WHY WE MUST STAY IN VIETNAM

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CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5
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December 15, 2016
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October 6, 2003
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July 16, 1965
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July 16, 1roved For ReMGJk1R(1VV United Nations, he was an articulate spokes Inan for the cause of human freedom throughout the world." Senator ROBERT F. KENNEDY: "The man who set out to `talk sense to the American people' would not want us to mark his pass- ing with 'the exaggerated praise that is so often the lot of public men. But the con- tributions of Adiai Stevenson to the United States and to the world can scarcely be ex- aggerated. Most of his adult life was spent in the service of government; all of it was spent in the service of the public." Mayor Wagner: "Adlai Stevenson was a spokesman for humanity. His wisdom, warmth, and courage are a legend that will endure and, grow with the years to come. He was one of New York City's beloved sons who, despite the great burden of his :office, .gave unstintingly of his time to scores of good causes. All of us in New York City join his millions of friends throughout the world in mourning his death." Michael Stewa't, British Foreign Secre- tary: "In the sudden death in London today of Mr. Adlal Stevenson the world has lost a great statesman. As an outstanding public figure in his own country, as a candidate for the U.S. Presidency and as Governor of Illinois he showed a liberality of mind and Cardinal Spellman: "All the world must mourn the loss of a man so dedicated to the cause of peace asAdlat Stevenson. His death comes at a critical time when his remarkable talents and his tireless efforts for the better- ment of mankind are sorely needed: I pray that God. will reward his selfless service to others and that his soul may find eternal peace." Sir Alec Douglas-Home, former British Prime Minister; "Adlai Stevenson will be mourned by his many friends and admirers in this country." Lester B. Pearson, Canadian Prime Minis- ter: "It is hard to exaggerate the importance of Adlat Stevenson to the free world or to his country. I can only express deep grief and deep' shock at the news." Jens Otto Krag, Danish Premier: "It was typical of Mr. Stevenson that that he was always ready to listen to what was being said by smaller countries. He was attentive' not least to the views of the Nordic countries. The aim of his endeavor was a stable and just peace." Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, former Indian Ambassador to the United States: "He stood for honor and justice among men and nations and his voice was the voice of reason in the United Nations." The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: "Our country should bow in reverence for the passing of a bright star from the horizon of world statesmanship. His leadership was a bright interlude in the troubled history of mankind." Richard. J. Hughes, Governor of New Jer- sey: "I knew that the people of New Jersey share my grief on the loss of this consci- entious and distinguished leader whose de- parture will be mourned by freedom-loving people throughout the world." George W. Ball, Under Secretary of State: "He was one of my closest friends for 30 years. I am very stunned by this. No one ever had a more generous friend. He was a man of very great qualities." Arthur. J. Levitt, State controller: "The world, has lost one of its most effective and eloquent spokesmen for peace and one of its great humanitarians." Abia?a pi , D. Beanie, city controller: "He was a loll Qf great personal spirit, a man who, contributed tremendously to liberal thinking in 20th century America." Paul H. Screyane, city council president: "We, our city, our country, the world, have suffered a tremendous loss.". Representative WILLIAM F. RYAN: "In him was crystallized the best of a civilization." Representative JOHN V. LINDSAY: "Adlat Stevenson's was the eloquent voice of rea- soned liberalism and human rights here in America, and indeed, the voice of America's conscience to the entire world." Robert Moses: "His.was the American im- age we are proud to, show as the symbol of democracy." ITr. Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University: "His was truly the global point of view, grounded in a profound love of his country and enlightened by compassion for all men." Bishop Reuben H. Muller, president, Na- tional Council of Churches: "As citizens con- cerned for the promise of man, we mourn the loss of a great champion of man." Rt. Rev. John E. Hines, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church: "His image is that of the cultured, educated mind for whom fear held no decisive victory. He remained the kind of a man only the free world could produce." Bishop Prince A. Taylor, Jr., president of the Council of Bishops of the Methodist Church: "He embodied in his life rare ideal- ism and practical realities as only few men could have ever done." Archbishop lakovos, Greek Orthodox pri- mate in the United States "His passing is an irreparable loss." Rabbi Maurice N, Eisendrath, president, Union of American Hebrew Congregations: "The world has lost one of its most valuable servants." A DEFENSE OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, in,view of the tendency of many in the country to criticize the U.S. Supreme Court for its decisions-mainly, of course, because they do not agree with them-it is re- freshing to find in one of our newspa- pers an eloquent statement defending the Court and pointing out to what extent it has, down through the years, guarded the liberties we all hold dear. Such a statement appeared in the edi- torial columns of the Salt Lake Tribune, one of our great newspaper, on July 4 of this year. I ask unanimous consent that the edi- torial be printed at this point in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: THESE MEN ALSO DEFENDED OUR LIBERTIES On this 189th anniversary of the Declara- tion of Independence some Americans not hell-bent on the highways may pause to contemplate briefly our glorious heritage of freedom. Too few, however, will give ade- quate consideration and approbation to the third branch of Government for its part in safeguarding these precious liberties. Praise for the Supreme Court is not abun- dant today. Many of the Independence Day orations, as in the past, may be highly critical of the tribunal which usually is most unpopular when it is most active. "Paradoxically," says Leo Pfeffer, consti- tutional lawyer, in "This Honorable Court," a newly published book, "the institution least democratic in its structure-consist- ing of nine men serving for life and respon- sible to no one-has become the institution most committed to and effective in the pro- motion and preservation of democracy." MOVES TO TRIM COURT POWER Except for i937, when the Court was un- der , fire for decisions, upsetting the New Deal, a record number of measures to re- strict the tribunal are now, in Congress. Twenty-eight years ago the Justices were damned for obstructing legislative power. Now they are attacked for usurping legis- lative authority. Hearings are underway in both Houses of Congress on, proposals to protect State legislatures which the Court says are mal- apportioned. The hearings presage what may be the congressional battle of the cen- tury-or an exercise in futility. Ninety res- olutions are in the House and five in the Senate which in effect seek to nullify the Supreme Court's "one man, one vote" de- crees, most of them by constitutional amend- ment.. Cries of usurpation are not "new. It was applied with vehemence on John Marshall, the fourth Chief.. Justice, and his associates who, established. once and for all the Court's authority for judicial review. A REFEREE IS ESSENTIAL Whatever the validity of original argu- ments against Marshall's Interpretation of the Court's powers-and the painful doubts of thoughtful men today about recent de- cisions-it must be acknowledged that we must have some kind of referee. Our democ- racy needs judicial review as much to vali- date legislation as to invalidate it. Without some national body to determine validation and legitimacy, the Federal and State Gov- ernments would clash repeatedly, every de- partment and bureau would encroach on its rivals, and no citizen would know where to look for legally binding rules. This is judicial supremacy, to some extent, but in a democracy like ours, the people must agree to limit, channel, and discipline their own political behavior if the written Constitution is to indure and law prevent chaos. Judges are likely to err sometimes. They may err grievously. But who can pro- pose a less fallible alternative system? So-called judicial lawmaking is not new. John Quincy Adams said that Chief Justice Marshall settled more questions of constitu- tional law than all the Presidents. And De Tocqueville noted in the 1830's that prac- tically every political question in the United States sooner or later becomes a judicial question. ISSUES THRUST ON COURT For the Warren court, the Bill of Rights, almost forgotten for a long time, is the heart of the Constitution. In the 1935-36 term, the Supreme Court dealt with civil liberties in only two out of 160 written opinions. In the 1960-61 term, 54 of the 120 written opin- ions handed down dealt with civil rights. Failure of the executive and legislative branches to meet their responsibility for basic freedoms contributed to the Supreme Court's emergence as guardian and defender of civil liberties. By indirectly thrusting upon the Court delicate problems more prop- erly their own, the elected branches have forced the judicial branch to take action. Judicial intervention resulted mainly from the necessity of filling a vacuum. Though it may have gone too far in some cases, the Court very likely has saved our Republic. The Declaration of Independence paved the way for our Nation. The freedoms for which patriots fought and died were embodied in the Constitution which established the gov- ernment of checks and balances. These checks and balances have been the supreme merit of the American revolution-still go- ing on-and the se t sf.,its success. WHY WE MUS STAY IN VIETNAM Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, an argu- ment the other night between a Salt Lake City attorney and his son resulted in one of the best and most factual de- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 16486 Approved CONGRESSIONAL RECORD R9 46R000300180Yu1~y 16, 1965 fences of the administration's policies in Vietnam I have seen. It came about this way. The Salt Lake attorney, Sanford M. Stoddard, who is a good friend of mine, favors completely the administration policy in southeast Asia. His son, Ray, who was graduated from. Stanford University this June with an A.B. in history, does, too. But, for the sake of an argument, Sanford Stoddard took the position that the United States has no business in Vietnam, and should pull out. Ray presented the case for the Johnson policies. When the argument was completed, Ray felt he had not fully convinced his father, so he put his argu- ments down on paper. The result was a hard-hitting, factual statement which I commend to my colleagues. I ask unan- imous consent that it be printed at this point in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, with thanks to the well-informed young man who prepared it. There being no objection, the state- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: WHY WE MUST STAY IN VIETNAM (By Ray Stoddard), The United States is compelled to, fight a dirty little war in South Vietnam, not be- cause national interests are directly at stake in the area, but because this country is en- gaged in a larger conflict-the cold war. Properly, the Vietnamese engagement should be regarded as one battle in the cold war. It cannot be a decisive battle, but it is one which may profoundly affect the outcome of the larger conflict. It may well prove to be a turning point in the struggle for the control of southeast Asia and possibly for the control of all of Asia. If the Communists should win in South Vietnam, the victory is likely to produce the following results: 1. The Communists will be encouraged to continue their aggressive policies in south- east-Asia. They will undoubtedly mount sub- versive campaigns against Thailand and Malaysia and the Chinese may be encour- aged to make some sort of aggressive moves against India, Formosa, or Korea. 2. U.S. allies in the area will become dis- couraged. If the United States proves un- able or unwilling to defend South Vietnam against Communist aggression, Thailand and Malaysia, and perhaps even Japan, will have no reason to believe that the United States will defend them against similar aggression. Thus, our allies in Asia may feel obliged to make their peace with China before it is too late. 3. The Communists will have won an im- mense psychological victory among both the Intellectuals and the masses, Already, com- munism has a strong appeal for the intel- lectuals 'because its successes in China have convinced many of them that it is the only possible solution for the problems of Asia. A Communist victory in South Vietnam will greatly strengthen this belief. The most common motivation for political allegiance in Asia is not the question of who is right, but that of who will win. And if China wins in South Vietnam, a great many Asians will Inevitably decide that China will be the winner in Asia. Thus, they will rush to jump on the band wagon. Therefore, South Vietnam has a symbolic value similar to that of Czechoslovakia in 1937 and Korea in 1950. If Great Britain and France had opposed littler in 1937, World War II might have started then. On the other hand, it might have been prevented. Similarly, if the United States opposes China's expansion into southeast Asia, a larger war may break out. On the other hand, the larger war may be prevented. The example of Korea, it is submitted, tends to support the argument that a strong stand in South Vietnam will discourage fu- ture friction between the United States and China. The Korean war was not decisive in terms of land control. Nor did it prove that the United States could defeat the Chinese army. It did demonstrate to~Chin a that the United States would oppose act of open aggression in Asia. In consequence, the Chinese have not atempted any com- parable acts of aggression since 1950, those in Tibet and India being relatively insignifi- cant. Instead, the Chinese have developed the tactic of indirect aggression. In areas like South Vietnam and Laos, Communist sup- ported guerrillas foment unrest, exploit ignorance and poverty, wage war, and, the Communists hope, undermine the govern- ments. In the long run this subversive movement is more dangerous to the United States than the Korea style invasion. It is just as effective and much more difficult to defeat. Therefore, the United States was bound to attempt to halt this campaign before it be- came too late. The only question was where. The Eisenhower administration de- cided against Laos: the situation was too far gone, the Communists had too great a stra- tegic advantage, and the logistical problem of supporting a war in the area was virtually insoluble. The Kennedy administration, however, decided that the Communists could be stopped in South Vietnam. The situation there seemed to be better. The Diem gov- ernment appeared to be relatively stable and determined to defeat the Communists. Its army seemed to be relatively strong, while the Vietcong seemed to be relatively weak. The strategic situation was certainly much better. The Diem regime, however, proved to be rotten at the core. Within the first 2 years of the U.S. involvement, that government collapsed and plunged the country into a period of political Instability from which it has not yet emgerged. Moreover, the Viet- cong proved to be much stronger than ex- pected. Once the U.S. efforts became hampered with political problems, the Vietcong launched a larger and more aggres- 'sive offensive. At the present time, it is a much more dangerous enemy than it was in 1960. It is better armed, it is operating in larger units, it Is bolder and more aggressive, and it is winning greater victories. To make matters worse, the South Vietnamese resist- ance is in much greater danger of collapse. The original Kennedy policy proved to be inadequate. President Johnson was forced to either abandon the war or to increase U.S. involvement. The course of abandonment, however, would have involved a serious de- feat for U.S. foreign policy. This country had committed itself too deeply to the win- ning of the war. A retreat would have cost the United States all of southeast Asia. It would have signified that the Vietcong-an army of only about 100,000 men-had beaten the United States. In the eyes of Asians, this country would have been exposed as a paper tiger.. The Communists would have no reason to fear its strength, and its allies would have no reason to trust in its aid. Of course, there Is always the question of how much the control of southeast Asia is worth. The answer is that it is worth a great deal. Strategically, the area controls the air and sea routes between the Far East and Europe and the Near East. Moreover, military control of the area endangers Paki- stan and India to the west, Australia to the south and the Philippines to the east. And, on the other hand, it secures the southern border of China. But, more important, Communist control of southeast Asia would psychologically endanger the U.S. position throughout all of Asia. In fact, it would endanger that position throughout the world. To the Asians, China would look like a winner and the United States would look like a loser. No country can afford to build its destiny on the basis of allegiance with a loser. Many coun- tries now friendly to us would at least be forced into the neutralist camp, since China would certainly emerge from a victory in South Vietnam as the only major power in a very great area of the world. In the case of Japan, our strongest friend in the area, it would probably mean a shift of economic and political ties from the direction of the United States to the direction of China. Of a certainty, a defeat in southeast Asia would put the United States on the defen- sive. The Chinese would be bound to exploit their victory to the fullest extent. So they would continue to test us. Their hope would be that when the time comes for decisive conflict we will be in a weaker position in southeast Asia and they in a much stronger one. But where shall the United States stand and fight after southeast Asia is lost? Thai- land and Malaysia are two of our closest allies outside of Europe, the Americas, Australia, and New Zealand, the Philippines and Japan. If southeast Asia is lost, the Philippines will not be worth defending, even if the Govern- ment will trust us to defend the country. Thus, if southeast Asia is not worth de- fending, there is very little left in the world which is both. worth defending and defend- able. Therefore, a retreat from southeast Asia could easily result in our fighting an- other war anyway, in an unfavorable setting, after losing control of a very valuable area of land. Or, on the other hand, it might re- sult in confinement of the Western World to their own tiny citadels, surrounded by the hungry, Communist controlled masses of the world. In such a situation, the West might simply be overrun. Can we win the war if we do continue the fight in Vietnam? The answer is probably no. The Vietcong Is too deeply entrenched in the country to be driven out. But failing to win does not mean that we must lose. If we maintain the determination to fight, the Communists cannot drive us out of Vietnam. The Vietcong simply hasn't the strength. In the end a stalemate must result. A stale- mate must inevitably be solved at the con- ference tables. If the United States can gain a favorable enough settlement in Vietnam, its cost will have been justified. We will not have won this particular battle but we will have pre- vented the Communists from winning it. Thus, this country will be in a better posi- tion to win the war. The Communists can be stopped on the more favorable grounds of Thailand and Malaysia, if we first: (1) Dem- onstrate to the Communists that we are de- termined to resist their offensive; (2) demon- strate to our allies that we can be trusted to protect them, even when the. going gets rough; (3) demonstrate to both the intellec- tuals and to the masses that the issue is at least in doubt and that they need not rush to the banner of communism. COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS AT WHITTIER COLLEGE BY SENATOR SMITH Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, the Golden State of California was bright- ened on June 1.2 by the presence of the distinguished and gracious lady from Maine, Mrs. MARGARET CHASE SMITH. The occasion was her commencement address to the 62d graduating class of Whittier College in Whittier, Calif. It is important to note that the Senator's commencement address was delivered immediately prior to casting her 2,000th consecutive rollcall vote on June 14. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 Approved for Release 2003/1011:-CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 July 16, 1965 CONCRESSIQWAL ,RECORD - SENATE theft part of the Alamagordo bombing range; now',AtIs .part of the larger White Sands missile range. General Farrell spoke of the times, in the First World War, when, as a young lieutenant, he. stood with a foot on the step, waiting to lead his men out of the trench into combat. "That," he said, "was nothing like what we have just been through." He said that the end of the war was now near; perhaps, he added, the end of all such wars. What we had just been through was the explosion of the first atomic bomb. It had not been a dud. At the, base camp, I worked with General Groves on the technical results of the test for his report to Secretary Stimson in Potsdam; for him, for the President, probably for Churchill, perhaps for some talk with Stalin. Later, Vannevar Bush spoke with me; he knew that we a hoped that our Government .,would take up with the Allied governments the future problems of the bomb, the future hope of collaboration and indeed the use of the bombs in the Pacific war. Bush told me that this had been decided. Nothing much like that was to happen; but neither of us then knew it, In the. morning air, most of us shared, clearly with no grounds for confidence, the two hopes of which General Farrell spoke. For a year, with the imminent defeat of the Axis in Europe and the growing weakness of the Japanese in the Pacific, more and more we had thought of the peril and the hope that our work would bring to human his- tory: the peril of these weapons and their al- most inevitable vast increase; and the hope of limiting and avoiding war, and of new pat terns and Institutions of international co- operation, insight, and understanding. AN ANGRY JAPANESE There was no such simple sense 3 weeks later, with the use. of the bombs in Japan and the end of the war, marked by this final cruel slaughter. Much has been Written on the wisdom of those actions, and on imagined alternatives. I would not add again to this debate, but would make one comment. In Hiroshima in August 1945, there was a hospital for postal and telegraphic workers. Day by day, Dr. Hachiya, who was in charge of it, kept a diary. He was himself hurt by the explosion, but managed to get back to his hospital. He wrote of the dying who name there, the burned and the mutilated, and of the sickness, not at first clear to him, caused by radiation: often the injured re- covered, and others, not seemingly hurt at all, sickened and died. There is no outrage or anger in-these pages. But in one entry Dr. Hachtya is angry: he had heard the rumor of an imperial rescript in which the Emperor asked the Japanese Gov- ernment to end the war. It was not only the generals and the Kamikaze who were deter- mined to fight to the death. If we should speak of regret, we should re- member that these considerations, looking to the end of the wax and toward the future, were not those that led to the initiation of serious work on the bomb. Already in 1939, in this country, Szilard, with help from Wigner and with the support of Einstein, in- dicated to our Government the possible im- portance of the uranium project, its possible military use. In England, Peierls and Frisch, like their American colleagues refugees from tyranny, addressed similar pleas to the Government of the United Kingdom. Peierls' work had a clarity and firmness of program at the time Unmatched in this country. He thought that will examine his proposals with the ut It was not until the autumn of 1941 that BIG BROTHER: SNOOPING BY IN- z Arthur Compton, Fermi, Lawrence, and TERNAL REVENUE SERVICE Oppenheimer, the scientific panel to the Secretary of War's Interim Committee on Mr. LONG of Missouri. Mr. President, Atomic Problems. during the past few days, the Subcom- 16489 mittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure has been holding hearings on snooping techniques of the Internal Revenue Service. Although I am becoming hardened at the revelations made by Federal officials when put under oath on this subject, even I was appalled at the confirmation of some of the items that our staff had found. Frankly, when my staff counsel first told me that IRS had permanent bugs and secret cameras planted in its own conference rooms, I was very skeptical. My skepticism turned out to be mis- placed as Mr. Sheldon Cohen, Commis- sioner of Internal Revenue, admitted under oath to such bugged rooms on IRS premises in such widely scattered places as Baltimore, Kansas City, Alexandria, Va., and New York City. When I was told that IRS in Pittsburgh used a disguised telephone company truck to look inconspicuous when they went on wiretapping expeditions, I was even more skeptical; after all, IRS had banned all wiretapping for years. Again, I was wrong, IRS had such a truck and used it for just such illegal purposes. The revelations went an and on. Next Monday we will begin 3 days of hearings on the situation in the Boston area. At this time, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to print at this point in the RECORD several news stories out- lining what we found in Pittsburgh. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 14, 19651 WITNESS SAYS IRS HEADQUARTERS HELPED IN PITTSBURGH WIRETAP-WASHINGTON SENT EQUIPMENT, EXPERT, SENATORS ARE TOLD (By James C. Millstone, a Washington cor- respondent of the Post-Dispatch) WASHINGTON, July 14.-Internal Revenue Service headquarters in Washington sent equipment and an expert technician to in- stall two wiretaps in the Pittsburgh area, congressional Investigators were told today. Cresson O. Davis, Chief of the IRS Intelli- gence Division in Pittsburgh, gave the testi- mony at a hearing by the Senate Subcommit- tee on Administrative Practice and Procedure, headed by Senator EDWARD V. LONG, Demo- crat, of Missouri. The subcommittee is de- voting its attention currently to IRS prac- tices. Davis said that he had a part in author- izing both wiretaps although he knew such action was against IRS regulations. Both cases, he said, involved investigations of or- ganized crime operations. He said that he knew of two instances in which Pittsburgh IRS agents used hidden microphones to record conversations with persons not involved in organized crime. Both were efforts to obtain evidence about falsified tax returns, Davis said. When LONG asked whether it was IRS pro- cedure to ignore constitutional rights of citi- zens, Davis said that the use of microphones "was not invasion of their rights as I under- stand it" LONG said, "That is a debatable question" Davis said his instructions from IRS Com- missioner Sheldon S. Cohen on protecting the names of certain individuals from public exposure prohibited him from answering. He had declined to answer previous questions for the same reason. . serious consideration was given here to mak- ing a bomb; it was not until then that the British had seen that our help was needed and that they could not go it alone. Then, just before Pearl Harbor, with El Alamein and Stalingrad still a year away and the de- feat of the Axis fax from assured, we did get to work. I think it a valid ground for regret that those 2 years were lost, 2 years of slaugh- ter, degradation, and despair. THE MOOD OF HOPE The last two decades have been shadowed by danger, ever changing, never really reced- ing. Looking to the future, I see again no ground for confidence; but I do see hope. The mood of hope is not as bright today as 2 years ago. Then, after the crisis in Cuba, President Kennedy spoke at American Uni- versity and Pope John XXIII wrote his "Pacem in Terris," giving the noblest and most rounded expression of what we vaguely thought 20 years earlier in the desert. But it is not the mood of hope, but hope itself, that is part of our life, and thus part of our duty. We are engaged in this great enterprise of our time, testing whether men can both preserve and enlarge life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and live with- out war as the great arbiter of history. This we knew early in the morning of July 16, 20 years a Mr. CASE. Mr. President, it is appar- ent from developments in the past 72 hours that the Congress and the people of the United States will shortly be con- fronted with new decisions respecting Vietnam. President Johnson spoke Tuesday of new and serious decisions in the making, and the Secretary of Defense intimated Wednesday that these decisions would be forthcoming upon his return from Saigon next week. All indications point to requests by the President for additional defense appro- priations and-more importantly-spe- cific legislative authority to call up a large number of reservists and to extend the terms of service of members of the Active Forces. These are grave steps for the country and will affect directly the lives and fam- ilies of thousands of our citizens. The stage is thus being set for congres- sional and public review of the course of the war in Vietnam, the deepening in- volvement of the United States in that war, and the assumptions upon which the administration is proceeding with respect to our proclaimed goal of a peaceful settlement. I have taken the position that, so long as our military operations remain com- patible with our stated objective of ne- gotiations, there has been no real alter- native to our present course-and I have supported that course. Now that we are to be asked, in all probability, for a fresh mandate, we shall look to the President to give us a full ac- count both of the existing situation in Vietnam and of his administration's Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 16490 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : GIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE July 16, 1965 LONG said Davis' refusal was "blocking our investigation" and questioned whether Co- hen "is authorized to do that" through his orders to witnesses. LONG recessed the hear- ing until later in the day and asked that Cohen be recalled for questioning. The IRS Commissioner and Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach testified yesterday. TAPPED SOOKLE PHONES Davis, flanked by two attorneys, said the wiretaps he authorized were set up In 1981 and 1984. The first was at an establishment in Wheeling, W. Va., that he said was "book- keeping headquarters of a nationwide (gambling) syndicate." A tap was placed on abank of 8 to 10 tele- phones in an effort to determine whether the Mannarino gambling operation in Pittsburgh was laying off bets there, Davis said. Agents listened at a nearby location and recorded conversations from the telephone lines, he said. After a few days they detected no connec- tion between the Wheeling and Pittsburgh operations and turned over the information to the West Virginia IRS office, he said. The second tap was placed in the greater Pittsburgh area in an effort to learn of pick- up points In the city's number rackets,"Davis said. However, he refused to say whose tele- phone was tapped or where the listening post was, contending that the answers would vio- late Cohen's instructions. TECHNICIAN INSTAId.ED TAP In both cases, Davis testified, he called the Washington office and requested the wiretap equipment. Both times, a technician took the equipment to Pittsburgh and installed it, he said. Asked whether he had any hesitancy about calling Washington on the subject, because wiretapping was against IRS regulations, Da- vis said: "I knew there were people in the Wash- ington office experienced technically In such matters." LONG expressed astonishment that wiretap equipment would be kept in Washington. "Well, that's where we got it," Davis re- plied. "Was there a general understanding that you could violate wiretap regulations when- ever you wanted to?" LONG asked, "No, air," Davis responded, "only under the most extreme circumstances.,, TELLS OF CRIME DRIVE He described those as cases in the campaign against organized crime in which informa- tion could not be obtained in any other way and in which potential witnesses were too terrorized to talk. Davis disclosed that IRS agents were being trained in use of wiretapping equipment, ex- plaining : "Training in such matters is a defense against the opposition. The racket element also is engaged in this activity, and they are not bound by these rules. "I once was told that my phone was tap- ped. I don't know if it was or not. I had it checked darn quick and It wasn't then." On the subject of hidden microphones, Davis said that such equipment was carried by Pittsburgh IRS agents when they had information they were to be the victims of a frame attempt by racket or police ele- ments, or when agents could be exposed to danger. USE IN ORDINARY CASES LONG asked whether a hidden transmitter ever was used to record conversations of "ordinary people," observing that IRS should not "use organized crime as the justification for any surveillance they want to use." ""I know of two instances where we at- tempted to record conversations with indi- viduals not In the organized crime drive," Davis said. "We felt it was the one means of obtaining evidence about falsified Se- turns." The testimony foundered when LONG asked, "Can you tell us about a tap you ran into your own basement?" Davis declined to answer, then consulted with his attorneys. He said he never listened to a tap set In his home, but he refused repeated questions by LONG as to whether the equipment was established there. Joseph McCarthy, Davis' private attorney, told LONG that the question involved delicate matters and that by answering it andother questions about particular investigations, Davis might jeopardize his own job as well as the reputations of others. One witness late yesterday told the sub- committee that he learned accidentally that a conference room used by IRS agents in Pittsburgh to interrogate taxpayers was equipped with a hidden two-way mirror. Robert J. Arnold, a certified public ac- countant, said he was in the room with a client when someone knocked down a picture of the Statue of Liberty with an American flag superimposed. Behind the picture was a two-way mirror, he said. From the confer- ence room, the device looked like a mirror; from the other side, however, agents were able to observe the room. Arnold said he had heard there was a microphone concealed in the room but did not see it. Fensterwald interjected that the microphone was concealed in the wall. He said that on occasion IRS used a framed picture of its seal to cover concealed micro- phones and two-way mirrors. Commissioner Cohen acknowledged earlier that two-way mirrors and hidden micro- phones were used in some IRS offices. He said that although present laws permit use of those devices, criticism of such tactics outweighed the benefits to IRS, and he had ordered them abandoned. From the Washington (D.C.) Evening Star, July 15, 1965] PROBERS DEMAND DATA ON BUGGING BY IRS (By Philip chandler) Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Sheldon S. Cohen today faced a challenge to either let Senate probers see confidential affidavits given him by undercover agents or make a command appearance himself. The choice was posed yesterday by Senator EDWARD V. LONG, Democrat, of Missouri, as his Judiciary Subcommittee ended the sec- ond day of hearings on IRS activities in the Pittsburgh area. Two special agents and the head of the Intelligence Division in Pittsburgh provided new details of wiretapping and other snoop- ing activities. But they refused to supply names and places LONG considers essential to a thorough investigation. And they raised new ques- tions with testimony indicating that: The Washington headquarters has been teaching wiretapping and supplying wiretap equipment to its field offices despite a long- standing regulation against wiretapping. Cohen said Tuesday that he had only re- cently learned of wiretapping by agents in Pittsburgh. U.S. tax agents in Pennsylvania have ig- nored laws against wiretapping and breaking and entering in their zeal to obtain informa- tion about suspected lawbreakers in the fields of gambling and vice. Pittsburgh agents have "bugged" rooms that could' yield personal information about "ordinary citizens" as well as about possible racketeers. 1861 CASE CITED The Pittsburgh intelligence chief, Cresson 0. Davis, told LONG the national office In 1981 sent Special Agent Burke Yung to help install a telephone tap in Wheeling, W. Va., during an investigation of a possible "layoff" operation for gamblers In New Kensington, Pa. "Why do they have experts in wiretapping if they have a regulation against it?" LONG asked. "I'm not qualified to say," Davis replied. Yung also brought the equipment used in the tapping of three telephone lines last year, Davis said, when his office was prob- ing reputed attempts to extort money from numbers racketeers. Davis refused, however, to give LONG the name of the person whose lines were tapped. "Is he a policeman by the name of Mc- Donald?" asked Subcommittee Counsel Ber- nard Fensterwald, Jr. David said he could not answer because a directive issued by Cohen on Monday barred testimony that could jeopardize the rights or security of agents or citizens not previously named in proceedings of record. LONG at that point unexpectedly recessed the hearing and summoned Cohen to appear. When the afternoon session opened he an- nounced that an understanding had been reached, and that Davis would testify more fully. But the afternoon testimony moved the Senator to call for elaboration today. SECRET MICROPHONE LONG wanted to know, for example, why a secret microphone installed in a revenue service office in Pittsburgh In 1981 could not be used to overhear conversations between a taxpayer and his counsel. "We've never done that," Davis said, "We have never used it for ordinary Citizens." But he acknowledged that the room was used to question ordinary citizens and crim- inal suspects alike. LoNG was even more struck by agents' de- scription of how the law office of the late Vincent Massock, of Washington, Pa., was "bugged." Massock was suspected of having connections with the Cosa Nostra, Davis said. Special Agent Jack Schwartz testified that he got a passkey from the building superin- tendent on the pretense of wanting to get into another office which the IRS had rented. He made a "fast impression" of the key in clay, had a copy made, used It to enter the office at night and-again with the help of agents from Washington--attached a small microphone to a bookcase. ADMITS VIOLATIONS Schwartz acknowledged that he had vio- lated both the State law against wiretapping and the breaking-and-entering statutes. But he declared: "Those of us in the organized crime drive felt proud to be in it. Anything that would have been asked, I would have done it." Ironically, the bug fell face down and was swamped with noise from Muzak and an air conditioner, Schwartz said. About 2 weeks later, agents again entered the office to re- move it, he said. The two agents' testimony aroused Sen- ator HUGH SCOTT, Republican, of Pennsyl- vania, who is a member of the parent Sen- ate Judiciary Committee. "How do you justify violating the consti- tutional rights of a person and the attorney- client relationship?" he asked. Davis replied that any "incidental" infor- mation picked up by the microphone would not have been used. The two agents, as well as Special Agent 'William D. Marsh and a clerk from the Pitts- burgh office, Dante Amobile, described the wiretap use of a truck painted to look like a telephone-repair vehicle. According to their testimony, a discarded Bell Telephone Co. truck was bought from a used car dealer with $300 supplied by the national office. The 1-ton vehicle was originally obtained for surveillance, but last year' was used once in wiretapping. In that case, a wireless bug was attached to a telephone line leading to an unidentified Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 hily 16, YZ#Aroved For ReI&QLg$A$7 1AL99 00180005-5 16523 "(b)'In addition to the number of fellow- ships authorized to be awarded by subsec- tion (a) of this 'section, the Commissioner is authorized to award fellowships equal to the number previously awarded during any fiscal year under this part but vacated prior to the end of the period for which they were awarded; except that each fellowship awarded under this subsection shall be for such period of study, not in excess of the re- mainder of the period for which the fellow- ship which it replaces was awarded, as the Commissioner may determine. "Fellowships for Recent Graduates "8=- 522. One-half the number of fellow- ships under the provisions of this part for any fiscal year shall be awarded by the Com- missioner to persons recommended to the Commissioner for such fellowships by insti- tutions of higher education. An institution of higher education may for the purposes of this section recommend any individual who has received a bachelor's degree with high standing from such institution, except that` such recommendation shall be made not later than six months after the awarding of such degree. "Fellowships for Experienced Teachers "i3Ec. 523. The remaining half of the num- ber of fellowships awarded under the pro- visions of this part for any fiscal year shall be awarded by the Commissioner to persons with at least six academic years of experience teaching in an elementary, secondary, or postsecondary vocational school, who are recommended to the Commissioner, for such fellowships by local educational agencies. A local educational agency may, for the pur- poses of this section, recommend any such person Who is teaching in such agency's ele- mentary, secondary, or postsecondary voca- tional schools upon condition that such agency agree`to rehire such individual upon his completing the course of study under such fellowship. `Fellowships in'Ancilliary Fields "SEC 524, ,dot less than 20 per centum of the fellowships awarded under sections 522 And 52$ shall be awarded to persons for graduate work in fields ancilliary to ele- mentary and secondary education, as defined in section 521 "Distribution of Fellowships "SEC. 525, In awarding fellowships under the provisions of this part the Commissioner shall endeavor to provide an equitable distribution of such fellowships throughout the Nation, except that to the extent he deems proper in the national,iuterest, the Commissioner shall give preference in such awards to persons al- ready serving, or who intend to serve, in ele- mentary or secondary schools in low-income rural or metropolitan areas "SEc. 526. (a) Each person awarded a fel- lowship under the provisions of section 522 shall receive a stipend of.$2,000 for the first academic year of study and $2,200 for the second such year. Each person awarded a fellowship under the provisions of section 523 shall receive a stipend of $4,800 for each academic year of study. In both cases an additional amount of $400 for each such academic year of study shall be paid to each such person on account of each of his dependents. "(b) In addition to the amount paid to persons. pursuant to subsection (a) there shall be paid to the institution of higher education at which, each such person is pur- suing his course of study, $2,500 per academic year in the case of a person receiving a iel- lowship' pursuant to section 522 and $5,000 per` academic year in the case of a person receiving a fellowship pursuant to section 623. Amounts paid pursuant to this subsec- tion shall-be less any amount charged any such person for tuition. (c) The Commissioner shall reimburse the East Room in the White House and any person awarded a fellowship pursuant to the second time in the message itself, that this part for actual and necessary traveling he did not need $700 million, because he expenses of such person and his dependents from his ordinary place of residence to the had plenty of authority to transfer the institution of higher education where he will necessary funds; but that he was using pursue his studies under such fellowship, and the measure as a vehicle for another vote to return to such residence. of confidence for his .policy in Asia. "Limitation A group of Senators stood here and "SEC. 527. No fellowship shall be awarded made speeches which caused me to label under this part for study at a school or de- them as the speeches of reservationists. partment of divinity. For the purposes of this section, the term 'school or department of divinity' means an institution or depart- ment or branch of an institution, whose program is specifically for the education of students to prepare them to become ministers of religion or to enter upon some other reli- gious vocation or to prepare them to teach theological subjects. "Fellowship Conditions "SEc. 528. A person awarded a fellowship under the provisions of this part shall con- tinue to receive the payments provided in section 526(a) only during such periods as the Commissioner finds that he is maintain- ing satisfactory proficiency in, and devoting essentially full time to, study or research in the field in which such fellowship was awarded, in an institution of higher educa- tion, and is not engaging in gainful employ- ment other than part-time employment by such institution in teaching, research, or similar activities, approved by the Commis- sioner. "Appropriations "SEc. 529. There are authorized to be ap- propriated such amounts as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this part.", On page 71, line 20, strike out "TITLE V" and insert in lieu thereof "TITLE VI". Beginning on page 71, redesignate sections 501 through 504 as sections 601 through 604, respectively. On page 73, between lines 12 and, 13,.add the following new subsection: "(g) The term 'local educational agency' means a public board of education or other, public authority legally constituted within a State for either administrative control or direction of, or to perform a service function for, public elementary, secondary, or post- secondary vocational schools in a city, county, township, school district, or other political subdivision of a State, or such combination of school districts or counties as are recog- nized in a State as an administrative agency for its public elementary, secondary, or post- secondary vocational schools. Such term also includes any other public institution or agency having administrative control and direction of a public elementary, secondary, They wanted their reservations noted, that they were not giving the President a blank check. They wanted their res- ervations noted that they wanted to be consulted if the President should send further American troops to southeast Asia; and that they exbected to be taken into consultation in connection with a further.-escalation of the war. The RECORD will show that the senior Senator from Oregon that afternoon warned them for the last time so far as the power called for by the measure was concerned. So I again ask the question on the floor of the Senate. I would like to have any Senator tell me whether the President has consulted him about the additional thousands of American boys he has sent into southeast Asia, since the passing of the so-called $700 million measure, who are- dying by increasing numbers as this escalated war proceeds. Of course they have not been con- sulted. I say to my colleagues in the Senate and to the President of the United States and his Cabinet that the American people, in due course of time, are going to be heard from, expressing their deep resentment in opposition to what I consider to be a failure on the part of this administration to follow the procedures 'of' the Constitution of the United States in regard to making war. I have been heard to say many times, but I shall continue to be heard to say across the land and to the Senate, that our President has no constitutional au- thority to send a single American boy to his death in Asia in the absence of a declaration of war. The Congress of the United States does not have a scintilla of constitutional right to seek to delegate to the President of the United States the power to make war in the absence of a declaration of war. v r L f' -1ion should be stopped by the Congress in CY I VIETNAM conducting an undeclared war. The day I sent to the Press Gallery mimeo- graphed copies of the speech I shall make today. It is an additional speech, added to a long list of speeches I have made in the last 2 years on this floor in opposi- tion to the unjustified slaughtering of American boys in Asia by this adminis- tration in an undeclared and unconsti- tutional and illegal war. At the very beginning of my speech to- day, I ask for the attention of the reser- vationists .in the Senate. By the term "reservationists" in the Senate,. my col- leagues well know I mean those Sen- ators who, not so long ago, when the President asked for $700 million to be used in the war in Vietnam, voted for the measure, 'although the President made it clear to us on `two occasions, _ once in the issue as to whether under article I, section 8, of the Constitution, it is ready to declare a war, for only the Congress can declare a war. There is not a -single basis for a constitutional interpretation in the lawbooks of America that justify Congress seeking to delegate power to the President to make war in the absence of a declaration of war. There are those who do not like to hear me say it, but I believe there are prob- ably two main reasons why there has not been a declaration of war. First, it would then make the war is- sue squarely an issue before the Ameri- can people: "Do you want to make war formally and declare it?" Any, such recommendation by the President of the United States and any such declaration Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 16524 Approved IQA W %OiC@ BOOMM046R0003001800 " 16, 1965 of war resolution introduced in the Con- gress would so split this body politic, so far as public opinion is concerned, that the President would take little relief and little comfort from the polls that he so frequently pulls out of his pocket as an indication that the public Is behind him in bloodletting. The public, like the senior Senator from Oregon, likes the President. The public, like the senior Senator from Oregon, would like to support the Presi- dent on every issue. The senior Senator from Oregon supports him on the over- whelming majority of issues, at least 95 percent of them. But as a friend of the President, I believe I can best show that friendship, when I disagree with the President, to say when I think he is wrong, as he is In connection with his foreign policy in connection with this illegal, unjustifiable war in southeast Asia. The American people are entitled to have their Congress act in accordance with the Constitution in support or re- jection of a declaration of war. Second, it would be difficult to know against whom to declare war. At the present time, the only country we could possibly present as a basis against which to direct a declaration of war would be North Vietnam. But, as I have stated many times in past months, on the basis of the present facts, if a proposed decla- ration of war against North Vietnam came before this body, I would vote against such a declaration; in my judg- ment, we do not have the slightest justi- fication under international law, or in keeping with our signature on existing treaties, or on the basis of the operative facts in Asia, to declare war against any country. On the contrary, on the basis of international law, of treaty obliga- tions, and of the serious threat to the peace of the world which we are helping to create in Asia, we should reverse our course of action and plead with other nations to join us under the procedures of the United Nations to set up a peace conference, with the United States sit- ting at the head of that peace table in an endeavor to carry out our professed Ideal of substituting the rule of law for what has become the American jungle claw for the settlement of the dispute in Asia. Mr. President, I wish to say that again because I would not wish anyone in the Senate or in the country to think that I, in the slightest degree, have modified my position of some 2 years in opposition to our Government's policies in Asia. In my judgment, those policies will go down In history to the everlasting dis- credit of the Johnson administration. If the President does not change those policies, he will leave a blot on what otherwise will be the record of a great President. With those comments as a preface, I now turn to the manuscript of my speech, setting forth the points I wish to em- phasize in addition today. ESCALATIONS IN VXETNAM TYph'Y ALL WARS With the statements made Tuesday by President Johnson at his news confer- ence, the United States and the world slid further into the morass of war. It is In- teresting to note that our new escalation is being justified on the basis of alleged increases in participation in the war by North Vietnam. Yet, the testimony of much of our Government suggests that the infiltration from the north was stepped up in 1964, after the American raids on North Vietnam naval bases, subsequent to the Tonkin Bay incidents. Let me point out that the administra- tion can never escape its responsibilities for exceeding its rights in connection with the Tonkin Bay incidents. The record is clear, and I have stated It so many times but repeat it today, that the Government knew of the South Vietnam ships that had left the South Vietnam ports to go into Tonkin Bay to attack North Vietnamese islands a `ew short miles from the coast of North Vietnam. The record Is also clear that American destroyers were in radio communica- tion with Saigon. The record Is further clear that the bombing of the North Vietnamese islands amounted to an attack on North Viet- nam, because those islands are a part of the territory of North Vietnam. Our destroyers were standing within a short distance of the area where the bombing was taking place--on the high seas, It is true, and under international law at a place where they had a right to be; nevertheless, they were there, available to give cover, if cover became necessary. As I said at the time, when I protested the conduct of the United States as a provocateur nation in respect to the at- tacks on the island of North Vietnam, when it was misrepresented to the Amer- ican people, as the Pentagon constantly misrepresents to the American people in its propaganda in regard to this war, that the ships were supposed to be 75 miles from the mainland of North Viet- nam. Of course it was not true, We finally produced the evidence which showed that the Pentagon propaganda was false. But the record will show that I pointed out at the time: Suppose Castro decided to bomb Key West, Fla., with a Cuban torpedo boat, and a Russian destroyer was 75 miles away, what do we think the United States would do? It would give the torpedo boat one chance to come into port under the escort of the American Navy, or we would sink it. Apparently, the Pentagon believes that these policies should work only one way. Mr. President, the log of the ship itself showed that it was somewhere around 13 miles from the coast. Under interna- tional law we had the right to respond immediately in national self-defense to the attack of those torpedo boats upon our destroyers. We did. The President of the United States was completely within his rights under international law. It will be remembered that there was a second incident of another attack, and we had a perfect right to respond in self-defense against the attacking ves- sels; but we had no right under inter- national law to go beyond attacking those vessels and the mainland of North Viet- nam. When we did, the United States, under international law, became an ag- gressor, and has been so branded by many an alleged allied spokesman around the world. We had the right to act in self-defense in response to the torpedo boat attack against our own tor- pedo boats. Then we had at least an international obligation to lay our charge against North Vietnam before the United Nations immediately for threatening the peace by attacking American boats on the high seas. The sad and ugly reality is that the United States, too, has been an aggressor from the very beginning In the war in Asia. The sad and ugly reality is that the United States, too, along with the despicable Communists, violated the Geneva accords from the very begin- ning. The administration would like to cover up the illegality of its own acts., It pub- lished a white paper, but not one word did it tell the American people regarding the violation of international law by the United States. Not one word was in that propaganda sheet, which was aimed at deceiving American public opin- ion, to indicate that the International Control Commission found not only North Vietnam and the Vietcong in vio- lation of the Geneva accords, but also found the United States and South Viet- nam in violation of the Geneva accords time and time again. I say to the American people again: "You are not being given the facts about American policies and actions in south- east Asia, and you have not been given the facts from the very beginning." It is about time for us to come within the framework of international law and lay our case involving the threat to the peace of the world in Asia by the Com- munists before the United Nations for adjudication. Mr. President, I cannot stress too emphatically my very deep conviction that if the United States continues to send over the thousands and thousands of men that the Secretary of Defense is talking about-if we continue this escala- tion, we shall find ourselves in a massive war in Asia that will last for years. Now is the time, before it is too late, to seek to avoid the shocking bloodshed by Americans and Asians that would flow from that war. We should seek under existing inter- national procedures, an honorable solu- tion of the war because if there is any world left to negotiate, before we are led into a nuclear war, the conflict will finally be settled on about the same terms upon which it would be settled now if the United Nations took jurisdiction. Are we never going to learn as the result of history? Are we never going to read the sordid details of the results of war? Mr. President, we are now in an era in which we cannot on any moral grounds justify seeking to win a peace through war. What is the alibi given by our Govern- ment for the accelerated escalation, for every action we have taken? We say we have taken it for retalia- tion. But every action the Vietcong and North Vietnamese have taken they have called retaliation. I do not know why so many are so surprised that after our bombing of Approved For Release 2003/10/15 ; CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 J y 1 V Wroved For Rel&Wfi W i 6 0U4 m 00180005-5 North, Vietnam, the North Vietnamese PRESENT POLICY IN ASIA FORFEITS OUR- Vietcong. Is it right only if it works one The shameful and-sickening manner in way? Is it justifiable if only the United 'which the United States has engaged it- States escalates, but it is wrong if North self in this war without so much as a 'Vietnam seeks to help the Vietnamese? glance in the direction of its legal obliga- At least they are helping their own skin tions under the United Nations Charter brothers. is going to be marked down to the ever- Do not forget that not so many years lasting discredit of the United States. ago there were no North Vietnamese and We are doing what we have for years South Vietnamese. They were all Viet- exhorted other nations not to do-set- namese. tling our international differences by re- And do not forget that the Geneva sort to force of arms. accords do not provide for two govern- We are doing what we have for years ments in Vietnam. The United States, condemned Red China for doing-using not the Geneva accords, created two gov- force against other countries in disre- ernments In Vietnam. gard of the United Nations Charter. We The Geneva accords did not provide have called Red China an outlaw nation for the setting up of a U.S. puppet gov- for her flagrant violations of the U.N. -ernment under the shocking ? dictator we Charter, but her violations differ only in sent over there when he was in exile in form and not substance from our own. Washington, ' D.C., and New York City. The President spoke Tuesday of our We financed-him, militarized him, and national honor and our national word. put him in power to rule with the police I ask him, What about our word as put dictatorship over the Vietnamese; and down by our signature on the U.N. Char- we were surprised that he .was not re- ter? ceived with open arms. What about our honor' as a nation that Thus, we have supported one American seeks the moral leadership of the world police puppet after another in South as the exponent of the rule of law rather Vietnam, and our Government has the than the, rule of the claw in world audacity to -talk about being over there affairs? to support freedom. There has not been It may be`enough to appeal to our own an hour of freedom under American rule people on the basis of a mutual pledge In South Vietnam. that has not been kept by the other side; Under American rule the United States namely, South Vietnam. But the rest of has supported military tyrannies-police the world knows that we are behaving in states denying civil liberties. A police southeast Asia in exactly the same way state, be it a Communist police state or we have condemned so many others for ?an American financed military police -behaving. That is why so many of our state, immoral and unjustifiable. professed friends and erstwhile allies So North Vietnam and the Vietcong have left us in the lurch in Vietnam. have also retaliated and escalated. That is why all the lists of countries That is all war is, really, to meet an helping in South Vietnam lists noncom- enemy and best him in military combat batant elements numbering in the doz- until he is reduced to peace on the terms ens, and combat soldiers only from the of the winner. The point at which a war other two white countries In the area- can be said to be "won" is the point where Australia and New Zealand, plus South the side with the preponderant strength Korea. is willing to accept terms offered by the Where are all our treaty partners from weaker side. North Vietnam, too, has its SEATO? Where are the Philippines, conditions under which it says it will ne- and Pakistan, and Thailand? More im- -gotiate. Those terms are as unacceptable portant, where are India and Japan, the to, us as ours are to the north, So each two great non-Communist powers? of .party in turn raises the level of the war, Asia? trying to gain the advantage. Certainly they are not joining us, and In the way in which we are advancing there is no reason to think their people into the war and the way in which we de- are even for us. They are openly criti- scribe its supposed objectives make it lit- cal of the United States. tie different from any other war. ' Both Earlier 'I said that if we had a declara- sides, we no less than North Vietnam, tion of war, in my judgment we would are stepping up their military activities have a split body politic in the United in.an effort to best the other, and they, States over the advisability of such dec- no less than we, are quite willing to have laration. When I said I thought there the ;issues settled by negotiation just as were reasons why this administration is soon as the United States is willing to so hesitant about formally declaring war, accept the terms of settlement offered by I did not mention another, so I mention North Vietnum. it now. If we do declare war against an- .That is why the parties litigant, so to other country, we shall automatically speak -the war participants-are not the change the legal status of every other ones that can lead the world to the con- country in the world. A nation's rela- ference table. That is why noncombat- tionship with noncombatants becomes ants, representatives of the United Na- entirely different in a myriad of respects bons that have exactly the same interns- ? under international law when it becomes tional law obligations as the United a belligerent. States under that treaty, have the clear That means that the course of action duty to call for the conference for which the President may take in connection the senior Senator from Oregon has been with escalation may affect the sovereign pleading, and without which, in my judg- rights of noncombatants. That is why ,nient the world is headed fora holocaust. I have been heard to sad on occasion on 16525 the floor of the Senate, in regard to Brit- ain, that it may very well be that the Wilson regime will tumble and topple in Great Britain because of United -States policies in Vietnam and the fail- ure on the part of the Prime Minister of Great Britain to follow a course of ac- tion that will maintain for him a major- ity of support in Britain. We hear much talk by Members of the House, telling the American people that North Vietnam ought to be blockaded by the American Navy, supported by American Air Forces. What do they sup- pose the Union Jack will do? Let those warmongers and warhawks who want to involve the American people in a major war in Asia, shockingly proposing the bombing of Hanoi and the Chinese nu- clear bases, tell the American people what assurance they have that the British Jack will ever be lowered to an American blockade. If it is, it will, be the first time in the history of the British Empire. Throughout the decades the British Gov- ernment has made clear to the nations of the world. that the British, flag Will never be lowered to a blockade that the British Government is not willing to accept. Does anyone believe that the French flag will be lowered to an American blockade in Asia, when De Gaulle is open- ly in opposition to American policy in Asia? I could continue to cite one prob- lem after another in regard to the inter- national. law relations that a declaration of .war would create. Because. of. that, I have formed my suspicions that one of the reasons why the President does not want to make. the war in southeast Asia a. legal war under the Constitution is that a formal declaration of war would create problems between the United States and our allies, or alleged allies, around the world, that would soon find us with fewer friends than we now have. The answer is not war. The answer to the threat to the peace in Asia is not the killing of Americans and Vietnamese in increasing numbers. The answer is to substitute the rule of reason for the -jungle law of military might. Oh, what a great opportunity our country has to advance the cause of permanent peace by stopping warmaking and calling upon all nations that are willing to help to po- lice . a peacekeeping program in south- east Asia to join, under the jurisdiction of the United Nations, to effectuate such a :cause, I say to the President that his policy of further escalating the American war in South Vietnam will result in escalation by the other side. He will be announc- ing many more escalations if he does not first announce a complete change in policy. The President's statement on Tuesday is an admission that the United States in no way controls the war. We do not control our participation in it because we do not control the other nations on the other side who have an interest in it. All we are doing is trying to make it 'too costly for them to continue. But we have given no thought as yet to whether they might have the same policy in mind. Approved For Release 2003/10/15: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 16526 Approved FWWgFU-j?lf0/49'F-@BF%rl~6R0003001800 16, 1965 BASIS FOR U.S. ACTIONS HAS BEEN CHANGED SINCE LAST FALL The President is in the process of mak- ing the Vietnam war into an all-Ameri- can war. This is quite a change in the viewpoint of the President since August 1964, because in August 1964, he said, in Texas : I have had advice to load our planes with bombs and to drop them on certain areas that I think would enlarge the war and es- calate the war, and result in our committing a good many American boys to fighting a war that I think ought to be fought by the boys of Asia to help protect their own land. And for that reason, I haven't chosen to enlarge the war. Obviously, the President has changed his mind. But he has not told us why. He has not told us why it is, no longer American policy to avoid committing American boys to do the fighting that Asians should be doing for themselves. Is It because they are not sufficiently in- terested? I am not talking now about South Vietnam only. I am talking about the countries of all of Asia, who appear to be more frightened by what America is doing than by the prospect of what might happen if we ceased our war activ- ity in their part of the world. In New York, on August 12, 1964, the President said: Some others are eager to enlarge the con- flict.. They call upon us to supply American boys to do the job that Asian boys should do. They ask us to take reckless action which might risk the lives of millions and engulf much of Asia and certainly threaten the peace of the entire world. Moreover, such action would offer no solution at all to the real problems of Vietnam. Oh, Mr. President, on August 12, 1964, you were so right. Such action offers no solution at all to the problems of Viet- nam. Yet you are now taking Ameri- cans down the road of escalating the war and supplying American boys to do the job that Asian boys should do, if that is what Asians want done. On September 28, 1964, in Manchester, N.H:., the President said: So just for a moment I have not thought that we were ready for American boys to do the fighting for Asian boys. What I have been trying to do, with the situation that I found, was to get the boys in Vietnam to do their own fighting with our advice and with our equipment. That is the course we are following. So we are not going north and drop bombs at this stage of the game, and we are not going south and run out and leave It for the Communists to take over. We have lost 190 American lives, and to each one of those 190 families this is a major war. We lost that many in Texas on the Fourth of July in wrecks. But I often wake up in the night and think about how many I could lose if I made a misstep. When we retali- ated in the Tonkin Gulf, we dropped bombs on their nests where they had their PT boats housed, and we dropped them within 35 miles of the Chinese border. I don't know what you would think if they started drop- ping them 35 miles from your border, but I think that that is something you have to take into consideration. So we are not going north and we are not going south; we are going to continue to try to got them to save their own freedom with their own men, with our leadership and our officer direction, and such equipment as we can furnish them. We think that losing 190 lives in the period that we hr ve been out there is bad, but it is not like 190,000 that we might lose the first month if we escalate that war. So we are trying somehow to evolve away, as we have in some other places, where the North Vietnamese and the Chi- nese Communists finally, after getting worn down, conclude that they will leave their neighbors alone, and if they do we will come home tomorrow. -- Li these speeches, the President repu- diated the idea of escalating the war, and of putting American combat troops into Vietnam. Many voters relied on those statements. In that campaign the Pres- ident took the fight to Goldwater on this very issue. He led the American people to believe that if he were elected Presi- dent, the policy in Asia would be differ- ent from the warmaking policy that Goldwater was recommending. I say, in all respect, that Goldwater could not possibly have moved further and faster than the President has moved in leading us Into a war in Asia. The President has a right to change his mind. However, he has a duty to present to the American people his justification for changing his mind, and sound reasons for changing his mind. In my judgment the President has miserably failed in justifying his war- making in Asia. One thing that has changed since last August has been the increasing failure of the Government of 'South Vietnam to establish itself as a governing institution. So the sound and wise and justified theory that Americans should not fight Asians' war for them has somehow been shoved completely out of the picture. One does not hear anything from the administration now about the size of the South Vietnamese Military Estab- lishment. I say to the American tax- payers that they have thrown $6.5 billion into the South Vietnamese Military Establishment, counting the billion and a quarter that we poured into the French endeavor when we were trying to keep the French in that war. On the basis of testimony from those in the Pentagon, it was stated over and over again before the Committee on For- eign Relations, on which I serve, that we are dealing with an equipped South Vietnamese Military Establishment of at least 500,000, nearer 750,000. The Vietcong are poorly equipped in com- parison with the South Vietnamese Mili- tary Establishment and without any air support at all. There are probably in the neighborhood of 50,000 to 75,000 hard core Vietcong. There is a South Vietnamese popula- tion in the neighborhood of 15 million. The interesting thing is that the Viet- cong control about 75 percent of the land area of Vietnam. What the American people are not being told is that they control the local government, they collect the taxes, they appoint the teachers. They are the `body politic of about 75 percent of the land area of South Viet- nam. This administration will not give us the facts about what goes on in the Viet- cong controlled areas of South Vietnam. Does anyone mean to tell me that, with a military establishment of some 500,000 up to 750,000 South Vietnamese soldiery, with the best equipment that can be supplied by the U.S. Government, with the air force equipment with which we have supplied them, with the naval power of the U.S. fleet in the waters adjoining that area, and with a population ap- proaching 15 million, we must send thousands and thousands of American boys over there to do the fighting for them? Mr. President, if the South Vietnamese with the kind of support that they have received from the United States cannot settle this war they ought to be told to proceed to negotiate a settlement of that war at an honorable peace table under the jurisdiction of noncombatants. through the procedures of the United Nations. That is my answer. It will continue to be my answer until a success- ful rebuttal comes from either the White House or the State Department. As of today, they have been unable to pro- duce any rebuttal under international law that would destroy the logic of my arguments, Including the arguments that I have presented in the memorandums requested by the President of the United States for the consideration of both the State Department and our representa- tives in the United Nations. The sad fact is that we are derelict in our clear obligations under the United Nations Charter. We are grossly dere- lict in respect to our moral obligations. There is no satisfactory explanation forthcoming from this administration. There has been no explanation as to why the old theory was discarded and no explanation of what new theory we may be working on in Asia, if any. WE NO LONGER FIGHT FOR THE FREEDOM OF SOUTH VIETNAM In light of the repudiation of our past rationalizations for our activities in Viet- nam, we must now assume that only direct American interests are motivating our new war effort. We are running the show. We are running the war. The re- sponsibility and the interests at stake have become ours. If there were any concern left in of- ficial circles for the fate of the people of South Vietnam, who have become mere pawns in this struggle between United States and communism, we never would have permitted a rotted mind like that of General Ky to become associated with and fostered by the American Govern- ment. Who is General Ky? He is the latest corrupt tyrant being supported by the United States in a dictatorial position in South Vietnam. We have had a chain of them, one after another. He is the latest. Let us take a look at him, Mr. President. We would never receive this information from the white paper re- leased by the Pentagon. We would never get this information out of any paper released by this administration. This kind of information we must go abroad to get, for it must be concealed from the American people. Mr. President, there are still a few peo- ple left in this country-I do not know how much longer they will be allowed to speak-who are willing to tell the Amer- ican people the truth as they find the Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 July Y 6, T ql65 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 16527 pproved For Release 003/10/15: CIA-RDP67B00446R0in030 180005- truth in connection with U.S. outlawry in be carried out with the help of the we now, too,-that General Ky has southeast Asia. Americans. often expressed the view that the war Who,is this tyrant whom we are sup Press stories coming from Saigon today must be carried north on the ground as porting, called General Ky? General Ky make one even more suspicious as to well as in the air. At least Hitler en- has only one hero-Adolf Hitler. So he what this tyrant is up to. He is now visioned regaining his lost territory tells us in the interview published July 6 saying to the American military over through the efforts of his own people, by the Sunday Mirror of London: there, and to the American representa- and not on the backs of American sol- Peopre ask me who my heroes are. I have 'tives sent over there, including the Sec- diers. only one-Hitler. I admire Hitler because he retary of Defense, "America must now But General Ky should read history pulled his country together when it was in a fight a war in Vietnam to win"-and he past the thirties. He will find out that terrible state in the early thirties. But the leaves no doubt as to his views and that after regaining the lost lands and con- situation here is so desperate now that one what is necessary to win is to proceed to quering most of Europe, Hitler left Ger- man would not be enough. We need four take the war to China. many only half the country it was before or five Hitlers in Vietnam. a U.S INTEREST AIMS AT CHINA, NOT VIETNAM he started. His legacy to his people was That ought to be the end of American Perhaps this administration can whip the occupation of a huge chunk of Ger- support for General Ky. up a war hysteria in this country suffi- man territory by the Communist, and One is tempted to remind General Ky cient to get the people in a hysterical occupation which, after 20 years, shows that FTrankliri Roosevelt also pulled a state to support our going to war against no signs of being terminated. much bigger country, together in the China by way of our escalating the war Russia is in there as the keeper of the early thirties when it was in a terrible into China. puppet regime of East Germany, just as state, but it is obvious that Ky is at- I have said for many months that I am the United States is the keeper of the tracted far more to the attributes of a satisfied, as a member of the Foreign puppet regime of South Vietnam. Hitler than to the attributes of a Frank- Relations Committee of the U.S. Senate, When we reach the council tables of lin Roosevelt. that we have a dangerous, desperate the world, let me warn the American The hand of violence fits General Ky group of men iii the Pentagon who want people that we are not going to be ex- just as it fits the Communists who always a preventive war against China and who onerated, we are not going to be found find it easier to shoot, murder, and en- would like to create an opportunity to with clean hands, but with hands drip- slave those who make themselves incon- bomb the Chinese nuclear installations. ping with blood. venient or who do not fit in with the I consider them the most desperate and All we can hope and pray for is that plans of the ruler. Inspiration, states- dangerous men .in all the world. The our hands will be washed in the solution manship, leadership of all the people in a shocking and despicable Communist of a peaceful negotiation which will do common cause-these are attributes that leaders of Russia and China have thus honor to all the world, including the are foreign to Ky just as they were to far-who knows how much longer?- combatants in this unholy war. Hitler. given evidence that they wish to avoid As stupid as Ky is, the fact remains This tyrant Ky, supported by the U.S. that massive war. that he is our man. He is our protege. Government, is a remarkable prototype I cannot understand how anyone could He flies our planes. He wears our of Hitler, in charge of the police state we even for a moment believe that if the clothes. He spends our money. He is help maintain. in South Vietnam; and United States should bomb nuclear in- all Government-issue, so far as we are out of the other side of our leadership's stallations of Red China, Red Russia concerned. He is the creature of the mouth they prate about supporting free- could stay out of the war and maintain 10-year U.S. military aid program in dom in South Vietnam. They have mil- any position of leadership in the Commu- South Vietnam. His only hero, he says, lions of American people convinced that cost segment of the war. is Adolf Hitler. we are supporting freedom in South Viet- A week ago yesterday, I went as far as Unless we change our policy in Viet- nam, when what we are supporting is I could under the doctrine of privilege nam, we are going to wind up with much .military tyranny and dictatorship. in disclosing the basis for a judgment of the same disaster on our hands in Viet- Hitler rallied a majority by turning mine, which I had reported to the Pres- nam that engulfed Germany. Commu- their fears and hatreds upon a minority ident of the United States and to the nism has made all Its gains out of war. within their midst, and by so doing he Secretary of State, which causes me to A general war in Asia will extend its do- created a record of human bestiality that believe that if the United States bombs minion even further. the world has been trying to forget for 20 either Hanoi or China, Red Russia will With each step this country has taken years. come into the war. alone, unaccompanied, and unilaterally Yet that is the kind of leadership that As I said a week ago Thursday-, it is my down the road to war, the chances of this man is offering to the people of opinion that that war would not be lim- limiting the war and limiting commu- South Vietnam, with American backing, ited to China. I said then, and repeat nism have become dimmer and dimmer. American financing, and with the life- today, Russia will not let the United Perhaps the last chance for peace lies blood of American soldiers. States pick the battlefield. She will pick with the nonparties to the war who can What a shame. What a shame, Mr- her own battlefield, and I happen to think yet bring the Vietnam war under the President. it will be New York City, Washington, jurisdiction of the United Nations. I ask unanimous consent that the en- D.C., Detroit, Seattle, San Francisco, and Mr. President, I have been pleading tire text of the interview from the Sun- other great population centers of the with my Government to assume its obli- day Mirror be printed at the conclusion United States. gation by taking the issue to the United of my remarks. However, if she comes into the war, Nations, calling for an extraordinary ses- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without she knows she will have to come into an sion and announcing that we would lay objection, it is so ordered. all-out nuclear war. The ungodly im- the threat to the peace of the world (See exhibit 1.) plication is that no one will win, but all before the procedures of the United Na- Mr. MORSE. I point out also that Ky will be destroyed. I say to my God on tions for its jurisdiction and its adjudi- shares another opinion of Hitler's, and the floor of the Senate this afternoon, cation, with our pledge of cooperation to that is that territory lost by treaty can How can we justify our warmaking cause implement the decisions reached. be retaken by force of arms. The story of action with all of these dangers preg- We either believe in a government of about General Ky points out that he was nant and inherent? law in the settlement of a threat to the "widely thought to have been responsible Iam at a complete loss to understand peace of the world, or we believe in taking for Khanh's boast that the Vietnamese it. Those of us who are willing must mankind down the road to what I fear air' fq,i'ce has the capability of dropping continue to protest, must continue to will be a great disaster through war. bombs on military targets in North Viet- plead, niUSt continue to challenge, in the CONGRESS MUST REMAIN IN SESSION nam and South China"-boasts made hope that the rays of reason will finally Most certainly the only possible domes- before the bombing of the north actually break through the war clouds and the tic restraint upon the executive began. One can' only wonder whether sunshine of a peaceful day will break branch-the Congress-must remain in session this fall - - i - n t world No. 129-7 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 16528 c~yC-~~~ Approved F or-ReTeas~slAb/1%~ i*-PDP T R0003001800ff 16, 1965 1 warn the American people that the armed services to the President that we China border. This is an interesting lo- drive is going to be on to adjourn Con- are now merely bystanders to the exer- cation of this segment of the railroad. gress. The drive is going to be on to cise of these legislative powers not only The railroad comes out of Red China, send Congress home. With Congress out by the President but by the Secretary of crosses the border to North Vietnam, of session, it will be easier for the war- Defense. where there is a projection of territory, makers to proceed with fewer checks The result has been the virtual abdica- makes a loop through North Vietnamese being made upon their warmaking. tion of our checking power. The admin- territory, and goes back into Red China. So far as I am concerned, so long as istration has been quick to take advan- The U.S. Air Force bombed the part American boys are dying in southeast tage of the situation by keeping away of the railroad that is in that North Viet- Asia, it is my position that Congress from Congress any real opportunity to namese loop. If that is not provocation, should never go out of session, because decide the use of American military Mr. President, I wish someone would de- under the separation of powers doctrine forces- in Asia. Any President always fine the word for me. of the Constitution under which we func- prefers to gather to himself as close to It is the fear of the senior Senator tion, Congress owes it to the American an exclusive decisionmaking power as from Oregon that the Pentagon, In its people to remain in session and main- he can manage to gather. Given a Con- escalating war policies, will continue de- tain a constant check upon the executive gress anxious to cooperate, and the con- liberately, willfully, intentionally, and branch of the Government. stitutional framework which was created knowingly to follow a course of action There are many reasons why we should to prevent a President from-plunging the aimed at provoking Red China to com- remain in session at some length this Nation Into foreign adventures on his mit an overt act. year, but the compelling and controlling own decision is effectively destroyed. I am satisfied that if Red China com- reason is that we cannot justify giving But so long as Congress sits, we con- mits an overt act, she will be quickly the administration a free handin con- tinue to hold the power to assert our bombed. That is the risk. That is the ducting the war with Congress in ad- duties So long as we re in i i . ma n sess on, joverment. the President knows that at least we are The floor of the House of Representa- able to exercise our constitutional func- tives and the floor of the Senate must be tion if we choose to do so. kept available for whatever public con- In his press conference on Wednesday, sideration is necessary to maintain a con- the Secretary of Defense made it clear stant and vigilant check upon the ad- that the administration was about to ex- ministration in connection with the con- ercise another congressional power that -duct of this war. - has been delegated to it-that of calling It Is true that our constitutional func- up reservists and national guardsmen. tion to.check the President in his conduct Thus, another escalation of the war ef- of foreign affairs as well as In domestic fort is about to take place without the affairs has atrophied to the point of dis- slightest reference to Congress. The appearing. I have been speaking about Members of Congress who insist they this trend toward government by ex- have voted for Vietnam resolutions only ecutive supremacy for nigh on 15 out of to endorse past acts and not to give a the 20 years I have served in the Senate. blank check for future acts are getting For the past 15 years, I have been trying their answer now. to warn the American people with specific As the senior Senator from Oregon proof after specific proof of the tendency warned them, they are getting their an- of Congress to delegate away more and swer now. They sought to justify their more of its checking responsibilities un- vote of confidence in the President's der the Constitution, leaving the Ameri- policy by saying they were not giving can people. with a government by execu- him a blank check. They gave him a tive supremacy. i have warned many blank check, and he is using it. times, and will continue to warn the They have the power to take it away. American people, that they cannot cite a I say to the American people: "You single government in the history of man- really have that answer. You - made it kind which remained free, while the peo- clear to Members of Congress that you ple were subjected to a government by want them to take away the blanket au- executive supremacy. thority, the blank-check authority that Freedom for the individual is incom- they have tried to delegate to the Presi- patible with government by executive su- dent of the United States. You can premacy, which is but- a polite word for deliver that message in a manner that dictatorship of one degree, form, or an- they will understand." other. I believe it is the only way that we Let me say to the voters of this country shall be able to stop this escalation. that they have the responsibility to hold I suggest that Congress keen in mind th i l e r e ected officials to a political ac- counting. They have the duty of citizen- statesmanship to check up and see to what extent their elected officials are delegating away to the executive branch of the Government the residual controls and checking obligations which the Con- stitution vests in Congress. I am talking about the principle of government, which many find to be a dry subject. It Is difficult to see the direct That is the threat leading to the begin- ning of a nuclear war. As I said a few moments ago, a bomb- ing of Hanoi will leave her no choice. It is not possible to bomb Hanoi without killing Russians. Let the American people understand that Red Russia is now giving military support to North Vietnam to the degree that there are a considerable number of Russians in Hanoi-technicians and military advisers necessary to advise them in the use of the military equip- ment that Red Russia has sent to them. Does anyone believe that the United States can bomb Hanoi and start killing Russians, and that the Kremlin will send us a thank you note? They will send us a declaration of war, or they will make war, declaration or not. Whatever the views of the President in this respect, I am satisfied that the chance to bomb China is the objective of a large body of opinion in the Penta- gon and. unfortunately the Department of State. One need only review the his- tory of our public pronouncements on the war over the last 3 years to appre- ciate that we have moved steadily away from justifying our acts as an assistance to South Vietnam, and closer and closer to justifying our acts as the only means of containing China. The ultimate "con- tainment" is the nuclear bombing of China's major industries, including her nuclear installations. t th e r merican people: ?'1 tell creased in Vietnam, the air raids in the ` ~ o rth are mever cto China, you that the Pentagon recognizes that it noIrthb are moving there is any ever closer lose coincidence to in the cannot defeat Red - China with bombing, nuclear or conventional; and the two events. When we have landed a suf- hawks who have been trwry- cient land army in Vietnam and pre- ing to toe the House, whho e fi ing egg the administration been onto the pared adequate coastal bases to supply bombing of Hanoi and even a bombing it, the air raids will find their way to of Red China, would have the American areas in or around China that will bring people believe that we can win the war China into the war. with bombings, either nuclear or conven- government to their precious, concrete ate, I must warn the American iC opll vary know it and say so-in private. freedoms and liberties. people e I know that I am getting tting pretty close, about what I think the preventive war but I am still The answer is that there are no free- crowd in the Pentagon has in mind. American people are entitled to have doors or liberties except in relationship We have read In the newspapers dur- everything the senior senator from Ore to the abstract principles of government ing the past 72 hours that the U.S. Air gon can tell them within the rules. I which we call constitutional guarantees. Force has bombed a segment of the China challenge the Pentagon to issue a state- We have delegated so many congres- railroad in North Vietnam. The bomb- ment denying what I have just said. I sional powers over war and over the ing took place only a few miles from the warn them that if they put out a propa- Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 July 16, 1 65 CONCWAWAA'6R--W&V600 ~RaAA 16529 aaroved For Release 300180D05-5 ganda statement denying it, all the rules of privileges before the Committee on Foreign Relations will be out the window so far as the senior Senator from Oregon Is concerned. I would rather take the discipline of the Senate than deny to the American people what those briefings will show, if the Pentagon denies what the senior Senator fron} Oregon has said, that they admit they cannot beat Red China with bombing, nuclear or conventional. They will have to beat her in both the air and on the ground. If they take on Red China on the ground, they will have to send hundreds of thousands of Ameri- can boys to China, to die in a war which in my judgment cannot be justified on any grounds. The American people must come to grips with the ugly crisis that faces us. The American people must stop passing the buck to their Government. The American people must recognize the fact that it is their ultimate. responsibility to decree what the American foreign policy shall be, and that it is not the respon- sibility of the President of the United States, for under our constitutional sys- tem he is but the administrator of a people's foreign policy. The American people die. American soldiers the by the thousands and thou- sands and thousands. I shall at least go to my grave knowing that I tried to. warn the American peo- ple, before it was too late, of the inevi- table consequences of a continuation of the Johnson administration's policy of supporting what started out to be Mc- Namara's war in Asia. And when we are adequately prepared on the ground, we will be ready to start whatever provocative bombing around her southern borders may be necessary. The Congress here at "home, and the members of the United Nations abroad, apparently are the only agencies left that can alter the course of this war, except my President and yours. Mr. President, let me put at rest once again the charge or criticism that is made against the senior Senator from Oregon that by taking the position he takes in opposition to his Government's war in Asia, he is aiding and abetting commu- nism. I yield to no one in this country In my hatred of everything that the ideology of communism stands for, but I am satis- fied that those who are escalating the war In Asia are the greatest allies the Communists have in the world. American. foreign policy in Asia Is mis- understood by the hundreds of thousands in the underdeveloped areas of the world. Those are the areas'in which we ought to win the fight for men's minds over to the cause of freedom, but we can never win them b_ y making war. Also,, do not, forget, Mr. President, that we are white men, by and large. Amer- icans are looked upon in Asia as white men, and Asians are determined to see to it, -that' Asia is not dominated by any white l atlon, in whole or In part. That ' Is 'why what we are buying for ourselves Is a war that :will return to us many military victories. As I have heard leading advisers in the Pentagon say: "We can kill them by the millions with our bombing; we can destroy their cities; we can knock out their nuclear bases: but to beat them we have to meet them on the-ground." We can do all that, Mr. President, but we will leave the United States bogged down in Asia for 25 to 50 years. We have neither the manpower nor the economic power ultimately to win that war in the sense that people mean it when they talk about victory. So, Mr. President, as the last point of my speech-and I shall be very brief on it, I say to my friend from West Vir- ginia, I set forth the conclusion I have reached most reluctantly. I have come to the conclusion that now is the time for the United States to go on to an economic war basis. I wish to say to my administration: "If you are going to win the war in Asia, you cannot justify a single dollar profit for a single American businessman in this whole country." If we are going to fight this war, let us do what we can to see to it that there is spread across this Republic an equality of sacrifice, to the extent there can be such equality-and, of course, the word defines itself when we speak about equal- ity in terms of supreme sacrifice, and equality in support of making profits out of blood. If we are going to fight this war, now Is the time to go on a war footing. Now is the time to bring into existence price and wage stabilization procedures and bodies. Now is the time to take the profit out of war. The other day a representative of a great union sat in my office protesting my position on the war In Vietnam. I lis- tened patiently, very much interested in a point of view that is held by too many labor leaders in the United States today. During the conversation, he mentioned the great interest his union had in the helicopters, airplanes, munitions, and war materiel in Vietnam that was being manufactured by their labor. Senators know that I would be aghast. I was shocked to think that even the thought should go through his mind that any change in my position should be dictated by the alleged benefits to the economy of the United States by fighting a war in South Vietnam. But, as politely as I could, I made it very clear to that labor leader that the senior Senator from Oregon was not going to vote to pay for jobs for Amer- ican workmen in war plants with the blood of American boys in Vietnam. Mr. President, we shall continue to es- calate this war. If the McNamara program is for call- ing up the Reserves, if the McNamara program is for calling up the National Guard, if the McNamara program is for increasing the manpower-the present figure is 170,000-let me say to the Amer- can people: Get ready. One hundred seventy thousand will be the minimum. We shall go far beyond that figure; and if ,Chiba cpnes., in, we shall have them over by the hundreds of thousands. Now is the-time to put, the economy of, this country on a war basis.. If we get Into a full-scale war, the constant emergency changes that will be required to prosecute it will be so sweep- ing and drastic for the duration of that total war that we will not know this Gov- ernment. Now is the time, in the inter- ests of preserving this system of govern- ment, to g., on a war footing economic- ally. This is no time for the American people to be making money out of blood. On the contrary, if the policy is to be a war policy, let us make it a war policy for everyone, not only for the boys who do the fighting and dying. Oh, I can read the editorials now. I can read the criticisms now of the posi- tion that the Senator from Oregon is taking. But I stand on it. When we start talking about having 170,000 boys in South Vietnam, when we start talking about the expenditure of funds the ad- ministration is talking about for Viet- nam, we have a duty to make every citi- zen-I do not care what his economic status is-enlist in the ranks for the war effort. The senior Senator from Oregon will tontine to insist, in speech after speech, as the administration continues to esca- late the war, that checks be placed on all segments of the American economy, not only business, but labor, as well, to require them to make their sacrifices for the prosecution of that war. I do not ever want to hear mentioned to me again that this war is good for the economy of the country. I am not interested in blood money. I shall yield in a moment to the Sen- ator from West Virginia, prior to be- ginning the second speech I shall make today, a speech I was prevented from making last night because of the parlia- mentary situation. I am saddened that I feel it necessary to make this speech. It is not an easy speech to make. It does not make one happy to disagree with the President of the United States, for whom he has af- fection. I have done so and shall con- tinue to do so because I believe the best service I can render my President is to disagree with him when I believe he is wrong. I believe that my President has been ill advised, and I shall continue to pray that in some way, somehow, an understanding may come to permeate this administration, that will cause our policymakers to turn back out of the jungle, go back to the fork in the road, and march again to the goal of peace that really will blaze in the sunlight, if only we will take the right road. EXHIBIT 1 [From the New York Mirror, July'4, 19651 OUR ALLY: A PREMIER WHOSE HERO Is HITLER (By Brian Moynahan) "I admire Hitler because he pulled his country together," says South Vietnam's lat- est leader. "People ask me who my heroes are. I have only one-Hitler." These are the words of Air . Vice Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky, latest Prime Minister of South Vietnam, whose re- mote, unstable country has the whole world holding its breath. The comment of this flamboyant little dictator, who grasped office by a military coup while 70.000 American soldiers strove to keep the Communists at bay, highlights the whole tragedy of the thankless Vietnam war. Ky outlined his Approved For Release 2003/10/15': CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 16530 Approved F& M /4b'/11 A- DP 6' 6R0003001800d 16, 1965 philosophy on Adolf Hitler in this remarkable .interview sometime before the takeover. Ky said: "I admire Hitler because he pulled his country together when it was in a terrible state in the early thirties. "But the situation here is so desperate now that one man would not be enough. We need four or five Hitlers in Vietnam." We met in his huge office at Tan Son Nhut air base on the outskirts of Saigon, when Ky commanded the Vietnamese air force. Now, as the country's 10th Premier in 20 months, he and his fragile government face a situation more desperate than ever. Outspoken and colorful, Ky looks every inch it pilot. He is small and lightly built. He wears an impressive mustache'-surpris- ingly thick for an oriental. COLOR On flying missions, he sports twin, pearl- handled revolvers and purple chokers. Even his private plane-a twin-engined Aero Commander, which he pilots on tours of the countryside-Is purple. "It's my fa- vorite color, because it is my girl friend's favorite color," he explained. His girl friend, a slender and beautiful half-Chinese Vietnamese, who was an Air Vietnam hostess, is now his wife. The big office reflected his character. It was splashed with bright blue flags and cur- tains. Orange and silver flying helmets hung from the walls. Beatles' music-,'Yes. I like them," he said with a smile-poured from a hi-fl set in the corner. The man the Western nations now find themselves supporting in the name of free- dom had a loaded .45 revolver as a paper- weight on his desk. The desk was stacked with thrillers and French paperbacks. An automatic rifle, with the catch at "fire," was handy on the wall * * * "just in case the Vietcong try to catch me here instead of in the air." The Vietcong have, indeed, had plenty of chances. Before he became Premier last month, Ky flew his American Skyraider fighter-bomber on at least one mission a week. His plane was hit several times and he was nicked by fragments when leading a recent raid on North Vietnam. But he is a superb pilot, trained in France, Algeria and America, "One of the best," an American told me, "very brave, but not death-or-glory reck- less." On off-duty weekends, Ky would` go up to Dalat, a mist-shrouded officers' retreat in the mountains northeast of Saigon, where the luxurious villas change with every, political shift in the capital. He likes to hunt from the backs of elephants. The tough political line he is taking now- he has clamped a curfew on Saigon's wild nightlife, publicly executed a terrorist and threatened the same punishment to profiteers-is not surprising. TOUGH When another terrorist was executed in Saigon last October, Ky told me: "I want an air force firing squad to do it and I want to be the officer in charge. "We have to be tough. As tough as the Vietcong. "'We are losing the countryside because the government here is weak and not trusted. The towns are getting rotten and corrupt. "We must have, soon, a strong leader whom the people out in the villages can admire and. trust and who can control the towns." He was then leader of the officers who saved General Khanh's government from an at- tempted coup last September-and who ex- acted growing concessions and influence in return. PURGE Ky was widely thought to have been re- sponsible for Khanh's boast that the Viet- namese air force had "the capability of drop- ping bombs on military targets in North Vietnam and South China"--a move that could have escalated the war disastrously for the rest of the world. His policy then was to "put all the coun- try's effort into the war by purging the Army of incompetent officers, stopping wild rumors and defeatism and taking a firm hand with demonstrations." Next, he,would start to win the country back from the guerillas, village by village. Whether Ky can live up to his hopes and prove strong and mature enough for his crushing responsibilities remains to be seen. South Vietnam's "strong man" premiers- Diem, Big Minh, Khanh-have come and gone in quickening succession. Even Ky himself smiled when I asked him if he was interested in the Premiership: "Here, that can only be a short-term ambi- tion." EXHIBIT 2 [From the Wall Street Journal, July 15, 19651 GLOOM IN VIETNAM: DOUBTS RISE THAT THE UNITED STATES CAN MOVE FAST ENOUGH To BLUNT REDS' DRrVE--AMERICAN STRENGTH INCREASES, BUT COMMUNISTS CONTINUE To GoeBt15 UP TERRrToaY-A HOLLOW VICTORY AT DAC To (By Philip Geyelin) TAN CANH, SOUTH VIETNAM.-Are we too late in South Vietnam? That thought haunts more than one Amer- ican war planner here, even as fresh forces pile onto coastal beachheads and the military pressure grows for a much more active, ag- gressive, and greatly expanded U.S. combat role. As U.S. troop strength heads rapidly toward 75,000, even an ultimate figure of 100,000 is now considered too conservative; totals in the several-hundred-thousand range are quite casually kicked around. As the number of troops expands, so will their mission. "We are on the verge of a whole new phase as far as American involve- ment is concerned," predicts one U.S. strat- egist. Deliberate Communist assaults on ?[f S. installations last February, he recalls, jolted the Johnson administration into bombing North Vietnam and landing the first U.S. combat troops for "combat support" duties well beyond the earlier advisory role. Until now, however, this has amounted largely to defensive action, with only occa- sional emergency assignments to relieve the pressure when regular South Vietnamese Army units felt an urgent need for help. COMBAT ALLY Now the idea Is for U.S. forces to play the role increasingly of what ane top officer calls "combat ally." Precisely how this will work is almost certainly to be the major subject for deliberations between local American and South Vietnamese authorities and the team of top policymakers due in from Washington Friday, including Secretary of Defense Mc- Namara and Henry Cabot Lodge, scheduled to begin his second tour as Ambassador to Saigon shortly. (In Washington yesterday, Defense Secre- tary McNamara told a press conference that his on-the-spot survey of Vietnam was needs might bring consideration of calling up mili- tary reserves, extending tours of duty, and in- creasing draft calls. A congressional delega- tion that saw him yesterday came away with the impression that the administration might ask Congress for a big new appropriation to finance Vietnam operations, even before the current session ends.) Even before the high-level talks begin in South Vietnam, however, the broad outlines of the new U.S. role are almost certainly firmly fixed. In effect, the combat ally con- cept would turn U.S. troops into a force avail- able much more routinely than now for duty in joint missions with South Vietnamese units or on special spoiling assignments aimed at breaking up suspected concentra- tions of Vietcong before they can get them- selves set for major offensives of their own. Awed by the prospect of so much power to be brought to bear, one ranking U.S. officer exclaims: "I just don't see how we can really lose, when you look at the stuff we are bring- ing in here." Most authorities would agree up to a point; no force the Communists could conceivably assemble seems likely to push U.S. coastal strongholds into the South China Sea. But the question of whether American power can act fast enough remains the key to U.S. fortunes in Vietnam. The reason is all too evident in what you encounter in a 1,000-mile inspection of this confused and complicated battlefront: The hard fact is that while the United States is building up strength, the Vietcong are rapidly gobbling up huge chunks of South Vietnam. VIETCONG GAINS In short, they're winning the war. Hamlets and villages by the score are being overrun; strategic distict towns are beginning to topple; the pressure is mounting on key pro- vincial capitals, especially here in the soggy, desolate-but militarily critical-central highlands. Driving hundreds of refugees be- fore them, the Reds are clogging coastal areas with displaced villagers, adding to already serious economic strains; Government figures at last count list over 500,000 fugitives. While U.S. bombers chop up communications in North Vietnam, Vietcong demolition teams are blasting bridges in the south; a simpler Red technique, the digging of deep trenches in key roads after nightfall, is also effective in shutting off transport of food and other necessities. Result: With war weariness a common complaint, Saigon's will to resist is in con- stant danger of buckling under the military, economic, and political strain. Such a col- lapse could flow from a variety of causes-a stunning military reverse; a switch to the other side by a disheartened, or perhaps op- portunistic, major South Vietnamese army unit; runaway inflation or an acute food shortage; a political coup predicated on peace 'at almost any price. Some knowledgeable U.S. experts don't even exclude the possibility of serious Communist penetration of the upper reaches of the Saigon Government, with all that could mean in the way of subtle sabotage of the war effort. U.S. diplomats and soldiers both insist the outlook will brighten once the monsoon sea- son ends and the United States-South Viet- namese "dry season" counterattack can be launched. But the trouble is that the rains will last for another Z months at least, and the Vietcong offensive, by most reckoning, has yet to reach full ferocity. AVERTING CALAMITY Meantime, it's conceded that the U.S. mili- tary might, so heavily dependent on air-strike support and air transport, will be partially paralyzed. "We aren't even thinking in terms of reversing the trend right now," says one high-level American. "We would settle in the next few months for simply holding the line and averting calamity." Even holding the line, however, is no easy task. To see why, you have only to head by helicopter up the chain of isolated outposts from the provincial capitals of Pleiku and Kontum here on the Vietnam high plateau and drop in at this tiny hamlet of Tan Canh, command post for the 42d Regiment of the South Vietnamese Army. Government forces at Tan Canh recently made a desperate effort to stem the Vietcong tide. Circling ' down for a landing in the bright sunshine; you can visualize quite clearly the seesaw struggle that raged a few days earlier for the district town of Dac To, a mile or two down the road. On the face of it, it seems reasonable to score the fight as a Govern- ment success. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 ury iu~ tvoa 1% F* GA%A 16531 I - B6 ~TF 1D300180005-5 Approved For Rees The battle began with the familiar night ways hard to keep going once you have to just that direction, he claims that only the assault by the Vietcong pouring out of the crank them down." ability mass overwhelmin encircling jungle to overrun Dac To. When The Saigon information ministry is already against tVietc ng co cent onsforce canquickl insury a relief column from regimental headquar- cooking up a special appeal designed to win against the sort of military setback that ters pushed out down the road, it bumped over demoralized Vietcong after the mon- might shatter popular and government into the also familiar Vietcong ambush, care- soons. But the problem, of course, is to keep morale. fully prepared behind a shoulder of land; the the war effort rolling and the Vietcong con- battalion-sized Government force was routed, tamed until then. the regimental commander killed. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I yield to to the Communists in recent weeks in the portions now, could quickly become so. COLD WAR VETERANS' READJUST- military region under the command of the There are currently few signs of extreme decided the psychological impact might well e rnment relief program, they actually receive The Senate resumed the consideration be more than the area could bear. With only almost twice as much in relief payments as of the bill (S. 9). to five battalions in reserve, corps commanders the average Vietnamese earns, plus cash provide serve yanked two of them out of the provin- grants to resettle or simply spend as they tent assistance to veterans who serve in cial capital of Kontum, airlifted them here to see fit. the Armed Forces during the induction Tan Canh through a convenient break in the Food shortages and soaring prices could Period. rain clouds, and launched a skillful thrust make the refugees' plight serious, however. Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, I am to retake Dac To. Railroad lines as well as roads have been cut, grateful that the senior Senator from q HOLLOW VICTORY and ships alone can't carry enough rice to Oregon has given me the privilege to, Confronted with overwhelming force, the - from e the southern northern The speak in the Senate at this time between delta arcec bowl. areas Vietcong clashed briefly, with only two United states has pitched in with an emer- the first address and the second address casualties, and melted back into they jungle. gency call for extra cargo planes, but in some which he is to deliver this afternoon. Since most of Dac To's citizens had scattered spots, such as Pleiku, the price of rice has I speak again in support of the cold earlier, some of them to join the refugee doubled, eggs cost three times more than war Veterans' Readjustment Assistance stream to the bigger, better-protected towns, normal and kerosene is often unavailable for Act. We know it as the cold war GI bill. Dac To was largely deserted and its recapture cooking. a somewhat hollow victory. And as a visitor If this trend continues, says veteran U.S. My commendation is given to the distin . to Tan Canh watches a drenching downpour refugee expert Richard Evans, who is with guished Senator from Texas CMr that blots out even the nearest hilltop and the American aid mission in South Vietnam, YARBOROUGH], because he has persevered, grounds his helicopter, it becomes all too "everybody becomes a refugee." And in that has as been most conscientious, and has apparent that even the limited victory case the real calamity to fear-and the real manifested real leadership in advancing achieved by the Government in the battle of payoff for the Vietcong's economic disruption this vital measure in the Senate. Dac To was solely due to the fprtuitous break campaign-would be a mass trek to the na- As we well know, the young men and in the weather. Much of the time at this tional capital for help. "You could have 5 women who have served in the Armed period of the year rain would prevent the fly- or 10 million marching to Saigon," Mr. Forces since January 31, 1955, are not ing in of reinforcements, and Tan Canh and Evans warns. Dac To would be cut off from outside help. Illegal monetary dealings as well as scarcity afforded the readjustment benefits which All road access has long since been cut by the are fueling inflation, according to officials we as a grateful people in the United Vietcong. at the economic ministry. The heavy stream States provided for the veterans of Foo4 stocks at Tan Canh consist almost of U.S. dollars from free-spending American World War II and the Korean war or wholly of rice and salt and have dwindled troops, the officials explain, is creating a mar- conflict. However it may be designated, to not much more than 10 days' supply. More ket for greenbacks, thus bringing into the it was a battle in which Americans lost critical is a shortage of gasoline, vitally monetary supply funds which speculators their lives. This discrimination cannot needed for generators to keep radio com- previously have been sitting on because of equality of mUnication open, and a skimpy reserve of the war's uncertainties. be justified on the basis of helicopter fuel service or on the importance of their en- Encamped nearby in the thick, all-conceal- HOARDING RICE United to the national security of the ing jungle are a sizable Vietcong force and, by Rice merchants in Saigon and elsewhere United States. some intelligence estimates, as much as a are compounding the inflationary strain by On February 8, 1965, it Was my re- up- regiment of the 326th Division of the People's hoarding in order to push prices up. The sponsibility to appear as a witness before Army of North Vietnam (PAVN), which the shot is that the United States has been forced ced United States is sure was infiltrated into to rush 50,000 tons of rice to this tradition- the Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs of South Vietnam as an intact fighting unit ally rice-exporting nation. Because exports the Committee on Labor and Public Wel- earlier this year. aren't earning as much as usual, the United fare to speak in favor of the pending bill, vlimrcorrc STRENGTH GROWS States is also being asked for a boost in eco- S. 9. It is interesting to note that less nomic aid; Saigon's hard currency reserves, than 2 days before those hearings began, The problem here, in short, is a microcosm now down to $100 million, are roughly half the United States intensified its efforts of the problem everywhere in South Vietnam. of normal. According to tentative estimates by United Added to this economic stress is the usual in ul tnon in retaliation for Vietcong States and Soutjl. Vietnamese authorities, quota of chronic political instability. It is a assaults on two military compan north another PAVN division, the 304th, may also bit early to expect a move against the new of Saigon. Seven American live es were be either all the way into south Vietnam government of Prime Minister Ky, but the lost in that attack by the Communist or at least en route along Laotian infiltration Buddhists have scant enthusiasm for the war forces. I wish to quote what I said dur- trails. Meantime, Vietcong strength is said effort, and from their political citadel in the ing my appearance before the subcom- by top U.S. officials to be roughly double northern town of Hue they are already snip- mittee in February: that of, only 4 or 5 months ago, a buildup ing at the Ky government, though their tar- We recall the events of the past few days roughly matching that of the United States. get for now is Catholic Chief of State Ngyu- to gain an understanding of their personal The Vietcong, to be sure, have their prob- yen Van Thieu. lives lems, too. Their casualties are getting Buddhist leaders insist they are ferventl sacrifices. Seven assault ona two m ou wear lost in higher; in a typical week, they may well be anti-Communist and wholeheartedly against the Vietcong ofSaig on two our young men, com- double those of government forces. Recruit- the Vietcong. But talks with them make it pounds north of Saigon; and our young men, ment in the countryside is growing more clear that their professed admiration for the taliate and 49 demonstrate that hat we intend e re- difficult; combat units report finding a far U.S. buildup is based on the condition that stand t stand firm m the defense of the world. greater number of teenagers among Vietcong it produce a quick and relatively easy victory, One in return. Our the free world. casualties and prisoners. In the Vietcong's Other question marks are the army's ently at defensereadiness condition there, haste to make the most of the monsoons, morale and manpower. "The thing to really which requires stricter security measures, their tactics have also become tougher, most watch for is if a whole battalion lays down additional manning requirements, and more observers agree. Efforts to ingratiate have its arms," says one high-ranking American. individual units on alert in order to effect given way to rough stun-terrorism, assas- Short of such a psychological blow, the immediate response to any enlargement of sinations an4 pillage-in order to collar re- South Vietnamese Army's dangerously thin the enemy activity. cruits and, gather supplies from the local reserves may lead to trouble. Those two bat- populace, talions at Dac To, for example, are Urgently What I said then, I would say today As a result, some authorities argue the in- needed for spot-relief chores elsewher"It's with this addition. It is my belief that surrection might lose its steam if its big bid a gamble every time you shift them about," we make a mistake when we seem to for victory falls short this year. "They can't says one American adviser who sees an urgent gloss over the seriousness-yes, even the keep up ,this pace for many more months," need for U.S. forces to take over more of the tragedy-of the conflict in which we are says one expert. "And these things are al- reserve.role. Hailing the apparent trend in now engaged in Vietnam, Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000300180005-5 16532 Approved For Regease 2003/10/15: CIA-RDP671300446RO0030018000r- r- t NAL RECORD -SENATE 7-~ly 16, 1965 It is wrong for us to think In terms of the Vietnam conflict as a police action, ont in. which the United States is asso- ciated in counseling or advising. It is realistic that the people of the United States understand that American boys axe losing their lives -in the jungles of Vietnam. It is Important that the peo- ple of the Nation understand this. Eloquent testimony on this fact is found in a New York Journal-American article entitled, "A Gift for the Baby- Marine's Last Letter." This news story contains a letter from an 18-year-old marine to his expectant mother. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the article be printed in the RECORD at this point. ,rhe~ PRESIDING OFFICER. With- out objection it is so ordered. A GTXT FOR THE BABY-MARINxIs LAST LETTER (By James Connolly) This Is a story that tells itself. It's almost all here, In a letter received June 19 by Mrs. (Iregory Rlsoldi of Claudia Street, Iselin, N.J., from her 18-year-old Son, U . S. Maxine Vincent Risoldi: "I)ear Mom: I guess you've had your baby already. Is it a boy or girl? I wonder it I'll ever know. But rve scraped together $20, and here It Is. Buy my little brother or sister something for me. "I don't make too much money, with this job I have now, and $20 is all I can spare. "You know, Mom, we were talking RbOUt me coming home for Christmas? Well, I --waait to tell you a little secret, I'm in Viet- nam and I'm wondering If IT ever get home. I really don't think so. "It's hot here, very hot, day and night. You're got to look over yonx shoulder every time you talk to a friend. You've got to always be on the alert. "These Vietcong, they pop up everywhere, take a few shots and run. But I'm here to help wipe out communism. '~By the way, if you see any of, my friends clown at the tee cream parlor or the drug- store, tell them I'm In Vietnam, and to get off their backsides and join the Marines. "It is scary at night when you wait for them to come, but once the fight starts the only thing you think about Is killing them before they kill you. "Say hello to * * * everybody. Vinnie.11 Mrs,.Rlsolcli, who may have given birth to her sixth child by the time this story IS being read, received 4 postscrIpt-a telegram at 1:45 ra.m. Tuesday. Vincent has been killed in Vietnam. Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, I hope there il]l be no effort by anyone within the Government, at any level, in any agency, or In any position, to have the American people believe that we are engaged in other than actual fighting in Vietnam. Mi. President, since those hearings in February our efforts~ manpower, and weapons have been continually increas- ing In Vietnam. Ironically, as we begin this floor debate today, there are indica- tions and talk that another intensified buildup is Imminent. The President recently stated that "new and 'serious decisions will be necessary in the near future." The Senator from Oregon has very cogently,'and I think correctly, called to the attention of the Senate this after- noon the importance of these decisions which are being made. The President has recently said: Any substantial increase In the present level of our efforts to turn back the aggres- sors in South Vietnam will require steps to insure that reserves of men and equipment of the United States remain entirely ade- quate for any and all emergencies. News reports inform us that the Viet- nam Government has asked Secretary McNamara and Ambassador Lodge for a larger force. Reliable sources indicate that the Joint Chiefs of Staff have rec- arnmended,the total of U.S. troops in Vietnam be increased from the sched- uled 75,000 to 179,000. 1 say to the Mem- beTs of the Senate this Is a serious crisis-and we are looking to the Arneri- can man-at-arms for his services. He has not forsaken the people of the Unit- ed States in the past. As long as we I are engaged in a struggle in Vietnam, he, of course, will not forsake the American people now. It is a question, sometimes, of whether we forsake the veteran. indeed, we owe a debt to the men who are risking their lives in the jungles of Vietnam, or on airborne alert in the Strategic Air Command, or maintaining the combat readiness of our ICBM and Nike missile sites, or patrolling the high seas to protect the world from Commu- nist aggression. We do an Injustice in calling them peacetime veterans. That is a misnomer, Mr. President. They are, in all good conscience and hard fact, en- titled to comparable adjustment benefits accorded their predecessors. *1 cannot use language too strong to point this out. I am certain that In the Senate we can bring this measure to an affirmative vote, In terms of a pragmatic Justification of the bill under discussion, we have available the fruits derived from the World War II and Korean GI bills. As the Senator from Texas (Mr. YAP- BOROUGH] cogently pointed out on many occasions almost I I million veterans have advanced their educational and voca- tional qualifications under the prior ad- justment assistance acts. We discussed this topic in the Subcommittee on Edu- cation of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. At ihis point I express not only my appreciation but also that of all Senators and the American people for the leadership which has been given to the cause of education, in this, and In prior Congresses, by -the Senator from Oregon [Mr. MORSE], the chairman of the Subcommittee on Education. Though the benefits of such education and the resultant increase in human skills cannot be measured with mathe- matical precision, we know that the ad- ditional earning power achieved by vet- erans from these programs returns more than a billion dollars a year In taxes to the Federal Treasury, an annual re- turn which has insured full payment of the initial investment. A cold war GI bill qimed at developing the talents of the post Korean veterans who will number over 5 million by 1970, would realize similar, if not greater, profits than thcoe which have accrued to the veterans and to our entire economy under previous veterans' legislation. In our State of West Virginia over 220,0100 veterans have availed themselves of the opportunities of previous legisla- tion and of these some 22,000 are engaged In the fields of medicine, teaching, en- gineering, and science. Certainly the beneficial effects of past legislation to Which I have called attention demon- strate that American life has been im- proved by the programs which have been enacted. In the interest of equity for the in- dividuals affected and in furthering the economic and social well-being of this Nation as a whole, I earnestly support the pending proposal. It is my sincere ~hope that the Senate will act favorably on S. 9, so that it will become law in this session of the Congress. Let us not be guilty of those lines inscribed on an an- cient sentry box in Gibraltar: God and the soldier-all men adore In time of trouble and no more: For when war is over, and all things soldier slighted. God is negelec?~~__01*1 U.S. POIACY-INVIETNAM Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed at the conclusion of my speech on foreign policy, an article published in this morn- Ing's Wall Street Journal dealing with the war in Vietnam, entitled "Gloom in Vietnam: Doubts Rise That United States Can Move Fast Enough To Blunt Reds' Drive-American Strength In- creases, but Communists Continue To Gobble Up Territory-A Hollow Victory at Dae To." The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit No. 2.) Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, this is a story which bears out the view that was received from so many intelligence forces to the effect that we are engaging our- selves In a long-bogged-down endeavor in Asia that will be terrifically costly in blood and money. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent, that I may yield to the Senator from Hawaii for an insertion in the RECORD without losing my right to the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The Senator from Hawaii Is recog- nized. LEONARD MARKS TO BE NAMED DIRECTOR OF THE U.S. INFOR- MATION AGENCY Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, on Tues- day President Johnson announced he intended to nominate Leonard Marks, of Washington, D.C., to be Director of the U.S. Information Agency, succeeding the Honorable Carl Rowan. Mr. Marks is an attorney with a long interest in international communica- tions, and is well known to me and to many other Members of the Senate. His qualifications for this position are out- standing, and the President is to be con- gratulated for nominating him. The world stands today on the thresh- old of a communications revolution. And it is essential that the U.S. In- formation Agency have at its head a man competent to guide it carefully and wisely through that revolution. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67BOO446ROO0300180005-5