U.S. CIVILIANS DYING UNHERALDED IN LAOS

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6
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RIPPUB
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K
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146
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December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 19, 2001
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1
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Publication Date: 
December 27, 1972
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NSPR
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tr ft Cr' Cr. TI? Approved For Release 2001V/R010: E?IA-RDP80-0 ? ? rl ? ,Nk /poi 7,17) V iH J kr,) By TAMMY ARBUCKLE Star.tiews Special Correspondent VIENTIANE ? Some Amer- icans killed in Indochina com- bat do. rot appear in the U.S. Indochina death toll which stands at latest count at 45,915. These unacknowledged com- bat deaths are of American .eivilians performing military duties normally carried out by U.S. Air Force or Army per- sonnel. . As they are civilians the U.S. military does not include .them in the death toll when ? they are killed in action.. . .. For example, U.S. officials. this weekend announced two ? , American military deaths:' -They said U.S. Air Force Capt._ Harold L. (Skip) Mischler of. . Osborne, Kan., was killed Sat- urday when his light observa- tion plane was shot down by small arms over the .embattled .South Laos town of Saravane: U.S. officials said a second . American was lost over the : plain of Jars area but were '. unable to indentify him tun , next of kin were notified. . On Friday, Dec. 15, how- ever, at a town on the South Laos' Bolovens Plateau called .Paksong another kind of death occurred. John Kearns ? of Alvaredo, Tex., was listed .? as killed by North Vietnamese mortar shells which hit the command- post of the Lao ir- .regular unit he was advising. Killed at Saravane . s An embassy spokesman de- ,scribed Kearns as "American ?Centract personnel attached to /n irregular Lao unit." Irregu- .ar Lao units are handled by ii the Central Intelligence agen- cy. Kearns was the third American adviser to irregu- lars killed in action since Sep- tern bee. . , Another American was I killed when Lao irregular units launched a heliborne at- tack on Saravane on Oct. 19. . He was aboard one of eight ? U.S. Air Force helicopters - which carried Lao irregulars ,into the :.-ar avane airstrip un- civilians 1,1( former mem_ ? p u Al Li V:ss:67 E cy or other U.S. government agencies. The U.S. failure to announce engaged were hit by Commu- nist fire but none crashed. A third American adviser to the irregulars was killed during .an operation which failed to retake the Plain of Jars in North Laos in September. Air America officials say about twenty of their Ameri- can crew members have been killed in Laos since -March 1970. Air America is a private contractor to the Central Intel- ligence Agency and other U.S. government agencies and as air crew personnel are civil- ians. They are not carried on the military death toll. Air America engages in re- supply drops to irregulars of- ;ten under intense enemy anti- aircraft fire and in infiltration and eifiltration of irregular in- telligence and commando teams behind enemy lines. An- other company, Continental Airlines, has lost some Ameri- can personnel in similar oper- ations in Laos. American of ficials say roughly 800 Americans were killed or are missing in Laos since Mo.y 1961 when the Unit- ed . States first shouldered a greater burden of the Laos war. This figure includes all categories and is mostly mili- tary. The unheralded paramili- tary deaths in Laos indicate a trend which may start to show in South Vietnam as American military wind down the war there and various private American civilian companies are poised to move in to take over paramilitary chores. Deaths Unreported Increasing use of disguised paramilitary organizations will allow the U.S. military to put out figures of zero American casualties on the ground as they do now in Laos, as it will be "civilians" who are I,-sing killed, not U.S. military per- sonnel. . As in Laos most of these ? a list of paramilitary deaths in Laos, however, is one of the few faults which mar these operations. In Laos, instead of having thousands of Americans as the entason has poured into outh Vietnam, the war is run just as effective if not more so by 500 to 600 Americans. -Small Group Functions While Hanoi fields four, and in the dry season, five weak divisions of some 40,000 com- bat troops in Laos, the United States has only between 30 and 40 men on the ground at the most in combat areas through- out the country. In the past eight years an estimated 31 of these Ameri- cans been killed. This figure includes some technicians caught flatfooted onthe ground in .1963 at Phou Pathi, a supersecret installation in North Laos which the North Vietnamese overran. About 60 Air America crew- men of American nationality are ? believed to have been killed in the same time period. The small number of Ameri- cans with the irregulars are essential to insure good Lao leadership and lack of corrup- tion. Poor leadership and non-payment of troops severe- ly weakened Royal Lao regu- lar forces throughout the war. It has been suggested, how- ever, that U.S. Embassy offi- cials should admit it when such Americans are killed in action instead of trying to pre- tend they are "American per- sonnel in management'' as happened initially in the Kearns' case and these Ameri- can deaths should be included in military casually figures re- leased weekly in Saigon. . Ejos STATOTHR (kr juten'e A101400,4foreRalteasesPOilA03/A4 : CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 American wt s the helicopter touched down, and similar units contracted to ? Six of the .U.S. helicopters the Central Intelligence Agen- WASH/NG TON Pal Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-0160 2 6 1972 takie nesearen BANGKOK (UPI)?A Pen- tagon agency said to have carried out intelligence and policymaking in Thailand &?er the last decade is to quietly close its doors at the rend of this month as part of the wind-down in America's military role in Southeast Asia. The agency is a field facil- ity of the Pentagon's Ad- vanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), a little- known organization that de- velops classified electronic research and intellignece systems as well as more _mundane items such as new -combat packs, hoofs and ' field rations. -.. When AFJ'A'sufFice Ire ! was opened in 1902, it was billed as a. facility to help ? Thailand's military develop its own research and devel- opment capability. It grew -to an organization with a ? staff of more than 140 and became by far the largest of ARPA's five overseas branches, spending about - half of a $25 million yearly. -budget for a program known as Project Agile. ARPA's Bangkok office t also became involved in: wider activities such as de- foliation and counterinsur- gency work, leading to charges that the advisory role to the Thai milli at was merely a cover for other jobs. 'Almost to a man, the pro- fessional staff of about 30 American scientists that, has phased out the facility's last research projects over the last few months feels that much of the criticism has been unjustified. U.S. officials still decline to discuss, ort grounds of se- curity, many of the projects ARPA was involved in, and era cy iaiia 17-7,11 STATOTHR An ARPA source said the defoliating was done to test results in an area under se- cure conditions that were not available in Vietnam. The same source said that a later Thai government re- quest for ARPA's help to de- foliate an area in North Thailand where Communist guerrillas were active was refused because the defoli- ants had been found harm- ful to animals and humans. there is still no official con- ARPA also ran projects to firmation that the agency gather intelligence material used airplanes of Air Amer- ki on Communist guerrillas ica, a charter line that from Thai sources, and works for the CIA and other ARPA teams helped develop U.S. government agencies in ground and airborne sensor Southeast Asia, to defoliate systems to detect. Comnm- an area of jungle in Thai-. nist movement through the -land in 1965 and 1966. jungle. Sonic of. these sys- . tems have had application in the electronic warfare system the United States has used to locate bombing targets in Laos and Viet- nam The workers at ARPA say, they have clone valuable work in such areas as soil testing, vegetation and envi- ronmental sciences that have peaceful as well as mil- itary applications. . When ARPA closes its ' doors here it will leave be- hind the military research and development center, a facility built jointly with Thailand that will be oper- ated by the Thai supreme command. - ARPA is also leaving about half a million -dollars' worth of electronic equipment and the unclassi- fied portion of its reference library, which runs to about 20,000 volumes. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 J. STATOTHR 20 DEC Approved For Releasegpkin94 : C 3 ? "Even as the U.S. military is packing up ,,,???-?%rin for its expected exit from Vietnam, American officials :here are secretly plan- \es ning a major postwar presence of U.S. ? ? i?,:ppi.j anej civilians in Vietnam, with many of them doing jobs formerly done by the military," . wrote Fox Butterfield in a report from 1 Saigon in the Nov. 27 New York Times. Without ? alluding to the delay in Paris, Butterfield noted that the U.S. is in the process of augmenting its "civilian advisory" force in Vietnam, from saco to io,ca, its peak level at the stage of maximum U.S. military presence in Vietnam. But it should be apparent that this "advisory" apparatus could not be assembled overnight, anymore than the enormous flow of U.S. arms could ? be brought to Saigon in a day. Saigon's air force was increased two-fold, from ap- proximately 1030 to 2020 aircraft during the past two months, to give only one item of U.S. supply effort. ? To place recent developments in their proper perspective, it must be noted that there has been a major shift in U.S. strategy sot in motion lest spring in the wake of the 10es-sustained offensive 1-ny the Liberation Armed Forces in South Vietnam. . Despite administration efforts to play down the Strength of the offensive, it is evident that once again the whole. U.S. strategy for victory in Vietnam was smashed. Only the most drastic U.S. measures of the E"3 LH ; . 1 ? L-3 By Placard E. Word Despite press speculation a 'peace agreement for Vietnam may soon be con- cluded, there is concrete evidence indicating the U.S. is planning to prolong the conflict and will attempt to subvert any peace ac- cords. U.S. procrastination in .Paris, intensified bombing and the huge shipments of arms to Saigon, among other developments, are all indicators that the .White House has no desire for true peace and has not abandoned . its neo-colonial designs in Indochina. An even more ominous proof of U.S. intentions of maintaining its puppet regimes in Indochina, ..was the apparent effort by presidential envoy Henry Kissinger to press Saigon's "demands" in Paris at the end of November, which would have virtually scrapped the agreement reached in October by Kissinger and Le Due Tho of the DIZVi There have been various hypotheses put forward in the Western press concerning Kissinger's seeming about-face on behalf of Saigon, after proclaiming in October before the world that "peace is at hand." Nearly every possible explanation has been proposed by the pundits eacept the most plausible one. The U.S stalling in Paris does not represent any deference to its Saigon puppets, but rather it is for the purposes of U.S. policy and the Saigon regime is merely i.. expressions of "support" such as USOM, USAI , USIS, etc. While these agencies may be under CIA direction, you don't know and you don't care. The novernment agencies direct the routines and scliedulings, your company provides the techinical know-how and you fly the air- The brochure makes it clear that "civilian Eying" is merely a cover for ciandestine military activity: "Although flights mainly serve U.S. offiical personnel movement and native officials and civilians, you sometimes engage in the movement of friendly trocps, or of enemy captives; or in the transport of cargo more potent than rice and beans! There's a war going . on. Use your irazigination!" - In what Burgess describes as a "hastily"added postrcipt, the brochure states: "Foreign rid situation unclear pending outcome military situation in RVN (Republic of Vietnam), but it looks as if well finish the war (and peace terms favorable for our aide); if so, it is expected that a boom among contract operators will result.... " In other words, here we have the first ?concrete indication that the White House waa implicitly admitting ? defeat of its "Vietnemizastion" program .and reverting to a less cbstly program of clandestine warfare. The U.S. strategy shift was probably equally dictated by a desire to further diminish the nolitical impact of the war on American war prevented the complete collapse of the opinion and finally by a desire to diminish Saiaon regime and its armed forces: the tbe blow to U.S. prestige in the event of blockade of the DRV, the greatest aerial eltime.c. fr,!inre, that is the colir.pse of the escalation against the DRV and liberated in.r,pt regimes. areas of South Vietnam (while heavy The U.S. is clearly trying to stave off this bombing of Laos and Cambodia was develo,ernent as long as possi:ele, but it also sustained), and unprecedented' aerial fac-. ? tical and logistics support for the Saigon wants to avoid the impression of being forces. engaged in direct and large-scale U.S. in- The augmentation of the U.S. air logistics terveation at the time, which sooner or later support 'for- Saigon's forces during, the of- Nixon and Kissinger must know is inevitable. fensive surged from a monthly average of Even if they cannot face this reality, they about nine million Poonds of cargo before are now in deadly earnest about maintaining the offeasive to 60 milliOn pounds in ?May. support for the puppet regimes, regardless of Amino:Med U.S. "support" for Saigon after any peace 'agreement. If the U.S. honestly the offensive bean, raised total. U.S. ex- adhered to a peace agreement, Saigon's penditurcs on the war by an annual rate of political collapse would quickly follow. That approximately tilt) billion or nearly double is why the U.S. is: stepping up clandestine the rate _prior to the Offensive. support for the Saigon regime, military aid The.Nixon administration concealed this disguised as civilian "contractual" aid, augmentation by requesting additional war provided mainly by U.S. private military funding only for the period ending Sept. fi0. contractors. an nstrument. TIC for Saigon's policies, now as in the past, to At about the same time the administration There is a relationship between the U.S. the extent they are not fictions for deceiving presented Congress with a request for these arms build-up Indochina and the proeram American opinion, are fundamentally ex- funds in June:, Air America and Continental /or secret contractual aid. Before the Oc- Air.Serseces, the CIA contractual "civilian' to her peace agreement, the U.S. made little presaions of the aims and designs of the U.S. bceen stepping up rec.ruineg among effort to. keep the program Secret. In Air Force personnel in Indochina, according testimony before the Senate Approoriations to a Dec. I report of Dispatch News Service?ICommittee on Sept. 13.. Air Force Maj. Gen. by John Burgess. He quoted from a con- Joseph R. DeLuca explained in detail U.S. fit'ential recruiting brochure which, among . plans for contracting for personnel to train other points, stated:- Saigon Air Force members. In the area of maintenance alone, the U.S. was planning to ll in Clot Osloec v '3-m-Fare ? . ? ? make contracts for $54 million of one to Oblong the struinele in Vietnam, aS We as ? ? a 647 t in-4.6541ln Gain time In essence, American procrastination in Paris has been an effort to gain time for augmenting Saigon's war machine and settinp, up a huge clandestine network of "civilian advisors" Which will attempt to the rest of iikpbilovefdrFornRelease f s. W?Ab ft01409401101b6aillti personnel, ac- um-cements have c -apart reached. government, that is government agencies , Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01 MIAMI, FLA. RERAT'D) N 61973i M ? 380,328 S 479,025 By FREDERIC SHERIMAN herald Editorial Writer THERE is at Yale University a doc- toral scholar who would like to believe Richard Nixon is trying to cut loose from Vietnam because of e?,d(ince that American involvement in Southeast Asia is a major factor in the increasing problem with heroin addiction here in this country. Alfred W. McCoy has offered such evi- dence in his book enti- tled The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia (Harper & Row). Those who support American intervention in Vietnam as a selfless act in defense of freedom will judge the McCoy book as a spurious indictment filled with wild ,and baseless charges. But there is too much in this book for it to be dismissed as anti-Vietnam propa- ganda. Eighteen months of study pro- duced the names, the places and the dates of trafficking in the poppy gum that is turned into the powder of white death. Sources of opium and heroin are traced through the ponies and the econ- omies of the military dictatorships in South Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand, Aircraft controlled by General Icy in Saigon transported from Laos the hero- in that was pushed on tens of thousands of American servicemen. It was sold:, cheaply because there were more than 500,000 potential customers. It was General Ry's sister who directed much of the traffic in heroin from the Sedone s?p?a?),ace Ilotei in Pakse, a city in western k ji -FL Laos near the Thai border. The Cambodia invasion, did not ac- complish the capture of the North Viet- namese headquarters, but it did enable the Saigon Navy to expand its role in the heroin traffic. Up until the invasion of Cambodia, here was no surface tran- sit for heroin from Laos. But with the protection of American air power, the Vietnamese admirals were able to run their heroin in competition with General Ky's aircraft. STATOTkR THIS is a book the CIA tried to sup- press because it doctuneriirS' "the use of American money and American airplanes in the heroin traffic. This again is more of the political expediency on which Washington's stumbling in Southeast Asia is based. The loyalty of mountain tribesmen could only he bought by purchases of their poppy crop and trans:iort of the opium gum to pro- cessing plants. controlled *by political leaders in Laos and Cambodia. It was a repeat of the game invented by French intelligence officials who use profits from heroin traffic to finance political machinations. On Page M. McCoy writes, ''With- out air transport for their opium,. the Meo (tribesmen) faced economic ruin.. There Was simply no form of air trans-. port available in northern .Laos except the CIA's charter airline, Air Americii. And according to several sources, Air America began flying opium from moun- tain villages north and east, of the Plain of Jars to Gen. Vane Pan's headquarters at Long Tieng." This, then, is the major factor in the so-called secret American war in Laos: traffic in opium destined- for pushers in Saigon and for the smug- glers coming,' into the United States by way of Miami from Latin America. THE BASIC problem, as McCoy out- lines it,. is that American officials in Southeast Asia who .know the inside story or the heroin traffic cannot or won't do anything about it because of fears that their actions would somehowi".; hamper the war effort. If agents of the U.S. Bureau Narcotics, for example, were to gefi,, tough with Thai leaders mixed up wititi heroin in Bangkok, American commancit, ers of the airbases in that country wouls;, suddenly find it impossible to get jcii fuel delivered or other vital supplic delivered. This is why McCoy called his booli,'", . , The Politics of Heroin. c.,-.M.,,,?-k,!,S7KATie..511. ructO,aa ,,,,T1,10,1,44,it Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 STATOTHR WASH TON STAR Approved For Release 2001103/C143:10114A-MP80-01 . ? ? tr or nw rca: ruyting ano ? By JOHN BURGESS Special to The Star-News ? BANGKOK ? "The flying is ',rion-military; in other words, ? 'civilian flying. You are flying .':.for the U.S. government, that ? Is government agencies such :;as USOM, USAID, USIS, etc. While 'these agencies may be , under CIA direction, you don't knew and you don't care. The government agencies direct .the routings and schedulings, ? your company provides the technical know-how and you fly the airplane." ;,.-?? Thus an unnamed American ?,!.pilot describes "civilian - flying" in Southeast Asia ? for Air America and the leSser ? known Continenfal Air Serv- ices ? both private companies t on contract to.the U.S. govern- 9nent. The pilot's comments bare part of a confidential, '.16-page brochure available at certain Air Force personnel of- flees. It is shown to Air Force ?..pilots interested in flying for ? 'one of the companies upon s completing their military serv- rice. ? The brochure lists no author ;or publisher, but it offers an .;illuminating view into the in- ? 'teena.1 .operations of Air Amer- :Ica, which .has played a cru- cial role in the Indochina war -theater since the 19505. Air :?-America, along with the other ompanie s, has airlifted troops, refugees, CIA agents, ?American politicians, war ma- ?-terial, food and occasionally 'prisoners all over Southeast Extravagant Salaries - The brochure, dated June 29, 1972, boasts that Mr America ranked as one of the most 'profitable corporation in the United States in 1969, a year when .most of the world's air- lines lost heavily. Air Ameri- ca's customer is the U.S. government. . . It employs about 436 pilots, according to the pamphlet, of which 384 are working in . Southeast Asia. The center of Air America's operation is Laos, where the presence of -? military or military-related -personnel is prohibited by the rhuch-abused Geneva Confer- ence of 1962: ' Air America's profits are ? high despite the somewhat ex- travagant salaries it pays for ' flying personnel. According to . the re t a ilot with 11 years ellyih9ra UH-34D heliccpter based, at Udorn air base in Thailand an average of 100 hot rs monthly,. will take home $51 525. All sal- aries are tax free. A newly hired pilot flying.a C-7 Caribou transport based in Vientiane, averaging 100 hours flying time monthly, would earn a minimum $29,442. The U.S. commercial pilot .average Is $24,000. Also available to Air Ameri- ca personnel, in addition to a. liberal expense account, is life and medical insurance, two- weeks leave, tickets on other . airlines at 20 percent normal cost, ?PX and government. mailing privileges and educa- tional allowances for depend- ents. Many Air America pilots are retired military men re- ceiving military pensions, ? 'Good' Investment Americans can also become "air freight specialists", coin? monly called kickers. Their job is to push cargo out over drop. zones. Salary is $1,600-$1,800 per month. Quali- fications: American' citizen- ship, air borne training, expe- rience with the U.S. Air Force preferred.. Air America, Inc., is owned by a private aviation invest- ment concern called the Pacif- - ic Corp. Dunn. and Brad- street's investment directory places its assets in the $10-$50 million category, and rates it "good" as an investment risk. Air America itself employs al- together about 8,000 persons, ranking in size just below Na- tional Airlines and above most of the smaller U.S. domestic side); if so, it is expected that airlines. In boom among contract opera- I Formerly called Civil Air J tors will result when imple- Transport (CAT), Air America mented, due to inevitable re- was organized after World . habilitation and reconstruction War II by General Claire 'aid in wartorn areas.... Job Chennault, commander of the market highly competitive and American fighter squadrons in you'll need all the help you Burma and China known as can get." the Flying Tigers. CAT played According to Pacific News a major role in post-war China Service, the following men sit supplying Nationalist troops. ion the Air America board of CAT also supplied the French directors: during their phase of the war Samuel Randolph Walker ? in Indochina. ' chairman of the board of Wm. Air America is commonly ?C. Walker's Son, New York; considered an arm of the CIA. ? director of Equitable Life As- In Laos, the CIA for the past surance Society; member of 10 Years or more has main- ,Federal City 'Council, Wash- tamed an army of hill tribe- ingten, D.C.; member of Ac- men, mainly Thai aed Lao tion Council for Bitter Cities, mercenaries. Most ? of the air ? ? Urban America, Inc., and life supply and transport needs for trustee, Columbia University. this army have been handled William A. Reed ? chair- by Air America. . man of the . board of Simpson ReleaR? Timber CO.; chairman of the atsfapt4 ? ciAaR9Raoloim 000090001-6 Tim"g 'e ? roe ure. d6e Co ? director of crown i hi t t th subject of con- I/ traband: ? "Although flights mainly serve U.S. official personnel movement and native officials and civilians, you sometimes engage in the movement of friendly troops, or of enemy captives; or in the transport of cargo much more potent than rice and beans! There's a war going on. Use your imagina- tion!" Air America works hand- in-hand with the U.S. Air Force. At Udorn air base in Thailand, Air Force mechan- ics repair the airline's trans- ports and helicopters, many of them unmarked. The Air Force has reportedly leased giant C130 transports whe.n the . planes were needed for opera- . tions in Laos. In the section on ? Air America's benefits, the brochure lists in addition to normal home and sick leave: "Military leave will be gtant- ed appropriately" an appar- ent acknowledgement that there are military people working directly with Air America. One should not conclude, however, that the salaries, ex- citement and tax advantages mean that Air America pilots hope the war will continue. As ? the brochure's author notes in a typed postscript: ? "Foreign aid situation un- clear pending outcome mili- tary situation in RVN (Repub- ? lie of Vietnam), but it looks as if we'll finish the war (and peace terms favorable for our Seattle First ?National 'Bank; director of General Insurance Co.; director of Boeing Co.; director of Pacific Car Found- ry CO.; director of Northern ? Pacific Railroad; director of Stanford Research Institute. Arthur Berry Melia rdson -- foreign service officer in Rus- sia, China and England from 1914 to 1936; chairman of the board of Cheeseborough Ponds, Inc. from 1955 to 1951; director of United Hospital Fund, New York; trustee of Lenox Hill Hospital. ? James Barr Ames ? law partner in Ropes & Gray, Bos- ton; director of Air Asia Co., Ltd., director of International Student Association; member, Cambridge Civic Association and trustee of Mt. Auburn Hospital. STATOTHR not mention opium explicitly, son Timber Co.; director of STATOTHR ASIA LZTTEIL I Approved For Release 2001/03/114cl,Wp80-01601R000 NEW DESTINATION: Air America, which has had its Asia headquarters in Taiwan for many years, is relocating its main .operations to Thailand. The airline---often referred to as the Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA's) air arm---has been tied in with Taiwan's old Civil Air Transport (CAT) complex, which includes Air Asia, for management and operational'purposes. CAT doesn't operate its own planes anymore but provides management services for others. It's Air Asia arm is the biggest aircraft maintenance operation in the Far East. Both will stay in Taiwan. Word about the Air America move has just leaked out. We'll have a more detailed report on what the move is all about and what it means in a later ' issue. :y Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 ?? PHILArALPIIIA They Want Out CIA militarization has Rprovbcrbr Refeasd 2 /04.: tetAaRE08040 $6,01 ROO BUT T E ing more than to escape the the Lao Toting. But the once SGU and the war, return to prosperous Meo have been E ? 634,371 their villages and families, decimated by the CIA's mili- n S ? 701,743 0 1 f. titt. OLT 1 0 1972 and grow rice. tary programs. . s The deterrent to escape was The tens of thousands of un- ? the Royal Lao Army ? 26 willing and unknowing tribes- ,. years in the Royal Lao Army. men helicoptered up to the : Military service is compel- Plain of Jars each dry season Lo llrremilars s.fory 13-year-old all nlaidles. of i 151 though since 1968 have been cut to d Get More Aid Thi ejars By JOHN EVERINGHAM Special to' The Bulletin Phou Dum, Laos ? The twin antennae of a small U.S communications transmltte sticks up from a lonely moun lain top '10 miles' northwest o the village 'of Luang Prabang in northern Laos.. . According to a Thai civilian emploSied by Air America (under contract to the CIA) to maintain the ? installation, i Provides the ? U.S. military with communications between northern Laos and the U.S. air base at Udorn, Thailand. ! Pro-Communist Pathet Lao f orces control everything north and west of the moun- tain, beginning just a few hun- dred meters from the trans- mitter. Not 'Irregular' The 400 Lao Teung (moun- taILLao) "irregulars" at the ipaallation are among the 30,- 000 mountain villagers who form the backbone of the CIA's no longer secret army in Laos, an army that is vir- tually Independent of Laotian eontral. Officials refer to them as !Irregulars," but they are fulltim e, highly trained troops. The Special Guerilla Units (SGU) are given credit o r the Vientiane govern- ment's not having lost control .Of the whole country. Commu- nist forces occupy three- fourths of Laos. :? How did these mountain sol- diers wind up in an American army? ? "Money," I was told over and over again on a repent 'overnight visit to the moun-? lain. (Chances of a journalist being given a lift aboard the 'American ? helicopter that' serves the mountain are about Oun'tialliens hi e agt?diPpr Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 Ito .111.old eirnehe II drafted, Wi )11enough shelling. And communist guns an And once a soldier, the only Barely 10 percent of the way out is bribery or until you're 40. Twenty-six serving Meo % survive in their tradi- years in the Royal Lao Arm tional mountain-top homes: As is risk" at the very best odds. y recruiting teams munist lines, they were bomb- A r . reach even remote villages, ed by the Americans. : 1?ls, national Dispatch News Service Inter- ;(../ getting in by helicopter where . :trucks won't go. , It isn't hard to see why 'those who' had the chance r opted for being an "American _ .soldier" instead. "American 1-Army" pay begins at 12,500 kip per month ($15); Lao :army at 4,500 per month ($5). ? : Food too, I was assured, was far better and more plentiful, chiefly because the t Americans deliver it them- 'selves.- Even big jars of local firewater whisky are occa- sionally given out. In battle, SGU troops have access to 'superior weapons and a more reliable flow of ammunition than their broth- , ers in the Lao army. Air sup- port comes faster and their wounded are evacuated more swiftly, said Lieutenant Olin See, the company command- ? er. More Respect The Lao Teung speak of the "American bosses" with more respect than do the Meo SGUs with whom they share these highlands. Before CIA militarization of, 111.1-Trtr?rrteritnta?in. tribes, the Meo had a firmly established socia I-political structure which the CIA brushed aside. But the Lao Teung were dis- organized and scattered; and the CIA had no need 'to inter- fere with their traditional ? leadership. The Lao Teung's economic position has always been well below that of the Meo. Their crops were less carefully ten- ded and their livestock fewer. Y their villages fell behind Com- . STATOTHR iA ? STATOTH R BALT.I.M4E SUN , . . Approved For Release 2001/03/041:0C3AgRee80701601R U.S. aid .is' still ,n.ozi73fq :,....4 s ,,,07 -.. . glli b I b 0 LL, o. Il ? ? .. . Ipervismn, though- -others may i , . , It is known, though, that the ..., i i In 1969-1970. a period M which ?..partly because many Ameri- :i cgthar units "just grew"-- , , By ARNOLD R. ISAACS 1 have faded across the border. i bombing has been very Sun 'stall Correspondent The war quickly resumed, and i heavy. Vientiane, Laos-L-The United so did American support. . . -- ' most bombing of North Viet- . eans felt the Royal I,ao Army States ? role in the Indochina . In 1,964-1965, when the Ameri- nam was suspended, the sor- was simply too inept to be war may have diminished?but cans launched full-set-ile - air .tie rate over Laos was re- in ide. into a eiyable fighting 'force. '. not in Laos. war in Indochina and the ported. to have been 400 a day? . , No longer top secret but still North Vietnamese increased a higher rate than. has ey . "Has evolved", partly. concealed.. from public their commitment of men and er been -reached over North. Viet-. view, the American war effort arms to the battles in South nam. . "The situation has evolYed, In the ground war, American ? . ? , said an ? American officer, in support of the Lao govern- i Vietnam, the Laos war took on Inuit remains as large as i a pattern that has remained Embassy officials, military at-- spetiking of the formation of ever. Without it, U.S. and Lao i essentially unchanged ever tactics and Central Intelligence the irreguliir units, "and Fin officials agree, the war against since, . _ Agency. personnel are deeply not sure our policy has evolved Vietnamese allies would cal the Pathet Lao and its North i. The- 1.I.S., seeking to tihr-cdc. involved in war planning. '1 'he la:vie-L.5, ix,ith . it is . it should '- j e flof Counist troops U.S. Embassy spokesman' in lapse not in months but possi- 1 th w o mmand supplies the llo Chi Vientiane, gives a military bly in days. ? I Minh trail 'complex in eastern . _ ? .! . ..- . units. the U.S. pays mid equips Along with ' the irregular "They might last a couple of I Laos; briefing 'for correspondents ati stepped up its supprt of ? battalions of "volunteers". wecks without us," said.. an 1 Lao government troops th re_ 11.30 every morning. .. . i , i irom ' Thailand. Almost is civ officer. with long ex.1 turn for diplomatic silence on The briefings ? are. quite' de-1 thing about the Tind units is perience in Laos. He grinned, i U.S. bombing of the trail. Thc tailed except on U.S. opera: ckissified, becztuse both the .but he wasn.'t joking. A Lao Nor lb Vietnamese in turn in Hons. ',Fhough the .:spokesman Colonel, asked how long it 'creased their aid to the Lao will often refer to air strikes Lao and Thai governments are, sensitive on. the subject. There would take with continued out-', Communist forces in northern ? for example, ,he Will not say are sti to be about 12.000 side aid for the Lao 1.rmy to i Dios, co:11111111:in, ?thousanis of whose Planes yere flying . Thai troops in the cotintry be able to defend itself, said 1 their own men to keep Lao them. ? " - now, .almost double the ? num- . seriously: "Eight or 10 years". 1 government troops pinned ? supplies ? '. . ber present a year ago, i! , In support of the govern- down safely away from the , . , All suppl. , ??? ---- - - ??r- Working with the Lzio forces . , ' menr s war effort, the U.S. is i appm.iches to the trail and On the ground, the U.S.:fu ?tccording to the U.S. Ern- providing direct miliary aid of !North Vietnam's border. rushes all the weapons. ammu- bassy, are 320 U.S. advisers. $3a0 million a year. This is In the ensuing years,' both nition and . supplies for the which does not seem a large about 10 times the whole Lao : Washington and Hanoi at 50;000-man ?-Royal Lao ?Army number but actually represents . national budget, - and almost ; tempted to hide the degree of ?which, despite the. U.S, aid, a far higher ratio of :1merican. 'twice the country's gross na- i theft involvement in Laos. '1 he 'still - is l'er.,artiod as ?poorly a - tional product. ? ? ,,North Vietnamese have. never .trained. badly?led and largely dvisers to local troops than The aid totals do not include tacknowledged the presence of :ineffective except for defensive ? has existed for year.A.' in South theft troops in the country? garrison duty. ' .." : . -' I Vietnam. ? the cost of American bornbirvi,, ? , The main American effort It is not klIONVI1 how many which is mounted from outside n?w -estimated to number about 20.000. The Americans, has been with. the irregular Americans working for "the Laos. Although rie present ex. Hiough feeling their aid was units, , origimilly. ...organized, 'tent of bombing in Laos is not annex"?local slang for the s and Justified by North Vietnam's trained, paid and- in. many ' known, fight er-homber CIA?are ? directly involved violation of the Geneva agree. cases directed by the CIA. The I3-52's have at times in the past, reached sortie rates over ment, apparently felt it wolf.] irregular forces have grown to with military or paramilitary Laos exceeding the highest be embarrassing..o .n_ .f i t ervene , about 30,000 "men; and many 1 unit's. ? ever reached over North Viet- openly while Hanoi continued- of them are Only very loosely 1 Between 300 and 400 Ameri- nam. to dimy its role. - controlled by the Lao.militaryi cans provide logistical support U.S. ald?to LaoS began in the Though an effort as large.- aS? command?a fact w w hich is no for Lao forces, mostly 'through ?1950's. During the confused the U.S. war in Laos could not giving sonic concern to the i Air America, the CIA-financed Warfare preceding the Geneva really be kept hidden, official governinent and to U.S. offi- charter airline that flies troops Conference of 1962, the Amen- secrecy was maintained for a aheadblealcseluosoel-dflitrge. to a possi- ! and - supplies throughout the cans '. supplied nearly half a long time.. It was not until . ., billion dollars for militar_ sal- Mara., 1970, that President The origins or country Air America's hi Iii irregular! ? . aries and equipment, adminis- NiXOn ' publicly acknowledgd forces areterg--and?transport planes, still shrouded in i .. w tering the military assistance Amer n a icaircra some of them ith the coitipi- ft were bomb- secrecy, but the information ; ing Laos, though the facts had available suggests that the ny's insignia but most un- through a mission misleadingly called the Pi o,ranis F.,-.,ilua- been knownlong before: - Americans did not intend, in marked, can he seen at sir lion Office an the beginning, to create what tually every airstrip in Laos. d manned by . FCW details ? -. has become .a parallel army. I g r ' Though. the .bombing is now , The .first units apparently were clothes under the military officers in civ ilian , . guise (-4 officially admitted, few details ? formed by the CIA to wage' "technicians"?an oper-?'?ion are made available. The num- i guerrilla warfare against thel that foreshadowed later clan- ber of missions each clay, for i lin, chi destine efforts. . example, is not disclosed nor 1: Nlinh trail-7-an activity that might have embarrassed When the Geneva Accords . are. weekly, monthly or m even! i the I.ao governent,. ? :which ma thiss(;11.1 i s, ,IIiits iiE:l iii,\,%-tiv-isi'iticLasrcalse.di'litQhe? war *.banned foreign military aid. yearly totals. Presurnably ? withdrew 666 military advisers. since the Americans have f,ori! of. the All1CfiCanS and! North affair . ,. . the Americans conscientiously is not. for security Only ?1.0 of the b0,000 North years relelised Ii.lidY preCISC i Vietnamese. ? ? i ? VietriamAppritYvd-floriRjeitg0 4 . c '4' IA' RDP80-101401R000900090001-6 . . : Laos withdr w uncer Interna- ajr a ac :pow ? ... ? ,, t- -Itional Control Commission su- and South Vietnam. American official sato, he ir THE M1W-U.3E1h, N. J. DAILY JOURNAL 28 Nov 1972 ' Approved For Relekse,?2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601 The fall'aSCO STATOTHR (Former C,rcen }levet. Capt. Robert F. Marasco and seven other Special Forces members were in. volved in (inn of the majcr controversies of the Viet Main-War in when ac- cused of murderilV. a triple agent. Now a civilian in Bloomfield, he spent many hours bein interviewed by Daily Journal reporter Thomas Michaiski. recall- ing events surrounding the .,assassination that he says DCVO' were made public), Tt MSi 111 wisamm????0411 _47A-1,1 in r I) TV1 If7(0)11-in mercurial chief of state. Were directed to Laos. SorlIF! to Sihanouk was at that, lime the herder area and others balancing the east, against the in Cambnclia. west, attempting to maintain If we had the South Cstnbodials independence Vietnamese in there, with u7.." and in strop his conntuy clear Marasco explained, "Project, of the Vietnam War. He did Gamma would have become not. succeed, however. just another worthless unit 'Hanoi, at that time, became lihe '7-n many others." ttonre demanding in its deal, It. was in April 19119 \viten ines with Sihanouk as th(' (111.1N-en's triple identity came Canimunisis built up large In light. The entire story, base camps and underground marosen said, was never told. arsenals in border areas. "f had a split camp." he explained. "Myself and two men were in one camp. I had a sergeant., Alvin L. Smith Jr., who was at. another location. setting up a team of Vietnamese and Cambodians of his own." Cbuyen was Smith's principal agent. Ultimately, Marasco relieved Smith and assumed total responsibility for the second camp or "net." Prior to the actual takeover, however, :Marasco said he handled Smith's net only in a supervisory rapacity. "Prince Sihanouk has al- J3'. T110:k1A.S Mint Al..Sici kA a. 7 COOterlded that. there ,Ionrull Staff Writer were no VC nr North Vietnam- Virtrar.p.,-.0 It11 le_a-ent .- 177.P in Cambodia and that 0 Thai 1_12SbtYen wa',.; , camhndia was not used as a '-'r-li. :-derectia_sals_.inat?e_d_hlill_be._ rrjup:P nr as a supply route." Central Intelligence Agency in l\Iarasen said. "In 069 ?-riTi-FITI..1-i-Tru-se 1:1-e.,-1;:,W)),-. teb Sihanouk was starting to Poole much nicjarteyt_rela...... artlund, The was sayin,,'.. 'yeah, -Itons ??i-t11-- PrutreNorndorn well, there may be a few.' ---sir.-1.1-,?ut., \., :in 5.85 Rdm,,n,E.., l'ltVi, were about. to send an ....tri71-t- The Cnmmunisls were American charge de-affairs In -setting up base camps in Cam- Cambodia because relations : 'India, Capt.. Robert, F. ere impt'oving," Marasco said. Marasco 'tad Chinyon talked ah.out savs. This. plus the fact that the intelligence , operations in CIA lcai-netd Chuyen was a. Carnhodia to the North? Norlit?I let nante,,,e_ agent., Vi011atres'". it ' mistht have resnItrd_ ji-L.....an ...order to affected relmtinns with 'Prince '1V5-Fasjito__,and, his_wen "it; Sitlall?0L . . _..? "Chuyen also knew that ? "Ile 1:Chnyeni was more Project Gamma was a uni? dangerous without_ a rifle than lateral oncration and, did, in 100 i'en with rifles," Marasco fact. inform South Vietnam abnut our highly classified told The Daily Journal. "Ile had 0)P konwledee, inieiti oPerations." :Marasco said. genre :rid capability of killing Although the United Slatr!; mant pronlo. . and South Vietnam were ? 'There was no difficull allies, the latter could not he drcF41^n to 1n21,e. It W;4; OPP I rirti'd enott;11-1 for involve. 7.0%. 1,:ain,-.,i, , went in Proircl, Gamma, _ . 1,41s7.0,!v tho,L-...v-rts of mar,,-4ro said. AmeiAen GIs. There was no "We wantrd it. to he _pow! f..- riisciissinn." successful," Marasco added. (11v:aert knew Marasco's "It rout(' not h?-taT been avtill ttheln:zranhir. eon! all the pIhin--; nun all tlir tntinn-??in)s and othil. mirth ?k," might, have grimed rquilltront , Moro found a'. ,air itn;lor,,le'.. he alsn hnew 111,1i .d:o'n,-.co r:d1(1 Prnircf, rmr' lillT111011 the normal Pr.aject GannAa tvas 1,er4r* i 1).1,1 nitir c,10-16-; P!or('S.;in herore hisf After an emergency leave to Florida when Smith's mother died, the sergeant was assigned In Nha TranZ Spectal 'Forces headquarters. One day he was going through some Second of 5 articles captinted photographs from another, unrelated operation. One of the pictures. Marasco sa:d, shnwrd a known Viet Cuing general standing with his arm arniind Chuyen, in a friendly manner. Maraseo was called from the field and, after a inretirw, it was decided to "run a check" on Chuyen. "We fannd that he it;id not STATOTHR STATOTHR "Supposedly, it was hard to collie 110 with enough appointments with the guy who ran the lie detector. . . it .was tough to do it., so there was always an OXOOSP as to why it hadn't been done." As it turned out, it was discnverc.d that Chuyen had ? been trained in North Vietnam "in the equivalent, of our CIA." Ile had arrived from Hanoi in 1951. During the early 19511's Ho ('hi Minh had allowed great. numbers of people to migrate to the south, Some of those who settled in various hamlets were,, Hi agentsin fact, whoNo rth '?,?'ricould be called upon at any time to perform a service. Thus. it. is possible that Chuven was an "inactive" agent until 19(;8 when Hanoi "Tapped him" for espionage duties. "Chuven came to us highly recommended hy the South Vietnamese," Marasco said. "When took over Smith's net. Chuyen had already been. eFiabliShed as a principal brought him to Nha Trang. and eventually to Saigon for questtontng," Maraaco aaid., "This was all based on the photograph we had found. We put him through three he deicrtnr examinations which he flunked miserably." It was early Jun. of 1141-19 when Chuyen's guise was discovered, Between the time Chin-en was hi-might from :Oa Tran:z to Saigon.Marascn had gone home in New .ler:-.ry on emergency "When my leave was-, no," he said. "I would have had only four weeks to serve in close pprove , ore,, ease 201011 3 4a:43KADP8041601.R000900090001-6 A proved F PARIS) LE NOUVEL OBSERVATEUR 27 Nov - 3 Dec 1972 /04: CIA-RDP8-0-01601R00 O STATOTHR 0 N., I N./ I I STATpTHR Michel: K. Lamberti el Catherine Lamour ont Jit le tour du monde. pour remonter toutes les fiVres qui menent aux Vrais patrons de la drogue ? - 4 Si nous ne venons pas a bout de cc Nan, mi qui vicndra a flout de nous 1,, s'exclamait, le 17 juin 1971, le president Nixon devant des dizaines de millions de telespectateurs. Les Etats-Unis ont, en effet, le triste pri- vilege de compter le plus grand nombre d'horoinomanes du monde plus d'un demi-million actuellement, dont trois cent mile., pour la seule ville de New York. Plus de 50 % des crimes perpetres dans les grandes villes sont directement lies h la .drogue : on tue pour se procurer l'argent necessaire.. -yachat d'une dose d'heroIne. Le phenomene,n!est pas settlement ameri- cain : tous les pays europeens voient croitre une vitesse vertigineuse le nombre de leurs herolnomanes. En France, oilt la pe- metration de la drogue n'a ete sensible qu'a partir de 1968, on en compte &jilt vingt ( mule. Et le ministere de la Sante estime? que le pays pourrait .compter cent mile heroinomanes en 1976. Couper la source ? La drogue n'ast plus un simple pro- bleme de police. Partant du principe evi- dent, expos?ernierernent a un journaliste americain de c U.S. News and World Report ) par l'ancien directeur des Dona- hes americaines, Myles J. Ambrose, et scion lequel c on ne pent pas devenir toxico- mane si l'on ne troetve pas de stupe- fiants ), :Washington a decide de remon- -te a la sourde, c'est-a-dire a la produc- tion' meme, de l'opium, dont Pherolne est up derive. ? ? Couper la source d'approvisionnement des trafiquants, c'est intervenir dans les ?affaires des pays producteurs : de poli- ciere, la lutte contre la toxicomanie est devenue politique. Se posant une fois de Plus en .c gendarmes du monde 3. mais, .cette fois, pour une cause dont personne no songe a discuter le bien-fonde, les Etats- Unis se sont lances dans une croisade que d'aucuns jugent d'avance vouee a l'echec. On produit, en diet, chaque annee, dans le monde, assez d'opium pour approvision- ner les cinq cent mile heroinomanes am& ricains pendant cinquante ans : deux a trols mile tonnes, dont la moitie seule- ment est destinee a rindustrie pharmaceu- 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 5: deux sources differentes : O 1) Les pays danslesquels la culture du pavot est legale et contrOlae par l'Etat, mais o? une partie de la recolte echappe aux autorites administratives. ? 2) Les pays dans lesquels la culture du pavot est en principe interdite, mais qui n'ont pas les moyens materiels et poll- tiques ?.ou le desir ? de faire respecter cette loi. ? La Turquie, troisieme producteur mon- dial, entrait dans la premiere . categoric. Jusqu'a cc que le gouvernement d'Ankara decide de 'proscrire la culture du pavot sur tout le territoire turc a partir de 1972, 25 e,lo de la production d'opium etait de- tournee vers le marche clandestin, alors qu'elle aurait dii. en principe, etre entiere-. me:nt achetee par l'Etat. Ce pays n'est pas le seul a connaitre pareil probleme. tine enctuete effectuee par le service strategi- que des renseignements du Bureau des?Nar- cotiques americain (B.N.D.D.) donnatt, pour 1971, les chiffres suivants. : Production (1) ocoulee SUr le mambo licit? Production acoulee sur le marche clandestin Turquie lode Pakistan 150 1 200 6 35 a 50 .? 250. 175-200 Iran . 150 U.R.S.S. 115 Republique popu- laire de Chine 100 Yougoslavie 0,83 1,7 Japon ? 5 Triangle d'or (Thailande - Bir- manie - Laos) 750 Afghanistan 100-150 Mexique 5-15 (I) En tonnes. Contrairement a cc que Pon pourrait penser, les c fuites ne sont pas propor- tionnelles a l'importance de la production licite ni a cello des superficies cultivees en pavot. Elles dependent du plus o moms grand sous-developpement admin? tratif du pays concerne et de la capacit des autorites locales a exercer un control effectif sur les paysans.. au moment cit recoltes. Pourtant, memo des controles rigot reux ne suffisent pas a eviter les detou nements. compte tenti de la difference dc prix pratiques sur le marche officiel et st le marche clandestin. L'exemple de l'Inc le prouve, oil, en depit d'un s:ysteme c contrOle gouvernemental cite en. exemp par toutes les instances internationales, fuites s'elevent a 18 % de la preclude totale. La Yougoslavie laisserait Cchappl pres de 70 % de sa production. Le Paid tan, enfin, qui .produit leg:dement six toi nes d'opium, contribuerait pour pies deux cents tonnes a l'approvisionnemel des trafiquants. Le pavot peIrtellit Dans une deuxieme categoric de pa) la production de l'opium est llegate. n'existe evidemment aucun organisn d'Etat charge de controler tine productic qui, en principe, n'existe pas. Clandestin la recolte d'opium est entierement ecoul sur le marche parallele..Selon le B.N.D.L ces pays contribueraient pour huit cent ci quante a mile tonnes a l'approvisionn ment du trafic. D'autres regions, sur lesquelles on possede absolument aucune informatic produisent de l'opium en quantite apt)! ciable : le Nepal et, probablement, la Syl et le Kurdistan irakien. On signale' l'apparition de champs de pavots en Air rique du Sud. Contrairement a cc que a sotivent affirme, la culture du pavot requiert pas de conditions geographiqu ou climatiques exceptionnelles. Elle racial- seulement une main-d'ceuvre abondante bon marche car la recolte demande bea coup de soins et de minutie. Nombre de pays qui ne sent pas c producteurs traditionnels d'opium p01 raient, le voulaient, se mettre a cultiN du pavot. C'est le cas tout recent du pon. La production d'opium a, de cc tendance a croitre en fonction de la c mande et pourrait encore augmenter con derablement. Des indices nombreux Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 -NAI0N STAtOTH Approved For Release 2001A7OP:VCIEWARDRERI PYRRHIC PLOY Elrodmramm CAL2Derom E. W. I?P'EnTrER Mr. PfeiDer is professor of zoology at the University of Montana and a co-author of Harvest of Death: Chemical Warfare in Indochina (Free Press/Macmillan). He visited Cambodia in 1969 and 1971 and was in Hanoi in 1970. While on a visit to Hanoi in June 1970 my two compan- ions. and I met with Premier Pham Van Dong. During the conversation, I asked the Premier to evaluate Nixon's in- vasion of Cambodia which had occurred one month ear- lier. His .answer was straightforward: "It makes things very favorable for the success of our revolution." By "our revolution" I supposed him to mean the revolution of the Indochinese people 'against foreign invaders. . How well does Premier Pham Van Doug's 1970 evalu- ation accord with the situation of Cambodia in late 1972? Redent dispatches from Indochina suggest that he knew what he was talking about. According to the A.P. (Sep- tember ? 1), only one-third of Cambodia is still under "Kilmer Republic" control. It has been revealed that the lanks used in the fall offensive against the An Loc area, (only a short distance from Saigon) came from the Chup Rubber Plantation and nearby areas in Cambodia. These are the very areas that President Nixon characterized In April 1970 as "Communist sanctuaries" that must be cleaned out. -? Two factors have been principally responsible for the failure of Nixon's Cambodian policies. First, the Presi- dent Wa-S badly misinformed about past U.S.-Cambodian- Vietnamese relations and about the situation on the Viet- namese-Cambodian border prior to the March 1970 change in the Cambodian Government. For instance, in his speech of April 30, 1970, announcing the U.S. -irt- Nasion ,of the Fishhook region of Cambodia, Mr, Nixon stated: "Tonight American and South Vietnamese units will -attack the headquarters for the entire Communist 'unitary operation in 'South Vietnam. This key control center has been occupied by the North Vietnamese and VietcOng for five years in blatant violation of Cambodia's neutrality." Mr. Nixon, standing in front of a map of . Cambodia, put his finger on the little town of Wilmot as he made this accusation. That puzzled me a great deal, for I had spent two days in and around Mimot about four months before the U.S.' attack, and knew it to be controlled by French and Cambodian rubber interests. Malty Europeans were working there, and some of them (e.g., a Belgian plant pathologist) were in complete sympathy with the American effort in South Vietnam. These Europeans were living with their wives and chil- dren in an environment of complete tranquillity.. We asked many of them Whether they. had seen any sign ..of North Vietnamese or Vietcong activity and they all answered no. My colleague A. H. Westing and I had visited the re- gion to insect the damag.e_dow. iqy a clandestine defolia- tion raid APPNI(Pgi it9Fint1504,P192.04.1AVQ4st 200,000 acres of eastern Cambodia. According to a letter I. received some months later from Sen. Fiank Church, the raid was carried out by Air America, a CIA airline, for what purposes we still do not know. After the raid, the Sihanouk regime asked that American officials visit the region, with a view to making reparations for. the 'damage. Although the U.S. Government to this day offi- cially denies having carried out this operation, it did send .a team of experts, including Charles Minarik of the Chem- ical Warfare Laboratories, U.S. Army, into the Mirnot region shortly after the raids. This team's report describes how they were flown over the region, driven 'through it, and how they walked in it?just as Westing and I did some months later. It is inconceivable to me that the North Vietnamese and Vietcong, who according to Nixon controlled the area, would have permitted an official U.S. Government team to wander through what Nixon called "the headquarters for the entire Communist military op- erations in South Vietnam." After the invasion began it was widely reported that no key control center could be found. Some arms caches were reportedly uncovered and, of course, -a great deal of rice. The rice did not' greatly surprise me, since at the time we were there, the main occupation, in addition to tapping rubber, was har- vesting rice. When speaking about the Cambodian "Communist sanctuaries," Mr. Nixon failed to mention that, on orders of Prince Sihanouk, troops of the Royal Cambodian Army had in' fact swept these areas about three months before his invasion. The troops were led by Prince Sink Matak, a loyal American prot? and one of those later involved in Sihanouk's overthrow. Sihanouk ordered Matak to search' out and destroy all Communist-Viet- namese positions in Cambodia. Paul Bennett of the Cam- bodian desk of the State Department informed me in an interview, March 22, 1971: "A Cambodian Army opera- tion began in January of 1970 in a northeastern province at approximately the time when Sihanouk left for France and when Prince Sink Matak was Acting Prime Minister. They sent up a number of additional battalions, among the better troops in the Cambodian* Army,- and carried out a series of small sweeps generally in this area. They did have, as I recall, a number of contacts with small V.C. and North Vietnamese units. They found and de- stroyed- a number of small supply* dumps, -a relatively small campsite, but there Was no major contact with the main North Vietnamese forces." Where were the thou- sands of North Vietnamese troops that Nixon said had occupied the area for five years? Besides ,being mistaken about the nature of the sO-called Communist sanctuaries in eastern Cambodia, Mr. Nixon grossly misrepresented the facts when he stated that "American policy since 1954 has been to scrupulously respect the neutrality of Cambodia. . . . North Vietnam, however, has not respected that neutral- . 1 I LiAtile KA 11 * 0)gitrD Qr. riper plan- tk0 MeV bVV;"*4 WY.l.",,W311olation of WASHINGTON STAI1 Approved For Release 2001/0110141 d-RD313,410601 52 Raids Calle Signal By EDITH M. LEDERER Associated Press SAIGON ? U.S. B52 bomb- ers continued their heaviest raids of the war over North Vietnam yesterday. The North Vietnamese For- eign Ministry issued another statement condemning the bombing attacks, and Ameci- can military sources indicated the raids were a signal to Ha- noi that the United States will not stop its bombing below the 20th Parallel until a peace agreement is reached. The peace talks have gone into re- ,cess until Dec. 4. U.S. officials disclosed, that secend B52 was damaged in 'a surface-to-air missile attack last week that claimed the :first 1352 combat loss of the . Vietnam war. None of the six crewmen on the damaged plane was injured but two of the six crewmen on the downed aircraft were hurt. U.S. officials In Vientiane, Laos, also disclosed that an Air America C7 Caribou cargo plane flying in support of Lao- tian irregular forces, was shot down by enemy antiaircraft fire Thursday, killing two Americans, a Thai and a Lao. ?Air America is backed by the 7" U.S. Central Intelligence c> Agency. ? 10th Lost in 5 Days The Air America plane was the 10th American aircraft lost in Indochina in five days, one of the heaviest tolls in several months. Six Americans were killed, 11 rescued and three are missing in the crashes. As reports circulate in Paris of serious differences between U.S. and Hanoi negotiators, the North Vietnamese Foreign Ministry said the B52 attacks ."laid bare the deceitfulness of the Nixon administration's professed desire to end its ? military involvement and re- store peace." ? In South Vietnam, tens of thousands of marchers demon- strated along a 50-mile stretch of Highway 4 in an anti- Communist protest to show that the government is in con- trol of the main road through ? The Air Force credited the pilot of the downed B52 witlj saving top-secret electohi equipment from falling into to Hanoi' The marchers carried flags and banners demanding that North Vietnamese troops get out of South Vietnam and de, claring that "coalition with the Communists is suicide." During tte 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday, the U.S. command reported 14 more B52 missions against North Vietnamese targets be- low the 20th Parallel. Sources said that brought to more than 200 the number of missions against the North in the last five days, the heaviest B52 raids of the war in the North. The U.S. command said the attacks were centered on sup- ply caches awaiting shipment to Laos and South Vietnam. But the North Vietnamese - claim the Stratofortresses ere bombing populated areas and causing heavy civilian casual- ties and damage. President Nixon baited bombing above the 20th Paral- lel Oct. 23 in a move adminis- tration officials described as a good-will gesture following an- nouncement of thedraft cease-fire agreement. Less than three weeks later, air strikes were intensified be- low the 20th Parallel to count- er what American officials de- scribed as an intensive North Vietnamese supply buildup. Heavy Ground Fighting Since monsoon rains have sharply curtailed strikes by smaller fighter-bombers, the B523 have undertaken the bur- den of the bombing mission in North Vietnam's southern pan- handle. On the ground, heavy fight- ing continued in the central highlands 15 to 20 miles south- west of Pleiku City. SheIlings were reported at Dalat in the highlands and at Cu chi base camp 18 miles northwest of Saigon. No casualties were re- ported. the MeknoWilleiVed, For Release 2001/03/04: ? North Vietnamese hands. The Air Force praised Capt. Norbert J. Ostrozny, SO, of Lackawanna, N.Y., for guiding the crippled bomber from North Vietnam into friendly territory before it crashed. U.S. officials said a SAM rnissile exploded 150 feet off the right wing of Ostrozny's: aircraft near the North Viet,. namese port of Vinh. Frag- ments of the Soviet-built mis- sile set two outboard engines afire. They fell off and the two inboard engines then failed, dooming the big air- craft. CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 NEW YORK TIMES Approved. For Release 2001/03011103/IfigFEbP80-01 STATOTHR 1-Enemy Military Leaders to Show Respect,' - By MALCOLM W. BROWNE ? i f1ACi ftl to the New York Times - ? VIENTAINE, Laos, Nov. 25 '--, There were ferris wheels and Charlie Chaplin movies and horse races and canacn dancers and a one-legged American stunt pilot to ? entertain both royalty and . revolutionaries at the That Luang Fair. The annual fair, which ended today, is a two-week festival just outside Vientiane, in which this. little country's .:citizens gather to reaffirm their faith in Buddhism and fealty to the King. It is also an occasion for . 'spectacular displays of the kind of fraternizing between enemies that has led some ? outsiders over ?the years to conclude that the war in Laos is not to be taken seriously. It was taken for granted , this year that the- Commu- -nist-led Pathet Lao delega- tion currently in Vientiane ., would loin enemy military leaders of the Vientiane Gov- ernment in prostrating them- ,. selves before King. Savang Vatthana, and the public was not disappointed. 'Asked why the Pathet Lao had participated in the an- nual profession of loyalty to the King, their spokesman,' . Set Petrasy, replied: I "We participate in religious , festivals because of our wish to show respect for the cus- toms and religion of our ' country." Nine nations contributed small pavilions to the fair this year, mainly to show photographs of life in those ? Countries. , Bow to a King at a Fair n Laos The French pavillion of- fered a juggling act and dancing the Soviet pavillion, showed moN, les of World War II on an outdoor screen and the South Vietnamese dis- played lacquerware, nuoc fish sauce and other prod- ucts. " But as King Savang Vat- thana and the royal entour- age, accompanied by the Premier, Prince Souvanna Phouma, made the rounds of the pavilions, the first stop was at the relatively elabo- rate American pavilion, Inside, there were movies of astronauts, recorded music and a model of Niagara Falls. The King paused politely before each exhibit as it was explained by Ambassador G. McMurtie Godley. The diplo- matic corps that followed the King into the pavilion did not include the Russians or Chinese; they waited outside. As the King emerged, the Americans treated him to a show that captured the at- tention of most of the tens- of thousands of people on the fair grounds. , Roaring out of the sultry low overcast was a tiny white biplane that pulled up just over the King in a spectacular display of acrobatics. The King, the crown prince and the Premier seemed to be enjoying the show, but for some of the spectators, the show was not without em- barrassment. Word i was spread that the pilot of the plane was James H. Rhyne, a pilot of Air America, the quasi-military airline operated by the Cen- ? tral Intelligence Agency. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 PHILADELPHIA, PA. INGZIER Approved For Ilelease 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-0 - 465,503 - 86.7,810 Nov 9 1972 : n - - ?/1,, 4 , 't -7 %?"Lj ;.- --? 7 -71, roaa '1 ? STATOTHR Li ;1 ? Si? 1 I 1 ! r1; r, 1.'r, '. - i. ' i i ; : '-. !,' 1 1. 0 Cr? i I -I, i -- 1 (-_--a ? a I ''''''' I i I - - ? ---- " - . .i i. H H L, - i 1 I. ,, 1 ,., ? ".. ?_ ?...., .: .,. ;.. .... .. I.,. , il .1 L.1 ,i,....iL....-_,,..1 Li \,........ \ L..- By Richard E. Ward In Laos the Nixon doctrine of using bombs and dollars to support - reactionary forces is suffering serious setbacks. The booths which primarily kill and maim civilians have not been able to slop or blunt the line ration forces led by the Lao Patriotic Front (Pat bet Lao). Arid sharply increased U.S. militaty aid to its mercenaries in Laos has not been able to raise the morale of these forces still experiencing heavy losses annually, especially in recent years. Once the pro-U.S. mercenary force of 30,000, directed and financed by the CIA, con skied almost entirely of Lao minoriiies, mainly Meo, led by the Meo Gen. Vang Pao. Now after a decade of operations the Meos have been bled white in the service of the U.S. and no amount of money can replenish their ranks in Vang Pao's forces. The CIA has had to turn to other minorities and to "volunteers" from the military forces of Thailand to fight for the U.S. in Laos... Thai troops now constitute the majority of Vang Pao's secret army which operates virtually independent of the Vientiane government. Their orders come from the U.S. embassy and in particular from ambassador G. MeMurtrie Godley, who relishes informal titles like field marshal and procounsul given to him by the press. Offeusive bogged down Vang, Pao's mercenary troops are now engaged in their annual offensive. This drive, which began in mid-August, is reportedly 'bogged down and being turned back .by the Pathet Lao earlier than ever before, even during the present rainy season when virtually all advantages are with the pro-U.S. forces. The main CIA-backed operations customarily begin during the rainy season because during that period ground transportation, the only means available to liberation forces, is extremely difficult at best and in sonic regions even impossible. While the liberation. forces must fight under this disadvantage, the CIA's mercenaries have U.S. aircraft providing transport and logistical support as well as tactical and strategic bombing support. But despite these advantages, Vang Pao's troops are engaged in what is probably their weakest offensive ever. Starting from Long Cheng, the once top-secret CIA base, Vang Pao's troops have. moved against the Plain of Jars. Detailed information has been entirely withheld from the press, an indication that the drive is failing, which is the conclusion of few assessments made by Western press sources. In a report in theSept. 2.3 Far Eastern Economic Review, D.E. Ronk, writing from.. Vientiane, noted the disparity between official U.S. claims that Vang Pao was making satisfactory progress and the reality "that (progress) if any ... is being made at a snail's pace." Ronk adds that Vang Pao's forces scattered around the edges of the Plain of Jars are being hit hard, while "progress toward the plain itself has been slow, to say the least; probably it has now stopped." As for the near future Ronk, an experienced observer in Laos, writes: Precarious hold "Most observers in Vientiane, including military men, are concerned for the safety of Long Cheng while Vang Pao's best troops are on the offensive. Long Cheng's defenses are being ritt rOitedviPareRO/tegi$W2001/0 manned bymm by Coun pp ist o es This year, \ am, r ao's map 011t -I fl r7;1 r7Li .? I -I 1 1 : i 1. 1 ! -\,-2,- ) I [ , 1. '-, r 1 0.-1 L' -I ,i ''- ri . ' ,.. ' _.,....-i ,..,........,,.._ STATOTHF munist hands. Few in Vientiane would be surprised if the Com- munists managed to sweep Long Cheng-Sarri Thong into their control before the end of the current rains, then turned on Vang Pao's isolated forces around the plain 20 miles to the northeast." Last winter, liberation forces mounted a three-month siege of Long Cheng during which the CIA-mercenary base was evacuated for a period. The siege Was maintained in the face of unprecedented U.S. bombing and despite wide deployment of Thai troops -who suffered heavy casualties. The heavy losses taken by the reactionary troops; including Vang Pao's Meo forces, has caused serious morale problems among all their elements. . For leading the Meo into disasters year after year, the CIA and - Vang Pao are meeting increasing resistance to recruiting among the relatively few able-bodied potential soldiers left among the Meo, who once readily took tip arms for relatively high mercenary wages in impoverished Laos. Those still in uniforms are, according to the New York Times correspondent Fox Butterfield, "bedeviled by exhaustion after many years of war...." Butterfield, in a Sept. 27 dispatch, confirms the dismal outlook for the pro-U.S. forces in, a ,report sent front the Long. Cheng headquarters at Vatig Pao: Although the general appeared "energetic," Butterfield states that his troops are "reportedly exhausted by last spring's fighting and afraid of the Communists' newly introduced 130-mm long-range guns." ? One feature of the current fighting is that the liberation forces did not fall back during the rainy season, leaving many units in place. In past years, Vang Pao's advances and "victories" were generally achieved with virtually no opposing forces on the scene and his forces could entrench themselves -before having to face the liberation troops. ; Fill (he breech It is doubtful that Thai forces will be able to fill the breech of the depleted ranks of Vang Pao's troops. The U.S. is currently spending at least $100 million to support Thai troops in Laos, but despite their IlleFCellary wages of many times the pay of regular 'iii ii troops, the heavy fighting has reportedly dampened their enthusiasm. One indicator of this is a 30 percent desertion rate among Thai troops in Laos. - Secrecy still . enshrouds many aspects of U.S, operations in Laos, apparently in order to disguise violAtion of Congressional restrictions. Congress has prohibited -the U.S. -from financing mercenaries recruited outside Laos. The Nixon administration sidestepped that barrier by calling the Thai troops and airmen in Laos "volunteers." The Thai government denies any role although it allows recruiting from the regular armed services and supplies Thai officers to command the CIA units in Laos. The charade is main- tained by giving the Thais Laotian names and Laotian military identification cards. In a preface to a Senate Foreign relations committee report issued in May, Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.) observed that the administration was violating the Congressional ban cm the use of Thai troops in Laos. Ile said that Congress had virtually no control over CIA programs, in part, because of Congressional abdication of responsibility as well as because of administration furtive?ess. "It is a fact," stated Symington,"that not only the American people, but even the proper committees of Congress, have not been ? given much detail of our use of Thai irregulars in Laos. .. . This is 4"4YCIALR OLO1z304R0009000900G1u6ns of dollars of aP- Lorigtsropriated monies ale involved." Cheng-Sam Thong defense line is precarious, at hest, with most of - the outer line ten miles north and northeast of the base in Corn- tontinued THE FAR EASTERN ECONOMIC REVIEW Approved For Release 2001/03104 :1(11A-RDPSD6C11110FI1RO THE CALM IN THE EYE OF .A STORM Houei Sai: Air America-US AID base operations at the airport here waggish- ly identifies itself as "Houei Sai Inter- national." But on detailed maps of Laos the only maps on which it ap- pears ? this place is still shown as "Ban Houei Sai" ? a village. Today Houei Sai is both village and interna- tional settlement, and many other things besides: regional supply centre, Mekong River port, customs and immi- gration point, tourist by-road and, ac- cording to the grapevine, headquarters for a substantial spy network. Houa Khong Province, in which Houei Sai is located, is no stranger to flux or intrigue. Bordered on the northeast by China (Yunnan), on the west and southwest by Burma and on the southeast by Thailand, the pro- vince has been the home in recent cen- turies of a large number of tribal peo- ples pressed generally southward. Its hills, for example, have provided sub- sistence to increasing numbers of Sinitic peoples including Yao, Lahu, Ikau and various Miao 'groups who have entered Laos through Yunnan ? or indirectly, through Burma-- in the past 150 years. Its valleys have shelter- ed lowland groups such as the Thai Dom and the Lue peoples. Yet Houei Sai itself seems an unlike- ly candidate for international noto- riety. Situated on the Mekong in the southernmost corner of the province, " its only road link with the rest of Laos ? even when the country was nominal- ly united ? was through the capital at Louang Nam Tha. In recent years, approximately two-thirds of the pro- vince including Nam Tha has been firmly in the hands of the Pathet Lao; today, Pathet Lao or Thai communists . (or both) exercise control over Me- kong River traffic east and southwest from Pekbeng. Houei Sai thus is com- pletely cut off from surface contact with the rest of the country. As a con- sequence, while postal communica- tions and some urgent supplies reach here from Vientiane by air, the prin- cipal supply route is through Thailand. In fact, with Thai-Laotian border con- trols extApprOvedifeir Release 200 Laotian side of the river find it a sim- ? ple matter to do their trading in Thai- land, at Chieng Khong or Chieng Rai. And most transactions here seem to be in baht, not in L,oatian kip. Paradoxically, the war, which com- pleted Houei Sai's isolation from the rest of Laos, has also raised it import- ance ? if not to Laos itself at least to the Americans. US concern with Pe- king's assistance to Hanoi and to the other communist forces in Indochina undoubtedly led Washington several years ago to undertake surveillance of Chinese activities in Yunnan. (The Chinese-built road from Yunnan to Muong Sai and from Nluong Sai to Pakbeng ? and ultimately, it would seem, to the Thai border ? is evidence of China's similar concern with deve- lopments in the region.) Because of its proximity to China and also its mino- rity groups with Yunnan ties, Houa Khong was a "logical" base for espion- age activities directed at the Yun Ching area. And for security and stra- tegic reasons, Ilouei Sai, with its ready access to northern Thailand, offered the only reasonable centre from which to operate the multiple activities that make up the intelligence operation in northern Laos. The changes in the international political situation have produced some changes here (although fewer than one might expect). Since the partial rap- prochement early this year, Washing- ton has been under some compulsion to avoid the kind of espionage acti- vities within China that it once might have undertaken; at the same time, it has less reason for concern regarding developments at the border. On the other hand, there are large numbers of Chinese ? a recent estimate said 20,000 ? currently engaged in build- ing a road not far east of Ilouei Sai. When completed, this road could well sever this area permanently from the rest of Laos. For reasons that are not hard to conjecture, the US has made no at- tempt to interrupt the construction of the road. But it is intensely aware of the Chinese presence here in northern Laos. Whether or not the US mission continues to send spies into Yunnan, it is certain that it continues to collect intelligence on Chinese and North Vietnamese activities here. The Yao people, many of whom are fluent in the Haw dialect and whose written language utilises Chinese ideo- graphs, have been employed most fre- quently to gather information on the Yunnanese. But it is probable that all of the tribal peoples and particularly those classed as refugees have been used as informers to some degree. Even liouei Sai's small colony of Lahu, who come from Burma, owe their new houses and their air of prosperity, we are told, to their diligence in passing information to the Americans. The presence of a significant num- ber of tourists passing through Houei Sai seems'to support the claim that the immediate area is quite secure. (These are generally students and other young people en route from Luang Prabang to Chieng Rai ? either through Chieng Khong,. directly across the Mekong, or via Chieng Saen, five hours up-river by boat and almost on the Burma bor- der.) But there is another aspect to the security picture here. As the tourist traffic indicates, the major highways between here and Chieng Rai have not been seriously threatened. In June, however, both Chieng Khong district and Chieng Kharn to the south were declared sensitive areas by the Thai Communist Suppression Operations Command and hill peoples in the re- gion ordered to move out. At the same time, military operations against Thai insurgents were stepped up. In many ways, Ilouei Sai's calm today, it seems, could he equated with that in the eye of a storm. It is doubtful that the Vientiane Government is much concerned with Houei Sai today. (Concerning its eco- nomic potentialities, one AID official says cynically: "The French took the wrong side of the river.") It has bigger problems, much closer to Vientiane. For the Americans, the Thais and SEATO, however, Houei Sai is in a cr1- 6101 R000910009O1Pse. - trrances Starner 'USE T T ON POST STATOTHR , . Approved For. Release 2001/03104CTC1N2RpP807016_01 R000 VIENTIANE, Laos -L. Still savoring "They weren't ten deep for the Laos assignment, but I just pinch myself daily when I think I'm being paid for doing this.," his cigar after a three-course luncheon washed down with French wines, G. McMurtrie Godley answered the telephone, postponed his tennis game, dashed to his sedan and was driven off at top speed. "Wheatburner 50 to Wheatburner Base," he intoned into the car's radio- telephone, "heading for airport ? ten- four." The rush mission of American Ambassador Godley on an otherwise sleepy recent afternoon in the Laotian capital turned out to be a false alarm of sorts. There was just a chance that three captured American pilots North .; Vietnam had agreed to release might be on board the regular weekly Aero- flot flight which was arriving from Hanoi ahead. of schedule. And "Mac" Godley wanted to be on hand just in ease the men accepted, his personal suggestion they disembark and accept U.S. government transportation home rather ,than continue in the company of their antiwar chaperones. While Russians in sports shirts and North Vietnamese in pith helmets and business suits streamed off the Ilyu- shin 18, Godley saw that the pilots were not among the passengers, got back into the ear and headed home to change for tennis. "Forty-five minutes is about all the tennis I can take in this age anyway." At 55, Godley has been going at this pace for more than three years in Laos and, for that matter, ever since he graduated from Yale, class of '39. Part proconsul, part traditional striped- 'pants diplomat and part general, God- ley personally directs the no longer quite so secret American war in Laos r?-and loves every minute of it. He has no doubts about Ms job or :how to carry it out even though his critics suspect he is more Defense Sec- retary Melvin Laird's man in Vienti- ne than Secretary of State William Rogers.' "Call me field marshal if it makes you feel better," he is inclined to -say. "I don't care. But please note rve got no troops." ,"Uncle Sugar', INVOINED in undercover work since World War II when he dealt with American prisdner of war prob- lems while based in Switzerland, one of the first U.S. diplomats to work closely with the military, activist am- bassador to the Congo during the 'Simba" revolt in 1964, Godley be- lieves in the American world mission ; in uncomplicated terms uncomfortable to more doubting Americans. So big and burly that Congolese called him "The Bear that Walks Like a Man" ?,vlien he was ambassador in G. 111clIfurtrie Godley ti,3_67' By Jonathan C. Randal . Washington Post Foreign Service Godley is given to pithy, direct lan- guage of a nature which an earlier age would not have found repeatable in mixed company. Pure product of the Cold War in warm climates, he invaria- bly refers to the United States as "Uncle Sugar," a sobriquet reflecting the persuasiveness of American power in underdeveloped countries. ? Even with a staff of 1,`TO diplomatic, military and CIA men, as ambassador to this Oregon-sized country Godley has his hands full: ? Requesting and approving all American air strikes against North Vi- etnamese and Pathet Lao troops?who numbered over 100,000 just before the Easter invasion of South Vietnam?in northern Laos and along the Ho Chi Minh supply trails leading south to Cambodia and South Vietnam. ? Directing CIA military operations and the activities of some 230 military attaches whose tasks include supplying arms and ammunition to the Royal Lao army, Meo tribesmen and Thai volun- teers in the Plain of Jars north of Vi- entiane and in the southern Laos pan- handle. ? Keeping able neutralist Premier Souvanna Phouma in office despite re- ? peated right-wing efforts to dislodge him, to ensure that the tatty facade on the 1962 accords remains intact for an- other effort to neutralize Laos in the event of an Indochina-wide peace set- tlement, a task even the North Viet- namese and Pathet Lao representa- tives here privately concede he per- formed brilliantly in the past month. ? Maintaining the precarious and ar- tificial Laotian economy within the limits of a congressional aid ceiling of STATOTHR 'OW million annually, a far from easy task since most of the money goes for military spending. Indeed, the annual threat of the fall of the CIA's base at Long Cheng on the Plain of Jars is feared.less than the economic crisis re- flected by the fall in value of the Lao- tian kip from 500 to 800 to the dollar in the past year. Dropping the Veils MIOR MOST of Godley's first year as ambassador, and indeed since the 1962 Geneva accords were broken first by North Vietnam and then by the United States, American military in- volvement was kept as secret as possi- ble. But in the past year or so, Wash- ington has progressively dropped the principal fiction imposed by the Ge- neva accords which set up the tripar- tite right-wing, neutralist and left-wing government under big power auspices: a,promise to avoid any foreign military establishment in Laos except for a small French training mission. As early as .1064, the United States was deeply cofnmitted to the Souvanna Phouma government, providing aid, a stabilization fund for the kip and mili- tary help. In return, Souvanna Phouma allowed the United States to bomb North Vietnamese positions on the strength of a verbal understanding which even now remains the only basis for American military operations here. In March, 1970, President Nixon started lifting the secrecy after a Sen- ate Foreign Relations subcommittee headed by Stuart Symington held hearings on Laos as part of its investi- gation of U.S. commitments abroad. Whatever major mystery was left dis- Leopoldville, A optivetfltsfflease 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01 akp.elTe_d_l2s1 DfcsalL)ez. U.S. of- LifItig46UOMUUQUUMilub of Long think I've }Ian 1.1 very bestof the . . Cheng, headquarters of Gen. yang Foreign Service" and "if I end up " ? ' being the fall guy I couldn't care less." rued 7 vomm.???? Ai6 Oc + el 7 STATOTHR Approved For Release 2001/03/04 : ?-14c-IWIW-016 Frictely,l.reft21,1972 THE IVASHINGTON POST ii GeTileralLi_nzied LTihnileiued, Itoy 1.42 Nhe, Drug Trade To. D I?'L Vii By George C. Wilzon Used As Witytaikitton rost Vtatt WASMNGTON (AF ii:Dep cRL ? A-10 ? ' x ern; Ia Plant Front 11 To judge from yet another study of the uncommonly unpleasant subject, there seems to be about as much chance of getting the drug business out of Indo- china as there is of getting the -officials of Indochina out of the drug business. The prospects for reform are seem- ingly limited?at a time when the U. S. military is having mixed results in trying to detoxify addicted American GIs?and the situation is one more deadly, degrad- ing element associated with U. S. in- volvement in Southeast Asia. Some of the latest facts have been presented by Yale graduate student Al- !ta 0:71% fred W. McCoy, who testified before a Senate foreign aid appropriations sub- committee that a flourishing narcotics trade in South Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand is carried on with the di- rect, active support of the highest gov- ernment officials?and that U. S. offi- cials make virtually no effort to inter- vene. Perhaps such attempts would be in- effectual. The "Vietnarnization" of the drug trade may be out of our hands as long as we remain resolved to "see it through withThieu." NEW YORK POST, 6/3/72 IVS eroin: Viet Cis L ced t: Trc OrtigerehatItS Se Viet officials t 1HE EVENING STAR Washington, D. C., Friday, June 2, 7972 Cc.-A heroin rachct ,01.115'4e f:41 Approve or e east 0 :4K-16A-RDP 001 STATOTHR STATOTHR U. S. Aides Rapped in Drug Study 1.7n-V Associated Press ?0 J IIABPER's STATOTHR Approved For Release 2001/03A4 tp-K-Rgimer-Atritgi STATOTHR Interrupting its .usual silence, the CM has provided Harper's with a rare public document. It is awofficial letter of protest against 0111 July COLT!' story, "Flowers of Evil," an extrelnely compromising report by Alfred 117.- McCoy about the CIA's complicity in the heroin trade in Southeast Asia. "I trust," writes IV. E. Colby, the Agency's execu- tive director, "you will give this response the same prom- inence in. your publication as was given to the McCoy article." The letter appears below in full, together with Mr. McCoy's reply and the testimony of a former USA/T) rep- resentative who witnessed the CIA's participation in the Laotian drug Ira ie. This exchange, we hope, throws fur- ther needed light on a little-known stretch of the sewer that runs between Washington, Saigon, Vientiane, Pnom- penh, and Bangkok. - Beyond all that, we are surprised by 31r. Colby's use of the word "trust." Ire may well be reading too much. into it, but that word, and indeed the whole 1012e of the letter, suggests that 311.. Colby expected an immediate mea culpa from Harper's. Is the CIA that naive? Air. Colby, who once presided over the notorious Phoenix program in Vietnam,* is hardly an innocent. Still, his entire letter reflects a troubling simplicity, an unquestioning trust in the goodness of his own bureaucracy. He asks us to share that trust, whatever the stubborn facts may be. As con- clusive evidence of the Agency's purity, for example, he even cites Director Richard Helms' public-relations argu- ment that "as fathers, we are as concerned about the lives of our children and grandchildren as all of you." THE AGENCY'S BRIEF: Harper's July issue contains an article by Mr. Alfred W. McCoy alleg- ing CIA involvement in the opium . traffic in Laos. This allegation is false and unfounded, and it is partieulady disappointing that a journal of Harper's reputation would see fit to publish it without. any effort to check its accuracy or even to refer to the Such curious expectations of trust apparently moti- vated the Agency to ask Harper S.: Row to hand over the galleys of 3:Ir. McCoy's book, The Politics of Heroin in 7 Southeast Asia, front which. he drew his magazine article. The Agency declared that it simply wanted to check the book for factual inaccuracies, possible libel, or damage to national security. To deliver this unusual request, the Agency dispatched Cord Meyer, a man with the proper Es- tablishment connections who, as 'the CIA's overseer of the sin ce-tran s ormed Congress for Cultural Freedom, * t be said to have once been in the publishing business him- self. Although the galleys were duly sent to the Agency, the CIA's subsequent C011iplaints about Mr. McCoy's research. failed to mi press Harper S.: Row, which, has since confi- (lenity published the book, unchanged. Apparently there are limits to trust, even among gentlemen. Although. Mr. McCoy won't agree with us, our own re- action to this episode is to feel a certain sympathy for the beset bureaucrats of the CIA, who seem. to be impaled on the defensive notion, "The Agency, right or wrong." By definition the CIA finds itself involved with a good many questionable people in Southeast Asia. That is a condition of its mission?a mission it did not invent but simply carries out on White House orders?and we suspect that thc public would trust the Agency a good deal more if it either acknowledged the facts or remained silent. /11(4's, the CIA now seems determined to revamp its image into something like a Cross between General Motors and the League of Women Voters. But so endeth our sermon. Let the reader draw his own conclusions. public record to the contrary. Normally we do not respond pub- licly to allegations made against CIA. Because of the serious nature of these charges, however, I am writing to you to place these accusations in proper perspective and so that the record will be clear. The general charge made. by Mr. McCoy that "to a certain extent it [the opium trade in Laos] depends on the support (money, guns, aircraft, etc.) of the CIA" has no basis in fact. To the contrary, Mr. John E. Inger- soll, Director of the Bureau of Nar- cotics and Dangerous Drugs, in a letter to Representative Charles S. Gubser of California on May 27,1971 ---7x.Phoenix is a campaign of systematic counterterror designed to root out and destroy Vietcong sympathizers. As U.S. pacification chief from 1968 to mid-1971, Ambassador Colby headed CORDS '(Civil Operations and Rural Development Support), which ran Phoenix in cooperation with the South Vietnamese police. Mr. Colby has testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that, in 1969 alone, Phoenix agents "neutralized" 19,531 suspected Vietcong, killing 6,187 of them in the process. Critics argu.e. that Phoenix uses assassination methods and that Mr. Colby's figures are extremely conservative. Kt **The t ilDg0-61 dultikoodb000sobol -6 The b?,, Pa#040,0t00?10,00.01/404). I.- ? ? ? .? tot' roafraAne- throtwhout the world. its conti mlnezi vi Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 BJ-:ST cop Available Approved For Release 200.1/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 ILLEGIB Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 Apprfiv-ed:Fpfrgelsapig 2001/03/04 : CIA-RDFgi-V1V13116009 R2CulM SU 25 1:72 E C-* r /I -;_11 .;, r On paper at least, Septenther'IS looked like a gre:fl_ day for thag nod guys in their battle awinst international drug traffic. There on fiCapitol Hill was the U. S. Senate ratifying by a vote of 69 to 0 a strengthening -r evision of a 90-nation treaty designed to clamp down on the nar- cotics trade. Henceforth, the revision provides, the International Narcotics Contiol Board \yin see to it that, the world production of dope is limited to the quantity needed for medi- cal and scientific use. Production above that ceiling will be. reported to the signa- tory nations and the United Nations Gen- eral Assembly. And there at the Department of State was President Nixon saying this country will suspend all American economic and military assistance to any govet nment "whose leaders participate in or protect the activities of those who contribute to our drug problem." Just which initiative will be the more productive is hard to say just now. That of the Senate is dependent on - devious channels and protocols, but it does have the advantage of being taken without benefit of George McGovern jaw- boning. - The route the president can take is a !good deal more direct, if only he will follow it now that he has made a Mc- Govern-nudged pitch for But the chances for clamp-down would KUNT:1,111.3.2..Pil,; 41i Approved For Release 2001/03/04 P I -4A e P-.74n /5. # be a great deal fatter, one suspects., if the president had been right whn he said he is "required by statute'' to cut off aid to governments contributing to our drug Problem. The statute is not quite so forceful. The rule, written into List year's For- eign Assistance Act, is than aid shall be cut off only when the president himself decides that a government has "failed to take adequate. steps" to supprc.!ss danger- ous drugs. The president is the sole judge of which countries are being helpful and which ire not. He is "required" to take no action that his personal verdict on the evidence does not support. His evidence, clearly, is not the same as that which has disturbed Senator Mc- Govern. The president, says his challenger, has failed to "crack clown on the narcotics trade in Laos, Thailand and South Viet- nam" because the administration needs "air bases in Thailand, Laos" and "mercenaries and Vietnamese soldiers to fight its war." There may he more partisan testimony than hard evidence in that accusation, of course. Even so, the McGovern statement is not barren of corrc-iboraliOn. There have been charges that the CIA's Air America has helped transport heroin in Southeast Asia. In his hook, The Poli- ties of Heroin hi Southeast As in, Arthur W. McCoy raised the question of CIA agents knowingly engaging in such traffic to help maintain alliances. And Mr. McCoy quail- -lied with no question his assertion that officials in Southeast Asian governments allied to the U. S. have profited from the drug traffic. To accuse is not to prove. But if Mr. McCoy's questions and statements are rooted in nothing firmer than supposition, they suggest that the president., even if not derelict, will have a difficult time being diligent in application of that stat- ute. ? The helpfulness (or, for that, matter, the helplessness) of allies like South Vietnam and Thailand in areas other than drug control cannot fail to influence Mr. Nix- on's reading of the evidence. Not,-that is, so long as a keystone of this nation's foreign policy is to prop up such allies. ? Presidential options running afoul of presidential- commitments, it's just possi- laIALREW80a011601RGOONOOR0001-6 to narcotics control, Lac_ THE BULLETIN Approved Fo4aiti9g2001/03/IttstgAMMF' STATOTHR ? "LADIES and gentlemen," announced . the genteel British diplomat, raising his :glass to offer a toast, "I give you Prince Sopsaisana, the uplifter of Laotian youth." The toast brought an appreciative smile from the guest of honor, cheers and applause from the luminaries of Vientiane's diplomatic corps assembled at the farewell banquet for the Laotian ambassador-designate to France, Prince Sopsaisana. A member of the royal house of Xieng Khouang, the Plain of Jars region, the prince was vice-president of the National Assembly, chairman of the Lao Bar Association, president of the Lao Press Association, president of the Alliance Francaise, and a member in good standing of the Asian People's Anti-Communist League. After receiving his credentials from the king in a private audience at the Luang Prabang Royal Palace on April 8, 1971, he was treated to an unprecedented round of cocktail parties, dinners, and . banquets. For Sopsai, as his friends call him, was not just any ambassador; the Americans considered him an outstanding example of a new generation of honest, dynamic leaders. The final send-off party at Vientiane's Wattay Airport on April 23 was one of the gayest affairs of the season. Everybody was there; the champagne bubbled, the canapes were flawlessly French, and Ivan Bastouil, charge d'affaires at the French embassy. gave the nicest speech. Only after the plane had soared off into the clouds did anybody notice that Sopsai had forgotten to pay for his_saiirp8i. reception. Approveu His arrival at Paris's Orly Airport on STATOTHF STATOTHR *el By ALFRED W. McCOY and KATHLEEN B. READ the morning of April 25 was the occasion for another reception. The French ambassador to Laos, home for a brief visit, and the entire staff of the Laotian embassy had turned out to welcome the new ambassador. There were warm embraces, kissing on both cheeks, and more effusive speeches. Curiously, the prince insisted on waiting for his luggage like any ordinary tourist. and when his many suitcases finally appeared after an unexplained delay, he immediately noticed that a particular one was missing. Sopsai angrily insisted that his suitcase be delivered at once, and French authorities promised, most apologetically, that it would be sent to the Laotian embassy as soon as it was found. Sopsai departed reluctantly for yet another reception at the embassy, and while he drank the ceremonial champagne with his newfound retinue of admirers. French customs officials were examining one of the biggest heroin seizures in French history. The ambassador's suitcase contained 60 kilos of high-grade Laotian heroin ? worth $13.5 million on the streets of New York, its probable destination. A week later, a smiling French official presented himself at the embassy with the suitcase in hand. Although Sopsaisana had been bombarding the airport with outraged telephone calls for several days, he suddenly realised that accepting the suitcase was tantamount to an admission of guilt and 'Tiffa'fly (RI rittilssVirglir 8 his declaration of innocence, the French government refused to accept his diplomatic credentials, and Sopsai remained in Paris for no more than two months before he was recalled. DESPITE its resemblance to comic opera, the Prince Sopsaisana affair offered a rare glimpse into the workings of the Laotian drug trade. That trade is the principal business of Laos, and to a certain extent it depends on the support (money, guns, aircraft etc) of the CIA. Unfortunately, the questions raised by the prince's disgrace were never asked, much less answered. The French government overlooked the embarrass- ment for diplomatic reasons, the international press ignored the story, and the United States embassy demonstrated a remarkable disinterest in the entire subject. Over the past 50 years, Laos has become something of a free port for opium. The delicate opium poppy grows abundantly at high elevations in the northern mountains, and under a sequence of different regimes (French. American, Laotian), the hill tribesmen have been encouraged to cultivate the poppy as the principal cash crop. Opium dens can be found in every quarter of Vientiane, and the whereabouts of the opium refineries are a matter of common knowledge. The Laotian indifference to Prince Sopsaisana's misfortune therefore becomes easily understandable. The reticence of the American embassy, however, requires a few words of explanation. Sopsai had allegedly received his 60 kilos of heroin through the kind offices of a particularly ao.my) Tot:row? 9000 'fa& ang ao also happens to be the tolr.,;laued commander of the CIA secret army in wiR-q91-71, icrr-7-.Retease-2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-0 CALIFORNIA VOICE WEEKLY - 12,500 By Mark Iienriquez Almost universally atiOnow- lodged as something akin to , the great plague itself, it is often surprising to learn that heroin was once proclaimed to be the wonder dinig of the age. The time was ;i1;Orti:: be fore the 1 urn of the contur and the place was iinneritl Germany where heroin hici just boon deecloped as a etrc for a more sinister addiettm, that of llicirphine, As USE of the drug became more v ide- spread and us disadvan ages more obvious, heroin otickly Jest its priveleged positiir and ? the scientific inatitutims of the day renewed their search in other directions. ? Quantities of heron first appeared in this cotntry a- round 1h3u. The pritriple im- porters of the drug vere sail- ors and other glol.1.1 trans- ients whose aLtivistes were confined primarily to the larg- er coastal cities. 'Me ghettos for the most part rimaincd un- touched. MORPIPNE With the comirg of W W 11 the situation Indcrwent a radical change aid once more the use of mophine \vas in- volved. Standesd procedure adopted by tin U. S. armed forces for the treatment of wounds recciwd in combat in- volved immtdiate massive injections d the drug to deaden tie pain. So wide- spread was he use of mor- phine durin; the war that many G. l.'s were issued their own persmal drug sunply and hypodcmic needle in the event that self treatment be- came necesary. Despite the fact that mirphine was known to have bim dangerously ad- dictive sone fifty years be- fore the cabreak of the war, the drug had become an in- tegral pal of America's war- time medcal machine. It was with the reloase of many etthese wounded veter- ans ham service that the specter of widespread drug addictim first app aimed. No one, it poems, hod yet develop- ed a etre for morphine addle- ? . ,?? Li Li '44 ty' tion but heroin was a good substitute, Sailors soon found that they could zco:d,o a lot more money selling heroin than they could on any ship and the rush was on to secure the most hiczative markets and methods of production. EFFECT Nowhere seas the effect of heroin felt more dramatically than in the Tilack COMMunity. Seemingly overnight scores of young men, whose only mis- fortune was to have served STATOTHR rt n el : : 1 .., , 4,..., u 1 : , LI ,.. _-,. k.:.. Freedom Party and even a fledgling Black Panther Party (New York chanter) have all espoused this position at one time or another. Whether or not this charge is valid in and of itself, there is a substantial body of evidence to sugoest that the United States govern- ment has actively encouraned large scale heroin production to further he own political ends. The genesis of this intrigue began shortly before the mc- their country, returned home with them only their wits between anti what was most often a slow agonizing death. Five years after the close of W WT lithe pusher was al- ready established as the new king of the ghetto. The post war baby boom, the newfound affluence of the if ties, and the Korean conflict in which even more Americans were intro- duced to use of narcotics all played a role in the rise of smack. As a result countless millions of young men and women, most of them Black, found themselves involved with heroin before reaching the age of twenty. Black power advocates were the first to allege that heroin addiction was actually en- couraged by this country's federal government as a means to further subjugate the Black population, and thereby avoid full scale revo- lution in the face of increas- ing repression. Stokely Char- michel, Dap .lirtrivn, the now defunct Sale, Peace and tual introduction of American troduction of Americtin ground troops in South Viet- nam. Before the American army could embark it was necessary to determine the amount of local support they could expect. Since the South Vietnamese arzny was barely on the edge of destruction and the civilian population almost solidly behind the Viet Cong, or just as solidly neutral, the search concentrated on cer- tain jungle tribesmen who in- habit the remote mountain areas that border Iiisios and Cambodia. It just so happen- ed that these fieo (prottooric- ed Mao) and li?totitinntyord flib.2.sinen traditionally enittort- ed in runaing nuns and opionl_ to the It:crania markets of Thialrnd and 'Via Nam. As they were already (Ic- ing a booming business on their own, some incentive Was needed to Intsli them into the uncertainti:r6 of war. It seems that since these trllotismen had little or no contact with any government, political appeals were largely inetlfeative, COMPII0f,IISE What evolved was a com- promise. Montingyard and Moo tribes would fight and provide intelligence for A- therican troops if the Ameri- cans would, in turn, help them move greater qumtities of opium and heroin. The details as to how this compromise has worked have been thensubject of numerous articles appearing in publica- tions ranging from Ramparts to THE NEW YORK TIMES. Air America aircraft, a chart- er owned and operated by the CIA, certain aircraft belong- ing to the USAF, and in one case documented by CBS, even the personal aircraft of the American ambassador to Sai- gon have all been involved in the trafficing of heroin. That a new generation of American soldiers becomes addicted while serving in Viet Nam is seemingly a small price to pay for the oppor- tunity of stopping the insid- ious 'red hoards. - Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000900090001-6 YEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOK,7 Approved For Release 2001/01/94qp167DP80-0160 ' - t.L.6 0 7727J1 . Alfred W: McCoy I? the galley proofs to the CIA could set a dangerous precedent and ultimately weaken On June 1 of this year an official of the First, Amendment guarantees concerning US Central Intelligence 'Agency paid a visit freedom of the press. Moreover, in view of to the New York offices of my publisher, what I had learned of the CIA's operating Harper and Row, Inc. This CIA official was methods in Southeast Asia I was convinced ' / 'Mr. Cord. Meyer, Jr. (now the CIA's Assist- li that the Agency was, capable of using .? ant Deputy Director of Plans; formerly the unethical means?such as coercing my . CIA official?in charge of providing covert sources into retracting statements they had financial 'subsidies for organizations such as made to me about US complicity in the the ? National Student Association, En- international narcotics traffic?in order to -counter Magazine, and the Congress for induce Harper and Row to withdraw the . ' Cultural Freedom).' Mr. Meyer urged sev- book from publication. icral of his old friends among Harper and After a week of negotiations, however, -iRow's senior management to provide him Harper and Row told me that they would with a copy of . the galley proofs of my not be villing to publish the book. unless I history .of. the international narcotics traf- agreed to submit the manuscript to the fie, The Politics of Heroin in Southeast CIA. Faced with what I believed -would be U Asia. In this, book I show the .complicity lengthy delays if I took the book to of various US agencies?particularly the CIA another publisher and the prospect of arid tk..-r: State Department?in organizing losing my Harper and Row editor, Elisa- , ' the SoUtheast Asian drug traffic since the beth Jakab, with whom I had worked STATOTHR early 1950s. ." . . closely, I capitulated.. Thus began more 'fr. Meyer presented one . of Harper and than two months of lengthy negotiations -.Row's senior editors with some documents and Row by stating categorically that it giving the CIA's view on . the Southeast between the CIA, Harper and Row, and could rebut all .my charges about its Asian drug traffic. His manner was grave. myself. Most of what happened during complicity in the international narcotics -He said,.. "You ,wouldn't want to publish a these elaborate negotiations is in the corre- traffic. We were surprised, however, that .spondence reprinted belo