettre a cuiti' du pavot.. C'est le cas tout recent du J pon. La production d'opium a, de cc f r tendance a croitre en tonction de la mande et pourrait encore augmenter con derablement. Des indices nombreux ink) Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 BEST COPY Available THROUGHOUT FOLDER Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL Approved For Relea> ,M..;@; fp4.g;, EIPP80-01601 1 :1~. L i ~iwi l',tt, 2 6 OCT 1972 RTQ7 -; o Tf i J 11- C/ JIUL By ROBERT KAYLOIt BANGKOK, Thailand --- (UPI) - Narcotics traffickers have stockpiled hundreds of pounds cf pure heroin in North Burma and are trying to establish a con- nection to lucrative markets in the United States. In the meantime, U. S. and Thai narcotics agents who have tightened their -rip on routes far heroin and opium traffic are !watching from across the bor- 1der. Informed sources here who have watched the stockpiles build up, say a wary standoff has developed, in the "Golden Triangle" the border area of Thailans, Laos and Burma vihcre the Southeast Asian nar- cotics trade is centered. INTELLIGENCE reports in- dicate that narcotics traf-i P i c k e r s-mostly overseas Chinese-have considered killing U. S. narcotics agents to clear' the bottleneck. I "Eventually they'll start to move the stuff," said a local source, "and things will start tol happen. The question is when." Sources who monitor the nar- cotics traffic say producers inj North Burma have on hand l several hundred pounds of neatly packaged, pure grade no. 4 white heroin, which looks like soap powder. Manufactured In refineries that are in some cases almost in sight of the Nam Ruak River l forming the boundary between Burma and Thailand more than l 400 miles north of Bangkok, the! heroin was intended for thel American GI market in South! Vietnam, the producers were caught unawares by the U. S. Avithdrawal, the sources say. TRAFPICI:EItS ARE now looking for connections in other markets, including the United States, which now gets an estimated 5 to 10 per cent of its heroin from Southeast Asia. "These boys haven't even tapped the U. S. market yet," said one source here. That they are interested was dernonstratcd by the arrest of two Chinese who sold a suitcase full of hero' n to an undo ?c ?er narcotics 34, PPKQVQa,'r1 1" Chinatown this summer. The heroin was traced to Southeast Asia. Narcotics authorities estimates that about 700 tons of opium are j produced each year in the! iur:gied mountains of the Golden; Triangle, mostly in Burma. While Thailand and Laos cooperate with the united States in combating narcotics traffic, Burma does not. THE AUTHORITIES believe half of the opium is used in the area where it is grown and another 200 to 250 tons used in Hong Kong and other places in Southeast Asia where there ist large addict population. Thaa leaves 50 tons or more unac- counted for-enough to produce, at least five tons of high-grade. heroin. The major route for the opium has been across the bor- ders into Thailand, then by highway to the Bangkok area and from the Thai coast by fishing trawler to Hong Kong, and the rest of the world. About a dozen U. S. narcotics agents have moved i n t o Thailand, sonic of them operat- ing in the far northern Thai' sector of the triangle. The Thai police last April formed a 30-man special nar- cotics operation (SNO) to work in North Thailand. While U. S. and Thai agents cannot work (across the Burmese border, they !have for need their own network of informants and also enlisted the aid of the CIA, which has been active in the area for the 1past 20 years. SINCE S:O STARTED work it has seized more than five tons of opium, heroin and other drugs ,and broken up smuggling net- works which used dummy gasoline tack trucks and opium the system works. Heroin is still plentiful In Bang kok and at the U. S.1 I military bases in Thailand, as' 1 was discovered by a more effi-cient system of testing GI's ,vhich went into effect in July. TESTS SO FAR indicate that up to 1,575 of the approximately 43,000 GI's in Thailand use heroin, compard with about 255 discovered earlier. A vial of pure heroin that will sell for $500 in the U.S. can be bought for $5 in Thailand. Authorities say big-time traf- fic through Thailand has dried sup temporarily, however. They cite the crackdown and tem- poraty loss of a big market as the cause. "What keeps a connection' together is a combination of faith and trust in the guy you're. dealing with," said one source here. "It takes time to build that. up. The sources added that heroine is a product that does not deteriorate sitting on the shelf, and that the men who run the Golden Triangle drug traffic can,. Irunr.^_rs in Thai army officers': 1uniforms to get past check-j (points. Much of the SNO success has been through cash awards nun-j ning up to ~2,600 for large drug seizures. The money is paid to the Thai investigators who make the haul, and they distribute it among their informants. Sources here say the reluc- ltance of traffickers to move /. Yb4,ti`c, IA-RD more than,6,b^U pounds is proof i P80-01601 R000800200001-4 T. ri CHICAGO, ,proved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80- NEWS t 434,849 OCT 1 17 197a okJ a Second in a series By Keyes Beech Daily News Foreign Service CHIENG.MA1. Northern Thailand - Nor lon, ago a vis- iting American congressman asked a U.S. narcotics ai ent in Bangkok if the hill tribesmen of Southeast Lsi:, had any idea of the havoc rieeir prodact, re- `fined to heroin, was cre:ain; in the streets of New York. For a inomant the agent w .s speechless at the question. Then taking a deep breath, ire replied: "Sir, theti never heard of New York." They never heard of Bang- kok, either. The question is indicative of the wall of iactorance that sep- arates most Americans from the history ana realities of the drug traffic is Southeast Asia. FOR FOUR centuries, begin- n i n g with the aggressive prodding of :reedy European colonialists, A.; ans have been cultivating the poppy that yields the t n;m that yields the morphine that yields the heroin that is now finding its way into the United States. Up thro,a,h World War If and beyond, every Southeast Asian government had its opium monopoly. Everywhere it was a major source of reve- nue, like other government monopolies including salt and tobacco. In the middy of the last cen- tury the British fought a war to win the rg,ht to sell opium to the unv: it:ir" Chinese. Hong Kong - had its own opium "farm." Anil act until 194f3 did .the British uuta?.v the drug ?traffic in Hon., Iran!. FOR TI1 E ASIANS opium was, and suil is, an escape more ways one. An Amer- ican woman nia\ s~:aliow a pill to ease the pain of her menstrual p riod. The hill tribe wotrz~..n of Southeast Asia's go':rb a u iangile - the upper reach.?-, of Hurmat,. Thai- land and tag, - will smoke a? pipe. Or r,? to of opium. Opium -i h:ippens to be the only cgs.. crop of the hill tribe peo,+z. their only means of acquiring same of the minor luxuries of ih' outside world. Their econorr?' is as dependent on opium :a.s the lowlanders 1 are on rice. DURING r,ti those earlier years, to -.",.'ericans opium was an Asian affair. But two years ago, w.- ii heroin addic- tion hit enidamic proportions among American Gis in South Vietnam, t!,e :'scan narcotics traffic sud:'.?_r.h? became Amer- ica's busine.;. ;Now the Cl market almost has vanished with the with- drawal of American troops from Vietn,ac'. But the drug problem lin?tr-ri on - a legacy of the Vietnam War as the her- oin traffickers seek new out- lets in the Urr;er. States to re- place their kar GI market. At the same time President Nixon has declared global gar on the interttaoonal drug traf- fic. As a result, stopping drugs has become aimnost as impor- tant as stopninl. communism a m o n g U.S. objectives in Southeast Asia. IN AT LEAST three coun- tries - Thailand, Laos and South Vietna nt - all the re- sources of U.S. embassies have been thrown into the campaign to ci,eke off the flow of heroin to the United States. STATINTL Embassy political officers. accustomed to routine diplo- macy, have b ,-en diverted to full time narcotics assign- ments. "One way or another, j we spend at least 50 per cent of our time o?t rarcotics," said a senior embassy officer in Bangkok. "Hell," said a young foreign service officer recently trans- ferred to natcotic?s work. "I love it. It's a !ot better than shuffling pa yrs." THE CIA, stung by charges that it has contributed to the drug traffic by collaborating with opium-growing hill tribes- men and corrupt Asian offi- cials, has t!1) w.,m all its in- tell igence-gaihecing resources into the antidrug campaign. On top of a'1 this, agents of the U.S. Bu.,-c- o! of Narcotics and I)an`-erous Drugs have made their appearance in Asian capitals horn Tokyo to Hong Fong to ?i:angkok in in- creasing nut ti' )Cm s. For 10 years there was one U.S. narcotics agent in Can;- kok. Today there are 13 oper- ating in all Thaiiand, "making cases" in co-operation with Thai police. SINCE Thailand is the natu. ral conduit. kit drugs coming from the gold'u triangle, the rn biggest effort has been cen- tered there. ". When the heat is on from the White :iw se," said one U.S. otiiciaul, .you jump. No one questions the desirability of cutting off t'-.e drug traffic. although sonic. of us wonder if there isn't an element of over- kill in the curr_4m campaign." If there is isn element of "overkill" - and that is deba- table - the trasons are under- standable. Mr. Nixon is run- ning for rc-eiccfion and the "Asian drug connection" could easily become an explosive campaign issue. Next: The doing traffic - ro- mantic and deadly. from the naaa.; of reality just as alcohol is an escape for so many Americans. Some Asians become addtcrs - a crowing number. in fact - just as some Americans become alco- holics. Opium is a pain-killer in Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 1y _ STATINTL Approved For Release 2( 1.&3 iCIA-RDP8O=01601 R000800200001-4 18 AUG 1972 tree (drug)' enterprise. Perusal of news dispatches about the Federal "World' -Opium Survey 1972" discloses -several deficiencies in the report. It does not deal with the role .of the Central Intelli- gegce Agency in conspiring in the opium traffic in the '.golden triangle" in Burma. Thailand. and Laos. That CIA 'role is dealt with in detail in Alfred W. McCoy's "The-Pol / itics of Heroin in Southeast Asia." published yesterday by Harper & Row. t,.... The.Survey is. thus. a.coverup for the CIA's drug oper. ations. The Survey does not deal with the drug'traffic in Sai- gon where several of President Thieu's generals are major operators. That traffic has been protected by the U.S. com- mand. One consequence has been the massive drug addic- tion among GIs. addiction which has returned to .the U.S. with them. The Survey reveals one useful-consequence of Ptesi- dent Nixon's visit to Peking. For years the U.S. Narcotics Bureau. and Harry'Anslinger. its chief. carried on a stand= erous war, against -the Peoples Republic- of China as the main source of the world's opium traffic. The present re- port admits. 1n effect, that that was a lie. There is "no re- liable evidence that China has either engaged in or sane- tioned the illicit export of opium or its derivatives." it says. The Survey concedes that. world-wide, government "seizures... represent only a small fraction of the illicit. flow." The obvious conclusion is that the flow of opium through the capitalist world is made possible by massive corruption of government officials, police agents. etc. The inspiration for the massive business in opium is, the same one that inspires 'other business - profit. In this .respect. it is a shining example of "free ente'rp'rise." . ?rL'fJai'C I - Approved For*Release .2001 /03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 .. Approved For Release 20( /fib ' :'~GltASRDP80-01601 '.. -6',1UG 1972 Drug'Trafftc: STATINTL Furor Over the Asian Pipeline WASHINGTON-?A bill to cut off $100-million in military and economic aid to Thailand as a penalty for failing to halt the flow of narcotics to the. United States will come before the House on Tuesday. It is unlikely that the measure will ever become law-it has already been defeated in the Senate -but it does reflect a furor in Wash- ington over official handling of the Southeast Asian drug traffic problem. Behind-the furor is the fear that a new wave of opiates, especially heroin, is on its way to the United States, particularly' from Thailand, which in turn gets the narcotics from Burma. Until now, the bulk of the illicit heroin supply entering the United States was siphoned off from the 200 tons of opium produced in Turkey. Turkey has promised to stop growing opium poppies by the end of this year. But a number of members of.Congress are? troubled by the knowledge that some of the 500 tons of opium pro- duced each year by the hill tribes of Burma and neighboring countries could profitably be diverted to the United States. 'Moreover, there Is suspicion that certain corrupt Thais are pulling the wool over the eyes of officials in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, the State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency who are supposed to block the flow of opiates. Or worse, that Americans have also been corrupted. But many of the legislators zvho have-been digging out "secret docu- ments" and hurling accusations are ill-informed about the realities of the situation. For a century or more, opium has been grown by'the hill tribes in South- east Asia, It was bought up by the Chinese traders and distributed to the addicts of Asia. Hardly anyone in America cared. In -recent years this pattern has been changed slightly as the main source of the Burmese opium has fallen into the hands of a Chinese named Lo Hsing- han, whose militia of about 1,500 men controls the mule train route to the refineries at Tajilik in southern Burma Government does not interfere with to because he also helps them control Communists and other insurgents in the area. Nelson Gross, the State De- partment's senior senior adviser on narcotics, met Premier Ne' Win of Burma last January and has had fol- low-up conferences at lower levels, but the Burmese have declined outside help and have done little or nothing on their own. The shipments continue to reach Thailand, which, according to some American officials, faces a situation comparable to that which would con- front the United States if Canada made no effort to control narcotics. Nonetheless, Mr. Gross and William T. Wanzeck, who headed the Southeast Asia regional office of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs for the past four years, feel that some- thing can be done and is being done to steal the flow. Mr. Gross and his colleagues argue, that their critics have relied headily on testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee by Alfred W. Mc- Coy, a Yale graduate who in four years in Southeast Asia made it his business to find out about the narcotics traffic. Mr. McCoy makes much of the fact that the opium is carried out of Burma by Chinese Nationalist paramilitary units that at one time were in the pay of the -C.I.A. The American officials contend that this is no longer true: They say the two. main Kuomintang units operating in Thailand left the narcotics trade last March when they were given land in return for a pledge to give up dope-running and for turning over o" tons of opium, which was burned. The Narcotics Bureau claims other achievements: s They have helped the Thai Nar- cotics Office to set up special anti- narcotics teams, one of which in the northern area of the country has been responsible for seizing $347-million worth of morphine and heroin since March. ? New technological aid is being given the Thais to help curb the flow -of narcotics on trawlers that carry the drugs from Thailand to Malaysia, Bor- neo, the. Philippines and Hong Koeg. O The. Thai Government is the first nation to enter into an agreement v.-ilh the United Nations whereby farmers who give up growing opium will be recompensed. The Thais are contribu- ting $5-million towards the program, the United States $2-million. As Mr. Gross said last week, "Easic- ' ally we are trying to anticipate what the narcotics operators are going to do to exploit Southeast Asian supplies. We have agents out. We have some chance of success." -DANA ADAMS SCIMIDT ovRertect CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL AI F ease 2i001/03/04 COURIER JOURNAL M-239,` 9- 1 S - 350,303 r"~ .. ES. ai for the drug traffickers. AS PART OF the effort to combat drug abuse-which, according to President Nixon last summer, has "assumed the dimensions of a national" emergency"-the administration is committed to an all-out attack on the inter- :national narcotics trade. This involves not just the breaking up of the syndicates that pro- icess and import the heroin to the United ;States, but persuading other governments, particularly in Southeast Asia where most of the world's heroin now originates, to come down hard on the- growers and marketeers. !But is the Nixon administration trying as hard as it could to cut off this profitable trade at its source? Disturbing evidence is accumulating that it may not be; -There is The Politics of Heruin in Southeast Asiq, to be published this fall but excerpted in the July issue of Harper's by a young Ya;e graduate student specializing in Southeast Asian history and politics. This documents the involvement of high govern- ment and r :ilitary officials in Laos and Thai- land in '.1,e narcotics trade; it even charges complicit; by the Central Intelligence Agency. JThe CIA has challenged all the author's alle- gations, asserting that most of them are with- out foundation. - `Lever' is hard to use _ But there is also the study made last winter ,by top-level officials of the CIA, the State De- partment and the Pentagon, and just now dis- closed. This report concludes that there is no prospect of cutting off the smuggling of nar- cotics from Southeast Asia because of. "the corruption, collusion and indifference at some places in some governments, particularly Thai- land and South Vietnam." This conclusion, too, is being discounted by administration of. ficials, who argue that it is out of date and that "substantial progress" has been made in the past fopr months. Yet it would be naive to assume that a situa- tion that was so bad could have improved as significantly anal as swiftly as all that. Certain- ::, 7Iir" ILIA I ' >, yf ts~Rt9 D~~r ti~ + _n'A_ ,~~3'1tw CDNGRe55~'` Dowling In The Kansas City Star "The place to start is the other end." of the opium poppy. In Turkey's case the United States is to help in compensating the thousands of peasant farmers for whom poppy- growing has been an innocent livelihood for centuries and who now must switch to other cash crops. Whether the Turkish government or anyone else is compensating the many mid- dlemen who have grown fat off the opium trade is not discussed publicly. But the United States has another way of persuading reluctant governments to join the anti-drug campaign. Congress tacked on a pro- vision to last year's foreign aid bill permitting the President to suspend aid to any country that doesn't take action against the drug traf- fic. The only problem is that suspending aid to the governments of Southeast. Asia would virtually end the Vietnam war overnight. It's a dilemma, to be. sure. But it's worth recalling that last winer, when President Nixon was vehemently reiterating this coun- try's commitment to keeping President Thieu in power in Saigon, even though this was the main obstacle to serious negotiations in Paris, the same regime was one of the major factors being blamed by U.S. officials for the con- tinuation of our own "'national emergency" -in drugs. And that's why we ask: Is the ad- ~r ~il,r~lt~ h+dstnb! able to persuade. the Turkish- government to 972 way below a certain view of a solution for 1-4 . STATINTL Approved For F a snaDOt7W01 fl4A1C1 DS80OF QT 0800200001-4 AND SOCIAL SCIEI`ICE .July 1972 ? STATINTL The Use of Force in Foreign Polley by the People's Republic of China By ALLEN' S. \\TIIITING ABSTRACT: President Nixon's "journey for peace" to Peking has implicitly modified. the image of a Chinese Communist ai;- gressive threat delineated by all previous administrations. However, it has not explicitly redefined the administration's assumptions on the Chinese use of force. This has left. coiisid- erable confusion and unease among Asian and American audi- ences who accept the concept of masive Chinese military force being?cleterred from aggression primarily by American security tommitnieiits, bases, and force postures extending from Korea and japan: to India. Tile nine instances Wherein the People's Liberation Arn:y. (PLA) has crossed customary borders in hos- tile array during the .past twenty-two years proyide-priilia facie evidence for the conventional image of a potentially expansion- ist regime contained by American commitments and force. However, closer examination of the use of military force by the lloople's Republic reveals an entirely different situation whereby.ti:e government in Peking, in most cases, deployed the PLA in defensive reaction against a perceived threat. The Chinese use of force primarily for defensive deterrence has re-. mained remarkably' consiste;it over twenty-one years, and* con- siderable continuity may be anticipated for at least the next five years. Allan.5. Whiting, Ph.D., Ann Arbor, Michigan, has bsen Professor of Political Science at the University of aichigani since 1965. He previously taught at .llickigda State, 1955-57, and Northwestern, 1951-53. He was a s/a l ire,nher of the Rand Corporation in Ike Social Science Division, 1957-61 Director, 0!0fice of Research and Analysis for the Far East, U.S. Department of State, 1961-66; and Deputy Principal Ofrcer, Amcriian Considale General, Hong Kong, 1966-6S. Educated at Cornell and Columbia universities and the recipient of several fello,Lships, he is the author of Soviet .Policies in China 1917-24 and coauthor of Dynamics of International Relations; Sinkiang: fawn or Pivot?; and China Crosses the.'i'alu. t CCORDING to a Gallup poll, in September 1971 more than half the American public saw China as the great- est threat to world ixcace in the next few years.' Nothing has. eventuated from President Nixon's self-styled ''journey for peace" to Peking to change this per- ception, nor has tlle.l(ll)lillislr,,Lio!l -given any systematic assurances -to the coa- trary. Instead the Pentagon continues to demand new, complex, and costly veapoils systems for the West Pacific, ostensibly to deter potential Chinese aggression. Admiral Thomas '11. .poorer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of staff" wants we must prepare to fight two nuclear wars at once, with the So- viet Union and with China.' Oil-,. . fan allies from Korea to Thailand, worry aloud about the credibility of :\n mica's deterrence in the aftermath of Stalemate and withdrawal from Vieti:vn, against It rising, weariness of military burdens in Asia, manifested by congressional pre: - aures for cuts in military assistance. American and Asian anxiety over the future use of force by the Peoples Re- pablic is rooted in recent history. On .nine occasions in the past t\renty-tv,o year, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) has projected-China's military power across its- borders.3 Iu Korea (1950) and India (1962) n:a for w.u? re- sulted. In Laos (1964) and Vietnam (1965) PLA deployments risked Sino- An6erican coni'act. Two crises in the Taiwan Strait (1954-55 and 195S) os- tensibly fell within the category of civil war, but nonetheless confronted . the united States as protector of the Chiang Kai-shek regime. In March 1969 bel- C opt inu!- Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601?R000800200001-4 . ST WJI ed For Release 20tW : CIA-'RDP8O-01601 R000800200001-4 AUG 1972 STATINTL 0jr! e c, lectronic A ~Wienaoir quarters in Langley, Virginia, right off the Baltimore-Washin ton ex ressw l ki g p ay over oo ng the flat Maryland countryside, stands a large three story building known informally as the "cookie fac- tory." It's officially known. as Ft. George G. Meade, head- quarters of the National Security Agency. Three fences ' surround the headquarters. The inner and outer barriers are topped with barbed wire, the middle one is a five-strand electrified wire. Four gatehouses span- ning the complex at regular intervals house specially- . trained marine guards. Those allowed access all wear irri- descent I. D. badges - green for "top secret crypto," red for "secret crypto." Even the janitors are cleared for secret codeword material. Once inside, you enter the world's longest "corridor"-980 feet long by 560 feet wide. And all along the corridor are more marine guards, protecting STATINTL the doors of key NSA offices. At 1,400,000 square feet, it is larger than CIA headquarters, 1,135,000 square feet. Only the State Department and the Pentagon and the new headquarters planned for the FBI are more spacious. But the DIRNSA. building (Director, National Security Agency) can be further distinguished from the headquarters buildings of these other giant bureaucracies -it has no windows. Another palace of paranoia? No. For DIRNSA is the command center for the lamest, most sensitive and far-flung intelligence gathering apparatus in the world's history. Here, and in the nine-story Opera- tions Building Annex, upwards of 15,000 employees work to break the military, diplomatic and commercial. codes of every nation in the world, analyze the de-cryptcd mes- sages, and send on the results to the rest of the U.S. in- .tclligence community. Far less widely known than the CIA, whose Director -Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP8.0-01601R000800200001-4 Qantinue4 STATINTL Approved For ReleaM/lf/Q4s'iCIA-RDP80 2 6 JUL 1972 Heroin. ,and tie War`, Alfred McCoy, a Yale graduate student who inter- ness to curb the international narcotics trade. The `viewed 250 people, charges that the Central Intelli- fact remains that the largest supplies of the filthiest --gence Agency has known of Thai and South Viet- poison of them all apparently come from or through -namese official involvement in heroin traffic, has Thailand and South Vietnam, if one is to take the. covered up their involvement and has participated CIA's private word-as against its public word- in aspects of the traffic itself. The CIA has publicly on the matter. Nor should it stretch any reasonable man's credulity to understand that the United denied these charges, in the process even per- States has had to accept certain limitations on its suading Mr. McCoy's publisher, Harper & Row, to efforts to get those governments to stop drub deal let it review his book manuscript before publication. ing because it has wanted to ensure their coopera- But now there comes an internal government re- tion in the war against North Vietnam. In the final -poit--done by the CIA and other agencies-on human analysis there. is simply no place in the pur- the difficulties of controlling the narcotics trade suit of honor and a just peace in Southeast Asia for in Southeast Asia. The report states: an 911-out lionest effort to control traffic in heroin. "the most basic problem, and the one that This is the infinitely tragic fact flowing from con- unfortunately appears least likely of any early tinued American involvement in the war. Would heroin addiction among Americans have salution,'is the corruption, collusion, and indif- swollen to its current diiriensions and would the '- ? Terence at some places in some governments, amount of heroin reaching the United States from particularly Thailand and South Vietnam, that South Vietnam and Thailand have reached its cur- by more effective sccppressio7a of traffic rent levels if the war-and power politics-had not pye?tee> governments on whose territory it takes gotten in the way of effective American pressure upon the governments in Saigon and Bangkok? If That is to say, a private report by agencies in- President Nixon needs any further reason to make eluding the CIA confirms the thrust of charges good his pledge to end the war, this is almost which the CIA publicly denies. The White House reason enough by itself for what it says about the contends the report, completed in February, is "out character of regimes this country has gotten into of date." the habit of supporting-lavishly and indiscrim- Now, we are aware that the Nixon administration inafely-in the name of our "national security" has worked with great vigor and much effective-. and "world peace." Rear Guard pproved_.Fo-r- Release 2001/03/04 :.CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001 -4 WASHINGTON POST ? Approved For Releasg 00/00f4 : CIA-RDP80- U.S. Cites Progress In Asian Drug Fight By Tim O'Brien Washington Post Staff Writer The White House said yes- terday that the governments) of Southeast Asia are making "substantial progress" in stem. ming the flow of illicit narcot- ics to the United States. Presidential assistant Egil i Krogh Jr. told reporters that a cabinet-level report citing cor- ruption and indifference ? in narcotics enforcement by! Thailand and South Vietnam' STATINTL In Vietnam, Krogh said the ; ' Myles J. Ambrose, director United States has received-of the six-month-long Drug substantial cooperation from Abuse Law Enforcement pro- President Thieu on down." gram, said . that "three years The State Department join- ed the White House In seeking to play down reports of South- east Asian reluctance to crack down on narcotics smuggling.. Spokesman Charles Bray said progress has been made since the cabinet-level report was filed in February. He called the report "more retrospective than prospect- live" in outlook, and was not a State Department report As not up to date. He said the report, compiled by officials with the Central Intelligence Agency, State De- partment and Defense Depart- ment , was submitted last Feb-.' I but "a report to the State ruary; ? but in the last four De " artment p . months there has been sub- Meanwhile the Bureau of stantial progress." I !Drugs and Dangerous A few hours later, however, . Drugs (BNDD) announced that Sen. Vance Hartke (D-Ind.) in-~ U.S. agents and Thai police troduced a last-minute amend- . sized about $230 million worth sistance i A F s ore gn ment to the Act to forbid further economic and military aid to Thailand, "because of its major role in .the international narcotics traf- -f ie.!' The Senate defeated the amendment last night on a I vote of 67 to 22. Hartke criticized Pres?dent! Nixon for-failing to withdraw of opium, morphine and her- oin in two days of raids in Northern Thailand. According to BNDD director John Ingersoll, the raids net- ted nearly three tons of op- ium, along with guns and other equipment. Yesterday morning, federal drug law enforcers told Presi- aid to Thailand, "despite a 1 dent Nixon, that the Bureau of provis'an of the Foreign As- Customs and the BNDD had sistan?-Le Act that allows the a hand in removing more than President to suspend aid to 470,000 pounds of narcotics na:inn that doesn't take ;"from world illicit traffic" in any action" to halt black market narcotics exports. The' President's inaction, he Fiscal Year 1972. This, they said in their year-end report, more than doubled the confis- ago- we were on our own ten- yard line and the other team had the ball. Now we're on the fifty-yard line and we have the ball." He said that, since its Incep- tion last.January,.his program has - produced over 3,000 ar- rests and identified about l 3.000 narcotics pushers. said, is "in the face of hard ev- cated poundage over 1971. :idence that Thailand serves as Marijuana constituted about the conduit for the trans-ship-j94 per cent of the seized nar- ment of opium produced in cotics. The administration said Southeast Asia, the largest op-jarrests of drug dealers rose ium?growing area in the from 12,497 last year.to more world." ' - than 16,000 during Fiscal 1t72. Recently published accounts It was reported that the num- of the pessimistic multi-agency ber of addicts seeking metha- study of Southeast Asian drug, done treatment has also in- traffic said governments 'of creased dramatically, though the region were unable and no numbers were cited. sometimes unwilling to halt'i Assistant Treasury Secre- the.flow of opium and other i!t ry o Rossides re- narcotics: 1ported Eugene President isl But Krogh argued that the pleased that we're on the of-' tide. "can be stemmed in fensive now, whereas three . Southeast Asia." He cited in- years ago .we were on the de-, creased seizures of. heroin fensive." "and other substances" in the region and said the problem - was being approached in, an atmosphere of "mutual cooper- ation." Approved For Release 2001/03/04?: CIA-eRDP80-01601 R00080026-0001-4 STATINTL rAs;,,irmTo,Z; POST Approved For Release 20011%3( :1 k-RDP80-01 "W Too v Isit to- -.a, By Peter Smith Pacific News Service PHITSANULOK, T h a I- land-In a U-shaped bend of a small river about 13 miles east of this northern district capital lies asecret U.S. military training base known as Camp Saritsana. Near the point where I had been told to turn off the road. to find the camp, a Thai waitress in a small restaurant said that there were usually about 1,000 Thai soldiers at the site, but that most had just left. She also told me that 10 or 15 Americans were station- ed there, and that pianos landed on an average of five times a? day. As I walked ? along the river away from the high- way, the whine of diesel. on the base, he said, "Sure, generators guided me until I saw several concrete and wooden buildings, a 100-foot- high water tower, and a- generator shed. Further up, a steel suspension bridge carried truck traffic across the river. The scene re- minded me of places where .I' had served in Vietnam and 'Thailand. At Saritsana, U.S. Army Special Forces train That f soldiers for c o m b a t in neighboring L a o s. Since the early '60s, CIA-financed Meo mercenary armies, led by their most powerful chieftain Vang Pao, have been fighting in Laos, and estimates of the number of Meo men killed run as high as 50 per cent. To replace these losses, the United States has been training Thais for the last three years. But the training and the fact that Thailand has been sending troops to Laos have not- been acknowl- edged by U,S. or Thai of- ficials. M Ha Se in .1 hal. supervises and pays for the tag, a frequent tip-off that, training of these irregulars people are engaged In ac- in Thailand and provides tivity which might , not their salary, allowances (in-,square with formal pro- eluding death benefits), and nouncements of U.S. policy. operational costs in Laos." Scattered a m o n g the These Northern Thai usual pin-ups and memor- speak a dialect similar to abilia of home were other lleo dialect, and they are One n said: "No war easily integrated into Van, was and on with odes- Pao's forces. At the c,,rn, I was stopped Another said: "Make war, at the main gate by three not peace. War is the final Thai guards, who called their answer." commanding officer, a Thai' The men were polite, al- special forces sergeant ma- most painfully so. They did jor, on the phone. When I not mention their mission, told him I had once served and when I expressed in- with the U.S. Special Forces terest they changed the In Thailand and just wanted subject. come on." 0 n c of the guards got on the back of my motorcycle and we drove to headquarters. ferr'.d to escort Me to the gate, - and I followed his truck out and waved to the Thai guards as I left. The 50-acre site 7s divid- ed roiihly in the middle by an airstrip. heavy woods surround the base. Ten bar- racks for Thai soldiers were on the left side of the en- trance road. Elsewhere on. the grounds were a Thai spe- cial forces headquarters, a jump tower and cable rig for parachute training, a drying loft for the parachutes, and several maintenance build- ings. 'Air America' Si = After checking with the Thai sergeant major, the guard took me across the runway to a building mark- ed "Air America," the name of the charter line which flies secret missions for the CIA throughout Asia. bly Thai escort ushered me in- to a U.S. Special Forces team room, tivhere,five men were having their morning beer. All wore civilian But a 'U.S. Senate sub- ? clothes or jungle fatigues committee- on security agree- without insignia or . name ments and commitments abroad reported last year: ' "The Thai Irregular pro- gram ... was designed by the CIA specifically along the lines of the irregular program In Laos. The CIA J STATINTL STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL Approved For Reld i2001t0 : CIA-RDP80-01 2 9 JUUJ 1972 WASHINGTON CLOSE-UP Homage to CIA Drug Fight Ironic STATINTL By JUDITH RANDAL ? The American Medical Asso- ciation, which predictably of- fers few surprises at its an- nual meeting, achieved the un- expected this year. As one entered the conven- tion's exhibition hall in San Francisco's Civic C e n t e r, one's nostrils were assailed by an odor more appropriate to that city's Haight-Ashbury dis- trict - an aroma strongly suggestive of the burning ]eaves and blossoms of the fe- male Cannabis saliva plant. The scent fired the curiosity of all in the hall who had ever sampled marijuana and drew from the wife of one physician attending the meeting the re- 'mnark that she had smelled that odor many times in the back of the school bus she drives. That was only the beginning of the surprise. Following one's nose, one soon came upon a booth housing an exhib- it on drug abuse v.luch fea- tured a display about many drugs, including pot, and a de- vice that generated a synthetic smoke that was close to, if not identical with the real thing. There was still more surpise to come in this display, which - it turned out-had won the gold medal in the AM,iA's coveted Billings Prize compe- tition as one of the outstanding scientific exhibits of the meet- ing. The exhibitor was no mere doctor or pharmaceuti- cal firm, or even your aver- age, run-of-the-mill science- oriented government bureau. It was that most unlikely of contenders for an A:IIA award: The Central Intelli- genoe.Agency. Dr. Donald Borcherding of the CIA was on hand to ex- plain the exhibit's origins, Like most agencies, he said, the CIA has. an occupational health division whose job it is to promote the well-being of its personnel. When CIA offi- cials at the agency's Langley, Va., headquarters b e c a in e worried about pot, LSD, speed, heroin and the like, Borcherd- ing and his colleagues assem- bled the display. According to the CIA medic, it was an immediate hit, not only at the Langley "Spook Farm" but also among groups in the community, such as Knights of Columbus lodges and parent-teacher associa- tions. The CIA is thinking about putting together "how- to-do-it" instructions so that other groups can build their own replicas. Granted, the crusade against drug abuse needs all the help it can get. But the trouble with the CIA exhibit is that it does not tell things ttrictiy as they are. For exam- ple, it implies that the use of marijuana sets the stage for later use of heroin. This issue is by no means settled and, as. a matter of fact, there is a good deal of evidence to sug- gest that alcohol, rather than marijuana, is the first drug to be abused by most people who subsequently become . heroin addicts. In any case, many experts believe that if there is any connection whatever between pot and heroin, it is their ille- gal status and that if the for- mer v.-ere "decriminalized," its link with the latter would tend to disappear. More important to this dis- cussion than an argument about the casual relationship of the two drugs is the point that the CIA does not come into the campaign with com- pletely clean hands. Reporters have been hearing for more arm winning a medal for an than a year that the agency exhibit on the horrors of drug has been supporting the heroin abuse. To some it was a little traffic in the Golden Triangle like the Mafia getting a top region of Laos, Thailand and j award for a display of the Burma, and that this opium evils of extortion, prostitution byproduct has been one of the and gambling' - and a few of more important cargoes car- the more socially aware physi- ried by Air America, an air- cians present did not hesitate line operating in Southeast to say so. almost exclusively with th gion, incidentally, is said t illicit opium from which mor CIA's complicity in the heroi mess, one might consult a article entitled "Flowers of Evil" by historian Alfred W. Harper's magazine. Part of forthcoming book called "Th Asia," the article spells out in detail how Vag Pao, long the leader of a CIA secret army in ?Laos, has become even more deeply involved' in the drug traffic and what role this traf- fie has played in the importa- tion of heorin into the United States and its use by our troops in South Vietnam. Writes McCoy of the situa- tion: "As a result of direct and indirect American involve- ment, opium production has steadily increased, high-grade heroin production is flourish- ing and the Golden Triangle's poppy fields have become linked to markets in Europe and the U.S." The CIA went away from the San Francisco meeting with a gold medal and, no doubt, a good many doctors who saw the exhibit went away im- pressed. Some of them proba- bly learned for the first time what pot smells like. But for others there was a bitter incongruity in the gov- ernment's super-secret spy Approved' For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL STATINTL THE I AMI DAILY PLANET Release 21)61 Q*TElA-RDP80 STATINTL QUESTIO CHI SMUGG.L By FLORA LEWIS NEW YORK - A weird series of incidents is bringing into focus the qu7stion. of the CIA's relation to the .booming Indochina traffic in heroin and the -opium from which it is made. Ramparts makazine has published a study of the drug trade in Indochina, pulling together many details of the .widely but only vaguely known story and making a series of specific charges against top South Vietnamese, Laotian and Thai officials. Further, Ramparts charged that-it is CIA operations and subsidies in the area which have made possible the big increase in the supply of heroin from Indochina. Sen. George McGovern (D.-N.D.) wrote a letter to CIA Director Richard Helms asking six questions about it. One inquired whether the opium production in Laos was conducted with the knowledge of CIA officials, particularly around the CIA's secret army base at Long Cheng in Laos, and if the effect of 'CIA operations is to "protect the sup- plies (of opium) and facilitate their movement." CIA legislative counsel Jack Maury called on McGovern to give oral answers to the questions. He referred to a sheaf of legal-size papers for his information, indicating that the CIA has made a new -investigation, but he didn't give McGovern the papers. He denied some of the charges, but said the CIA has been trying to convince the local people not,to be in the drug traffic, which obviously inplies that the CIA knows about it. McGovern's query wasn't the first challenge to Helms on the subject. On March 4 Helms went with his wife to an evening event at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington. The star happened to be Allen Ginsberg, the tousle-haired mystic poet. They met at a reception before the poetry reading, and Ginsberg took after Helms for what he says is CIA support of the dope trade. The poet has been investigating drug traffic for seven years, and he has on the tip of his tongue a lot of precise names and places and figures. For one thing, he said, Long Cheng is a central collecting market for the opium flowing from Zieng Quang Province of Laos down into Vietnam and Bangkok and out around the world back to the United States. Helms said it wasn't true, so Ginsberg said, "I'll make you a wager." If he lost, brass symbolizing the lightning-bolt doctrine of sudden illumination." Helms was to meditate one hour a day for the rest of his life if he lost. Some time later, Ginsberg sent Helms a clipping from the Far East Economic Review saying that - a number of correspondents who sneaked into Long Cheng over the years saw raw opium piled up for sale in the market there, in full view of CIA armed agents. He also sent a note offering Helms suggestions hil b t h k t i ht b k t a ou ow o eep a s ra g ac w e meditating, the best sitting position and proper breathing. He has had no acknowledgement from the CIA chief, but says, "I have been tender-toward him. It is terribly im- portant to get him into an improved mind-consciousness. Anything that might help save the world situation would be sheer Hari. Krishna magic, the hard-headed people have brought us to such an apocalyptic mess." - Helms says that he has received no note from Ginsberg, and only vaguely remembers the bet. He called the charges "vicious," "silly," "ridiculous." He told me, "There is no evidence over the years that any of these people were involved in any significant way. Almost all the opium grown there is in Communist-controlled areas, Pathet Lao areas." I asked about Thailand, and he said, "I don't control northern Thailand. I don't control the Royal Laotian government; it's an independent country" (whose national budget and army are subsidized by the United States). "I don't know why you want to lay all this on the poor old CIA." We are not involved in the drug traffic in Laos or anywhere else. There is no evidence at all. To have evidence you'd have to get somebody in my office and have him say yes, I ran drugs with your approval." - At another point, he said, "Opium's been in that part of the world for cen- turies," and "most drugs in the United States come from Turkey." He said he didn't know anything about a U.N. report that 7()%-80% of the world's supply comes from Southeast Asia. And at another point he said ? "that part of the country (Laos) is loaded with ver the azea " ll i It' . um. s a o op Maury, he said, had told McGovern that "it's all rot. It's not true." Later, g y, Maury told me that he couldn't say anything about his talk with McGovern illicit enterprises. The CIA doesn't A t- _ ..._:u _s..,....,.~,: w- h- support what they do on the side, but it Ginsberg prom iseAppiovednf C* R "vajra" (sic) which he describes as "a Buddhist-Hindu ritual implement. of aliu u~aa a Y1114 a4a, s , v? .. ....... uv u..o l2A~ar toE:IAqR.~8 a 6'f4Rfi${302000014 available to you or anybody else for .publication." Meanwhile, the rate of heroin ad- diction among GIs in Vietnam is soaring dramatically, and drugs continue to pour into the United States. Certainly. Helms is right when he says -that drug control is responsibility. But inescapable. not the CIA's two facts are I.-Drugs are flowing into Vietnam and out of Indochina into the world underground network in dramatically increasing quantity. Not only is there a fearful growth, in the amount of opium, from which heroin is refined, produced and exported from. southeast Asia. Alongside the traditional opium trade, . heroin is being produced there. This is new. The proof that it is true is the ready availability of heroin to GIs in Vietnam. Their powder doesn't come all the way from Turkey or France. 2.-The CIA provides virtually all the transportation, the arms, and much of the money on which the people engaged. in growing and moving drugs depend on in order to keep going. The CIA isn't there because of the drug traffic. As Helms says, it does not officially condone the traffic. But official CIA operations have made it much easier for the trade to prosper in security. While the standard American government position is that Turkey is the main source of the heroin reaching the U.S., there.is every reason to question whether this remains true. The United Nations Commission on Narcotic Durgs has said that 80% of the world's opium supply comes from southeast Asia. Dr. Alexander Messing, a UN narcotics expert, says that "if (the supply of opium from) Turkey were shut down overnight, there is still so much of the stuff around that it would hardly make a difference." Partly, this is because the main producers of opium are the hill tribes in Laos and northeast Thailand. Many are the Moo people, on whom the CIA relies for its "clandestine army" in Laos. Opium is their one cash crop. The CIA needs the goodwill of the Meos. It does not go out of its way to offend them. Partly, this is because the very nature of CIA operations in southeast Asia requires the cooperation of high local officials, daredevils, adventurers. Often those who are corrupt cooperate all the since it facilitates their more willin l DflT.Y ~~ Approved For Release 2001 /01/04`:`aA-RDP80-01601 WO OJJ200001-4 3JUN1972 Charge CIA and Thiel,, push heroin to U.S. GIs Daily World Washington Bureau WASHINGTON. June 2-Alfred W. McCoy. a Yale student. working on his doctorate, told a Senate Appropriations subcom- mittee today that the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and Sai- gon Dictator Nguyen Van Thieu are directly involved in the ship ment of vast quantities of opium and heroin to the U.S. McCoy, who has authored a book. "The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia," debunked president Nixon's campaign against heroin imported from-.Turkey." He told the Foreign Operations subcommittee. headed by Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wisc), that the U.S. underworld has totally recouped the loss of the Turkish supply by turning to Southeast Asia sources. In South Vietnam. McCoy said, the opium and heroin traffic is divided among. the nation's three dominant military factions: Pres. Thieu's political apparatus, Prime Minister Kim's political organization, and Gen: Ky's political apparatus. "Throughout the mountainous Golden. Triangle region, the CIA has provided substantial military support for mercenaries; right-wing rebels, and tribal war lords who are actively engaged in the. narcotics traffic and in Thailand the CIA has worked closely with nationalist Chinese paramilitary units which control 80 to 90 percent of northern Burma's vast opium export and man- ufacture high-grade heroin for export to the American market," McCoy testified. "Some of President Thieu's closest supporters inside the South Vietnamese army control the distribution and sale of he- roin to Americans GI's fighting in Indochina." "Finally U.S. agencies have been actually involved in. certain aspects of the region's drug traffic. In Northern Laos, Air Ame- rica aircraft and helicopters chartered by the CIA have been trans- porting opium." Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA.RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL Approved For Release 2001#@4 w DP80-01601 RO DATE UJNKNOW1) ta?a- S Xu w .e - Want to ask t ramous person a 6.;ea:son? Son. the a.eCion on a postcard. to "Ask." FWnfly Wrrsi9Y. t-i1 Lexington Ave. Now York. N. Y 10422- Well pe! 35 I~r pub+islad q;,est ons. Sorry, we can't anrwL?t therL 10 U74_71931_~ FOR REP. CHARLES B. ?RA_ti GEL, N.Y. You've aicnsed the CIA of aiding and ahefling heroin sellers in Asia. V117hat grotrnds do you have for such a serious charge?-R. D., New York, N.Y. C De pite pubic disclaimers by the CIA, many of us in Congress have serious reason to believe that the agency is indeed complicit in the trafficking of deadly heroin to our servicemen in Southeast Asia. Newslnen clandestinely entering the secret CIA base at Lvng Cheng in Lans hate reported raw opium openly oiled t.o For ~;..le in th- market there. In addition, we kr.ou that the CIA regularly supplies arms, transportation and funds to dries producing hill tribes in Laos and Thailand in exchange for Their al egia nce, know- ing full well that these tribesmen are cornerstones of the drug trade. Most Congressmen have little idea how the' CIA operates and how much money it spends. The CIA budget is carefully disguised and hidden. In fa.,t, a recent Senate Foreigu Relations Committee report, "Laos, April, 1971," reads like a jigsaw, puzzle, with pieces "deleted at the re- quest of the Department of State, Department of Defense and Central Intelligence Agency." Congress cannot prevent CIA involvement as lone as we are delibcratcl, kept in the dark al.utt that ageucvs trperatiors. STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATGNTL Approved For Release 2 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA. RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 IA-RDP80-01601 RO LAOS . A heavily censored report revealed May 7 in he U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee charged the U.S. spends $100 million a year to support a Thai irregular army of 10,000 men in Laos. The report 'revealed that for the first time U.S. helicopter, gunships, under U.S. army command but apparently with Thai pilots, are northern Laos. The report was prepared by committee members James Lowenstein and Richard Moose after their trip to Thailand and Laos in January. The report also noted the CIA and Thai army headquarters in Udorn air force base in Thailand provide contact with the Thai irregular forces; the irregulars are trained in Thailand by U.S. army special forces per- sonnel; payments including bonuses are made .by the CIA to the Thai unit at Udorn. supporting medical evacuation missions in STA T NEW YORK. 3~i]~.Es Approved TIN or eleaSb72O T/0 b4 : CIA-RDP80-0 The, S 6utheast Asian Connection By HANS J.7SPIELMANN BANGKOK, Thailand-The world's attention in recent months has been turned toward the Mideast-Turkey, principally-as the source of illicit supplies of heroin. But the fact is that the fabled "Fertile Triangle" of South- east Asia - Thailand, Burma and Laos--continyes to produce two-thirds' of the world's known supply of opium, from which heroin is derived. 'The figures alone are eye-catching: in - 1970 Thailand's hill tribes con- tributed 185 metric tons of raw opium to the world's supply, Burma 1,000 tons, Laos 100. It is true that most of the opium, or abo" 800 tons, is consumed by South- east Asians from Rangoon. to Hong Kong. Nonetheless, about 400 tons continue to leave the area, bound for addicts around the world. The buyers, not all Americans by any means, range from soldiers in Vietnam to junkies along New, York's Eighth Avenue. So- vast are these suppliesO (U.S. addicts, for example, consume annual- ly the heroin derived from "only" 120 metric tons of opium), so limitless the profits, that governments, armies and revolutionary fronts have played parts in the production' and trade throw h the years. They continue to do so, aid even the United States Central Inte:- Jigence Agency has had its days in the poppy fields. J "They have been growing poppies for 150 years." The 'Vietnam war and the complex and confusing movement of "foreign- ers" back and forth through Southeast Asia has created a boons in the illicit production. of raw opium. Today, in Thailand alone, it is estimated that half of the 350,000 hill people in the elevated areas of the north participate in growing poppies. Thirty per cent of these workers are addicts themselves, but they turn a tiny profit by the standards of the million-or-billion-dollar de.ils we are accustomed to associating, with nar- cotics. The average worker earns about $100 a year and has, incidental- ly, no. real knowledge o. what he is doing. That is to say, the hill people do not even know that they are pro- ducing an illicit product for a world market, they have been growing the poppies and using the opium in lieu a kill' d' f o 150 f The production of opium only be- came illegal in Thailand in 1958, as did trafficking and smoking, and the hill people really could not understand that they were outlaws. Not to worry, as things developed: production went on unabated. As it is now, there is a sort of Com- mon Market in opium operative in Southeast Asia. National boundaries are crossed by an assortment of rogues who, while moving tons of the stuff, "lose" only 2 or 3 per cent as bribes and tributes and so forth. The operation begins with the fields in the high country (over 3,000 feet above sea level for the high-quality poppy) of Thailand, Laos and Burma. The hill people themselves have neither the courage, contacts nor funds to enter into the distribution, so they await the sharp lowlanders., These townsmen come around at harvest time, looking down their noses at the hill people whom they consider to be inferior, and buy the opium at very low prices. The best buy is in Burma, where a kilo of raw opium sells for $15; in Laos it's $30, and in Thailand $40. Opium is gathered in the villages and then in ever-larger towns by smugglers,. who may. be described in the first dealings as petty, but who become rather more than that as the opium changes hands and the supplies pile up.'Then highly disciplined para- military types take over, with tough- ness and sure-handedness. Among these is an outfit known as the Shan of Northern Burma-rela- tives of the Thais-whose dream, at least back in Burma, was the establish- ment of an autonomous Shan State. But its fighting wing, the Shan Libera- tion Army, has generally abandoned politics as it observed the fertile fields of Shan asylum in northern Thailand. Units of, the front transport the opium grown in Burma (and this is the mother lode-700 metric tons for ex- port) to bases in Thailand. Of course, as units cross the Burmese-Thai bor- der, bask and forth, back and forth, the talk is all politics and the dream of statehood, but it's camouflage for the real action, which is the opium. The Shan has somewhat complex, but strict, working arrangements with the notorious Kuomintang (whose par- ent organization is Nationalist Chi- nese) troops of the Fertile Triangle. Sometimes the Shan and the Kuomin- tang trade arms and ammunition, and medicines-often purchased from U.S. stocks in. Laos-for opium. The Kuomintang troops also keep up political appearances, when the real idea is opium. They say that they carry out pro-U.S. espionage in. Burma, and even claim forays into China for "anti-Communist" activities. But these units are no longer used and supplied by the United States or Taiwan, as they once were, although they maintain radio contact, with each other. The Kuomintang is said now to.tiave 10,000 men under. arms, chiefly in Thailand, but in Burma and Laos as well. Frequently, Kuomintang caravans of between 300 and 500 meh, -plus horses and mules carrying contraband for trade, can be seen working toward the north of Thailand and Laos toward Burma. They are supplied along the way with food by villagers eager to please such impressive forces, and eager to make extra money or to ac- - quire some unusual luxuries. Once they make their- contacts- either with Shan troops or with smug- glers-the Kuomintang caravan can pack up as much as fifteen tons of opium for the return trip southward. It is said that these troops and their "allied contractors" transport between 450 and 500 tons of raw opium south- ward each year. Their profit mark-up is 200 per cent. One. arrangement that the Kuomin- tang and the Shan have is that each Kuomintang convoy that goes into certain poppy-growing territory actu- ally controlled by Shan troops must. pay tribute. This 'amounts to about $1.50 a kilo, and entitles the caravan to a transit letter and Shan escorts back to territory controlled by the Kuomintang. . (In other areas Shan convoys must pay tribute to Kuomin- tang soldiers-the reverse situation.) As noted, there, are a great 'many addicts in Southeast Asia, and the' Kuomintang troops sell off a good deal of the opium back in Thailand. They get four to six times what they paid. But most of it is headed for export- for quick dashes across more borders, to airports and train stations, to sea- ports, to Bangkok, Singapore, Hong Kong, Vientiane and Saigon. And on In the last five years, the Kuomin tang, discovering among other things that some of the opium it was trans- porting was bringing in 2,500 times more profit to the ultimate dealer than to its troops, began processing the opium itself. Kuomintang thereby in- creased its own profits, never incon- siderable,'-at least threefold. STATINTL pan- mg m tones or o years.' rov"d For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 ?ontinued THE LOND0. Approved For Release 2001/93&#.j9 tP80-01601. CIAbehhd Thai regal- ad's in Laos From Fred Emery Washington, May 8 The Central Intelligerice Agency is the paymaster for an expedi- tionary force in Laos of some 18,000 Thai "volunteers," with plans to increase it to sonic 14,000 men at a yearly cost of $100nt ((40m), it was disclosed today in a staff report of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The numbers and cost involved in this operation have been pre- viously kept secret, with the Nixon Administration invoking Thai Government sensitivities. However, Senator Stuart Symington, chairman of a Foreign Relations sub-committee, says in a preface to the. staff report that the Congressional. ban on American support for third country forces in Laos "is apparently being vio- dated in letter as well as in spirit." The Administration's defence is that the troops are " local " forces. The report questions the Ad- ministration's contention that the 'men are volunteers d-raven from thb large community of ethnic Lao living in Thailand- It asserts the men are recruited "by the Royal Thai army from all over Thailand " with a specific cadre of officers and ncos from the regular army. The report, written before the current Communist offensive in South Vietnam, states that "Laos is closer to falling now than any time in The past nine years. Cam- bodia has last half its territory, and is insecure in the remain- der... The North Vietnamese ,will be able to continue to use the -territory of Laos and Cambodia to pursue the war in South Viet- nam, no matter how successful Viotnamization proves to be and to keep South Vietnam in a poamanent state of sei.ge ". STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-61601 R000800200001-4 STATINTJ}pproved For Release 2001/": CIA-RDP80-01601 April 1972 CIA WORRIED ABOUT THAILAND: High on the CIA priority list is Thailand. American in- telligence predicts a communist takeover within two years unless military aid is stepped up. According to CIA sources, there has been an enormous influx of highly sophisticated Chinese weapons delivered to the Peoples Lib- eration Armed Forces, the Maoist guerrillas who have been harassing government forces for the past few years. Washington supplies Bangkok largely with surplus US weapons, and the CIA says the guerrillas' weapons are far superior to these. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 SAUY Pw D e 200t/b4PL2I - db SR: BOOKS . Book Review Editor: ROCHELLE GIRSON . STATI NTL IN THE MIDST OF WARS: An American's Mission to Southeast Asia by Edward Geary Lansdale Harper & Row, 386 pp., $1250 the CIA at a meeting of the President's Special Committee on Indochina held on January 29, 1954. Why is this important? Because if there is one word Lansdale uses re- peatedly it is "help"-and he uses it personally, simulating a Lone Ranger- like urge to offer spontaneous assist- ance. Thus, the first day he ever saw Diem, ". . . the thought occurred to me that perhaps he needed help.... I voiced this to Ambassador Heath... . Heath told me to go ahead." The in- formal atmosphere continues when Reviewed by Jonathan Mirsky a With the exception of the Pentagon Papers, Edward Geary Lansdale's memoir could have been the most valu- able eyewitness account of the inter- nationalizing of the Indochinese war. Lansdale, a "legendary figure" even in his own book, furnished the model for the Ugly American who, from 1950 through 1953, "helped" Magsaysay put down the Huk revolution in the Philip- pines. He then proceeded to Vietnam where, between 1954 and 1956, he stuck close to Ngo Dinh Diem during Diem's first . shaky years when Washington couldn't make up its mind whom to tap as the American alternative to Iio Chi Minh. Lansdale's support insured Diem as the final choice for Our Man Lansdale, upon actually meeting Diem, immortalizes him as "the alert and eldest of the seven dwarfs deciding what to do about Snow White." Further desires to serve inform Lans- dale's concern for the "masses of people living in North Vietnam who would want to ... move out before the October [1954] including items abou property, money reform, and a thre day holiday of workers upon takeover. The day following the distribution of these leaflets, refugee registration tripled." r-Phe refugees-Catholics, many o whom had collaborated with the French-were settled in the South, in communities that, according to Lans- dale, were designed to "sandwich" Northerners and Southerners "in a cultural melting pot that hopefully would give each equal opportunity." Robert Scigliano, who at this time was advising the CIA-infiltrated Michi- gan State University team on how to "help" Diem, saw more than a melting pot: communists took over." These unfortu. Northerners, practically all of whom are nates, too, required "help." Splitting refugees, [have] preempted many of the his "small team" of Americans in two, choice posts in the Diem government.... [The] Diem regime has assumed the as- Lansdale saw to it that "One half, pect of a carpet bag government in its under Major Conein, engaged In disproportion of Northerners and Cen- refugee work in the North." tralists ... and in its Catholicism.... The "Major" Lucien Conein, who was to Southern people do not seem to share the play the major role the CIA had in the anticommunist vehemence of their North. murder of Diem in 1963, is identified in ern and Central compatriots, by whom the secret CIA report included by the they are sometimes referred to as un. Times and Beacon editions of the reliable in the communist struggle.. , Pentagon Papers (see SR, Jan. 1, 1972) [While] priests in the refugee villages hold as an agent "assigned to MAAG [Mili- no formal government posts they are gen. in Saigon. While the book's time span 'tart' Assistance Advisory Group] for crafty the real rulers of their villages and is, therefore, relatively brief, the period serve as contacts with district and pro- cover purposes." The secret report vincial officials. it covers in the Philippines and Viet- refers to Conein's refugee "help" as nam is genuinely important. There is only one difficulty with In the A4idst of Wars: from the cover to the final page it is permeated with lies. That Harper & Row finds it possible to foist such a package of untruths on the public-and for $12.501-several months after the emergence of the Pentagon Papers, and years after the publication of other authoritative studies, exhibits contempt for a public trying to understand the realities of our engagement in Vietnam. The lie on the jacket describes Lans- dale merely as an OSS veteran who spent the years after World War II as a "career officer in the U.S. Air Force." In the text Lansdale never offers any explicit evidence to the contrary. In- deed, on page 378-the last of the text- he states that at the very time Diem was being murdered in Saigon, "I had been retired from the Air Force." For all I know Lansdale drew his pay from the Air Force and, as the photo- graphs in his book attest, he certainly wore its uniform. This is irrelevant. Lansdale was for years a senior opera- tive of the Central Intelligence Agency; on page 244 of the Department of De- fense edition of the Pentagon Papers, Lansdale, two other men, a d Allen n Dulles are ideriJifpt provedrrOf[We t 41.9 AA a Vic one of his "cover duties." His real job: "responsibility for developing a para- military organization in the North, to be in position when the Vietminh took over ... the group was to be trained and supported by the U.S. as patriotic Vietnamese." Conein's "helpful" teams also attempted to sabotage Hanoi's largest printing establishment and wreck the local bus company. At the beginning of 1955, still in Hanoi, the CIA's Conein infiltrated more agents into the North. They "became normal citizens,' carrying out everyday civil pursuits, on the surface." Aggression front the North, anyone? Lansdale expresses particular pleas- ure with the refugee movement to the South. These people "ought to be provided with a way of making a fresh start in the free South.... [Vietnam] was going to need the vigorous par- ticipation of every citizen to make a success of the noncommunist part of the new nation before the proposed plebiscite was held in 1956." Lansdale modestly claims that he "passed along" ideas on how to wage psychological warfare to "some nationalists." The Pentagon Papers, however, reveal that the CIA "engineered a black psywar strike in Hanoi: leaflets signed by the Graham Greene, a devout Catholic, observed in 1955 after a visit to Viet? nam, "It is Catholicism which has helped to ruin the government of Mr. Diem, for his genuine piety has been exploited by his American advisers until the Church is in danger of sharing the unpopularity of the United States." Wherever one turns in Lansdale the accounts are likely to be lies. He re- ports how Filipinos, old comrades from the anti-Huk wars, decided to "help" the struggling Free South. The spontaneity of this pan-Asian gesture warms the heart-until one learns from Lansdale's own secret report to Presi- dent Kennedy that here, too, the CIA had stage-managed the whole business. The Eastern Construction Company turns out to be a CIA-controlled "mechanism to permit the deployment of Filipino personnel in other Asian countries for unconventional opera- tions.... Philippine Armed Forces and other governmental personnel were 'sheep-dipped' and sent abroad." Elsewhere Lansdale makes much of Diem's success against the various sects, Cao Dai, Hoa Hao, and Binh Xuyen. (At every step Diem was ad- vised by Lansdale who, at one pathetic moment, even holds the weeping Chief STATI N1L F t/ l~~6f6~ri1~c2ffab~ a4 STATINTL Approved For ReleasMAib810'4:L`-IA-RDP80-01 2 2 tr ;I- 1972 ThaiInd Becoming .. Staging Area. for--U5.-'Dircced-.GroLmd CombM BY JACK FOISIE Tunes Staff Writer BANGKOK-Thailand is gradually 'becoming the s t a g i n g area for most American-directed ground operations in-Indochina as: troop 'withdrawals con- tinue, from Vietnam and the war and political situa- tions become. more tense in Cambodia and Laos. This. has resulted in in- creased sensitivity by both Thai and American offi- cials concerning the American 'air. bases in Thailand and the camps and bases involved in cross-border operations. == in--answer--to a'news- tnan's request,. American officials disclosed t.b a t there are 245 U.S.-militarv advisers in Thailand and 280 members of the U.S. Special Forces. But other than outlining their ac- knowledged training and advising roles, the officials 'disclinetly to' gb deeper into Thai-b'as'ed' American operations: pertaining to the Indochina war. .Many Secret Camps Rebellious areas in Burma great deal of aplomb can* also. are being penetrated stumble into an American from Thai - A m e r i c a n clandestine camp and stay camps in the western pro- awhile by pretending that' vince of.Thailand. he, also, is on a mysterious' 'Volunteers' in Laos :assignment. - .,..T he participation of It happened this yvav, Thai army "volunteers" in without a lie being` told. The as -part of -a Western- lcn;ede r: ate g u "Who are a r dre c h a?" backed royal Lao army i;' y ou?" The inewsman assumed a now an established fact. _ 1- -1- _ - , n o000 i - h ? .gore a a fantry, artillerymen and airmen are in action on foreign soil. They are .American - paid but'-the ;.Thai government. also has its own reason for making the."volunteers" available. army and its Coinmunist replied: "Don't ask me!" For emphasis he pressed a finger to his lips. "Oh," the- guard said; impressed, "I understand." He opened the gate and directed the \'-isitor.. to - the command post. ' - Exotic code names also figure into -the secrecy. ?Pathet Lao auxiliat are-_ ' closer to the banks of the .Mekong River than in past dry' seasons and. the. \le- kong is Thailand's border. -:,Despite contrary evidence, both. Thai and American - officials c?o n- tinue the pretense that the volunteers. sign up on 1 eppergrinaer is the name of a big American-Thai lo- gistical base, way point for weapons and supplies des- their own. They are, in Thailand have declined fact, regular Thai units led ' from a high point of 369 in by their own officers and taking orders mostly from /p The reduction was possi ossible , after the Thai Officially, the role 6f-.ail ligence Agency. own training. The Ameri- -American Green Berets is One of the assembly can advisory force also has to "train the Thais to be areas for this trans-\le- been cut hack by 255o trainers"' in counterinsur= from its high point. kung migration is the Thai Other American military gency a*arfare, "both e army camp of Saritsena, activities have offset the their own troops and those of ,third country" 'armies outside the north central reduction. -that is Laotian and towel of Phitsanulok. Air For more than a year, equip -the-- 125,000-man Thai army under the cur- rent $60 million military aid program. This is an all-time high 'for. annual American spending on the Thai army and apparently re- flects its support of. Thai forces in Laos. A 10-man American ad- visory team is presently with a Thai army "sweep and clear". operation aimed at driving a 500- man insurgent band out of north central Thailand and back into Laos. The senior American is Army Col. Charles G. Ray of Browns 'Mill, N.J. who. Js peaks Thai fluently. Ray said neither he nor any of - his subordinates goes below Thai regimen- tal level and are forbidden to. fly or drive into 'any area where they might be shot at. Confirming t h i s, an ..American- - Embassy - offi- cial said, "\Ve've never had an American combat casualty in Thailand and we intend to keep it that way" Cambodians. America transport planes the American'- military Rut- these` same Ameri= fly the men from there &.7 strength in Thailand has can officials :acknowledge rectly into Laos..- been announced as 32,200. that there are numerous In the most recent ex- ' Twenty-six thousand are scxxet cam s-they - call. planation of the Thai pre- airmen, as five big bases them 'ad hoc training' senee in Laos, a U.S. State in Thailand continue to be areas"-at which Ameri- Department spokesman the. major springboard for last week described the American bombing of ene- Thais are located. But they Thais as "local forces" eli- my.. targets in Vietnam,. .will not discuss the Ameri-' gible for U.S. support. Laos and Cambodia and can role in these camps. ' This definition is intended retaliatory strikes against It is known, however, to avoid being in violation N o r t h Vietnam missile that. some are b o r.d e r of the congressional ban and antiaircraft guns. -camps fronting_`,o - Laos -on the recruiting and pay- All-Time High Cost ment of mercenaries for The 6.000 other Ameri- and -~amboclia. They are Laos'and.Cambodia. ' can military are mostly manned by both Thai and Secrecy concerning mil A . ,? ? ,; ? ; + American Gree'A-" e&aE a&s W ? r ld.t}1 /Np G-01601 R000800200001-4 UPPO V tined for allied forces in Laos. Despite its various un- publicized roles, the American special forces in Approved For Release 2001/03/04: QW-RU 8WL01601 R000800200001-4 LOS ANGELES, CAL. STATINTL JJERAL~17~11 SP TW72 . SEMIWEEKLY - 35,000 cc~a~t~thp9 WASHINGTON, b.C.-If, and we hove every reason to believe it's true, the charges made In the March, 1972 Issue of "Earth Magazine," that the CIA is now, and has been in the past, dealing in the d-oe traffic, it's deplorable. Drugs and its danger was brought to the at- tention of the American people of the National HERALD-DISPATCH newspapers in 1960. We pointed out in our initial drive against dope, the fact that it destroys American youth. Hence, if tl"e CIA as charged and documented by "Earth Magazine" is dealing in the dope traffic, they are singularly destroying a whole generation of American youth. Dope des- troys the brain cell, it renders the individual, regardless of race, creed, or national origin, use- less and powerless to think clearly. Dcpe, as it was fed to American soldiers in Asia is despicable and deplorable. In Asia America's finest voting manhood was destroyed before being sent into battle in a senseless, useless, racist war. In the article titled "The Selling of the CIA" text by Morton Kondrocke, offers documen- tation, photographs of former CIA spies, The spy was quoted, and we have no reason to believe that Earth is lying on the C?IA, that its history is a sordid one. The HERALD-DISPATCH has been aware for a number of years that the CIA has had stooges in the universities and colleges throughout the nation where they recruit brilliant young students. These students were used as spies to overthrow the African and Asian countries, to murder, assassinate, and destroy pecple. "Earth" cites facts, that the CIA is involved in the opium traffic with the "fertile tri- angle" in the border areas of- Laos, Burma, Thailand and the Yunnan province of southern China. They say, "about twenty-five percent of the heroin sold in America comes through this Southeast Asian channel. Ironically, the American taxpayer foots a six billion dcllor o year bill for running the dcpe-the CIA, an organization which answers to nobody, is intricately it Approved For Frey,8``ttDFEdb*t~l9tks4u.s, tax mcne; to tinIie Approved For Release 2001/03/04 ~ 4iMtDP80-0160 APRIL 1972 BEYOND. WORDS Writing for the President by Harry McPherson -but what is heroic death compared to eternal watching with a cold apple in one's hand on a narrow chair with a view of the ant-hill and the clock's dial Adieu prince I have tasks a sewer proiect and a decree on prostitutes and beggars I must also elaborate a better system of prisons since as you justly said Denmark is a prison I go to my affairs -Zbigniew Herbert, "Elegy of Fortinbras" In 1965 one could still feel John Kennedy's pres- ence in the White House. I walked out of the mansion one cold, starry night, headed for my office in the West Wing,.and imagined I saw that lithe figure standing in the Oval Office, his back to the window; but it was only an aide. I missed his wry humor, his detachment about himself, his rejection of all that was mawkish and ba- nal in politics. If he had not generated widespread public sentiment for social change, he had helped the nation to gain a perspective on its problems in which 'reason played a greater part than passion. One of the many terrible ironies of the sixties was that the shock of Kennedy's death was a more powerful stimulus to congressional action than was his presidency. Another irony lay in the response many of his par- tisans made to Lyndon Johnson. To the most pas- sionate of these, Johnson was simply a usurper. The presidency had passed from Hyperion to a satyr. To others Johnson was a parvenu, and always would be. His. accent was the occasion for scorn among people who had regarded Kennedy's way of saying "Cuber" as picturesque. A distinguished reporter told me, "I don't hate Johnson. I just hate the fact that all the grace and wit has gone from what the American President says." I said that 1 found it difficult, reading his commentary, to make the distinction. I did not say that I could un- derstand how reporters might have enjoyed Ken- nedy's deft banter more than three hours of self-justi- fying stream of consciousness by, Johnson. It was hard to be fair in a climate spoiled by hurt feelings. STATINTL policy as a people, then we shall effectively cripple each generation to come." Thus began the first presidential message on which I worked. What followed were the nuts and bolts: "special grants amounting to 80% of the non-Federal cost of our grant-in-aid programs," "planning funds for the coordinated treatment of the regional trans- portation network," and so on. They were the sub- stance of the program. The rhetoric would last only a day or two; whether the cities would be helped de- pended on how well the "Urban Problems Task Force" had foreseen real-life problems and designed a practical structure to meet them which the Presi- dent could persuade Congress to adopt. Since Kennedy had promised to get us moving again, Democratic speech-writers had forced the pace of everything the President for whom they worked said. Nothing was too small to be termed "urgent." The consequences of inaction were never less than drastic; action would always bring redemp- tion, prosperity, or civil peace. Sdmetimes the prob- lem was described so severely that the program seemed feeble by comparison. I speculated that writers for conservative Presidents did not have such problems. Their guiding principle was good management, where ours was social change.. Good management was an end in itself. Social change, on the other hand, was a process-involving the recog- nition of legitimate needs, the arousal of expectations that they should and could be met, the creation of laws and bureaucracies, and a payoff-money, health care, the right to vote and get a job, better schools. The pro- cess could fail at any point-most often at the payoff. It could not even be started unless the needs were recog- nized and the expectations aroused. To do that, a leader had to raise his voice. He could not engage in an academic debate; he could not take .a. long view of his- tory, in which crowded cities and poverty seemed in retrospect the benevolent engines of progress; he could not say, "Perhaps it would be wise"; he had to say, "We must." In pressing hard for change Johnson took great risks, both for himself and for the country. He had to convey. not only a poignant sense of the misery to be relieved but also confidence that money and organi- -zation and skill could relieve. it. Otherwise men "If we stand passively by, while the center of each would do nothing. city becomes a hive of deprivation, crime and hope- If he proposed a law prohibiting certain malign lessness ... if we become two people, the suburbanpractices-such as excluding blacks from restaurants and votin booths-he was relatively sure that he affluent and theA OW&Fh A6F S'~t~{9'0l1 /O~d~4d: r l -RDE1$iOgO116(~St~8OO86?x@00 1-4 and feat for the of er ... if this is our estre and passed. If his goal was to provide medical care for the STATINTL TU SOUND Approved For Release 296h4W ? E3P80-01 1972 STATINTL Earth magazine's March issue accuses the CIA of controlling Air America - and charges that the airline operation is responsible for at least 25 percent of all heroin which reaches the United States. Earth's editor and publisher James Goode charged that the CIA-supported Air America airline is being used to ship opium from CIA bases in Laos and Thailand. Goode cite d an article written by University of California professor Peter Dale Scott who said that opium is grown by CIA mercenaries, including the Meo tribesmen, in Southeast Asia. According to Scott, the opium is then shipped from the remote jungle areas aboard Air America planes. A spokesman for Air America in Washington, D.C. also declined to comment on the story. He would say only that Air Arnerica is a "non-domestic airline owned by Americans which operates in Asia." He said he was unaware of any connections between the airline and the CIA. Approved For Release 2b01 /03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL Approved For Release ash, & CIA-RDP80-016 R6f eat e, aahington March 1972 Earth magazine charged that the Central the smuggling of millions of dollars worth of Said Goode: "I find it inconceivable that the hierarchy of the CIA and other agencies within our government have not cracked down on this source of smack." Goode'was asked about a suggestion voiced earlier this week by Senator Hubert Humphrey that the CIA be assigned the task of investigating and stopping the flow of illegal heroin. F "Tl?.tt's like appointing the SS to investigate atrocities at Dachau or Auschwitz," Goode said. A 28-year-old Seattle resident who worked as a "civilian aide" to Continental Air Services in Thailand and Laos testified in San Franciscothat he witnessed opium being loaded aboard CIA-sponsored aircraft. Enrique B. del Rosario said he watched as cargo, labeled as "miscellaneous," was put aboard Air America planes at the Ban Houie Sai base in Laos, and at two other bases in Thailand. Del Rosario said he had served as a "civilian understudy" at the bases in Southeast Asia between 1966 and 1970. When asked if he was aciually employed at the time by the CIA, del Rosario declined to answer, insisting that he was not "permitted to." He added that his wife'and two children' are currently ,in Thailand - and said that he did not want to say anything "which might jeopardize their safety." The magazine's editor James Goode announced at a press conference in San Francisco that the March issue of Ifarth documents a web of alliances which co nect opium-growing Southeast Asian farmers to the CIA-sponsored Air America Airlines and big money interests in the eastern United States. Goode said, that heroin-smuggling entanglements are carefully spelled out in an article written by University of California English professor Peter' Dale Scott; Scott's eight-page article traces the connection between opium growers, CIA operatives, flights of CIA-controlled airlines and the eventual delivery of heroin to the U.S. Goode further charged that the CIA-supported Meo tribemen and other opium growers located in Southeast Asia's "fertile triangle" are responsible for anywhere "from 25 percent to 80 percent of all heroin traffic reaching the United The magazine editor stated tht Scott's article was "clearly the most, dramatic documentation of CIA complicity in heroin trafficking yet published;" but he added that the.CIA's involvement in smack smuggling has been suspected and reported about for years, adding: "Yet nothing has been done." However, del Rosario admitted that he had worked very closely with the Meo tribesmen and other CIA-supported tribes, and that he had seen literally "hundreds of acres of cultivated opium fields planted by the tribesmen." Del Rosario said that the opium was later harvested, and that he watched as Ait American planes landed at Thai and Laos bases and loaded the "miscellaneous" cargo aboard. Goode announced that he was making all of his evidence immediately available to United STATINTL States Senators - and that he is calling for a Senate investigation of the CIA's role in the underground heroin market. Studies on the smack problem in the United States have indicated that up to $5 billion dollars is spent annually on heroin by 500,000 American addicts. More than half of the money spent each year on the purchase of heroin - or 52:5 billion - is' obtained through theft by addicts. Medical authorities report that heroin presently caused more deaths to people between the a s of 18 and 35 than do wars or cancer or ' uS +,, $ ci. 1 i a Del Rosario, a former marine who served in` Vietnam in 1964 and 1965, said that the opium growing was permitted by the Laos and Thailand governments as long as there was no outside pressure exerted. lie explained that, occasionally, a complaint I would be * lodged about the amount of growing and smuggling, and that then the government would move in and demand a temporary halt. to the opium cultivation. C 4 D CA9U$ The Central Intelligence Agency has refused to comment on charges voiced by Earth magazine that the CIA "is deeply involved in the smuggling of heroin into. the United States." A spokesman for the CIA, assistant director Angus Thuermer, insisted .to Earth News that the intelligence agency "never comments on any charges or complaints made against the CIA." Thuermer added, however, that CIA director Richard Helms had specifically denied any CIA connection to the trafficking of heroin during a speech he made to newspaper editors in Washington$ D.C. early last year. At that time, Helms, in reply to charges that the CIA was involved in moving opium from Southeast Asia to the United States, said: "We know we are not. contributing to that problem.". (Ed Note: Further information on CIA involvement in the opium trade is contained in an article by Enrique B. del Rosario in ear accidents Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800206001-4 STATINTL ~t TPOST Approved For Releae,2 9jy 4 : CIA-RDP80-016 ' A The repeated assertions of I Laos to het { government leaders here have been that any Thai nationals serving in Laos have simply l More Thai ai chosen on their own to work' Mercenaries (for the Laotians. Sometimes it is added that by battling the these pa-' Communists in Laos , i Itriots are, helping meet the Washington Post Foreign Service BANGKOK, Jan. 21-The number of CIA supported Thai soldiers serving in Laos d i n 'he com- e se b Geneva Accords By disassociating them- , selves from the troops, Aineri- cans here explain, the Thais damaged. One day in Kem- bern in scattered fighting 35 Thai security forces were killed. Analysts think any connec- tion between external and in- ternal events should not be ex- aggerated, . but do note that North Vietnamese propaganda against the Thai regime has been harsher and more per- sistent lately. U.S. Bombers The vitriol has been primar- ily directed at the presence of American bombers in Thai- land. The broadcasts threaten "punishment" to the Thais fort allowing "American use of l Thailand as a springboard." a e incr Will [:cannot be accused of violatin ing -months to contend with 1 the provisions of the 1962 Ge- to y situa- senior neva accords which prohibited tion the there,. worsening according military . U.S. sources here. 'Introduction of foreign forces into Laos. The sources declined to say I "From start to finish, the how many additional Thais whole business is diplomatic would be sent, but unofficial 'and military sleight of hand,;,! "Putting it all together," estimates are that the present said a long-time American ex-'said one American diplomatic total, fixed variously at from pert in Thai affairs. (For their source, "I guess you could say 4,800 to 6,000, may be as much part, the North Vietnamese there is a kind of offensive as doubled. - also will not admit to having under way here, but, of The Thai battalions h a v e many thousands of troops in course, it doesn't begin to been taking very heavy casual- Laos.) compare with what is happen. ties in the Communist dry-sea- On the whole, Thais have log in Laos." son offensive that began in greeted the issue of the troops So ? far the government has mid-December, so the first job lackadasically. Certainly the dispatched more gunboats to is to reorganize existing units families of casualties know I the Mekong River with Laos and bring them up to strength. ! who they are and one Thai-, and has placed troops in criti-I Like those Thais already ' owned English-language paper J cal areas on alert, but neither] there, the reinforcements will. printed a news agency account step is regarded as especially be "volunteers," ostensibly re- of 200 Thais being killed in meaningful. cruited from outside the regu-done battle at Paksong. "Why they've been having lar Thai Army and trained by But no local opposition to red scares for so long, no ones the CIA to serve as mercenar- the Thais being in Laos has; knows what they mean any- ies attached ? to the Laotian been recorded. Indeed, Thai , more," said one young Thai government forces. ? civil servant, "How can we tell Placing them officially inrvsts and intellectuals interviewed in the past few, the difference between what is under Laotian command (al- 'days agreed that the presence 1 always serious and what. is though each unit has Thai offi- of troops there would proba- very serious?". cers) is a technicality designed bly be applauded if Thai pub-I Thai Concern s o meet the restrictions on Ameri- lie opinion could be accurately There are indications, how. can financing of third-country tested. ever, that the Thai leadership forces in Cambodia and Laos. Nagging Insurgency is very concerned about the 'in- The United States role in With war raging just beyond plications of the worsening sit. mounting the Thai contingent Thai borders and nagging in- uation in Laos. has beefs bitterly criticized by, surgency within them, popular .It is our first line of de- members of the Senate For- sentiment appears to favor fense," commented one Thail eign Relations Committee. A whatever steps are necessary official," If it falls, we must be aid the CIA su- to preserve the country's )prepared." rt ff t repo s s a peace and relative prosperity. pervises and pays for the , In the past month or so training of the Thais and "pro- while the situation in Laos has vides their salary, allowances, deteriorated, there. has been . and operational costs in an upturn in the number of in- Laos." cidents attributed to- guerrillas in Thailand's northern and Committee sources said last southern regions. 'summer that the United Some of the incidents have 'States may have spent as been serious. Yesterday, for much as $35 million to finance example, 16 policemen were the Thais In Laos-roughly killed in an attack on a "spe- cial per man a year. cial operations base" in a re- mote northern district. Police Until very recently, Thai- land maintained about 10,000 regular troops In South ? Viet- nam, but the Thais have scrup. ulously avoided any official trn (connection w "~. Laos. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Thanom Kiitaka- chorn met with Gen. Creigh- ton Abrams, commander of U.S. forces in South Vietnam, to discuss what was officially described as "the war situa- tion in Laos." .In the very heavy fighting on the Plain of Jars last month, sources in Vientiane i reported, the Thai casualties outnumbered those of the Lao- tian irregulars by about two- to-one. The same was gener- ally true in the south. Some observers speculated that the Communists might be bearing down particularly hard on the Thais in an effort to discourage ethers from coming. Another theory has it that the Thias were merely poorer, less disciplined fight. ers than their Laotian and Meo allies. Details of the session were never made public, but in. formed Thai sources said var- ious "contingency plans" were discussed, along with the ques- tion tion of sending the Laotians said about 200 Communist- more "volunteers." hill-tribesmen were in- The Thai ai battalions - been lo- volved, armed with B-40 rock- serving in Laos s have e n lo- ets. 1 cated at firebases in the north- Then too, there was a demo- east on the Plain of Jars and lition team attack earlier this around the erib:it 1 C F~be9'f~@01~103 ~taft~laA-0 ~`> i0t'k000800200001-4 in which a B-52 was sligh y south, they operated on the Bolovens Plateau. STATINTL Approved For Release=01/03/04: CIA-RDP8 Jan 1972 U.S. operations in Southeast Asia have often involved shadowy figures, perhaps none more shadowy than the elusive, Jekyll- 'Hyde figure of Anthony A. Poshepny HE'S A ROUND-FACED, cheery man with a cherubic smile and a charming family arid, it is said, a penchant for preserving the heads of his victims in fordialdehyde. He's a classic Jekyll- and-Hyde who has been waging the most secret phase of America's secret war in Southeast Asia for the past ten years. To the boys at Napoleon Cafe and / the Derby King on Bangkok's Patpong Road, a watering ground for Air America pilots, CIA types, journalist's and. other assorted old Indochina hands, he's just plain Tony Poe, but his real name is Anthony A. Poshepny. 'He's a refugee from llun ary, an ex- Marine who fought on Iwo Jima and a dedicated patriot of his adopted land, Poe is airplane pilot. He works for Continental Air Services." An assist- ant manager, also Japanese, showed me the -registration card Tony had signed only a few days before my arrival.at the Amarin last June, in the middle of my search for him. Tony, I learned, generally stayed at the Amarin, only a few blocks from the modernesque American embassy. He was a familiar, beloved character ?to the staff at the hotel-the opposite of his public image as a sinister, secret killer and trainer s ll nist-armea guerrirtas, -most of then members of mountain tribes, and ill trained Thai army soldiers and police men..Tony, it seemed, had vanishe the jungle is so thick and the slopes s steep as to discouragethe toughes American advisers) on a mysteriou training venture not known even t most American officials with top-secre security clearances, much less to th girls behind the desk of the Amarin. "Oh, he's such a nice man," one o the girls in the hotel assured me' whe I asked how she liked Tony-who, I' been warned by. other journalists might shoot on sight any reporter' dis covered snooping too closely into hi life. "He has very. nice wife and thre lovely children," the girl burbled on, pausing to giggle slightly between phrases. "He comes here on vacation from up-country." The impression Poe has made on the girls at the Amarin is a tribute both. to his personality and his stealth. As I discovered while trac- ing him from the south of Thailand to northern -Laos, he already . had an STATINTL . of anti-Communist guerrr a warrior "Anthony A. Poshepny," read the' opulent home in Udorn for his wife, a top line. "Air Ops Officer-Continental /Tribal princess whom he had married a Air Services." So Tony, with a record' year or so ago. Mrs. Posliepny, a tiny, .-)f more combat jumps than any other quick-smiling girl whom Tony had American civilian in Indochina, had met while training members of the l the United States of America, for used Continental as his "cover" while which he has risked his life on literally training mountain tribesmen to fight hundreds of occasions while ranging against regular Communist troops through the undulating velvet-green from both China and North Vietnam. crags and valleys of Red China, Laos -Tony's cover surprised me; I had as- and Thailand. sumed he would declare himself as f t"ffIll S U missions into. Yao tube for specia China, liked to cone to Bangkok to shop while Tony conferred with his CIA associates on the guarded "CIA 1/ floor," of the American embassy. It was ironic that I should have learned that Tony stayed at the Amarin. . He-also shuns -publicity and hates some sort o governmen .. o r while in Bangkok, for it was only by reporters, as I discovered in a long -perhaps an adviser to border-patrol.. chance that I had checked In there at search for him, beginning in the Thai police units, the traditional cover un /the beginning of my search-and only capital of Bangkok and extending to der which CIA operatives masquerade during small talk with the desk clerks 'the giant American airbases in north- in both Thailand and Laos. Still, Con - eastern found one of Tony's desk clerks eastern Thailand and to the mountains tinental was a logical choice. Like Air that . caadI of northern Laos. The search for Tony America, Continental regularly ferries The day after I arrived in Bangkok, Poe ended where it had begun, in the men and supplies to. distant outposts local journalists gave me my first ink- lobby of the Amarin Hotel on Ban; throughout Indochina. Financed at lin of some of the rumors surround- kok's Ploenchit Road, a crowded, six- least in part by the CIA, Continental/ing Tony Poe. One of the journalists; lane-wide avenue that runs through a could hardly balk at providing cover. Lance Woodruff, formerly a reporter residential and shopping district sup- for full-time CIA professionals. on one of Bangkok's two English-tan ported largely by rich American The next two lines on Poe's registra gtiage newspapers and now with the "farangs," the somewhat demeaning tion form were even more intriguing Asian Institute of Technology in Bans Thai term for "foreigners." There, be- than his link with Continental, at least fore leaving Bangkok for the last time, g kok, said Poe not only hated reporters in terms of what he was doing at the After to," Tony bad but had been known to "do away with I picked up a note, signed simply present. "going y he doesn't like." W"Tony," stating that he had to "de- written, "Udorn," the name of the base people li tee from Woodruff r Ter Poe to a fist 'cline" my request for an interview. "I town in northeastern Thailand from ccomompatared red Poe an a fgu from the Terry beelieve [sic] that you can appreciate which the United States not only flies of how Poe lined one wall of a house in my reason for not seeking.public com- bombing missions over all of Laos but northern Laos, near the Chinese bor- mentary,"-wrote Tony in the formal also coordinates the guerrilla war on der, with heads of persons he had "statement style" better befitting a pub- the ground. And where was Tony killed. None of the contacts I met in lic official and probably suggested, if coming from," according to the form? Bangkok had the slightest, clue as to not dictated, by a superior in the His origin was Phitsanulok, a densely Tony's whereabouts-except that he Central Intelligence Agency. jungles mountain province famed for was somewhere "tip-countryt training "C-I-A?" asked the cute little Japa- incessant fighting between Commu- tribesmen to fight the Communists, nose girl at the front desk of the ~jossibl iin China itself. Amarin, enuncf raartesf IEneneRel ona rr firs a e a'ro r 7 e a $"-011 ~' Q ? ~ QM440 ,tors, smiling slightly with glittering East for years, is now based in Tokyo Arnarin, I drove to a town named white teeth, raising her eyebrows fiir- as a Chicaeo Tribune correspondent., Ubon, some 325 miles northeast of MEN AT WAR/ BY DONALD KIRK J NEW YORK DAILY iE WS STATINTL Approved For Release 2(1Q1,( /9 1 CIA-RDP80- S; iaon, Dec. i (Special)--'Tic allies are secretly training Thai irregulars in South Viehlam to'; operate helicopter u it s h i p s against the Cmnnluili3t3 in Laos, reU ble sources said tonight: Tliek said that the Thais had been Yccruite1 by the U.S. Cen- tral: Intelligence Agency and that the U.S. would provide heli- copters for their missions. -Joseph Fried Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-0160.1R000800200001-4 STATINTL Approved For Relea!/ZCIA-RDP80-01 28 Nall 1971 washington Post Foreign Service BANGKOK, Nov. 25- Thailand's Communist insur- gents, one American official here likes to say, are like mice "operating between the hooves of the government elephant." - ? It's not a bad simile. The Thai government is very .concerned about the -mice, who began to appear nearly seven years ago and have t bl a l Thai- pockets of trouble in back American officials here ki lly e ng, spea ra Gen land has not one but several, country areas of the south are sensitive to the incur-, d I f f e r e n t Insurgencies.: and west. gency, and tend to be an Those of most concern to Also, in the far south,'. noyed by the not uncommon the government are in the about 800-. Chinese and; suggestion that the Bangkok' north and northeast. Malay guerillas are known government overstates the . The northeast is a dry,. to base along the border nature of the emergency to` squeeze more, military aid flat, poor area, dotted here with Malaysia-but they are out of Washington. and there with the large said to be members of the . American built a! r b a s e s; Malaysian Communist Party They note that U.S. mili- from which- bombing mis and more concerned with tary aid to Thailand has sions throughout Southeast 'probing across the border to been decreasing annually from a high of $58.3 million y rou become nerea..inb Asia are flown, and it is throe, and it Is squashing that Communist politi. them as fast as can. But n. going cal organization has been Away. show no signs of .going most successful. . -By. the standards of Viet- . The insurgent Thai Peo- nam, the guerrilla threat to ples Liberation Armed Thailand is minimal. Ac- Forces that operate in this cording to the government's area and base in the Phu best estimates, there are Phan mountain area near only about 5,000 armed in- the Nakron Phanom airhase surgents in the country- have begun to establish a though for each maa with a true village infrastructure, rifle there may be as many government sources say. - as 10 unarmed but active The guerrillas have an esti- supporters of the movement. mated armed strength of This number has not 1,500. grown appreciably since the In far . north, the moun- clandestine. Communist tainous jungled arm of Thai- the south than with Tha- land. an 1966 to about half that in 1970. Thai sources in the five- They also say that Thais year-old Communist Sup- have responded well to the pression ? Operations Com- .threat of the insurgents. mand, a combined police-eiv- 'Both the insurgency and ii-military o r g a n i z a tion headed by the respected the government's perform' ante are on risin~b curves;' Gen. Siyud Kerdphol, be- one source said, "and the keyed that the various in " surgencies are directed from governments keeping up. Peking-not from Hanoi.' Whether it can gain on The Americans, who have the insurgency, however, is another question. It starts a special counterinsurgency with certain basic disad- section manned jointly by vantages. representatives of the em- Thailand is a country only bassy, CIA and the military, Slightly smaller than France, tend to agree. with a hard-to-administer, Party of Thailand decided in. land that reaches toward "It's. part of a long-term 1964 to switch from simple China between Laos and plan aimed at the ultimate political activity to armed. Burma, the situation is dif- control of Thai society," one struggle- -but the guerrillas ferent. source said. "It's not a spin- are now much better armed, About 2 000 Meo tribes off from the Vietnam war." trained and organized. then-ethnically the same as C a p t u r -e d Communist According to the official the tough CIA-trained guer- cadre told Thai officials of Thai reports, the combined rillas used in Laos to fight-' training in China. More re? number of terrorist incidents the Communist Pathet Lao cently, there have been re-. and assassinations has risen -led by Thai cadre have 'ports of Meo and Thai guer- steadily from 300 in 1966 to staked out highland "liber- rillas being trained by 1,100 last year. In the first ated areas" in the north Chinese instructors along seven months of 1971 there where the government sel- the road the Chinese have were 900 such incidents. dom seeks to go. - been building, for the last .Village-level organization These units launch hit- several years, down through b 41. 'll 1 T MW nrd Thailand. d aos l largely rural population of about 35 million and-thou- sands of miles of border. Of the four countries with which it shares borders; two (Laos and ,Cambodia) are at 'war with Communist forces and the other two (Malaysia and Burma) have . low-level guerrilla problems of their own. - O.n the other hand. it is the only country in Southeast Asia without a history of colonial rule. At the moment, the guer- an y e guerii as continues, and-run raids on out despite new government: settlements around Chiang The road, which has now rillas are still more of an programs to stop it. In one' Mai, and then fade back into ? reached 'to within 30 miles annoyance than a real area of northeast Thailand the hills where the royal of the Thai border, has had threat. But there is no doubt the long run the alone, -an estimated 209 vii- Thai army follows only at Bangkok officials worried Thais that over are worried 'lager are estimated to be its own risk. If pressed. too for some time and. has . thusi- ti eff l ec ve y under Commu- hard, they can slip across tended .to dampen en nist control. the borders into Laos or asm for diplomatic over When there Is violence- Burma. Lures toward Peking. ambushes, assassination of , "What have you achieved Indeed, last week's"'coup government officials, at- when you have chased 40 against parliament," in tacks on -isolated police out-. Meo from one ridgeline to which the military leader posts,-it is often carried-out another?" asked one official ship of the, country dis- :with speed and precision. in Bangkok. "Nothing and it banded the National As- "That was a real pro job," takes a hell of a lot of ef- sembly, abrogated the con- an American counterinsur- fort." stitution and imposed niar- enc s c ialist said not tial law, was said to be di- g y p In addition to the north: rected in part at checking long ago of an ambush in ern and northeastern insui-- public sentiment in favor of northeast Thailand that cost. gencies, Thailand has little., the lives of several govern= a rapprochement with China. Approved For Release 2001/03/04 :.CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL Approved For Releaseef4 r1A-RDP80-01601 2 5140'V 1971 BY Michael Morrow DI.Dztch Net& service UBON, 'Thailand-Toni' Boyd Is a building man, a "They don't post pictures realizes it or not is some tall Lincolnesque American Of GI's who- get V.D. And thing other than the benevo- S'ho has spent 20 years in what if somebody were to lent roadbuilder. half a dozen developing slip a-picture of the gover? With the roads has come the countries, mostly as an nor's daughter up there: border patrol police and, just agent of U.S. foreign aid. where would we all be as important, if not more so, Boyd Is a symbol of much of then?' 'the spooks.' American intelli. what is noble about Ameri- _ But the tragedy of Tom gence authorities have set up can assistance to poor coun- Boyd's life is that more a" guarded, off-limits communi- tries. But also of much of often than not he loses. cations center near the south- what Is tragic. From 1960-67, at the peak of ernmost town of NTamyin.. Boyd is 60, a native of : his career, he served in Viet- ? northeastern Texas, who nam. He supervised, the Indication of where Ameri- was bossing construction modernization of Tanson- can priorities in the area lie gangs in Arkansas by the nhut Airport, when It. was for the future is not hard to time he was 20. Due to re- Intended for commerical come by. Boyd is the only tire next July, .he already use. "straight" AID employee on 'has his bags packed, hoping The only American offs- the four-man roster. One other -that--the hassle over foreign cial at Tansonnhut in the is an adviser to the border pa- aid appropriations will evict early Sixties, Boyd became trol police, principally a light him early. from his cruet- Ambassador Frederick mobile counterguerrilla force. bling. yellow-stucco office in Nolting's representative in Another is a liaison officer for this American air base cum one of the early intramural CIA operation in Laos. The market town of northeastern wars in Vietnam. "They (the fourth runs the cornmunica- Thailand. Tom Boyd is tired. Air. Force) used to lend tions center at Namyin, When Boyd is one of the four their jets. I'd go out and tell Boyd goes home, moreover, he employees of U.S. Agency for them how glad we were to won't be replaced. 'International Development see them and that they had Boyd does not believe in a In Ubon. His job is to advise one hour to refuel, eat lunch Communist threat in north- .local officials on - building and be on their way," he re- eastern Thailand. "I've always country roads. "It's kind of members. said that I could put all the like the county highway de- During the 1963 coup Communists in this area in partment back home," he d'etat, Boyd overheard the' the back of a pickup truck. says., And every week he last conversation between That doesn't mean you can't treks .over the two provinces Ambassador Henry Cabot find people to shoot at you if to which he is assigned, Lodge and President Ngo you go stirring things up. But writing poetry in large legi- Dinh Diem. "And It wasn't ;,on can find them in Louis- ble hand on long tablets of all in the Pentagon Papers, iana or Arkansas- too. There -yellow paper to absorb the either," Boyd recalls. ? are plenty of bandits, moon- endless hours in his jeep. That conversation made, shiners and people cutting it Boyd's poetry Is sour. It Boyd an even stauncher legal timber. You go messing often mocks the anti-Con- dove. He tried to thwart mil- munist crusade and slams itary subordination of AID's with them and they'll shoot the military. Boyd builds local assistance programs. you. That's all." -'better bridges than poems. Westmoreland's command You knows' Torn Boyd said,, But both are stolid and hang won. Tom Boyd was exiled stroking his silver Hemingway together. Poetry keeps him to the outback of Thailand. beard and looking over the sane, Boyd says. His -career has idled here pool of scrapers and bulldoz "They say I've got it out ever dace. ers at ' the provIneial work. for the military," he apolo- However, Boyd, like AID 'shop. "The Thais are some of gizes. "That just isn't so. I In Thailand, is far from free the cleverest people I've ever Just don't like bullshit .. , to, Ignore the military and worked with. If we pulled out And ? blowing things up just their priorities. In fact, the tomorrow, they'd make out all to be .blowing them, up is Accelerated Rural Develop- right. Their economy would anathema to me." ..meat. Program of which have some setbacks, but they Little vletortes Boyd Is a part Is 'basically need that. I don't agree with a counter insurgency, as much lot of Americans that the Thai ? Boyd sometimes wins lit- a part of the American re- , has just got his hand out. He's tle victories. Recently he gionwide effort to defeat got his hand out because was able to. persuade the Air communism as Ubon Air" we've got ' our ' pocketbook Force not to post pictures of Base from where Air Force open. Thai girls reported'to have. e ream oa} y Bt ter tire R letin 000800200001-4 letin gal der' 1i ~~ta la~ioeiaLO$kll7?'r ~p~wrl~~' boar rd t e ase naan. Boyd, whether he fully. Tom Boyd is going home. Inntf STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 CHICAGO, ILL. SUN-TIMES M - 536,108 S - 709,123 1871 Klong song The "coup within a coup" in Thai- land is about as confusing as trying to find one's way around Bangkok's ' ,network of klongs, or canals, without a guide or a map. But it does seem that all the Pentagon's money and all the CIA's men couldn't put democracy to- gel ier again in that beautiful country. This is the third political setback for the United States in Southeast Asia in the past six weeks. First, 43,000 Amer- ican dead and untold treasure resulted in the re-election of South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu on Oct. 3. Then, after turning Cambodia into a battlefield, the national assembly was suspended on Oct. 20. And now Thai- land,' where the military has ex- tinguished parliamentary democracy. When will we learn that the only way to ensure self-determination for a people is to keep our hands off their, apolitical processes? J Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL DAILY wor-I Approved For Releatej94jp3/04 : CIA-RDP80-01 CIA rnuscii g in on T h i ousi aessinen - BANGKOK - The manager of Thai Airways has complained to the U.S. Embassy here that Air America, the Central Intelligence Agency's owned and operated air line, has been picking up passengers inside Thailand and thereby competing with the Thai airline. Prasong Suchiva, 'manager of Thai Airways, said his line had the sole ri ht' to pie's up domestic passengers in Thailand. Air America is used mainly for transport of war materiel and personnel for the U.S. war.of aggression in Indochina. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATII roved For Release~ f1 /WCIA-RDP80- _27SEP1971 $y D.E. Ronl, l-. 'dined in the Moose-Lowenstein proval forTbotiibing is known,. i Special to The ws shtn-ton Post 1report released by the Sy but reliable estimates- place it at perhaps less than 20 'per VIENTIANB, Sept. 26 mington Senate subcommittee , country s area. V.S. bombing in most of Laos' on U.S. Security Agreements cent of the ip no longer subject to prior 1and Commitments Abroad on "After-action" reports are approval by the U.S. embassy; Aug? 3. That report, widely re- now reviewed daily and map- iii . Vientiane, according to' garded as authoritative, out. plotted by the bombing offi- Anierican government sources. 1lined earlier` changes. in.U.S., cer, according to the govern- operations n Laos, lneludiiig' 1went sources. He sets aside Instead, final say In the bombing; those he finds "suspicious," re choice of most targets has viewing the questionable tar- Force's shifted tactical' hthe ea headua quartersAir~ though According there to the were report, al- prevali- vets weekly and requesting ae- graphs of those still q . at Udorti Thailand, these dated targets in Laos, or rial 1)hotoL sources say. The prinipal ex- "free-fire zones," most targets 1believed fiuestionable. ceptions are major. populated 1required prior approval from Photographs are. routinely rareas of Laos and targets zctja the U.S. embassy here after 1provided, the sources say, a.l- being proposed by a commit though there is no means of the sources. China, according to the r tee meeting at Udorn Airbasc, {checking thier authenticity. .In most-other cases, the cm- Thailand. 11 The 'sources also say' fihat bassy reviews the targets only Under the old method, the every U Si overflight of Lao list of. targets was previewed tian territory. is reported to after bombing, .they say, by by a junior foreign service of- the embassy in Vientiane, in- checking "after-action" reports' ficer and P. U.S. Air Force ser- 'eluding those over the do Chi from Udoru. geant in Vietiane under ad. 11linlt "trail. Eml,a~sy1- spokes- The sources say that this ap- visement of a member of the men have ceneastentty denied pears to be a major bombing-? embassy's air attache office, in the past that such informa- policyshift in Laos, although usually the same office who tion is available to them, di- embassy spokesmen 'in Vienti ane deny knowledge of such a shift in targeting methods or policy. There has been no pub- lic announcement of any shift in policy in recent weeks. Reports that there has been a major change In -bombing policy in Laos follow contin- ued reports of bitter disputes at higher echelons over tar- get-selection methods and de- lays in decisions affecting 'op- era(tions in this country. J i attended the committee meet reefing newsmen's questions sings at Udorn. to Saigon. - The "bombing officer," as IntrQductjon of forward air he came to b-_ known, could guides ; as an '."important ele-? delete targets proposed for ment in b o m b-targeting - bombing or, in special cases, 1 guides lead airplanes to tar ,pass the decision upward ink gets from the ground - is' the embassy for higher ap'; seen here as an adjunct to any ~nrava_l. ` I justification for the reported The._-Udorn targeting com-!. new system. mittee Is composed of repre- Having a man on the ground sentatives from the ambassa- directly ousel ;-ing a target and dor's office in Vientiane, mil- evaluating its military ~,ignifi- itary attaches from Vientiane, canoe theoretically makes the the Central Intelligence/ (rules of engagement more' Agency- and U.S. Air ForLd {foolproof. Tactical and operation quar- ter's- of the -American com-' mand, Including the U.S. Air Force and the Central Intelli- ,gene Agency, have long con- tended that they need greater decision-making authority for quick ?and decisive response to targets of opportunity which, they say, under the previous system often managed to slip away. Previous _ practice was, out- headquarters in Saigon and l Udorn? As reported by. Moose-Low- enstein, however; the majority Sources say that the Udorn of forward air' guides are of targeting committee remains Thai origin with the remain- functional, but that .it is no' der professional Lao soldiers. longer required to submit all Both groups; according to .argets to Vientiane for prey- Westerners who have talked alidation since. it now has au- with them, seem unclear in thority to bomb in most cases, their attitudes toward the dis- No 'area-size limitation. of tinctions between military and Laos requiring specific. ap-, civilian targets. Approved'For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R0008002000'01-4 STATINTL tYs'r ,r;: Approved For Release 2 1, -r.7it". w t r, 1 `' G i ~ P80-01 UG 1971 By George W. AshwoAh Staff correspande-itt of The Christian Science I7onitor army troops of Thailand, asked to accept special assignment in Laos, which they can refuse. They are in all-Thai battalions with Thai officers. Washington The Nixon administration is taking heavy gambles in its handling of the war in Laos. On the domestic scene, the administra- tion is risking deepening troubles with Con- gress and supplying ammunition to critics as it directs the war in Laos with debatable regard for congressional dictates. And, in Laos itself, the administration has decided to take unprecedented steps in pros- ecuting the war that may have devastating impact on the future of Southeast Asia. At specific issue is the use of so-called "irregulars" from Thailand to fight with the Royal Lao Army and other irregular forces. The State Department, which just weeks ago refused to talk about the matter at all, either with the press or the Congress, now has sent representatives to Capitol Hill to. tell more and is steadfastly maintaining that the Thai forces are volunteers. Options t'Pducetl? Whether the forces are indeed volunteers or not is important because, through amend- ments, Congress has been steadily whittling away at presidential latitude in the war zone. Sen. J. V.I. Fulbright (D) of Arkansas got approval last year for an amendment forbidding the use of U.S. funds to pay for troops of other nations fighting in Laos. 'Loopholes might allow such activities if the -payment of such troops were tied into the Vietnamization process. However, the State Department--has as- sured Congress that the fighting along the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which might help Viet- namization, is not related to the fighting in the north of Laos, which involves the' Thais. Tints, the administration is arguing that the Thais are volunteer irregulars, not fall- ing under congressional strictures. The problem 'is that nobody really believes this argument. It is well known in the White House, State Department, Defense Depart- pent, and the Central Intelligence Agency that the Thai Government has agreed to provide the troops, and the U.S. is picking up the tab. h` st lgnmeait op tioital There is even a Thai general (a lieutenant general, according to other sources here in Washington) directing their activities. The' Thai troops are supervised and trained in Thailand and paid for fully in Laos by the Central Intelligence Agency. One source in Washington said, "They are regular Thai troops, and we are breaking the law. Congress may now try to limit funds. Even if they did, however, I doubt that would stop us." .Jlit'ilt13'. v es13?.uated Sen. Stuart Symington (D) of Missouri has offered an. amendment to the military- procurernentbill that would limit direct and indirect military and economic assistance to Laos to $200 million a year. This would not include funds spent to bomb the Ho Chi Minh Trail and other nearby areas. The administration clearly does not approve of the proposal, because, it is fairly clear, much more is now being spent. Senator Symington estimates military and economic aid and support spen-.ling for Laos and Cam- bodia together at more than $1 billion an- nually. A Senate Fcreign Relations Commit- tee staff report estimates the partial costs in Laos during the last fiscal year at '284.2 minion, including military and economic aid, plus CIA e:cpenditures. ? This infighting between elements of Con- gress and the administration doesn't appear likely to let up soon, what with the admin- istration desire to play the war by its own, not congressional, rules, plus the advent .of the, political season, plus the continua- tion of antagonisms already at play.. Adding to the difficulties for the administration is evidence that old-line stalwarts on the hill are becoming more and more unwilling to back the administration completely, lest they develop their own credibility problems. The administration has come to the con- clusion:that the only way to safeguard Laos is to get the Thais involved in the rescue attempt. - While this approach may help save the day militarily, it may have long- range political implications with the Thais now more deeply involved in the quest for any eventual settlement. To help clear the air, D. E. Ronk, who / writes for the Washington Post, went to ask some Thai soldi truth of tldilte 4$',?001/03/04: CIA=RDP80-016018000800200001-4 Ronk, he reports, that they are regular pHILRDEI.FHTA, PA. BULLETIN Approved For Release 2 634,371 S _ 701,743 AU G 11 % ill Peril -to Nixo i Trip See n 11110TJ614L CIA-RDP80-. 0u.M O ``~ s # c5,7if~y~V Y id f~i'~:WF 3 lLro . By ItAY I OSEL'EY Bulletin Washington Bureau Washington - A fon-ner State Department official sa;d today the Government is con- cealing the full extent of U.S. '?military and intelligence oper- ations on Taiwan (Formosa) from Congress and the Ameri- can public. Such operations, directed against mainland China, must cease if President Nixon's forthcoming "journey for peace". to Peking is to suc- ceed;- said Allen S. Whiting, chief China specialist in the State Department from 1962 to 1966. ? Whiting, now a professor at the University of Michigan, testified at a hearing on China policy conducted by- the con- gresional Joint Economic Conjmittee. , Quotes From Documents f -.--- ffi ial documents o c I ts , , ....... ano news ,epo -- settlement of the outlined a variety of alleged a peaceful U.s. intelligence activities in Taiwan problem by the Na- support. of Chinese Nationalist tionalists and Com-nunists forces. on- Taiwan;-.that .have and lead to continued military Allen S. Whiting in Taiwan, and some Nation escalation on both sides. alist forces " have served se.- "Only a convincing and' cretly in South Vietnam. credible reversal of our mili- -Nationalist China has re- tary-intelligence- use of Tai ceived "a steady stream of wan can lay the basis for con- cut-rate weapons out of the + kpil " e fidence necessary to make mammoth Vietnam stoc President Nixon's 'journey for and sane deliveries have peace' a successful reality," been "unauthorized, uncon- he said trolled and often unknown to The Nixon Administration ` the Congress." was reported recently to have - ordered a halt to clandestine activities, including U.S. spy plane flights-over China, to avoid upsetting plans for Mr. Nixon's trip. - In his testimony, Whiting cited these examples of covert activities allegedly supported by the U.S. against China: STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 come to light over the last 20 years, and said: "In sum, there is a credible case that overt and. covert U.S.-Chinese Nationalist activ- ities have aroused Chinese Conirnunist security concerns, resulting in heightened mili- tary deployments toward .and across China's borders. This activity, in turn, .has been used to justify increased American and allied military investment throughout Asia to guard against the _so-called Chinese Communist aggres- sive threat." Whiting said a complete as- sessmant of U.S. involvement with tile .Nationalists has been seriously hampered by secre- cy and censorship. "Certainly Peking has known more of what has been going on than has Washing- ton, or at least the legislative branch of -our government,'.' he said. May Block Settlement Whiting said U.S. covert ac- - 'The Nationalist' airline Civil Air Transport (CAT), gon Papers as owned by. the Central Intelligence Agency, operated from bases in Thai- land in the 1950s ;to ferry sup- plies to guerillas in northern Burma, Laos, Tibet , and China's Yunan Province. China Air Lines (CAL), another :apparent cJ oper- ation, provided planes- and -. pilots to Vietnam and Laos and admitted involvement in "clandestine intelligence oper- ations." = A C1A ine called Ai f/ Asia is headquartered in Tai- . U.S. Rangers have STATINTL Approved For Release 2 4 1 b 51`A-RDP80- aeL 31,14 Val 1_11 Thai@ Laos. f The Thai soldiers agree with By D: E. Ronk ` . - ~ o. Cheng. At Long Cheng, the press reports that these IS at unit was engaged in defense l i L . n aos, of that headquarters. The VIENTIANE, Laos, Aug. 8 least one Thai genera -Than soldiers -serving with) using the code flame hat Caw. %1'hais fought in one "heavy" is is the equivalent of John -,the CI~i supported irregular ` ThDoe. The Thai troops say he is battle in a sector call "Sky- ?forces in Laos say they are ' line" by U.S. personnel. ;regular . army troops of Thai 3 1C nt general. eland, asked to accept special Code ode names are frequently Shortly before the fall of g and for Thai troops in the Bolovens Plateau in south- used by ,assinment in all Thai battal- ions. Laos. reliable sources in Thai- ren Laos to North Vietnairiese Their assertion contradicts a! Land say that until recently all, forces last May the Thai bate Senate Foreign RelationsI wounded Thais treated ill flee talion was flown to Ubon Air ~bonirnittee staff report made U.S. hospi`al at Udorn Airbase.i Base in Thailand then to Paksc, where twere air- _ :public last week. The report, were listed as John Doe One,l lifted to the they vicinity of r-Ba' prepared by. Committee Two, T ianr1 Thai irreg lays an e a e t s he Al fi f th r o e t eoate V:;ti:ud VIV5ed.1 doors Issort time, tuc k regions of Laos, plus Thai tir to a,;,:?a:+r in the Congresiib.lal report produces official figures'' Wars ocrating main') in the' Record tcll:orrow. to document th4 steeply rising strategic Plain of Jars in North costs of the Laos war since 1993. Laos. Most Exact Figures For the fiscal year 1972 which The t'xact number of the Tahi forces is deleted from the report 1' or the I%nihic record, the began July , 1, the overt military by c 1 23-page report toda ' 111ana es to assistance' program alone is to } adminitration censors: But ` b` } cost $252.1 n11111on. Sen. J. William Fulbright, chair- give the most enact figures to man of the Foreign Relations date on the cost of the secret C1linzse Double Committee, after reading the uu operation, but overall totals still censored report, on June 8 put are obtained only byputting-to- The report also finds that the number of Thais at 4,800. gether bits and pieces of what Chinese participation in Laos, the administration has. allowed along the road from the Chinese Long Negotiations through censorship. border into north central Laos, .. They ersion made public today follows five weeks of intensive -negoitations between the authors of the report, James G. Lowen- stein and Richare M. Moose, and three representatives of the ex- ecutive branch--one each from the State Department, Defense Department, and Central Intelli- gence Agency. t is. the first time that CIA activities in Laos have been con- firmed and given some. detail publicly. The report states that the Lao p g irregulars-called BG units after. representatives - that makes, lean money and Lao and Thai tth F I/ .1r rench nae, bataillons guerriers-"are part of the ir- re g u I a r forces which are trained, equipped, supported, advised, and, to a great extent, In addition, Secretary of State William P. Rogers said June 15 that the total U.S. expenditures -in Laos in fiscal 1971 - exclu- sive of bombing - was $350 mil- lion, not $284.2 million. That makes an additional $65.8' million spent. - Committee sources say part of that $95.8 million went for addi- ional and unexpected expendi- i tures after the staff was iiii manpower, "most observers in Laos say that from the military organized by the CIA." These forces, the report con- tinues, have become the "cutg ing edge" of -the Lao military forces, far more active and effi- cent than the 60,000-man Royal Lao Amry. `Encouraging Sign Sen. Stuart Symington, chair. man of the security subcommit- tee which sent Lowenstein and Moose to Laos for 12 days, April 22 to May 4, said it was "an tive rhra e46Fo ' rr.. that much of what the -United For instance, a key passage has more than doubled in two a lists a total- of $204.2 million as year's. Up from 6,000 men; the the total U.S. expenditure in Chinese force is now estimated Laos in the fiscal year ending ?by U.S. intelligence at between, June 30 -exclusive of bombing 1;4,000 and 20,000 men. ' costs. That $284.2 million, the Since November 1970, the re= report says, is made up of "an port says, the Chinese, besides estimated $162.2 million in mill--. improving previous road con- tary assistance, $52 million in struction, have installed eight the AID program (economic) small-arms firing ranges usu- and $(deleted) spent by CIA ex- ally associated with ground gar- elusive of the Thai irregular risons, plus antiaircraft guns, costs." , raising the total to 395. ? By school-boy mathematics The report says that, despite. uncontested by administration : the hu e ex enditures of Amer- point of view the situation there is growing steadily worse and the initiative seems clearly to be in the hands of the enemy." Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 Approved For Release 2001/03/04. CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL 'CHICAGO, ILL. SUN-TIMES b4 - 536,108 - 709,123 -jut311911 NGTON - Sen. Ad!ai E. Stevenson III (D-Ili.) said Friday that the State Depart-. Ym e n t has advised China against admitting any senators or congressmen Prior to Presi- dent Nixan's visit, He felt "sure" Peking would comply. Stevenson indicated support for the State Department pol- icy and saici he had passed the word to Pc?i;i;ig tat lie did not think it would be "appro-. priate" for him to visit China il.after Mr. Nixon's trip. i-The senator applied for a visa a few hours before the l resident made his surprise )u1y 15 announcement that he plans to go to China before next May. To tall:to t A-' Stevenson called ti prc _s con- ference to make a formal an- nouncement of his plans to take a.25-day trip to Asia and t h e Soviet Union starting Wednesday. His Asian stops will be Kong Kong, Thailand, South Viet- nam and Japan. Stevenson said he intends to concentrate on political and economic, rather than mili- tary, problems. However, he said he will discuss the war in Laos with officials of the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency at the CIA Headquarters at Udorn in .northern Thailand. In Saigon, he. said he hopes to see President Nguyen Van Thieu, Vice President Nguyen Cao Icy and Gen. Duong Van (Big) Mirg, who, with Ky, is threatening to challenge Thieu in next October's presidential election. 'A special interest' Stevenson said he has "special interest" in the politi- cal scene in South Vietnam since he fears, after an in- vestment of W,OG.O American lives and $200 billion, the U.S. invo!vetrtent will end in what is "perceived to be a croced election (with) a U.S.-dictated outcome." Stevenson said he intends to enter the Soviet Union from thv east, stopping in Siberia at Khabarvsk and Irkutsk before going on to Moscow and Lenin- grad. He expressed the hype of arranging a meeting with Prime Minister Alexei N. Kos- ygin and other high Soviet offi- cials. He is scheduled to return directly from Russia to Chi- cago or Aug. 20. He will be ac- companied by Thomas Wag- ner, his administrative assis- tant, and John Lewis, director of the Center for East Asian Studies at Stanford Univer-. sity. 'f ''1{ r 1' 431r~~ t (( 1.0 7 0 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL Approved For Release llV O4~. CIA-RDP80-01 STATINTL 29 JUL 1971 Thai in L~o@ Washington Post Staff Writer Sen. Clifford P. Case (R- was between the use of the N.J.) charged yesterday that regular overseas Military and there is "glaring Inconsisten- sistance drawn from the De- ?y" In the Nixon administra funds f e n s e Department budget, tion's explanations of U.S. called "Military Assistance, financing of Thai troops in Laos. Case said he believes that the administration is violating legislation which "forbids the use of Department of Defense money for funding foreign mercenaries in Laos" The Stele a n d Defense de- h partments disagreed. T eyiiwhich, as you know, is funded said the 1970 legislationtcited llthrough the Department of - Lalrf's: coniment5 "a tha point in the lengthy hearings, not MASF." It is "norma V--- -- tinned, for the Committee and' the Department each to make their own corrections iii "the unofficial draft transcript .. for accuracy and clarity." Con- gress "is, of course, fully aware: of the MASF program," said the spokesman, and Laird's re- marks were "reviewed" to as- sure that they were ",under- stood" in the proper context. A .State Department spokes- man .,said that Congress, in 966, set up the MASF pro 1966," gram for use of Defense De- partment.iunds for Laos, Thai- land and Vietnam. Case said yesterday that "the fundamental issue re- mains of the public's and the Congress' right to know what Is happening In the 'secret war' in Laos." Case produced a letter yes- terday from David M. Abshlre, Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations,; dated July 15. It said:. "Support for these [Thai] Irregulars is supplied under the Lao military aid program by Case would bar the ran ,Defense budget at 'military fer by Thailand of U.S: sup-, ~rlssistance, Service Funded' plied military assistance to an- ? other country. But in the case i (MASF). of Laos, the departments Case contended that this claimed, the legislation per- statement conflicts witl) mitted the use of Defense De- Laird's responses to his ques- partment funds for "Thai vol- tions on June K. Ile asked unteers who are operating in Laird then if the "Military ld b " Irregular guerrilla units in Laos under the command of the Royal Lao Armed Forces. Case recalled yesterday that; be stated on May 20 that he bad learned "from Govern. ment sources that there are four to six thousand Thai J troops in Laos and the U.S. Government - through the CIA is paying for them." "I stand by that statement," Case said yesterday, and "I am glad we now have, a better idea, of where the money is coming, from:' Case claimed that new in- formation supplied to him "di- rectly contradicts testimony given by Secretary of Defense [Melvin R.) Laird on June 1.4 before the Senate Foreign Re. iationiE Committee." ? State and Defense coun- tered yesterday that there is "no 'inconsistency." This was the latest In a se- 4! n. utes during the e wou Assistance Program used "for regular or irregular Thai troops in Laos," or if that financing "comes from somewhere else." Laird re- plied; "That is correct. The ;Military Assistance Program will not fund that program." Laird later 'repeated the dis- claimer. Senate sources yesterday said that in another exchange, Case asked: "Would the fund- ing for Thai troops in Laos fall under the international security program." Laird re- sponded: "There Is no pro- gram in our department which finances such a. program." But in the transcript as amended by the Defense Department, these sources said, Laird's, answer was changed to state: "There is no such program in our Department's request for international security -assist- ance" \''hen asked.for explanation of that change, a Defense De- partment spokesman yester- day said that the subject of Laird's public testimony was. "the international security as-? res o p Indochina war in which con- gressmen expressed the be- lief that one avenue of funds had been blocked off, only to find that funds had been drawn from' another category. ar t 'SKW041: Nase ldbly 164: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 M i.2 MIRA D STATINTL Approved For Release 2Qg Qf) IA-RDP80-01601 .STATINTL Cli 711 fit'l By SAUL FRIEDr.fAN Herald Y!eshin,ion bureau WASHINGTON -- The Central Intelligence Agency has built clandestine armies numbering 100,000 in Laos, .Thailand, and Cambodia, an expert on Southeast Asia told a congressional panel Tuesday. "It's the CIA's foreign le- gion," said Fred Eranfnian, a former member of the Inter- national Volunteer Services and a free-lance reporter in Laos. The armies, controlled and 1 a i d for by the CIA; iiralifian said,. include na- tive' ?tribesmcn, Thais, Na- tionalist Chinese -and other. Asians. Their job is to ha- rass the population and troops in Communist-con- troled areas of Indochina, ex- cept North Vietnam.- Presum- ably . they would continue their fighting with American supplies and money after American forces are with- drawn, he said. BRANFi1;AN'S charges were the closest thing to hard news at the opening of a three-day seminar on the Pentagon papers, sponsored by 17 members of Congress. The generally repetitive dis- cussion shoved that the leak of the Pentagon papers them- selves is-a difficult act to fol- low. Rep. John Dov, (D., N.Y), chairman of the three-day event, said that Daniel Ells- berg would join the group today. Ellsberg, -one. of the authors of the . 47-volume study, has ' acknowledged passing portions of the docu- Rep. ow . heads pr:neZ lnent to the press, for which he has been indicted by a federal grand jury. Only one author of the Pentagon Papers, N'T42 I'll 11 Gurtov of Santa Monica, ap- peared at the conferenc9 Tuesday. But he added little to what is already kno ri _n. GURTOV, WHO last month was forced to resign as a researcher at the Rand Corp. because of his anti-war sentiment and his association with Elisberg, .told the panel that almost no-one is govern- ment had read the Paatagon papers, including, the man who commissioned t h c nr; former Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, until they were published in the press. He noted, in response to a question,. that Cie Pentagon e study shows the intclligcnce /V tnamese people, by analysts of the CIA, but not Y which he meant the Commu- the field operatives, "ia a nis*s and the Saigon re; ire. good light " The CIA analysts, he said, Tran Van -Dinh, former South Vietnamese ambassa- dor to the United States, tracedAincrican involvement In his country from May 1854, when Marines landed there to free an iinprisQned French missionary. "I DON'T plead for Arriri- cans to understand the Viet- namese," he said. "Ameri- cans ? s li o u 1 d understand America first. In 1945, when we thought we won our rode. pendence by defeating the Japanese, we believed in this country and that it would help us. 110 Chi Minh had faith in America. But we didn't understand about your Indian wars, and the suppre.- sion of the revolts in the Philippines. In the past years we have been trying to find out what America is all about, and so far we don't how;" Others at the conference included Anthony Russo, a fora-,& Rind employe now facing contempt charges for refusing to testify about the leak of the Pentagon papers; Noarn Chornsky, ? a linguist whose books on American policies heiped convert Ells- berg, and David Truong, whose father ran second in the South Vietnamese presi- dential elections in 1867 and subsequently was impris- oned. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 questioned basic assump- tions, like the theory that if Vietnam fell to the Comrna- nists the rest of Southeast Asia would fall like doini- noes. They also criticized the effectiveness of American bombing, Gurtov said. "But when their reports, like ethers, challenged basic assumptions," Gurtov said, "they were ignored." Branfman, talking about the CIA's role in Southeast Asia, said it "exercises func- tio.ial control of military op- erations in Laos" and other Southeast Asian countries outside of Vietnarn. In Laos it is conducting a campaign of "terrorism" in Communist held areas. NGO VfNHI Lon;, a South Vietrlarncse now studying at Harvard, said the Pentagon. papers disclose that Ameri- can war planners had no un- eerstanciii:g of the Vietnam- ese pople, their aspirations, problems, and -nationalism. "For there the Vietnamese didn't exist except as Com- munists or ... anti-Commu- nists," he said. And he suggested that ad- ministrative overtures to mainland China in hopes it would help impose a settle- ment of the war on North Vietnam indicates that the United States still does" not understand that any :.bide- meat "must come with th STATINTL ' 1i1~`I YORK, .I E Approved For Release 20a11fl,V V CIA-RD Loop-_r Acts to Force 'C.I.A. to epori 10 Con gi'cgs By DAVID E. I:USENBAUM much better position to make documents dealing with opera-jaside resolutions seeiin in-' 5 .alts^ie\e~ YorY7::nes? judgments from a much rnorelltiuns of the United States mill- formation on bombing opera-I WASHINGTON, July 7 informed and broader perspec- tary and the C.I.A. in Laosl Lions in northern Laos and on "- tive than is now possible,' he from Igor to the present the Phoenix program, -which is John Sherman Cooper of Ken- said. The resolution, which was designed to neutralize the ef- fluent one of the most in Senator Cooper, an aide said, sponsored by Representative fect of unx'.erground Vie',cong fluential Senators on foreign considering the le-is Paul N. 1vlcCloskey Jr.,.Repub- operations. The house also setI policy matters, introdueed1had been r , legislation today that wouldllation for three years but dis- lican of California, was set' aside a resolution .see'ting en- closures in the Pentagon papers aside by. a vote of 2G1 to 118.1 other set of the Perrtagoni Agency to give detailed intelli- gence information to Congress regularly. Mr. Cooper, a Republican, said that Congress needed this on United States involvemnnt Critics of the measure con- papers that the Administration; in Vietram had now provided tended that the information was made available to Congress last an impetus. too sensitive to be given to week. The aide referred specified Congress. The supporters of the Iv to C.I.A. analyses during the Following this vote, the tion were, for the most part, kind of evaluation and analysis ,ilohnson Administration that I-louse, without debate, ? set, Democrats opposed to. the war: now available only to the ex-ffull-scale bombing of North - ecutive branch, to partic..pateXietnarn would not be effective policy. Meanwhile, the House re- jected a series of resolutions demanding that the Nixon Ad- in halting infiltration or break- ing the will of Hanoi. Senator Cooper's proposal was supported on the floor by Senator J. W. Fulbright, Decno- rriinistration provide CongressTcrat of Arkansas, the chairman with additional information on of the Foreign Relations Com- United States operations in mittee, and Senator Stuart Laos. Symington, Democrat of Nis- . Two other Senators also of- souri, the only Senator belong- fered proposals relating towing to both the Foreign Rela- the C.I.A. 1 tions and Armed. Services Cont- Senator George McGovern, mittees. Democrat of Sou' ii Dakota; sum htr. Symington said that it gested that exj,enditures andl`was ,,no secret that we on appropriations for the intelli- various committees have not single-line item in the budget. Agency funds are now con- cealed in other items in the budget. Senator Clifford P. Case, Re- publican of New Jersey, said he would offer measures that would prohibit such C.I.A. activ- ites as the funding of Thai troops to fight in Laos. Senator Cooper emphasized in a Senate speech that his proposal was not aimed at any C.I.A. operations, sources or methods, but was- "concerned only with the end result - the facts and analyses of facts." "Congress. would be in a have obtained. "If the proper. committees are not acquainted with what we're doing," b,r. Symington went on, "how we can func- tion properly?" Because Senator Cooper is so influential, it seemed like) that his proposal -would bathe subject of hearings and, per- haps, floor debate this year. A measure of the respect said his views came from Mike Mansfield of Montana, the ma- jority leader. "Anything John Cooper says would be given, the most serious consideration by me," Mr. Mansfield said. Regular Reports Asked Senator Cooper's proposal would require the C.LA.tomake regular (reports to the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services Committees and to the House Foreign Affairs and Armed Services Committees. The agency would also be re- quired to make special reports in response to inquires by these committees. Mr. Cooper said that the agency would have to decide for itself what information to' present to hte committees, but he specified that the data woul. have to be "full and current." There are now ? "oversight" . committees in the House and Senate, composed of senior members of the Armed Services and Appropriations Com- mittes, that review the C.I.A. budget and operations. But 'these committees are not con-1 STATINTL me w- h the s Approved ,04 : CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 ~ar~~te~a~e ~ ~i gathers. In the Mouse debate today, maior fieht came over a STATINTL -Approved For Release 2001/03/6WAMMTFkDP80-01601 .?STATINTL ll .t ITIIn 1ITA7/YE A/l.t/ YS/S OL' 6S/All AFFAIRS Number 366 Pub'ishzci''ayr:"FH;S ASIA LETTER Co. Tokyo Hong Kong Washington Los Ange e STAT1 NTL Dear Sir: THE C.X.A. IN ASIA (II) No intelligence operation in Asia is as wel.l- of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (C.I.A.). led Has that h . ee The annual working budget of the C.I.A. runs over US$600 million. That's justa starter. ou count the cost r if l i y one a a The age'rcY spends far more than that in As Government agencies. For S :: : i w,-;,, othl r ed r ": " . . . per: ow c bc of sore of the instance: n nuclear tests and forei it g or -U.S. Air Force planes are used to mon collect air samples. The agency,. while having its own cryptographers, draws on the Army's corps of 100,000 code specialists and eavesdroppers to.tap Asian communications. . C.I.A. specialists often operate off U.S. Navy ships in the Pacific, i t n ia ?? 1 usually involved in c i e o ---The agency also is privy to information from the Defense Intelligence Agency (D.I.A.) which has a substantial operation of its own. in Asia. The D.I.A. spends from its own budget more than US$1 billion a year reconnaisance planes and keeping satellites aloft. in fl g y Those "satellites allow C.I.A. analysts to know more---from photographs, l . h ves emse taken 130 miles up---about China's topography than do the Chinese t State Department's intelligence section also fee.ds a considerable U S - -Th .. . e - amount of co lfidential data it collects through its embassies, consulates athered tion f g orma s:nd travelling diplomats to the,C.I.A.This includes in by agents of-.the Federal Bureau of Investigotion (F.B.I.) the Justice Department atic missions l di t om p ached to and the U.S."freasury.(Secret Service) oaten at v-v-The C.I:A. also works closely with"the'intelligence services and police forces of the countries considered America's allies in Asia, exchanging information with them. where dbes all the C.I.A.-money go? It funnels out in myriad directions: To..pay for the agency's overt finance "dirty tricks" and other intelligence gathering activities, to . to prop up ousted or failing politicians and to pay for clandestine capers , chological warfare ploys. .. s d other " i f " 1 y p on an ormat disin Despite the C.I.A.'s oft-deserved sinister image, a good deal of its funds are expended on open intelligence gathering operations. These go for subscriptions to newspapers, periodicals and other publications and salaries;"for those who must scan them for intelligence tidbits. It is estimated that more than,.5070 of the C.I..A.'s world-wide intelligence input comes from such overt sources. (An estimated 357. comes from electronic nd-dagger operations.) k-a cl . oa .spying and less than 157. from JAMES BOND-type, An exception is Asia. Approved For Release 2001/03/04 CIA-RDP80-01~ 9,,J Q,Q?A0200001- ? - -- _-_._ ???n'' CR c.UOTATIOH IN WHOL A D PRO U WITHOUT AUTHORIZATION-I F.; STATINTL Approved For Release"CIA-R STATINTL 1 6 JUN 1971 By RiCl-lard E. Ward Second of two articles A rare secret session of the Senate was held at the request of' Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.) June 7 to hear a report on U.S. clandestine- activities in Laos. Following the 'session, Senators Symington and J.W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) openly charged that the uSe of Thai mercenaries, just admitted that same day by the State Department which calls them "volunteers," was violating congres- sional restrictions on U.S. operations in Laos. 'Some -details of the nearly 31/2-hour closed door meeting were given in the June 8 Washington Post in an article by Spencer Rich viho reported: -Symington, who revealed that the administration wants S374 million for military and economic programs in Laos for the 1972 fiscal year (a figure which does not include the S2 billion estimated costs of bombing), said that he wanted the Senate to know the details of "the secret war" before appropriating funds for it. -Of the request, S120 million is said to be ear ?:;. d for funding CIA operations in Northern Laos, including t:.e use of Mco mercenaries from Laos as well as at least 4800 That troops. -A major issue in the secret debate centered upon whether the use of Thai forces was in contravention of the 1970 Fulbright amendment to the 1971 Defense Appropriations Act, signed into ,law by President Nixon Jan. I 1 this year. The amendment barred use of Defense Department funds to support what the Pentagon calls "free world forces" in actions "designed to provide military support and assistance to the government of Cambodia or Laos." -The massive bombing of Northern Laos, which has nothing `to do with the movement of supplies from North Vietnam to the South or Cambodia, was questioned by several senators, including Fulbright and Clifford P. Case (R-N.J.). ;Nixon t h-. lawbreaker After the Senate meeting, Rich reported' that Symington stated:. "My personal opinion is...that the law has been contravened. The amendment said you couldn't spend money to train and put people of foreign.governments into Laos or into Cambodia." That was also Fulbright's view. State Department' sources later said, according to Rich, "that the Thais being used aren't recruited on a government-to-government basis, but were individuals recruited from the borderside Thai population." The Post report obviously left out many details of the Senate discussion, assuming the legislative body got a full account of U.S. activities. Symington's disclosures were based on a report by two staff members of his subcommittee of the Foreign Relations committee, James Lowenstein and Richard Morse, who had recently made an inquiry into Laos. Reportedly the. Symington subcomittee now has a relatively accurate account of U.S. activities in Laos that is more complete than was provided by the administration at secret hearings in As has been previously noted by the Symington suocomittee, the lid of U.S. official secrecy conceals little that is not known by informed journalists or "the other side." Certainly the Pathet Lao knows what is happening in Laos. They are obviously fully aware of the bombings by the'Air Force as well as the array of CIA programs. Although no reliable figure had been released on U.S. spending on its Laotian programs, the Pathet Lao accurately estimated it last summer as greater than 5300 million (again apart from bombing). - - Number of T i%ai troops rrotvi:tg . Concerning the use of Thai troops, the Pathet Lao stated last year that they numbered about 1000 during the Johnson administration (a figure that has recently been corroborated in the press and by Sen. Fulbright)and that the increase in Thai forces was undertaken by Nixon. However, according to the Pathet Lao, the number of Thai troops now exceeds the 4800. figure used hy.Fuibright. ? In April of this year, Prince Souphanouvong, head of the Lao Patriotic Front (Pathet Lao), charged that the number of Thai troops was being augmented by the U.S. Shortly after this, Ashworth reported in the April 17 Christian Science George W. Monitor: "Nixon administration officials have hammered out an agreement with the government of Thailand for sharply increased use of Thai forces in Laos." - Thai troops were previously used in the ill-fated U.S.-backed attempt to hold the Plain of Jars, which ended in an important Pathet Lao victory in February 1970. Presumably the losses then were an element leading to the more formalized agreement for use of Thai troops. Bangkok may relinquish some of its sovereignty to Washington, but not without a price. Thai "volunteer" troops used in South Vietnam were given a bonus by the U.S. considerably augmenting their regular pay while Bangkok received military hardware and other considera- tions from the Johnson administration to agree to use of Thais in Vietnam. There is no reason to assume that Bangkok's price has gone down, more likely it is up. Confirming this, a Senate source has noted that the cost of the mercenaries was high. Symington on June 7 referred to both regular and irregular Thai troops` being used in Laos, so it is possible that part of the deal with Bangkok involves freedom for the CIA to recruit directly in Thailand. Taking all evidence into account, Thai troops in Laos may now number 10,000 or higher. Senators Symington and Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) attacked administration activities in Laos in statements issued a day before the secret debate. Symington emphasized the adrninis- tration furtiveness while Kennedy charged that U.S. military activities in. Northern Laos lacked constitutional authority, which seemed to be implicitly saying that the U.S. was conducting a war against the Laotian people without a declaration of vtitar or congressional authority. October 1969, released after "security" deletions by the adminis- tration in April 1970. What might be called the battle of Laos in We destruction Washington, concerns the attempt by antiwar senators to get U.S. Among the facts to emerge from the recent congressional activities in Laos itself into the public record. Initially and debate is the acceleration of U.S. bombing in Laos, or rather, of perhaps still 'some senators' have been reacting against the the liberated zone since the autumn of last year, anil the p's ' , increased use of B-52s, a plane whose bombing reaches th7 peak administrations deception of themselves along, with the public. 2 . i However, the issue of Laos is now being put forward to oppose of indiscriminate destructiveness. The step up in E 5_ stn ty in administration policy in Indochina as a whole because it so Laos has largely coincided with the accelerated "protective clearly reveals the White House aim of maintaining-if not reaction strikes" being carried out against North Vietnam, and it expanding-the war. This point remains clouded during discus- is quite possible that one of the real purposes of these attacks is .sions focusing on Vietnam because troop withdrawals are still' an effort to prevent the DRV from utilizing its potent aerial aims of U.S. pol ccy vEdf6Fr 'etPe '9W'26'dlaf 6V04 : CIA-RD~P80ir01601 R000800200001-4 I c,r,t;t,tzod - SApproved For Release 2001/03104: CIA-RDP80 876 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -Extens;ois of Remarks '\-June 15, 1971 r world Is made up of Individuals, and. His humane spirit pervades all who know nk that In the individual is where any him, tot me offer my warmest thanks for' of a change or solution must start. It his devoted service and wish him con- stop there, though, because It must tinued personal fulfillment in the future. tually reach the top. For example, if a as is happy he won't mind separating hi tge for recycling, giving away some Food or money, thinking of the oth r before he demands more rights or a-s a bomb. If he is happy he will have icern for other ' people. If everyone did ndividual part in helping to solve such HON. JEROi E R. WALDIE T problems, and took down just one OF CALIFORNIA that wall would be gone in no time. IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES fat is a lot of if's. How can a person be Tuesday, June 15, 1971 ,y so he will want to do his part? As - already said, happiness means different Mr. WALDIE. Mr. Speaker, I would gs to different people, but a full stom- like to include In the RECORD a second a roof over one's head, and a feeling article by Tammy Arbuckle on his recent :ceptance and security among one's peers findings in Southeast Asia which ap- Llly helps. For those of us who are lucky Lgh to have these things already. happi- petered June 7th in t he Washington should be helping others to find them, Evening Star. Happiness Is contagious, and even If I believe it sheds further light on the can't give a person what he needs most, military interests and activities of the rile or a hello can sometimes mean just Thai Army in Laos and the correspond- Luch. Then maybe he will pass that smile Ing role of the United States. e another person. The article follows: ometimes I have to stop to think, and re myself that we, the people of this THAIS IN LAOS IDENTIFIED AS RE.GUI.ARS Let, are not going backwards-or be- (By Tammy Arbuckle) lug more violent, egotistical, and antag- VIENTIANE,- LAOS.-Despite official state- tic. I always manage to convince my- ments that the Thai forces serving in Laos that we aren't although sometimes it ap- are volunteers without official sanction from ?s that way because it's always the nega- the Bangkok government, informed sources and not the positive things that we hear here say they are regular Thai army troops. at. The number of people who truly care The sources said "the troops sent here keep at other people is groving, and man is 'their That army rank and salary as well as nning to spread his concern over a wider le of humanity. We usually care about family and friends and we want them to sappy, but as the years go by there are 'e and more of us who care about the Ile in our city, state, county, and world Individuals. By caring. I mean wanting i person to be happy and secure and, Lting this bad enough to do something at it. If each inhabitant of this earth d about the rest of mankind as indi- ials our brick wall would disappear, and ape that we can destroy it before it crushes the salary paid by the Americans. . Some Thai units come here in a group, said the sources, adding that Thailand's 940th Battalion presently is garrisoned on Hill 1063 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 U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, the sources just like to see everyone here really said. spy and able to show it. Sometime-try The only voluntary aspect of their duty Is ng HI to someone you don't know-take that Thai soldiers are anxious for assignment the mask for awhile-really feel the to Laos because of the financial benefits. le you are giving everyone-forget your Officials of the United States and Thailand blems-make someone else happy-and'if governments insist the That troops in Laos, can't do that at least you can be happy* numbering at least 3,200, are volunteers. Jell, I know what I can do to make every- Thal officials, in particular, claim the troops happy now---that is to end this speech have no official sanction from Bangkok. ;hat we can all get out of this wind. Have (Even the number of troops is in dispute. appy day tomorrow! and make it happy As it result of U.S. Senate Inquiries into the someone else too. The world is only what operation, the figure of 4,800 troops presently make it-so let's make it happy! Is given in Washington as the number of 'NIVERSARY CONGRATULATIONS TO FATHER WALSH Thai troops on duty in Laos.) The Lao military attributes the official That 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 HON. PETER W. RODINO, JR. light in Laos. (which remained in the salve place for five years while men were rotated) was overrun when North Vietnamese tanks broke through the neutralist Lao troops. Following this. attack, In which at .least 90 Thais were killed, Bangkok insisted on having That troops protect the That gull- ners. Thai gunners also were sent to Long Chong, 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 Chong. Recently That troops have served on the Bolovens Plateau In southern Laos and on operations against Route Seven, the main Hanoi resupply route to Its troops in north- ern Laos.. All troops under American control who need 'ineciical help are sent to Thailand di- rectly, 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 three years ever 8,000 killed In action. The Lao army claims Its under strength and tunable to substantially help Vang Pao because it's spread the length of Laos, fac- ing the enemy. This claim, however, is sus- pect. Hundreds of unemployed young men roam around Vientiane In motorbikes. When Gen. Koupralsith Abhay. the Vientiane military boss, tried to conscript them, he found they are the sons of influential Lao- tians who protested conscription and forced Kouprasith to cease his activities. Also, several thousand Lao troops 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 said that Laos still is woefully short of manpower as well as good field officers and some military dis- cipline. Therefore, Lao needs help from its ethnic neighbors, the Thais. - The Lao however, don't want their neigh- bors in the western provinces.of Champas- sac and Sayaboury, which the Thais covet nor in Mekong River towns where the That propensity for the spoils of war may match that of Saigon troops in Cambodia. There- fore, they are In the mountains of northern Laos where the Thais can do the most fight- Ing and the least mischief. - HORTON PRAISES MRS. DONALD LOETZER FOR- HER AFFIRMA- TION OF AMERICA - HON. FRANK HORTQN or NEW YORK IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, June 15, 1971 OF NEW JERSEY Thai troops have been fighting in Laos Mr. HORTON. Mr. Speaker, during since late 1964. The first That unit in Laos these times of protest by our Nation's ' TATIVES N THE HOUSE OF REPRESErT was a battery of 155mm howitzers based near outh, the very philosophies upon which Tuesday, June 15 , 1971 Ban IChaf village }this country was established are being and in men the thePlain of n en were re sent Jars, sepa- / Mr. RODINO. Mr. Speaker, congratu- rately offers rs an to guerilla units run by the CIA. V Cluestioned. At times, anti-American ions are In order for Father Gerald On Feb. 1, 1967, a reporter met one of sentiments and acts seem to overshadow . Walsh who celebrated the 25th an- these Thais at NAM Bac, Lao fortress 40 positive feelings for this country and our eersary of his ordination to the Holy miles southwest at Dien Bien Phu. The Thai leader's goals. iesthood on June 1, 1971. Father Walsh said he was a captain in the Thai army and There is little doubt that we must do turned to St. Mary's Church in Nutley, - came from Bangkok. what we can to. foster respect for and In coni- J. where he had spent his early priest- an American cin was for r understanding of this country among " god to perform a special mass with St. payment, mantlintng, he his unit saidand d w was ressp clothes p onsible e f people of all ages, especially among our said. There were at least 20 Thais with the cap- youth. Feeley Msgr John J any's pastor . , . . Father Walsh Is an ardent contributor tarn at Nam Bac and Site 217. Concerned about the destiny of this 1 11 both his parish and his community. On June 25, 1969, the That Artillery unit country and about tine young peop e w o Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP8Q-01601-R000800200001-4 STAT$Tr oved For Release 26? F`iO?JO : fA-R 10.JUN1971 V G U1'r 1 E R S, BA NGICO !NS!S i-S 811 US7 OR) ri O-)j. ccll S, By TAMMY.AHBUCKIE particular, claim the troops in the same. place for five Special to The star have no official sanction from years while men were rotated) VIENTIANE, Laos - De- Bangkok. was overrun when North Viet- spite official statements that (Even the number of troops namese tanks broke through the Thai forces. serving in is in dispute. As a result Of. the neutralist Lao troops. Laos are volunteers without U.S. Senate' inquiries into the' ' ' Following this attack, in official sanction from the operation, the figure of 4,000, which at ]cast 30 Thais were B a n g k o k government, in- troops presently ? is given in ' killed, Bangkok insisted on formed sources here say they Washington as the number of having Thai troops protect the are regular Thai army troops. Thai troops on duty in Laos.) ..Thai gunners. Thai gunners' The sources said the troops The Lao military attributes also were sent to Long Chong,' sent here keep their Thai the official Thai position to further south, but this time army rank and salary as well corruption. They say only cer- several hundred some as the salary paid by the taro members of the Thai gov- sources say 800 - Thai infan- Americans. - ernment: are pocketing pay- trynicn were sent to protect ? ' Some Thai units come here ments from the United States,- the artillery. in a group, said the sources, so the entire Thai cahirct may Part of these units now are adding that Thailand's 940th not be informed of the entire. at Fire Base Zebra northeast ? Battalion presently is garri- U.S. arrangement for Thais to of Long Chong. soned on Hill 1663 west of Ban fight in Laos. Recently Thai troops have Na on the southwest rim of the Thai troops have been fight- served, on the Bolovens Pla- Plain of Jars in northern Laos. in-, in Laos since late 1961. The teau in southern Laos and on 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 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. dirties in Laos, the sources On Feb. 1, 1967, a reporter 1said. However, these units re- met one of those Thais at NAM main part of the Thai army on Bac, Lao fortress 40 miles loan to the U.S. Central Intelli- southwest at Dien Bien Phu. gonce Agency, the sources The Thai said he was a cap- said. taro in the Thai army and The only voltuitary aspect of came from Bangkok... . their duty is that Thai soldiers An American in civilian are aasious for assignment to:. clothes was commanding his 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.. ... . Laos because of tike financial unit and was responsible for The Thai role, according to benefits. ' payment, he said. U.S. officials is to make up for Officials of the United States There were at least 20 Thais heavy losses among the Meo and'1`lhailaud governments in- with the captain at Nam Bac tribesmen of Gen. Vang Pao, gist the Thai troops in Laos,, and Site 217. who have been fighting since numbering at least 3 100, are On June 25, 1V59, the Thai 1030 against the North Viet- volunteers. Thai officials, in Artillery unit (which remained namese, suffering in the last three years over 8,000 killed in action. . The Lao army claims. it's under strength and unable to substantially help Vang Pao because it's spread the length of Laos, , facing the enemy. This claim, however, 1s ,sus- Peet. Hundreds of'unernployed yotutg men roam around Vienttiare on motorbikes. When Gen. Koupraisith Abhay; the Vientiane military boss, tried to conscript them, he found they are the sons of in- fluential Laotians who protest- ed conscription and forced Kouprasith to cease his activi- ties. Also, several thousand Lao troops are not gainfully eni- ployed but act as.bodyguards, chauffeurs, office personnel or are building new villas for Lao, officers. Despite all this, -it may be said that Laos still is woefully short of manpower as well as good field officers and some military discipline. Therefore, Lao needs help from its ethnic neighbors, the Thais.. The Lao however, don't want their neighbors in the` western provinces of Cham- passac and Sayaboury, which the Thais covet nor in Mekong River towns where the Thai propensity for -; the spoils of war may, match that of Saigon troops in,. Cambodia.. There- fore, they' al-6 in the mountains of northern Laos where the Thais can do the most fighting and the least nil,-chief. first Thai unit in Lacs was a operations against Route Sev- battery of 155mm howitzers en, the main Hanoi resupply based near Ban Khay village route to its troops in northern T1_:.. of i_.._ i n the Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-0.001 ROQOaQQ2QQ00.1_-4. Approved For Release 2001103/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 PHILADELPHIA, PA. INQUIRER' ld - 463,503 S - 867,810 QUU9 1971 STATINTLP Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 Approved For Re1eas9j, g%Y4,p3/Q4 : CIA-RDP80-0 ~ JU'"1 iri Says Financing Of Thai Troops There Breaks Congressional Edict BY GENE ols; l Washington Bureau of The Sean Washington, June 7-Senator Stuart Symington (D., Mo.) told a secret session of the Senate today that the administration was violating cong ressional re- strictions by financing Thai mercenary troops to fight in Laos. After 'the three-hour closed ! session, Mr. Symington repeated the charge to reporters, adding i that he intended to introduce. legislation to limit United States expenditures in Laos to $204 mil- lion a year. That amount, be said, is what the administration says publicly it is spending in Laos for mili- tary and economic assistance. Comment Declined Mr. Symington declined to say whether the U.S. was actually spending more, pleading that he .was dealing with classified in- formation. But in a statement released yesterday he said, "Our activi- ties in Laos have been carried out largely in secret, without congressional sanction and out- side the normal appropriations process." Meanvvlfilc, Senator ChiRrd P. Case (R.,. N.J.), who had previously disclosed that the U.S. was financing 4,000 to 6,000 Thai. troops in Laos, said the secret session revealed that the U.S. was spending $100 million a year. more in Laos than Con- gress has specifically - The 4,000 to 6,000 estimate has spice Mr. Case's original disclo- sure been refined to 4,09 by SznatAJj jJ(' r&i (t)., Ark.), ehairniau of the For-' In I,, tions Committee. After- today's session, Sen.tor. Case. said there was no indication that the number of U.S.-financed Thai troops in Laos have been increased beyond the 4,800 level. It appeared that the adminis- tration was relying mainly on this second clause for legislative justification for its operations in I Letter To Kennedy ' T d M A{,e.l,i,.n assistant avi In another development today, / secretary for congressional reia- a State Department spokesman V lions, said recently in a letter to acknowledged that Thai "vollui_ Senator Edward '1?,f. Kennedy teens" are fighting in Laos, add- (D., Mass.) that the operations 1 I re linked to i c o ing that. they are sometimes .called mercenaries. He declined to say how. many there were or how they are fi- nanced. Asked whether the Thai troops in Laos were supported by the U.S. on the same basis as in Vietnam, he replied: "There are no comparable arrange- ments." Witten reminded that Thai troops in Vietnam are paid by the U.S. and provided equip- ment and transportation as well, the spokesman said, "No, ar- rangements are quite different" in Laos. The State Department spokes- man begat his briefing by stat- ing that the U.S. operations in Laos were begun during the Kennedy administration and de- veloped and continued by two succeeding administrations. The "volunteers" in Laos, he -added, are there at the request of prince Souvaima Phornla, theI Laotian prime minister, and 'U.S. support of this program is fully 'consistent with all perti-i nent legislation." s ti .in nor iein a the Vietnam war. "If the North Vietnamese vmre to conquer all of Laos they could divert thousands of their forces now engaged in north Laos to the war against South Vietnam and greatly enhance their position in those areas of Laos bordering on South Viet-: nam from which trey launch at- tacks on U.S. and allied forces)" be wrote. Senator Jacob K. Javits (R., N. Y.) commented after the closed session that the issue was primarily a "legal question" as to what constituted "free world; forces" and whether there was a separate war going on in Laos or whether it had a bearing on the security of U.S. troops in Vietnam. But the session, attended by; about half the Senate, he said, was "useful" in that it again raised the question of what the limits of an undeclared war are. rite Answer To Me ..." "The answer to me is to get out of Indochina," he. said, "then you wouldn't have these questions raised." Most senators emerging from the session said little new inat>r rial had been disclosed. ifils was the seventh secret meeting: held by the Senate in the last five years on a variety of sub- jects. Senator Symington, chairman of the foreign relations subcom- mittee on U.S.' security agree- ments and commitments iabroad, requested the session so that the contents of a special istaff report on Laos could be disclosed. The report was believed to ,contain information pertaining to the depletion of the Meo tribesmen, wwho have carried the brunt of the fighting against Communist forces in Laos, and ;their replacement by Thai mer- cenaries, financed through the CIA. The legislation at issue was, attached by Congress last year, to the 1971 Military Appropria-, tions Act. The amendment, of- fered by Senator Fulbright, ,banned "[lie use of any funds to' :support Vietnamese or other;' free world forces in actions de signed to provide military sup- port and assistance to the gov- ernments of Cambodia and Laos." Thus amendment, however, was modified further in a Sell-. ate-(louse conference committee to state that "nothing contained ;in this section shall be construed to prohibit support or action i-e quired to insure the safe and .orderly withdrawal or -disen- gagement of U.S. forces from 00001-4 2 edged-by the administration. -- -.:-- -. release of American prisoners of to cThe report was also ontain details on B-52 ebomb- ele99e' 2001 %03/04 CIA- RD08 0-k OIkF=0t8>i~ only recently been--ackno,.vl- Approved For Releagg,~(l~~i?Qq'W~OJ/,?t4-RDP80-0 - 41- li 2 JUTE 1971 N, -' f ~'~ t( O lj--- f:l~'( P'A ~~- 1' 1 t~ f1 11 l{ 1 `~ t~ } 'l., 9 1' 11 ~~ fl I! t ti < 1~ it p ; ,l By Charles Meyer Pacific NetvsSeriliec Lon Nol's recent abdication of power in Phnom Penh has once again brought into the spotlight the ina1r whom the CIA has long sought to impose upon Cambodia. Only three months after the coup of March 1970 which overthrew: Prince Norodom 'Sihanouk, most politicians in the. Cambo- dian capital were predicting a short term / for Premier Lou Nol, and naming as his probable successor Son Ngoc Thanh. Son was born Dec. 7, 1908 ih Ky La, South Vietnam, of a Cambodian father and a Vietnamese mother. After attending a French high school, he moved to Phnom Penh in 1937, a functionary in the govern- ment there. The same year he started a nationalist nroup which published the first native language journal, Nagaravatta (Land of the Pagodas). In 1941, French Indochina, still techni- cally ruled by the Vichy government, granted the use of military facilities to the Japanese, in exchange for maintaining French sovereignty over Vietnam, Cambo- dia and Laos. Son immediately became an active collaborator with the Japanese Black Drag on Society, which aimed at overthrow- ipg the French. On the verge of arrest by French authorities in the summer of 19 2, Sonfled to To'.kyo. With defeat imminent, the Japanese abolished the colonial administration in March 1945 and imprisoned all French citizens in Cambodia. A month later Son appeared in Phnom Penh as a Japanese captain, and became minister in charge of relations with the Japanese command. On Aug. 10 a palace revolt inspired by Son and supported by the Kempctai (Japanese po- lice) forced Sihanouk, then king, to confer .upon Son the office of prime minister. Following the collapse of Japanese pow- erg Sihanouk on Oct. 8 secretly delegated a cabinet minister to go to Saigon for the avowed purpose of discussing "certain questions" with the French command. A week later French Gen. Leclerc arrived in Phnom Penh and arrested Son. He was put in the Saigon jail and then sentenced to forced labor for collaborating with the Japanese. Soon, he was sent to France and pint under house arrest. After several royal interventions, Son was pardoned in October 19.51. lie re- turned to Phnom Penh on the agreement that he would abstain from all political activities. lie refused the ministerial port- folio Sihanouk offered to him, but within a few weeks-encouraged by several promi- nent Americans-he revealed clear political intentions. Early in 1952 he began publish- ing Khmer Kr auk (Cambodians Awake!), violating his repatriation agreement with the French. By March he fled the city to rejoin an underground resistance band in northwest Sicmreap province. Ile had, there, only a few hundred men and a radio transmitter. His broadcasts called upon the population to rise up and overthrow colo- nial rule touter the French. Joina 1vi'tn Yh? CIA In November 1953, Sihaiiouk's efforts at influencing the French paid off and Cambodia was granted formal indepen- dence. Son tried to gain some control in the new regime at I'hnom Penh. Unsuccess- ful, he. returned to the armed band in the northwest, where defections during his absence had weakened the ranks severely. His political constituency gone, in'the wake of Frcr,4:'h maneuverings, Son was forced to ally himself with the CIA. In January 1956 the final blow was struck, as government troops attacked his camp near the Thai border killing 108 men and destroying the radio station. Son and a few But Cambodian public opinion remains very unfavorable to Son. The urban youth is violently hostile to him. He therefore continues to live in Saigon, whore he has the solid support of the South Vietnamese puppets and the entourage of U.S. Ambas- sador Bunker. More importantly, he enjoys the loyalty of the Cambodian armies trained by American Special Forces units, who consider him a "spiritual father." Son has also renewed his tics with the Japanese groups which carried him to power in 1945. Representatives from Tokyo consult him on their Indochinese political and economic questions. Son Ngoc Thanh wants to redeem the defeats that impeded his political life, and now anxiously awaits his hour. The CIA, which has backed Son for fifteen years, will be happy to make good his losses. Charles fTeyer was editor.in-dzirf of the maga- lzine Etudes Cambodgierpzes (Cambodian Studies) and Nokor Khmer. From 1957 through 1970 he was a.couQzsclor to the cabinct'ofSihanouk and coatinuecl as such to Lon Nol until Junc 1970. men escaped and entered the service of the T,_--_I-_I- elf A in Although his movenrcnt-now known as the Khmer Scrai (Free Cambodia)--had been crushed, the ?CIA revived it steadily and built it into an army of 5000 ethnic Cambodians. Most of these in en were recruited from Cambodians living in Thai- land and South Vietnam. The mercenary army was based on Thai territory, from which it launched-sabotage missions. Son became a front for these operations and plots, mounted jointly by the CIA and U.S. Army Intelligence in Bangkok and Saigon, against Sihanouk and Cambodian neutral- Jty. The Khmer Scrai, transformed into the "National Liberation Front of Cambodia" (sic), announced on May 15, 1970 its support for the regime which grew out of the. coup'uncler Gen. Lon Nol. Son, how- ever, secretly entered the capital as his supporters began to prepare for a return to power. Lon Nol, who had the full backing of the Pentagon, wasn't about to step down for the CIA's min.' Son had to settle for the post of principal advisor 'to the premier. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 Approved For Release 20g 1/9+i9 -LCIA-RDP80-016 CHARLESTON, 41.VA. GAZETTr1f ~... ~# 719 GAZETTE-MAIL ~. ' 106,775 r. We Pair < Sen. William Fulbright, asked by news- men how many Thai. troops are being // paid by the CIA to fight in Laos, replied: "It's not vey secret. I think it's 4,- 800." Among conclusions to be drawn from this is that the 4,800 Thais are being paid by America to do tho fighting against Communists in Laos because America can't get anyone else to fight, Not even Laotians. Why does America persist in the futile } endeavor? If Asians aren't interested in, preserving their systems against the Communists, the vast treasury of Anmeri- ca isn't big enough to pay them forever. It must be frustrating, too, to the needy of America to learn that $260 million has been paid from the American treasury to Thai troops fighting in Viet-- pain, if fighting is the word. No wonder Americans are turning to isolationism. National leaders who first encouraged America to assume a role in, international affairs didn't envision that role to be paymaster to reluctant allies. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R00080O20OW"- - STATINTL . Approved. For Release 2001103/04: CIA-RDP80-01 f SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.- CHRONICLE M - 480,233 tt AY ~., 4 M: , _-r_-._-. * . * * e ous rr--- ddn RE OSTEROS g n '?`???--"------ ?-L~, 1 toU aa .,...... ...-.. AP (yC for the Americans, and bears no relation to their TAI's Liul~ Army I . 2 6000 Thai troops in Laos, and the United States iand F11101,11 r'ai %,. paying'them through CI'1." ~ R0 [ JF1.{Sly]', General Washington hired a vies in Laos eNcept to help free POWs or facilitate schoolteacher named Nathan Hale to spy on the American troop withdrawals. The committee is cur ,British in Manhattan. It was bad judgment. Hale had rently taking testimony .from two aides recently in no -experience in espionage, as he soon proved by Indochina. The Senator said he wrote to Secretary of immortal. . captured and hanged, to become an American State Rogers about it a month ago, and has received In the Civil War the govern- h no reply. . Then why not invite the Secretary to tell the to ment set hired the Pinkerton outfit committee what he knows about it,`\vhich might not lip an espionage system. It e i. i.N n be mirth, as there is no evidence [r. Rogers talks to was never much good, but neither CIA, or vice versa. was the Confederate. _ ~- But congressmen enjoy complaining, and don't In World War II we set up a 1 enjoy doing. If they enjoyed doing they would adopt after the wnr it was consolidated itures over the past few years. The howling would be as Central Intelligence Agency. It yy;~1, t pitiful that this would uncover supersecret inve~y moved in,. The French _ colonial caz~tiAU'a3 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 Approved For Relgjerq,/03/04: CIA-RDP80- U.S. Officials Concede CIA. A A ~ BO;TO:4, "'ASS. RL CORC-A;,; RICAN M - 439,372 ADVERTISER S - 432,963 Aides Are Operating in Laos By JOHN' 1'. WALLACiI they would release the names American personnel assigned rRtcord American Washingrnn Bureau, of the two men in the next for three-to-six months tours .g ?1,/ MAR 4 197(1' few days, . of duty, or CIA men who t WASHINGTON - Ad- ' The acknowledgement of c pp m m u t e bark and forth ministration officials private- the CIA role in Laos. an onen : -ft~om a border village in Thai- ;'ti he C e n t r a l Intelligence The U. S.' has attempted to evidence of'the difficulty that et Lao. involvement. Laotian neutrality, prohibited . ' But the officials denied re In the apparent absence of., the introduction of foreign . ' ' as a thousand civilian agents live on what is public and The U. S. began to train the "what is private, State Dept. \ -' -~ - - regular army or anti-t=om-,,. arc gitina_M;yflla?' ;k c;or;a Los = - `??'Ana-Nat biid t provrcle t'ac mint-:%n-t"-!best11NLiney.. ~of -what they assert is the 'tical air support for Laotian ,. s said that at most_ there,4. situation. government troops when it be-. a - gents in the beleaguered U. S. had lust guered 193 servicemen. since 1961. nam was training rebel Pathet Asian kingdom. Monday a D e f e n s e Dept.;..,; Lao tribesmen to overthrow This disclosure was, spokesman corrected the,,, the neutralist government. prompted by a Pentagon ad-~r record to reflect that loss When the Communist train mission Monday that twos" since 1964-a thr@e year mis- - ed Pathet Lao recently ste civilians were among the take in sombody's figuring. regular U. S. military person- State pad up their attacks , the a- net feared dead or missing In Dept. officials are so increased its m militailitary opa era. Laos. concerned about figures leak- tions, reportedly including the A pentagon spokesman re- Ing out that the Laotian desk diversion of B-52 bombers . fused to confirm whether theofficer refuses to confirm a:,., from attacks on the strategic two civilians, later identified' figure used by a senior de- t . ? 14o Chi Minh trail to Comma- as intelligence agents, were parfinent official in public . nist, strongholds. in northern originally included in the 193' testimony before a congres- Laos. airmen acknowledged last sional subcommittee. This has brought a barrage f week as missing. According to the American, of criticism from Congress But the spokesman ills- embnssy In Vientiane, there ,,, that the U. S. is falling Into are 2330 Americans In Lao closed that one of th i ili th e c v ans s,; e same kind of bottomless was seen being captured and -833 U. S. government em- "Viet am pit" that will take. presumably is still alive. - De-- - Iployees and' the rest depen,' years of fighting and count- fen se Dept. sourCes t3afd that donta, This 'does 'not include leiltli eaaualtiea . to get' out of. Agency~ (~C~IIn~1~ is involved in , cloak its activities in Laos be- ' military ` operations the U. S. government is hav- perations in Laos cause the 1962 Geneva Bo- irig keeping confidential they Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL w~sulcvurota wrA t Approved For Release 20%1/ /} j7dCIA-RDP80-016 CARL T. ROWAN Like a recurring stomach trading an agreement from ache that eventually starts you Nikita Khri'shchev during the worrying about ulcers, a mis- 1961 summit meeting in Vien- erahie crisis called Laos just na, that the United Stales and l-nnnc nnniinn hack the Soviet Union would not Thus Johnson waged almost would seem to have ruled out full-scale war against the sending combat troops to Communists in Laos while ev- Laos, although the President cryone's attention was focused ?? might decide that this is overt on the unsecret war in Viet- aggression from North Viet- And it poses MC mOS[ SCr- rISK war uvu a.,"- a..- - .. ous challenge yet to "the Nix- was consummated in Geneva Now that indigestible crisis he vaguely left the door open on doctrine" of a "low profile" in 1962? Both sides agreed to called Laos is on Nixon's for a commitment of U.S. for the United States in the pull out foreign troops, and the plate. And whatever else it forces. Far East. United States complied by represents in terms of a Com- What makes it more trouble- Laos again is in danger of - withdrawing 666 "military ad- munist threat to all Southeast some for Nixon is his certain being overrun completely by visers" before the Oct. 7, 1962, Asia, it is a special challenge knowledge that the Lao: offen- Communists, especially North deadline. But only 40 North : to this President. sive is Hanoi's lefthanded way Vietnamese troops. President Vietnamese troops came out : First, it will force the Presi- of intensifying the Vietnam Nixon is faced with showing past the International Control dent to -reveal some practical war in defiance of all of Nix- that he can handle this crisis Commission checkpoints, lcav- , specifics about "the Nixon on's not-so-veiled warnings better than his three predeces- in., Laos's neutralist premier, doctrine." and in violation of commit- sors in the White House. Souvanna Phouma, to com- As the Communists take the meats made at the time the Dwight D. Eisenhower agon- plain that thousands of North Plain of Jars and sweep on- United States stopped bombing ized over Laos, beat down a Vietnamese troops were stay- ward, the military situation is North Vietnam. Thailand proposal to put ing to try to overthrow his about the same as it was nine There is no greater fiction troops in and clean out the government. years ago when Kennedy con- than to pretend that the war in Communists, then bequeathed,1 Lyndon B. Johnson found a eluded he had to go to Geneva Laos is separate from the Ion- a rising crisis to young John halfway point between the ex- or go to war. flirt in Vietnam. From the big F. Kennedy. tremes of letting the Commu- But a Geneva conference is ? air bases at Sattahip, Korat, Kennedy quickly saw that he nists take Laos and sending in out of tl a question for Nixon. and Udorn in Thailand, across could either let the Commu U.S. combat forces. He com- He has made it clear that he Laos and onward to the far- nists have this Idaho-sized mitted U.S. planes, bombs, finds the Paris peace confer- thest reaches of South Viet- country or he could put in U.S. commando raiding units, and /once a bore, so he could hard- ram, it has been one war for combat troops to stop them or CIA operatives to a secret wary ly opt for a conference on' years. Planes out of Thailand he could try to work out a and encouraged the Thais to Laos, not that the Communists: have struck at Communist peace agreement. do some things Eisenhower are likely to agree to one. units in Laos as often as a Kennedy tried the latter. eY was reluctant to have them do. , Yet,,;: the .,Ilixou . doctriM target in North Vietnam. Air- fields in Laos have been used to strike at targets in North and South Vietnam, as well as to harass Communist units moving down the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos. The first time I heard Nixon warn that the United States would take stern action if the Communists increased the lev- el of warfare, I knew that it was inevitable that Hanoi would test him. When he went to Asia to talk about a lowered profile for the United States in that part of the world, I knew that it was inevitable that the Communists would soon start probing to find out just how low that profile might be. Well, the moment of truth seems to be near. With char- acterist-c devilishness, the Communists have challenged- in a little landlocked piece of real estate that might not be worth a dollar an acre in the normal context of things. But in the context of world politics and world power - not to mention U.S. domestic poli- tics - Lags.is worth a bundle. We learned h lot about Ei- senhower, Kennedy and John- son from the %~,ay they handled or did not handle - the challenge of Laos. As Nixon grapples with. it, we shall learn a lot more about him and his foreign policy than we could divine from 13 months of ress Annroved For Release 2001103104 - CIA-RDP80-01601 R000amQ2M8Q1-4 Approved For RipftA01/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 DIPMIN;HAb1, ALA. POST-HERALD - 81,277 FE B 2 1970 ace c?r? is a s hudksj BY JAMES FOSTER Scripps-Howard Staff Writer BANGKOK - Thailand must surmount formidable economic hurdles in the next, two years if it is to contain the threat of Communist in. surgents. in as launc per cent of Thailand's foreign g h points for U. S. erg, jet-powered gunboats, A exchange income, are at a air strikes against the ordnance, fuel, vehicles, and 15-year low. Last year's crop Communists in Laos and Viet- construction materials. Also, was of poor quality. World nam. The workers are jobless there is considerable coin-.. 'demand was off generally. and restless. munications and intelligence me ouuook for teak and rubber is not much better. Tin and corn exports are little above levels of four. years ago. At the same time, U. S. Government spending in Thai. ments this year is expected to the United States is pouring show a deficit, first in a into Thailand as part of the decade. During the peak of Nixon policy of letting Asians construction of U. S. Air fight their own wars. bases, more than 40,000 Thai The United States admits to workers were employed at supplying "an array of mod- b e t t e r-than-average wages..: ern weapons," including; M41 These airfield complexes are tanks, M16 rifles, HUl heli- largely completed and operat 'copters, F5 supersenic' fight- Thai officials face the pros. These weapons are not used pect of record spending - up in the massive, clandestine U. 14 per cent this year on top of S. operation against Commu- a 10 per cent increase' last 'Dist forces in Laos and Viet- Year - to finance a double- nam. They are intended for barreled attack against Thais to use on each other land, grown to about $250 Communist insurgency in the million per year, is expected north and northeast. and another third in 1971 SOCIAL PROGRAMS area stirred up by Communist because of cutbacks in the aimed at raising the standard agitators. ? . 50,000-man U. S. military'' of living, but military These financial demands i force here. programs must keep the in. are saddling a country where It r * surgency under control until per capita income is only $150; AMERICAN SERVICEMEN the social programs have a per year and corruption is on rest and recreational leave chance to take root. said to skim at least 15 per', from Vietnam pour about $60 Rural police have been in-- cent of the cream of all taxi million - one third of That-, creased from 34,000 to 47,000 revenues, land's tourist dollars - into in the past three years. Spe-....rte..........-----~~~ quick circulation here. This cial counterinsurgency schoolsi will shrink with U. S. troop have been established, staffed withdrawals from Vietnam. , mainly ' by former Green Thailand's balance of trade Berets now working for 'the has shown a $500 million _fD. AIsol men must be deficit for two consecutive rn d I to use the increased ,,yeers. Its balance ' of''`pW `amount`?of' military hardware and on their neighbors from bordering Laos and Cambodia Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001-4 STATINTL il., . ,..,,., Approved For Re~tease '&i116104 : KCRbAo-01 17 JAN 1970 RICE RUNS - AND ARMS rl r o J':s M LJ Y L ~~.~: is v 4V By TA' IIIY AItBUCKLE' ?:Su.ci Ial to The Star VIENTIANE - The United States is almost totally respon- sible for the logistics of Lao 'government forces in the cur- rent war against North Viet- namese and Communist Pa- thet Lao forces in Laos, well- informed sources here admit. Top Lao officials no longer bother to deny the fact. "We could not do without American logistic support. We need it to survive against the Commu- nists," says one Laotian. This American logistics op- eration is carried out entirely by American civilians and by U.S. military men in civilian-cover roles. This is be- .cause Washington shies away. from admitting its military in- volvement in Laos for political reasons. Both the men and aircraft concerned in these operations, therefore, are claimed by U.S. officials to be - and often are - part of the yearly $52 mil- Lon aid program in Laos. The operations include the movement of troops, ammuni- tion and food to battle areas in the mountains, and evacuation of government wounded. The missions are often under fire and are carried out by two American companies - "Air America" and "Continental Airlines." Questioned b y reporters about these companies, U.S. Embassy officials give the stock reply that the firms are. private companies under char- ter to the American Agency for International Develop- ment. According to the embas- sy officials, the two companies are engaged in flying rice to 200,000 refugees made up mostly of tribespeoplc fleeing North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao troops. The beauty of this reply is that Air America, besides its military activities, does fly many thousands of tons of rice and other foodstuffs to the ref- uge". To bolster this image, corre- American pilots, Continental employs 73. The two companies have ap- proximately 70 aircraft and 20 helicopters which carry out both AID and arms flights. Air r America pilots receive base Ire,, f e Ty :) ru~J j :. d rt)(~` pay of aro(1nd $20,000 per year u Ca t1 L1 `.,~+ { ~' U~ j r e; for 70 flying hours, a month, kok to Udorn. There they are ' at higher pay rates. stored in concrete warehouses The pilots are worth every -o? Udorn THAILAND encircled by a series of wire dollar. Laos t e r r a i n and fences with manned sentry weather mean d a n g e r o u s, towers and floodlights. Storage flying conditions. Craggy J areas are spaced wide apart to' mountains are covered by lay- prevent attacks by Thai Com- ers of thick fog, smoke from munist terrorists. tribesmen burning off forest At Udorn, ammunition is for opium fields, or are hidden loaded aboard C123 transports. by monsoon rains. These transports, colored sil- Aboard a green, unmarked ver, have no identification Air America H34 "Sikorsky" marks apart from a "Stars & helicopter with an American Stripes" on the tail. crew, this correspondent sat Informed sources say the on boxes of :~; ;6 hand gren- ; planes are chartered to the 4dcs with two teen-aged Lao Central Intelligence Agen troopers who clutched their.' for these particular flights. carbines fearfully as we cir- i:acn plane's load and des- tied looking vainly in a thick tination is decided by Ameri- mountain fog for our landing ----I can "Requirements Office" zone north of the royal capital, .s on cuts are allowed to go on personnel. The Requirements Luang Prabang. these rice-drop flights. Office, though it is situated in Finally we skimmed be- The aircraft, usually a C47 the American aid compound in tween two barely seen peaks transport, is loaded with 5 tons Vientiane comes under CIA( to land on a site 100 yards of rice by Filipino, Thai and and Pentagon auspices, Amer- square encircled by a shallow Lao cargo handlers at Vienti- icans say. trench with bunkers. Govern- ane's Wattay Airport. Any. Its location is the aid com- ment troopers unloaded the where from 20 to 50 minutes pound is part of the cover sto- grenades, and within minutes, after takeoff, the plane drops ry. the chopper was back in the. into a mountain bowl or cir- There are presently 87 re- air. The crew was in a hurry cles over a ridge partially hid- quirements officers in Laos. because Communist troops den by clouds. They are ex-military Person_- were on surrounding ridges While the craft circles, two warehouses bulg-, mortareattackgarrison them control het co - the Americans in the cockpit scan the drop zone for recognition ing with arms and other milr- ter, t i t upcoun ry. pmen signals showing the area is in, tart' equ f 11 h d Th bell The warehouses are marked en a s u y an . as aid warehouses. Sitting later in' a Lao com- buzz zzes, signalling the drop is on. "Kickers" ? (cargo han- Dropping or landing zones mend post under Communist dlers) - usually Thais - trun- for both AID and arms car- fire, this reporter heard a Lao- dle the rice sacks stacked on goes are known by Air Ameri- tian major talking nervous. plywood pallets down a roller ca pilots as "sites." These Americans onto their drop; coaster of metal strips and frsites are number run. What hell is up tosias nedhigh as 2005 down, theretheasked o ernervl om 1 wheels the fuselage door. names are seldom used. Other ous pilot, seeing the bursting Then the e sacks are sent sites have girl's names such rounds from a Communist The down to the drop p one zone-- as "Mary," or names derived mortar. under plane the mountain 7kntoin times round from code such as "Hotel In- "It's all right, come on in," und peaks, the Lao major radioed calmly. a heads back to Vientiane then missed the another load. , The sites are divided into Some C123s Lim ima, sites where larger drop zone one the but the last aircraft Base in Thailand aircraft can land, and STOL put its load of lots of 200 105 sites (short landing and take- mm. howitzer ammunition on Correspondents, however, off) for Air America's single the center of the zone - and, are not officially permitted on engined Hello Couriers and 'Lao troops whooped it up. the arms flights. These flights Pilatus Porters. originate from what pilots re- Other American crewmen Some sites can only take a for to as "Tango" -Ameri? helicopter. drawing more dangerous . ca's Udorn airbase in north- assignments. east Thailand, 32 miles from Over 200 Pilots Used one helicopter pilot said he the Lao. border. Cargoes are taken by trans- been landing Lao commandos. Ammunition and other sup- , its to Lima sites, then dis-i "right on top of Pathet Lao plies are- trucked from Bang-tributed by light aircraft and command posts" under auto, .. J ' matte gun fire. STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R00080020ff tWe STATINTL Guardta't Approved For Releasq Q $ 4 IA-RDP80- C.i C By Wilfred Burchett Guardian stall nvrrecpondenr the rich natural resources of the area and transform states border- ing China into military bases for the "roll-back" policy initiated in the early 1950s. American military intervention started in the second half of .1950 (economic penetration began much earlier), long before the Geneva Agreements had divided Vietnam into a "North" and "South" or the existence of "Ho Chi Minh trails" and other such post-datum pretexts for intervention. In August 1950, an Ameri- c;n, military mission headed by Gen. Graves B. Erskine arrived.in Thailand to inspect airfield and port facilities, road and rail coinn-unications and make an appraisal of Thailand's military potential. The outcome was a treaty of "economic and technical cooperation" signed on Sept. 19, 1950, followed by a "Mutual Defense" treaty signed on Oct. 17, 1950 between Washington and the Thai military. dictator, Marshal Pibul Songgram. (The latter had overthrown a liberal constitutional government in a military coup three years earlier and he headed the first' of a series of Paris military dictatorships which have continued in one form or appeared to end'further American intervention in Laos and Thai- land, there was a public sigh of relief. The resolution was the result of a Senate inquiry, stimulated by public and Congressional alarm over U.S. activities in Laos and the disclosure of a secret agreement to move into Thailand whenever the Pentagon thought necessary. But when the text was published, it became clear the measure would permit the Nixon administration to continue and perhaps to intensify those acts of intervention the Senate was supposedly concerned with stopping.. Thus it was not surprising President. Nixon could tell the Senate the resolution was "definitely in line with administration. policy" or that White House press secretary Ron Ziegler could say it represented an "endorsement" rather than a "curbing!" of that polity. The actual wording had been adopted at a secret Senate session after reporters had been cleared from the press gallery. l'hc phrase responsible for the initial "misunderstanding" was in a rider to the defense appropriations bill stating "none of the funds appropriated by this act shall be used to finance the introduction of American ground troops into Laos or Thailand.... " ' ' Everything that had provoked the indignant outbursts that led to Senate hearings and the resolution would go on as usual. Thailand would continue to be used as a base for aggression against her neighbors. American B-52s would continue to use the giant air bases at Utapao and Khon Kacn for their murderous raids against the villages of South Vietnam. U.S. "Green Berets" would continue to run headquarters 333 at Udorn and use it as a base for the American-officered Vang Pao mercenaries in their attacks against Laotian patriots. American fighter-bombers would continue to use the bases at Takhli, Korat, Udon and Ubon for their attacks against South Vietnamese and Laotian peasants. Thailand would continue to commit acts of war, at the Penta- gon's bidding, against the peoples of South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, just as it previously had permitted Thai bases to be used for the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam. Until recent years the Thais were proud to claim that their country had never been colonized. In the days of the old rivalries of British and French imperialism in Southeast Asia, both striving for the richer prize of South China, there was a tacit agreement. Thailand would not be colonized, but would be a sphere of British influence. Now the Thais realize they have been colonized by the U.S. through the "back door" with an officially-admitted 413,000 U.S. troops on their soil, U.S: "advisors" running' the armed forces, U.S. helicopter pilots shooting down liberation fighters in the Northern and Northeastern regions of the country and Thai mercenary troops fighting in South Vietnam and Laos. flow did this happen? The official U.S. reply is, as with Laos, that it was all because of North Vietnamese "aggression" against Laos and South Vietnam. The actual reason is Washington's d I r ? tion to ?titablish he'c o 'r Southeast Asia, control . ' When SEATO was established under U.S. pressure in Septem- ber 1954 to offset the Geneva Agreements and rob the Viet- namese of the legitimate fruits of their victory, Songgram, the recipient of lavish U.S. "aid," was one of the most enthusiastic participants. Bangkok became the SEATO headquarters, Thailand the trite of annual SEATO military maneuvers. When the U.S. started pressuring Cambodia to abandon its neutrality and join SEATO and Prince Sihanouk refused, Thailand provoked frontier clashes-coordinated with those on. Cambodia,'s Eastern, border staged by the Diem dictatorship in Saigon-and 'sent planes deep into Cambodian territory. Later a CIA-subsidized organization, the so-called "Khmer Serei" (Free Khmer), chased from its bases in South Vietnam by the NLF was transferred to Thailand, from where bands of armed raiders were sent across the border to try and overthrow the neutral regime of Prince' Sihanouk. Gradually Thailand was pushed into more and more open war-like activities against its neighbors. When the right-wing Laotian dictator, Gen. Phoumi Nosavan was overthrown in August 1960 and replaced by the neutralist Prince Souvanna Phou-na in Laos, Thailand immediately clamped down a blockade on all supplies to Vientiane, the Laotian capital, but permitted U.S.-airlifted supplies to pour into Nosavan's base in Southern Laos. ' When Nosavan was ready, his troops were transported through Thai territory to attack Vientiane from the Thailand side of the Mekong river, which forms the Thai-Laotian border at that point. - ' .. . % Nosavan's troops captured Vientiane at the end of 1960 but the neutralist and Pathet Lao troops took "in exchange" the strategic Plain of Jars. The American response to this was to dispatch so-called "white star" teams of U.S. military "advisors" to stiffen Nosavan's forces-one team to each battalion. When this did not work and Nosavan suffered repeated defeats in his at- tempts to retake the Plain of Jars, the U.S. rushed the 7th Fleet' to the Gulf of Thailand and the first 500 Marines with helicopter units to Northeast Thailand-the first step in the serious implanta- tion of U.S. military forces there. This was in April 1961, over eight months before similar helicopter units were sent to South Vietnam. In May 1962, after another catastrophic defeat of the Nosavan forces at the battle of Nam Tha, the 7th Fleet brought a few thousand more Marines into Thailand. ? ? . By that time more base facilities were "needed" in Thailand to support the U.S. effort in South Vietnam. Later, with the start of the bombings in North Vietnam and the commitment of U.S. combat troops iq the South, there was still further expansion of ` N1 Approved h 6r Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 ROOO8OO2OO00k1,r4i-n?r`1 STATINTL %k ~e Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000800200001- U.S. base facilities an more troops to service and defend them. another way of saying the resistance movement is active through- On March 21, 1967, the huge air base at Utapao was completed', out the whole region. ana \Vashington extracted a treaty enabling its use for B-52 raids Although the resistance has started first in' rural regions, against Vietnam, which started immediately. among those who are doubly. exploited for racial as well as class For years, the fact that Thailand was an "attack-free sanctu- reasons, there is actually general discontent throughout the land. ary" for the U.S. Air Force, with over 80%. of the raids on In the cities, especially in Bangkok, it takes the form of a demand Vietnam staged from there, was kept secret from the American for an end to U.S. intervention, the departure of U.S. troops, the people. Obviously it could not be kept secret from the people of. withdrawal of Thai troops from South Vietnam, the adoption of Thailand, especially for those whose villages and means of liveli- a neutral policy in foreign affairs and recognition of People's hood were destroyed. China. Discontent gradually fanned into armed resistance in several Campaigning in favor of such policies, the opposition Demo- parts of the country. Under the feudal military dictatorship of cratic party swept the polls in municipal' elections in Bangkok Bangkok, the tribespeople and the Laotian and Muslim minorities Sept. 2, 1968, winning 22 out of 24 seats and 1 1 out of 24 in the are treated as second-class citizens. The Laotians, almost all of twin city of Thonburi. In elections for the House of Representa- whom have relatives on the other side of the frontier, have an tives on Feb. 10, 1969, the Democratic party won all 21 seats in added grudge against the Bangkok regime and its American back- Bangkok-Thonburi. It was only in the capital that the ruling junta ers, because they know what is happening to their kinsfolk in could not rig the elections in favor of the Unjted Thai Peoples Laos and the U.S.-Thailand role in all this. Party of the prime minister, Marshal Thanom Kittikachorn. Trouble in the North started when Bangkok decided to en- In the lace of pressure of U.S. and Thai opinion. Washington force government control over an area where government had has stated that it will reduce its forces in Thailand by 6000 men scarcely reached before. The first taste of government "presence" by July 1, 1970, according to a U.S. statement of Sept. 30. The was in the form of troops and armed police. As in Laos and the fact that it is to take nine months to withdraw 6000 men is a mountain villages on the other side of the frontier in China, the measure of the reluctance of the Pentagon to give up its military tribeswomen wear their wealth in the form of silver ornaments, presence in Thailand. Further revealing U.S. intentions. Nixon has heavy bracelets, necklaces and car-rings, passed down from just sent Vice President Agnew to Thailand to assure Mar- generation to generation. The first troops and armed police to shal Kittikachorn that despite the U.S. Senate's resolution, "there ? ?__ ? . ??'' arrive in the Meo villages started arresting the women in the will be no change in American policy.". market places on the flimsiest of pretexts to steal the ornaments. At the same time, Bangkok radio started a propaganda cain- paign in the tribal languages about the government being the "mother and father" of the people and that any.problcros should be brought it) the notice of the nearest. district headquarters. One village headman, who went down to the district government. office to report about the outrages against the women of his village, was arrested and summarily executed as a "communist agent." The news soon got back to the village and revenge was. taken. The U.S. and Bangkok reaction was two-fold: planes to bomb ? the village and a team of American anthropologists to study what there was in the psychological and physiological make-up of the - local tribcspeople to turn them towards "communism." That was ? in the spring of 1967. Since then American-piloted helicopters and planes with orders "to shoot only if fired on"-the classic formula used at the start of operations in South Vietnam- have been supporting 'Thai troops to put down what has developed into a "chronic state of insurgency," in the language of the Pentagon. International attention was dramatically alerted to the situa- tion in the North in November 1968 when a guerrilla force, officially stated to number around 500 but which must have been much greater, virtually took over the three Northern provinces of Phitsanulok, Phetchabun and Loey. Tanks and aircraft and troops brought in by U.S. planes were used to try and suppress the revolt in a campaign that lasted over two months. Communiques issued in the name of the Thai People's Liberation Army in mid-January 1969 claimed guerrillas shot down 25 aircraft and helicopters and put out of action 300 troops and police. The Thai People's Liberation Army was the name adopted Jan. 1, 1969, by the Peoples Armed Forces which were constituted shortly after the formation of the Thailand Patriotic Front in 1965 and in whose name guerrilla activities had been waged until that time. In the Northeast regions resistance is also under way. Ain- bushes on police and troops and attacks on police stations-both aimed primarily at building up arms' stocks-have been frequent occurrences. The area of most action recently has been in the South and Southwest where Chin Peng's guerrillas, battle-hardened from fighting the Japanese in World War II and the British afterwards, form the nucleus of a growing resistance movement. Repeated combined sweeps by the Malaysian-Thai security forces, have only reinforced the guerrilla ranks and swelled their stocks of modern arms. Of ReKio y Tommu e - f~ 4 CIA-RDP80-016018000800200001-4 ng o o be cs ed y mmum i considered by Ba s s, w i c