TRENDS IN COMMUNIST PROPAGANDA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
46
Document Creation Date: 
November 17, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 7, 1999
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 26, 1972
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6.pdf2.23 MB
Body: 
%J j Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Confidentisl ~IIIIII!I~~iiuiii~~llllllll FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE ~~~~~~~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~~~~~~~ 1'12ENDS in Car,~n~uni~t Pro~a~anda C~nfirdenti~l 26 JANUARY 1972 (VOL. XXIII, N0. 4) Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Thla propaganda analysis repurt is bused ex- cluelvoly on mnterlal carried In communist broadcast and press media. It is published by FBIB without coordlnntlon wtth other U.B. t3overnment components. 'JVARNINC3 Thla document contains intormntlon aRectlna the national detenae of the United States, within the menning of Title 18, sections 703 and 701, of the U8 Code, as amended. Its trnnamlaalon or revelRti~n of 1ta contents to or receipt by an unauthorized person Upro- hfblted by law --C:Ou?-; ---- I.d.~w w.....ww wA...~..,... Approved For Release 2000/O~I~F:~@~~i~4'4P85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CUNP'IDEN'i'T.AL 1rDf.4 'i'RI~NDN 26 JANUARY 1972 CONTENTS Topics and Evonts Given Ma;~ot Attention INDOCHINA i DRV Dismissos Prosidont~s Eight-Point Poaco Plan as "Rehash" 1 Moscow Complains President's Plan Set No Withdrbwal Date 3 DRV, PRG Say State of Union Mea~~~tge Shows Presidents Obduracy 4 Paris Talks: GVN Legitimacy Questioned Vietnamization Scored 5 Moscow Echoes DRV in Criticizing Prc+sident's Meseage~ Policy 7 PRC Support of DRV llighlighted by "Supple.nentary" Aid Accord 8 DRV Spokesman Protests DMZo DRV Raids, Plane Downings Hailed 10 Communist Media Hail Military Gains in North, South Laos 11 Thai Actions in Indochina Assailed in Communist Statements l3 SINO-U.S. RELATIONS Peking Rencte to Nixon-Sato Talks, State of Union Message l5 CHINA Peking Propaganda Makes a Gesture to Native Taiwanese 19 SOVIET BLOC AND PRC Soviet Bloc Shnrpene Anti-China Line on Eve of Nixon Trip 21 Moscow Broadcasts to China Seek to Fan Opposition to Trip 23 GROMYKO IN JAPAN Propaganda Stresses Possibilities for Economic Cooperation 25 Chou En-lei Supports Japanese Stand on Territorial Issue SOUTH ASIA 26 Soviet Union Announces Recognition of Bangladesh 28 Peking Reports Evacuation of Consular Staf.E from Dacca . 30 GERMANY CDR Evinces Concern Ovet Itamif ications of Mrn~es Toward Detente . 32 TOPIC IN BRIEF: The President's Remarlce on Weapons Systems . 36 SUPPLEMENTARY ARTICLE: DISSIDENT ACTIVITY IN THE UKRAINE LEADS TO N~1 ARRESTS S 1 Approved For Release 2000/O~l~i~~-f~DP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 P'OTZ OD'>U',[CZAL U81~ nNZ,Y I~'1114 'I'RI~~NUh 2(~ JANUARY 1.97'l '1'UPLCS ANU IVI?N'I'S (I.CVI;N M/:,IUR A'I"L'I~;N'L'IUN 1.7 - c3 ,.fANUAItY Lc)7t MaHCOw (24A0 .LtemW) L'c~kank (1..353 :Ltumw) Indochina (IA,.) H'% Uomestl.c 7.NSUey (4LY) 39Y [LI.S. Air Ralcls (GY) 2%J .Incloch:Lna (1.H~) 227. Chinn (9%) 7% [Mil.itur.y Actiun (8X) 9x,J Ind:Lu-1'alcistan (3%) 4x in Laos I:uropectn Security (3%) 3X [PRC I?ore:l.gn Mln.Lstr.y (--) 3Y] Middle Lust (7%) 37~ Statement on Iteloca- World Zionist (.l~) ~~ t:Lon o# South VietnameNe Congress Gromyko Visit to (--)l~6 UN Security Council Spec:tal Session in Africa (--) 5% Jupun 1'1sOPLL'S DAILY Rebuttu:L or USSR's Malik (--) 3% Rhodesian 51*untion (--) 3T These statlatlca are based on the volcecaat commentary output of tl~e Moscow and Peking domestic and international radio services. The term "commentary" la used to denote the lengthy Item-radio talk, speech, press article or edltorlai, govern- ment or party statement, or diplomatic note. Items of extensive reportage arc counted as commentaries. Figures In parentl~eaes Indicate volume of comment dering the preceding week. Toplca and events given mayor attention 1n terms of volume are not always dlacusaed !n the body of the Trends. Some may have been covered In prior issues; In other cases the propaganda content may '.,a routine or of minor algnlflcance. roR ot~c>r~ usE oxi, z Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CONI~',LpI~N'I'IAL 1rISZ5 'I'IZI.NI)5 26 JANUARY 1972 I NDOCW IN11 llanoi reacted to the President' d 25 ,January '.I'V speech with a dommst:Lc serv~l.co radio commentnry some f ivo hours of tar it was dmliverod. '.Phis 1.nltin.l eommentnry totully ignorod the President's disclosuros that theta had bean private negoL?i~rti~ns and that Presidential advisor Kissinger hnd met with North Vietnnmese lenders a total of 13 times oinco August 1969. It dismie6ed the President's oLgl~t-point peace plan as old proposals "put in a new frame to fool the public." llanol and t:ront comment on tyre 20 January State of the Union message castigntod the President for pursuing the wur through Vietnnmization instead of responding to the PRG proposal. In a departure from its normal practice of promptly covering all mayor U.S. developments, TA55 has not reported the President's TV speech. The first available Soviet reaction care at 1900 GMT on the 26th itt a Moscow domestic service broadcast which, un1 ike llanoi, repotted Ilia announcement that the U.S. peace plan would be submitted at the Pa r.te talks on the 27th. Peking's support for the Vietnamese communist, is currently highlighted by the announcement of the signia~y on 22 January in Peking of a protocol on "supplementary" aid to the D1,tV for 1972. Peking continues its circumspect treatment of the President; the KCNA report of the State of the Union message as well as other propaganda remains devoid of personal attacks. Consistent with it? normal reaction time, Peking has yet to mention the President's speech of the 25th. A PRG Government statement stressi,ag the need to destroy the Vietnemization policy and r,alling for the Sor.rth Vietnamese to unite, "millions as one," in an uprising to overthrow the Thfeu administration has been given wide publicity beginning on 25 January. The statement directs its appeal to 10 different groups--from youths about to be conscripted to main force army unite--and stresses the "humane and lenient" policies of the PRG. Publicized at a press conference icy Wanoi on the 25th by Nguyen Phu Soai, the s~atement was hailed the next day in a NNAN DAN editorial and a QUAN DOI NHAN DAN commentary. DRV DISMISSES PRESIDENT'S EIGHT-POINT PEACE PLAN AS `REHASH`' Hanoi reacted promptly to the President's TV speech in a radio commentary first broadcast at 0500 GMT on 26 January and NFID . Approved For Release 2000/08~g9 : ~A~ P85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CUNT I:DIuN'C I'AL L~ Ii l8 'I'ltli;NDy 26 ,JANUARY .1972 aubsoquuntl.y rupeutod in other. caste. I~~ntt.tlad "Nixon Sot Forth A Deca.itfu.l Eight-Point Viatnnn- 1'lnn Dee:ignod to Fool. the 1'ubl.t.c," the commentary sa, s a caroiul, analysis of the riroposn.ls 1ndl.rnto that Washlnpton's baoic stand remu:in~ unchungacl. It argues thaC the President is sti.1.1 suggaeti.ng n "cond:i.tionnl" w.ithcirnwal-- that is, withdrawing while maintaining "neocol.onia.l.ism through n puppet regime." 'Phe commentary s?lmilarly ridicules thn not.ton of elections to be held a month after Thieu's r.eslgnat:ion when in fact, it days, a caretaker government would be lroaded by '!'bleu's "henchmen." In standard fashion, it dl.smiseee the President's proposal f?~r a ceasa-fire throughout I.ndochlna as aimed at depriving Cho people of the right to self-defense, and it caste doubt on the eincerlty of hie concern over the fate of U.S. prisoners, And it repeats the stock line that the PRG's seven-point proposal is the correct way to end the war and restore pence. This Initial reaction is more notable for its omissions than its content. Thus, it fails to acknowledge any of the President'8 revelations that secret negotiations had been taking place during the past three and a half years, that the communist side presented a nice-point proposal privately, that the eight-point U.S. proposal had been diepatched.pri~~ately but had gone unanswered, and that Ambassador Porter has been instructed to introduce the proposal at the Paris session on the 27th. REACTIONS TO Hanoi had reacted differently to the PAST DISCLOSI'QES President's disclosure of information about private contacts with the Vietnamese communists in hie 3 November 1969 speech on the U.S. vi~tnamization and withdrawal policy--the speech in which he revealed tha'. there had been correspondence with No Chi Minh during that summer and char. there had been 11 private meetings between the two aide: in Paris. Unlike the current commentary which tot~Iiy :,gnore~ the secret diplomacy aspect, immediate routine llanoi radio reaction to the 1969 speech said "the Preaid~~nt advanced the idea of secret contacts aimed at misleading public opinion." and Vi~lA said that to divert public opinion the President "insinuated" that private meetings were taking place. Xuan 'I'huy at the Paris session questioned the President's motives in divulp~na pr~;ate DRV-U.S. contacts. A ORV Government statement on the President's 1969 speech begged the question of his remarks on private contacts, saying only chat he distorted the truth about the "situation of negotiations with a view to leading people to believe he has good will." But at CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 (.(JN1~:C1)I~1N'I' fAf, l~'IIrS T111;N1)S 2(~ JANUAIt1l 1,172 tho samu tJ,mu that ii~~noi ra~luusod tho Cc-vornmont dtutc+niont, It broadcast t}?ia texts of th? Pr~naidunt'Fi and llo'w 1i~ttur?.* MOSC01~1 COMPI~1 I NS PRESIDENT ` S PI~1N SET NO W I ThIDRl1N1AL DATE Soviet media roacted to the l'rogiclent'c~ 'l5 Januar.y TV epnoc}~ belatedly in Moscow radio's domnatic service brc~adcnet at 1.'00 GMT on tl~o 26th--the main eveninK nuwo a}u-w. I,ikr, Ilunoi, hl~r Moscow hroadcast iytnored the President's disclosure of U,S.-1)RV secret ca~~lks. rut unl.ikc llanoi, 1-, acknow]eciged hf.a announcemenx that tract U.S. rapresentativn. La to oubmit the U,S, olght-point plan at tbrri;Cia conference on the 27th. Moscow complained that the plan Walther contains an exact data f~~r total U.S, troop withdrawal from South Vietnam nor mentions U.S. readiness to withdraw armad forma from oeher Indochinese countr.ieb and to remove air and naval forces. Noting that the President said Kha United States would never agree to the overt};.row of its "a11,y," the broadcast said the speech indicatep shat thr United 5tatas intends to preserve "a pro-American regf.me" f.n Sielgon although is maintains that it is peepared to hold new elections them . Moscow concluded by noting that the President laic: "in essance" that the United States intends to conduct the Parts ealke "from a position of strength" and insists on "the unqualtf.ied acceptance" of its plnn, citing him us ntating that tf the opponent rojeces the proposal Washington will proceed wtth the Vietnam.tzation policy. The notable failure of TASS to carry its normal, prompt news report of a major speech by the Pteai.dent suggests indecision on how to react even on a reportorial level, at 'least until Nanoi's reaction becomes known. It may also be related to tho absence from Moscow of Bre~hnev and Koeyg!n, who were in Prague for the Warsaw Pa^t Political Consultative Committee aESSion. The session issued a Atatement on Indochina--coincidentally carried by TASS at the same time as the doerestic radio broadcast reporting the President's speech---which complained that "Washington continues to bid not on a political but on a military solution of tl-~e problems" of Indochina. The statement did not mention the President's speech. +~ For a further discussion of this propaganda, see the TRi;NDS of 13 November 1969, pages 3-5. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CONFIDENTIAL FnIB TRENDS 2h JANUARY 1972 DRV, F'RG SAY STATE OF UNION MESSAGE SI~IONIS PRES t DENT ~ S OBDURACY Hanoi and the Front routinely assail President Ni.xon's remarks on Indochina in hie State of the Union message ae furth~ar evidence of hie intention to pursue the war. In addition to routine Hanoi and Front radio and press agency reaction, there are articles in the party daily NIIAN DAN and the army paper QUAN DOI NHAN DAN on the 23d which include personally abusive comments on the President. Ae briefly summarized by H~.noi radio, the arn-y paper says that while the President wanted to present "a peace facade" in ox?der to maintain the presidency another term, "no adornment can cover up his too rotten, horrible face. Nixon continues unswF~rvingly to show that he is an extremely stubborn and crafty ringleader ag,gressor." In a similar vein, the N}tAN DAN article says that tt~e message to C~ngrese mirrored the President's true image: "After three years in off ice as President, Nixon's nature remains unchanged. lie remains one of t'ne most anticommunist reactionaries; he remains one of the most dangerous enemies of peace, independence, and the freedom of the nation." The NHAN DAN article as broadcast by }irnoi radio is attributed to Nguyen Huu Chinh, a specialist on the United States who has frequently commented on President Nixon--moat recently in a 7 January N}~ DAN article on the President's 2 January TV interview.* Chinh's latest article contains some of the under- tones pr.e4ent i.n that on the 7th and, more sharply, in Hanoi's July-August anti-China polemics in the wake of the announcement of the Presiatent's Peking visit. The polemical Hanoi comment last sucranec }lad repeatedly claimed that the Nixon Doctrine was aimed at splitting the socialist camp. In referring to the nine foreign policy points as outlined by the President on the 20th, Chinh now claims that they mean, among other things, that the United States will continue "to provoke and sow discord among the socialist camp." And in a possible allusicn to the President's summit diplomacy, Chinh says: "Nixon wants to make believe that some diplomatic moves could keep him in the oval office. But now as before in U.S. history, the fate of a president can never be decided on by sheer diplomatic activities." Chinh also cepeats the elaborated demands of the PRG proposal regarding U.S. withdrawal and support of. Thieu--an cr.3 to all U.S. action in both parts of Vietnam and relinquishment of * See the TRENDS of 19 January, page 2 and 12 January, pages 3-5. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CONCIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 26 JANUARY 1972 all commitments to Thieu--which have been spelled out frequently, both at the Paris talks and by propagandists, since DRV Premier Phaua Van Dorg presented the elaborated formulation in his 20 November speech in Peking. Chinh prefaced this by saying that the United States must give up its "111usion" of winning a military victory--an illusion he claimed to see evidenced in the Administration's remarks on a U.S. residual force in South Vietnam and on continued use of U.S. air and naval power in Indochina. The earlier, routine-level comment on the President's message, like the Chinh article, had assailed the President's Vietnamization policy. A Hanoi radio commentary on the 22d said the President "boasted" that during his term 87 percent of U.S. forces had been withdrawn but that he cannot conceal the fact Chat he has spread and intensified the war throughout Indochina and has accelerated air strikes against the DRV. A LIBERATION PRESS AGENCY commentary on the dame day observed that more troops would be withdrawn, however, "on condition that the U.S. agentr~ i.n Saigon are capable of defending themselves." PARIS TALKS; GVN LEGITIMACY (aUESTIONED. VIETNAMI71~+-TION SCORED At the Paris session on 20 January PRG delegate Nguyen Van Tien focused on the perennial claim that the Saigon government is merely a U.S. puppet and in no sense can speak for the South Vietnamese people. In seeming response to Ambassador Porter's questions on the 13th regarding the PRG, Tien insisted that the NFLSV and PRG, not the Saigon regime, are the "genuine representatives" of the South Vietnamese. The VNA account glosses over Tien'a detailed remarks, including the claims Chat the "people's revolutionary power has been established in South Vietnam from top to village levels" and that the growing international prestige of the NFLSV and PRG is reflected in their having been recognized by 30 countries. Xuan Thuy in his prepared statement routinely assailed the Vietnamization policy and echoed comment on the President's 13 January troop withdrawal. announce- ment in arguing that the war is still an American one in view of continued U.S. air and naval as well as monetary support. PRG PROPOSAL, In routinely pressing the PRG proposal, Tien NY TIMES QUERIES said that to end the war and bring home U.S. servicemen, including POW's, the Nixon Administration should "negotiate: seriously with the genuine representatives of the South Vietnamese people at the conference." Approved For Release 2000/08/~~~~~~~P85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 26 JANUARY 1972 And he said again that in addition to a speedy troop withdrawal, the Nixon Administration "must renounce the Thieu ruling group so that the South Vietnamese may decide themselves on their own affairs and future." The line Chat the PRG proposal is the road Coward a Vietnam settlement was also reiterated in the response to the New York TIMES' A.M. Rosenthal from Ngo Dien, head of the preen deparr!nent of the DRV Foreign Ministry. VNA's English-language transmission on 25 January carried the text of Dien's response, in which he said the answers to RosenthaJ.'s questions could be found in the proposal.* VNA did not transmit the text of Rosenthal's questions, instead stating: "After President Nixon's 2 January TV interview at which he made ambiguous remarks on que Lions of U.S. troop withdrawal anti of the South Vietnamese people's right of self-determination," Rosenthal sent a number of questions to Pharr Van Dong "asking him to clarify several points relating to the aforesaid problems." ALLIED SPEECHES, The VNA account of the 20 January session, POW ISSUE like the account of the one on the 13th, says that "the U.S. delegate again played the trick of allowing the Saigon delegate to speak for the U.S. side" and that it "resorted to the POW issue to elude the responsibility of an aggressor in the settlement of the basic problems raised in the PRG's seven-point plan." Hanoi says nothing about Ambassador Porter's absence from the session and the fait that his deputy, Heyward Isham, pressed tbr: communists for inr:ormation on U.S. prisoners who are known to have been downed alive inside North Vietnam but whose names do not appear on Hanoi's prisoner list. (A brief TASS item on the session, however, said: "The Unified States continues sabotaging the Paris conference. The U.S. delegation head, Porter, walked out of the conference and left for the United States on 'private business. "') A TASS item on the 21st reports that DRV Paris spokesman Nguyen Thanh Le in remarks to reporters criticized the U.S. and Saigon representatives' remarks at the post-session briefing on the 20th * VNA's service channel from Hanoi to Paris carried the text of both Rosei:thal's questions and Dien's response on 15 January. See the TRENDS of 19 January, page 4. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CONFZDTrNTIAL F13ZS 'TRENDS 26 JANUARY 1972 in which they "stressed the prisoner issue but sa.d nothing about the PRG's peace plan." TASS quotes Le ae saying "we not only inform the American government of all the captured American pilots but, proceeding from the principles of humaneness permit them to maintain ties with their families, to maintain correspondence and to have visitors." Le made no such remarks in his regular post-session briefing. No other reference to these remarks has been monitored, and the circumstances under which Le met the reporters are not known. 0 In another development concerning U.S. prisoners in North Vietnam, VNA on 22 January publicized a communique .issued that day by the Hanoi post office under the DRV General Department of Post and i'elecommunications. Ln addition to reporting the acceptance of 300 parcels for prisoners named in l~lsnoi's December 1970 list, the communique notes that Hanoi has rejected another 407 parcels, "sent to addressees who are not on the above-mentioned list of U.S. pilots captured in North Vietnam," and returned the parcels to the senders. MOSCOW ECHOES DRV IN CRITICIZING PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE. POLICY Moscow radio and press comment on the State of the Union message echoes Hanoi and the Front in assailing the President for his Vietnamization policy and alleged prolongation of the war. A KOMSOMOLSKAYA PRAVDA article or.~ the 23d observes that while the President proclaims his wisLtfor a political settlement he continues to bomb the DRV--thus "undermining both hie personal prestige and the tattered prestige of the country he represents." ELABORATION OF A Moscow radio domestic service commentary PRG PROPOSAL on the 24th contrasts the President's expression of hope that the conflict could be ended by talks with U.S. "obstruction" of the Paris talks and alleged failure to seriously discuss the PRG's seven-point ? proposal. A PRAVDA article by Mayevsl~iy on the 19th--the day before the President delivered his message--atypically spelled out the elaboration of the PRG proposal, which includes the ? explicit demand that the United States must stop all military action in both North and South Vietnam and end all support of the Thieu regime. Mayevskiy may have described the proposal in detail because of the special circumstances: lIe was in Paris to attend a Approved For Release 2000/08/ll'49~~'I~P85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CONFIDENTIAL F13IS TRENDS 26 JANUARY 1972 preliminary session for the World Assembly for Peace to be held in Versailles from 1L to l3 February, and in the article he recounted a discussion he had with the DRV and PRG delegates to the Faris talks, Xuan Thuy and Nguyen Van Thieu. Mayevskiy presumabl;~ was also concerned to score points against Peking in supporting the Vietnamese. He seemed to obliquely allude to President Nixon's forthcoming trip to Peking when he accused the President of seeking a solution to the Vietnam problem not in Paris, but "elsewhere." The article was summarized in Moscow broadcasts in a number of foreign languages, including Vietnamese. PRC ?UPPORT OF DRV HIGHLIGHTED BY 'SUPPLEMENTARY" AID ACCORD Peking's effort to reassure the Vietnamese communists of continuing support has bean highlighted by a new military and economic aid agreement. t?;CNA announced on 22 January that a protocol signed in Peking that day calls for a "supplementary gratuitous supply of military equipment and econamic materials by China to Vietnam for 1972." Coming a month bef ore President Nixon's visit to the PRC, the signing of the protocol follows in the wake of a "supplemen~ary" aid agreement between Moscow and Hanoi signed on 29 December.. Apart from the usual annual aid accords between the PRC and the DRV, the most recent of which was signed by Li Hsien-mien when he visited Hanoi in September 1971, Peking has signed three previous supplementary aid agreements with Hanoi. The last previous one was signed on 4 July 1971, coinciding with the publication of. strong Chinese editorial support for the PRG's seven-point peace proposal. The first two supplementary agreements were signed on 25 May 1970 and 15 February 1971 at the time of the incursions into Cambodia and Laos, respectively. The current protocol was signed by Chang Tsai-Chien, a PLA deputy chief of staff, and by the DRV ambassador. The previous agreements had been signed by visiting DRV officials, but the lower level of representation is consistent with the signing of last month's Soviet-DRV agreement by the DRV charge d'affaires in Moscow. The Peking ceremony was a+aended by Yeh Chien-ying, vice chairman of the party's Military Commission, who took the place occupied last July by the purged PLA Chief of Staff Huang Yung-sheng. VNA's report of the signing ceremony, but not NCNA's, cites Yeh as hailing the "brilliant victories" achieved at the beginning of the dry season by the Vietnamese, Laotian, CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050004-6 CUN1P.1:1)IN`I'IAi, PIlZS '1'Ri~Ni)8 z~ JnNUnR~ 1972 and Carnbddlan paoplow and as expressing Chinoeo datorminntion to support the Vi?tnnmose peopl? until "final. victory." debar Peking support for the Vi,etnamase has taken the form of a 21 Januar~~ PRC Foreign Ministry etatomcnt--in support of 1?ho PRG Foti~+.Lgn Ministry ?tatement of the 17th--condemning "U.S. impa+cialism and the Nguyen Van Thieu clique" for the relocation of inhabitants of northern provinces of South Vietnam to "concentration camps" farther south. The PRC statement, charging that the "ruthless" U.S. policy of pacification reveals the "savage and cruel nature of the U.S. aggressors," demands that the "U.3. Govornmerrt" Atop its persecution of the South Vi?tnamese people, end VietnamizaCion, withdraw from S~~uth Vietnam, and stop suppor,~ting the "puppet" rebimes ir. Indochina. But it does not censure the "Nixon Administratio