THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE IN LAOS

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March 25, 1971
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S 3924 Approved For Rele /~ A~1 8 00 RqY00100003-5 r f ech 25, 1911 care now. Scholarships, totaling $29 million, would be provided for low-income medical and dental students. A similar amount would be budgeted for training physicians' assist- ants. Medical schools would be eligible for $93 million in grants for expansion. A com- mission would be set up to study the high cost of malpractice insurance. Mr. Nixon said that nationalization of health insurance inevitably would lead to federal personnel approving local hospital budgets and setting local physicians fees. He said the better way-"more practical, more effective, less expensive and less dan- gerous''-is to reform and renew the present health system. Many Americans will agree. But there is strong support also for nationalization. The Kennedy-Griffiths plan was drafted by the AFL-CIO and the Commitee of 100 for Na- tional Health Insurance created by the late Walter Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers Union. A long debate is likely in Congress before an adequate solution is reached to the mounting problem of financ- ing the Nation's health care. The Adminis- tration's plan appears at first glance to be adequate. [From the Atlanta Constitution, Feb. 25, 19701 Tim GENOCIDE CONVENTION Genocide is an ugly word defined as "the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, political or cultural group." The word came into common usage after World War II when Nazi extermination of some six million Jews and gypsies staggered the conscience of mankind. In 1948 the U N. General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. This made mass murder of a people a matter of international con- cern. The United States signed the conven- tion but has never ratified it, and it has no effect in our country. Surely Americans are not indifferent to the deliberate mass slaughter of innocents. Then why haven't we taken a stand with 74 other nations by ratifying the convention? For a long time it was held that treaties of this sort would supercede our Constitu- tion or interfere with sovereignty. But President Nixon, backed by the Secretary of State Rogers and Attorney General Mitchell, says there is no constitutional obstacle and has urged the Senate to approve the Conven- tion. One influential organization has opposed ratification from the beginning. The Amer- ican. Bar Association, meeting in Atlanta, has once again gone on record as opposed ratification, though the vote was close-130 to 126. They argue that Americans could be tried in foreign courts, or that our troops in Vietnam might be accused and tried on charges of genocide. This attitude, we'd guess, is greatly appre- ciated by those employed in the propaganda bureaus of America's enemies. It seems to suggest that genocide is a terrible crime un- less Americans are committing it. One dele- gate said quite bluntly that genocide in war is no crime and added: "I wouldn't be in this country if it weren't for genocide. It was either the white man or the Indian and the Indian went down the drain." This mem- orable quotation is probably framed on the office walls in Hanoi and Moscow right now. Rational Americans know well enough that we intend no genocide in Vietnam or any- where. But we're being accused of it. This is unjust, but perhaps it is behind the Presi- dent's desire to place the nation firmly on record. "I believe we should delay no longer," he told the Senate, "in taking the final con- vincing step which would reaffirm that the United States remains as strongly opposed to the crime of genocide as ever." The enormity of the crime, it seems to us, makes the objections look like petty quib- bling over technicalities. We support the President wholeheartedly. Vietnamese troops in he area between Khe Sanh and Tchepone -:e. doubled after the invasion began, to tl e equivalent of four or five divisions, and is pretty clear that General Giap meant to fisht a decisive battle to keep open his suppiv routes to the south.. But the actions in ow second and third weeks of the opcratici siowed him that, for all his two-to-one sup'riority in numbers in the area as a whole, re could not concen- trate enough men to .,fit a clear-cut victory at any given point wit :cut exposing them to devastating losses fro.u air attack. Second, said the :' cnnomist- The other thing t is South Vietnamese have achieved, and wh ci, has bgen made pos- sible by their ability t?, s say one jump ahead of Giap's men, is to gave deprived the com- munist forces in Cam -iodia and South Viet- nam of a substantial r ?portion of the sup- plies they were coup it on being able to use between now anc: May, 1972. - Mr. President, in tie belief that fre- quently we here at ?lcme do not see the forest for the tree I ask unanimous consent that the ar;:irle entitled "What It Has Bought," pu" 11:,hed in the Econo- mist of March 20, 1971, be printed in the RECORD. There being no ..h.:ection, the article was ordered to be p be Led in the RECORD, as follows: WHAT IT ,A; BOUGHT Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, an editorial published in the Atlanta, Con- stitution following the American Bar Association's vote on the Genocide Con- vention is an example of the many fine editorials and stories on this important human rights covenant. Following World War II, the entire world was shocked by the exposure of the Nazi extermination of over 6 million Jews. Consequently, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Conven- tion on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide in 1948. The Constitution asked why America stands apart from 75 other nations in the world which have ratified the Genocide Convention. The paper pointed out that the human rights treaties of the U.N. would not supersede our own Constitu- tion and that both the President and the Attorney General. have urged the Senate The paper further stated that the claim that the United States would be charged with genocide by many foreign nations is based on false assumptions: It seems to suggest that genocide is a terrible crime unless Americans are commit- ting it. But all rational Americans know that America does not intend to, nor does it commit, genocide anywhere in the, world. Unfounded charges can be made at any- time, anywhere, regardless of Whether or not we adopt the Genocide Conven- tion. I have been at a loss to understand how our not signing the convention would protect us from unfounded allega- tions by other nations or people. The time has come to ratify the Geno- cide Convention. I urge the Senate to act now. I ask unanimous consent that the edi- torial be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the :RECORD, as follows: THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, this week the London Economist magazine re- viewed the effect of South Vietnam's ex- pedition in southern Laos with the clar- ity of thought, and dispassion of intent for which that journal has long been noted. The 'Economist says the South Viet- namese in Laos have probably won a year's quiescence in the war, and that the operation has succeeded in at least two very important things. First, it demonstrated that- The North Vietnamese have been unable to prevent the invading force from coming and sitting in their own back yard, They tried to prevent it. The number of North It is six weeks on 1? *e.day since the South Vietnamese went into Laos: six weeks more, and the monsoon will ix- starting, the gullies of the Annamite chi a of hills will be dis- appearing under any:-' 111g up to eight feet of water and it will ,e God, not man, who is cutting the Ho Ch lliinh trail. It'has not beeneasy to tell wha has been going on in southern Laos these mast six weeks. For once the non-communist s d(- of the war has been fought under wraps: its reporters and the cameramen have bent escorted to what it was convenient for t-,wn to see, the spokes- men have told as m' cl' as they wanted to, and each hillside ti ssle has duly become either a triumph or 'out. Perhaps this is how wars have to be snip-ht. But enough has happened now for the shape of the campaign to be reasonably pl.?-'n Even If the South Vietnamese come bf-"k out of Laos fairly soon-and provided t"i,e. come out in reason- ably good order-th .?peration has had a major effect. It has rr,,vie it clearer how this war is likeliest to end '' iot with a peace, but a pacification. It sho' d also have helped Mr. Nixon to make up his mind how many Americans-above aT . now many American helicopters and boml cr --he will have to try to persuade the Am,- cia'an electorate to let him keep in the wa- iU the months imme- diately before the ;='esidential election in November next year. The South Vietna??:e:'e army has not done the most it may have biped to do. It has not beaten the North Vi ?tnamese in a aet-piece action, and thereby - nraed the tables in the battle for morale. got beaten itself at Landing Zone Rang , and only just came out on top at Hill 3 which seems to have been a turning-poir- of the operation. It knows that it could not have fought this campaign without tl help of American air power, and the batt -:rid helicopters liauled out of the Laotian hills are evidence that American air power `.z,+s had a rough time against the other ci y'e's anti-aircraft guns. It is quite possible that the North Viet- namese will still be we to catch, and ham- mer, some South Vietnamese units before they pull back over the border as the rains Approved For Release 2004/03/30 : CIA-RDP73BO0296R000300100000 , 5/20/2003 March 25, 1971 Approved e8 a 4t0 OCb &RD~09 ,9968000300100003-5 S3923 And, from a peak of 8% or 9 percent last summer, rates on conventional home loans have dropped to 7 percent in some cities and 63/4 percent in a scattered few; the swiftest decline in decades. As Time magazine noted this week, this decline in interest rates has had the double effect of reducing the buyer's monthly payments and enabling people with lower incomes to qualify for mort- gages under the usual standards de- manded by lenders. Finally, the Federal Housing Admin- istration gave the market a lift by cut- ting the ceiling on its home loans from 71/2 percent to 7 percent. Thus to President Nixon, and to his entire housing team, I think we owe a hearty "well done." PRISONERS OF WAR STATEMENT Mr. HUMPHREY. Mr. President, hav- ing joined in supporting the congression- al resolution which led to the President's designation of this week as "National Week of Concern for Prisoners of War/ Missing in Action," I should like to reit- erate at this time, along with Ameri- cans everywhere, my personal concern for American prisoners of war in Viet- nam. I urge once again the Government of North Vietnam to observe the minimum Standard of treatment for prisoners of war as it agreed upon with 124 other governments in the Geneva Convention of 1949. And I urge our own Government to disengage completely from Vietnam by the end of this year so that we can ob- tain the early release of our servicemen and civilians, now being held in Viet- nam. The North Vietnamese Govern- ment and the National Liberation Front have offered to negotiate the release of these prisoner-hostages once we submit a timetable for the complete withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam. I strongly request that the administration consider this offer seriously before re- jecting it as a tactical diversion by the other side. Until these American citizens are prop- erly cared for according to the mini- mum standards set by international law and released in a timely fashion, we must all work toward the rapid achieve- ment of these demands. Only through concerted energies can we emphasize the strength of our demands to the North Vietnamese Government and the Nation- al Liberation Front as well as to the ad- ministration. In that regard I ask unanimous con- sent that the statement issued by the Student Association for Freedom of Pris- oners of War together with the signa- tures from leaders throughout the coun- try be printed in the RECORD. This asso- ciatign has worked unceasingly to bring this issue before the public conscience. and I commend the work it has done and will continue to do. It has organized bi- partisan support from students and other solicitious citizens and public represen- tatives. For that reason it merits the sup- port of this entire body. There being no objection, the state- ment and signatures were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: We, the public representatives of the Unit- ed States of America, differing in our politi- cal persuasions and our opinions concerning the conduct and management, of the South- east Asian war by this Government, call upon the leaders of the Communist Forces In that area of the world to respond to our plea for the humane treatment of the United States military personnel and the civilians that those Forces hold as prisoners. We ask that they not examine this plea for either superficial or hidden motives, for we assure them that we speak from our hearts, without regard to any political label or coloring. We speak on behalf of the families of the nearly 1.800 American servicemen and the 18 civilians who await word of the wel- fare, or indeed the existence, of their hus- bands, sons, brothers and fathers missing in action or captured in Southeast Asia. Under both Democratic and Republican Administrations, the United States Govern- ment has brought the plea for humane treat- ment under the supervision of the Inter- national Committee of the Red Cross to the attention of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, and to the other Communist Forces in Southeast Asia. A minimum degree of humanity on the part of the said Forces would require them to fulfill their obligations under the 1949 Geneva Convention relative to the Treat- ment of Prisoners of War, by identifying each serviceman that they now hold or have held prisoner; a decent respect for the opin- ion of mankind should compel them to do so. We further call upon said Forces to as- sure this nation and to assure the world that they will begin to comply with all pro- visions of the 1949 Geneva Convention rela- tive to the Treatment of Prisoners of War, by which all parties to the conflict in South- east Asia are bound. We ask nothing more than these prisoners' rights as soldiers and men, as set down In the long history of civil- ized mankind, and in the 1949 Geneva Con- ventions. The children in our States who are denied fathers, the wives who are denied husbands, the parents who are denied sons, the brothers who are denied brothers, and prisoners of war who are denied life in its most primitive meaning, deserve this simple courtesy and basic right required by international law and protocol. In the name of simple and basic humanity, we request the Government of the Demo- cratic Republic of Vietnam and all other Communist Forces in Southeast Asia to be- gin Immediate and meaningful negotiations for the release of all prisoners of wax, es- pecially the sick and wounded. The following is a list of those United States Senators who have signed the state- ment on prisoners of war being circulated by this organization: AS OF 12 P.M., MARCH 25, 1971 Senator Allen, Senator Allott, Senator Beall, Senator Belimon, Senator Bennett, Senator Bible, Senator Boggs, Senator Brock. Senator Brooke, Senator Burdick, Senator Byrd of Virginia, Senator Cannon, Senator Chiles, Senator Cook, Senator Cooper. Senator Dominick, Senator Ellenc,er, Sen- ator Fannin, Senator Gambrell, Senator Goldwater, Senator Griffin, Senator Gurney, Senator Hansen. Senator Harris, Senator Hurnphre.7, Sen- ator Inouye, Senator Jackson, Senator Jordan of North Carolina, Senator Jordan of Indi- ana. Senator McGee, Senator McIntyre, Senator Metcalf, Senator Miller, Senator Moridale, Senator Montoya, Senator Moss. Senator Muskie, Senator Nelson, Senator Packwood, Senator Pastore, Senator Pearson, Senator Prouty, Senator Routh. Senator Saxbe, Senator Sparkman, Senator Stevens, Senator Stevenson, Senator Thur- mond, Senator Weicker, Senator Young. Every Governor has signed this statement. Six hundred forty-three Mayors and forty- seven State Attorneys General, and numer- cus other public servants on. the state, local, and municipal level have added their sig- natures to the statement. THE PRESIDENT'S COMPREHEN- SIVE HEALTH PROPOSALS Mr. PACKWOOD. Mr. President, an e ditorial published in the Portland Oregonian lauds the President's com- prehensive health proposals stating that other proposals based on a national health insurance would inevitably lead to raore Federal control over State and local governments. Under the President's bold health-care plan the Federal Government would play a comparatively minor role with private insurance companies and the health in- dustry. I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD the Oregonian editorial of February 19, 1971, entitled "Reformed Health Care." There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: (Front the Portland (Oreg.) Oregonian, Feb. 19, 19711 REFORMED HEALTH CARE President Nixon's health care program, proposed in a message to Congress Thursday, would cover virtually all Americans, as would other plans under consideration by Con- gress. But in contrast to some proposals, such as Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's and Rep. Martha W. Griffiths' Human. Security Pro- gram, the federal government would play a ccniparatively minor role in cooperation with private insurance companies and the health piofessions. Cost of the Kennedy-Griffiths national health insurance has been estimated at from $53 billion to $77 billion a year, financed from increased Social Security taxes and from federal general revenues. Mr. Nixon made no over-all estimate of the cost of his plan, but individual items added up to $2.8 billion. Under the Administration plan, employers would be required to provide comprehensive private insurance for employees by July 1, 1973. The employer would pay 65 per cent of the premium cost at the start and 75 per cent after 21/2 years. Employes would pay the remainder. Full hospitalization, surgical and medical care, laboratory serv- ices, maternity and well-child care would be Co aered. The government would subsidize family health-care for families earning less than $5000 a year under a proposal to eliminate most of the present Medicaid program. Farniles earning less than $3,000 would pay no premiums and those earning between $3,000 and $5,001) would pay on a sliding scale. The $5.30_ monthly contribution now paid by the elderly for supplemental Medicare co""erage would be eliminated. s nationwide network of health main- tenance organizations would be encouraged by Federal financial aid. The President said such organizations would reverse the present "illogical incentive" whereby doctors and ho ptials are paid in relation to how long a patient is ill. Under his plan, lie said, income would grow in relation to how long the pas.ient is well. A doctor corps would be established at a cost of $10 million to provide care in rural areas and ghettos where there is inadequate Approved For Release 2004/03/30 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300100003-5 March 25, 1971 Approved Eff~a(JT3RDgjJ96R000300100003-5 "13925 approach. This has not been the stroll across the Ho Chi Minh.tralls that some of South Vietnam's generals seem to have thought it would be. But neither has It been the flop that so many hand-wringers expected. The operation has done two things, and these two things are very important. The first is to have demonstrated that the North Viet- namese have been unable to prevent the invading force from coming and sitting in their own back yard. They tried to prevent it. The number of North Vietnamese troops in the area between Khe Sanh and Tchepone was doubled after the invasion began, to the equivalent of four or five divisions, and it is pretty clear that General Giap meant. to fight a decisive battle to keep open his sup- ply route to the south, But the actions in the second and third weeks of the operation showed him that, for all his two-to-one superiority in numbers in the area as a whole, he could not concentrate enough men to win a clear-cut victory at any given point without exposing them to devastating losses from air attack. The South Vietnamese were able to move into one section of the trails after an- other-first east of Tchepone, then around Tchepone itself, and then to the south of it-spend a week or so in blowing up the dumps they found there and blocking the routes to south-bound traffic, and then flit away by helicopter to the next landing-place before Giap's plodding infantry could stop them. It has been an exp6nsive way of doing things, in shot-down helicopters and spiked and abandoned guns. But it has put the squeeze on the trails. And that is what counts. The other thing the South Vietnamese have achieved, and which has been made possible by their ability to stay one jump ahead of Giap's men, is to have deprived the communist forces in Cam- bodia and South Vietnam of a substantial proportion of the supplies they were counting on being able to use between now and May, 1972. The trails of the Ho Chi Minh route, running like capillary veins along the limb of the Annamite hills, are the second of Hanoi's two means of keeping the war in the south going. The first was the Sihanoukville route, run by Chinese ships to the port of Sihanoukville and from there by Chinese- owned lorries trucking the guns and am- munition to the South Vietnamese 'border, and financed through the Bank of China in Hongkong. That route was closed whet; Gen- eral Lon Nol threw Prince Sihanouk out of power a year ago this week and when the Americans sent their troops into Cambodia to prevent the North Vietnamese from putting him back again. Now the Laos operation has cut across the best part of the Ho Chi Minh route. It is around Tchepone that the tracks wind un- der the thickest canopy of trees; ten miles west of that erased town the last ridge of the hills falls away into relatively open coun- try where the trucks cannot hide from the bombers. The South Vietnamese have found, and destroyed, some of the supplies that had been hidden away along the trails; they have obliged the North Vietnamese to use up other dumps in fighting them; above all, they seem to have stopped about half the south-bound traffic just by being there. The fact that the total amount of traffic on the trails has been cut by less than half Is simply a result of the reinforcements that have been pouring down from the north into the fighting zone-and have got not farther. What this will mean for the war in the south, which is the heart of the matter, had better be judged when the monsoon ends in September or October. The optimists in Washington are saying that by then the com- munist divisions in Cambodia will have been reduced to tattered bands of men trying to stay alive in the jungle. The optimists about Indochina do not find many people to believe them nowadays. But there are sensible men who think that the trail-cutting operations may already have made it impossible for the communists to launch any major attacks in Cambodia or South Vietnam either dur- ing the coming wet season or during most of the dry season that follows it, which goes on until May, 1972; and who believe that a smaller raid on the trails during that dry' season might be enough to keep them quiet from then until the beginning of 1973. If these guesses turn out to be right-and if nothing goes bloodily wrong in Laos in the next six weeks-this fighting may have justi- fied the number of men who have died in it. It will have bought a year, and maybe more, of relative quiescence: a year or more in which the armies of Cambodia and South Vietnam will get more arms and better train- ing, and after which it will be that much harder for General Giap to order another at- tempt to turn the tide. :[f this is how it goes, there are two lots of people who will have to draw their con- sequences from it: the men who run the war in Hanoi, and in Washington. The North Viet- namese have already seen the centre of the war move twice in the past year. Last year it moved westwards from South Vietnam Into Cambodia. This year it has moved northwards from Cambodia into southern Laos. One effect of this is that, although a larger part of Cambodia and Laos is now involved in the war, the total proportion of the land area of Indochina in which a significant amount Of fighting is taking place is probably smaller than it used to be, and most of this Is sparse- ly populated back-country; in this sense there has actually been a de-escalation of the war. But there has also been an effect on Hanoi's calculations. The communists have lately been telling a lot of their men in South Vietnam to come back above ground: to hide their guns, apply for identity cards, and blend into the normal life of the country for the time being. This is part of the strat- egy of lying low In South Vietnam which they fell back on last year. But until now the low-level strategy has been backed up by the belief that the North Vietnamese regi- ments in Cambodia might be alile to start attacking across the border again before long. If that possibility has to be deferred for another year, and perhaps for longer than that, the communists' low-level strat- egy will have become a very long-term busi- ness indeed. Of course, the North Vietnam- ese are not likely to call the war off by a public admission of defeat, as.the Greek communists did in 1949. But the longer the Vietcong have to get along without the sup- port of North Vietnam's regulars, the more the struggle will become a political contest combined with a certain amount of terror- ism and only the occasional guerrilla action. It will be a job for the intelligence men and and the police-and the politicians-more than for the army. The Laos campaign also has its lesson for Mr. Nixon. It is that he has to balance the political necessity to go on withdrawing troops from Vietnam against the fact that the South Vietnamese army will plainly go on needing a certain amount of American help to prevent things coming unstuck again next year or in 1973. It Is true that by this time next year the South Vietnamese will have got more helicopters of their own-600 against about 350 now-and more fighter- bombers and more artillery. It is true that there may not have to be another operation on the scale of those In Cambodia and Laos before Mr. Nixon faces his fight for re-elec- tion next year. But it is going to be important that Mr. Nixon should leave just enough units in Vietnam to make it possible for the South Vietnamese to enforce the past year's change in the state of the war. He knows that the war is now deeply unpopular in America. His own policy of Vietnamisation is partly to blame for that: the Americans, having thought they were gettin * 'nit, still see their helicopters being shot. Gown on television. But he also knows tha his policy requires him to provide South Vic nam with enough help to make the differe,io-! CLEANING UP POLLUr]ON Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. Preside:;,. we are treated to countless words acid catchy phrases about cleaning up poilltion. It is my pleasure today to spe ik briefly about two oranizations which are doing something about it. The first is the Governor's ouncil to Keep Nebraska Beautiful. Thi group is promoting an intensive state?,ride anti- pollution effort during the n-nth of April, which it is calling Neb a;ka En- vironmental Action Month. This fine organization is i,eo+ded by Mrs. Les Anderson, Omaha, wr -i has been very active in fighting polhi.ion-long before it became the popular i.hing to do. Mrs. Anderson and her coma it Lee have organized a full-scale promotional effort dedicated to securing particip ti in of all Nebraskans in this first com?rohensive statewide effort. They have e'ilisted the help of these individuals ar_d groups: Garden clubs, county extensi;jn agents, the clergy, mayors, industrial editors, school principals, and neighbrrhood im- provement groups. To all of these groups and iodividuals, Mrs. Anderson's committee has dis- patched fact sheets and sugg:2sted pro- grams and projects which the y can un- dertake in order to make a ce~n.structive contribution to the month's at ti-Aties. Mrs. Anderson meanwhile I ea+._ipens to be cochairman of another . oinmittee, called the Environmental Col trol Com- mittee of Downtown Omaha, Inc. The committee held its fist awards luncheon recently and honor-ed. several Omaha businesses for their ef] arts to im- prove the Omaha envirollmeni. Awards went to these firms. The Northern Natural G. s Co. for building a plant which heats 34 down- town buildings, cools 12, al d reduces pollution by eliminating the n yea for in- dividual systems. The Union Pacific Railroad o;_ install- ing an industrial waste treatr.tennt plant. Safeway Stores for eliminat ng; the use of incinerators and using mere ecologi- cally beneficent methods of disposing of solid wastes. The Omaha Public Power 1 ti::trict for early and continuing efforts t abate air pollution. Mrs. Anderson's commen at the awards luncheon are well worth re- peating. She said in part: American industry is spending over $3 bil- lion a year to clean up the envir, mnent, and additional billions to develop p ducts that will keep it clean. The real danger today is nci from the free enterprise establishment th is bas made ours the most prosperous, the io,t power- ful, and the most charitable nati n on earth. The danger today resides in the -1itaster lob- by-those crepe hangers for p(rs)nal gain or (those who) out of sheer ig cranee are undermining the American aystem and threatening the lives and fort?sn-s of the American people. Approved For Release 2004/03/30 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300100003-5 Approved For Release 2004/03/30 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300100003-5 S 3926 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE - March 25, 19 1 This awards luncheon prompted the Omaha World Herald to publish an edi- torial on her comments and those of James Malkowski, her- fellow cochair- man. The World Herald voices a common- sense approach=one I like very much- when it refers to pollution as "a prob- lem that is serious but not as hopeless as it is sometimes made out to be." I ask unanimous consent that the com- plete text of the World Herald editorial be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: SOME GOOD NEWS ABOUT THE ENVIRONMENT Ready for some upbeat talk, about the environment? Listen to James Malkowski. As naturalist, forester, ecologist and intensely concerned citizen, he was fighting pollution in this community long before it was the popular thing to do. On Tuesday, as cochairman of the Environ- mental Control Committee of Downtown Omaha, Inc., he was passing out awards for business and industrial achievement in cleaning up our surroundings. He reminded his audience that he had helped to define what was "environmentally degrading" in our way of life and had never spared business and industry. But Tuesday he was helping to honor the Northern Nat- ural Gas Co. and the Omaha Public Power District. Why? In his words: "These awards do not in any way accept or condone the practices of any business and industry, including any here today, which result in avoidable environmental degrada- tion. Present problems, however serious as they are, do not negate the legitimate efforts to keep our air, water, food, and water, cleaner. "On the contrary, I believe we should laud, loudly and clearly, the true efforts that are being made by everyone, including business and industry, to keep and improve our en- vironmental quality. This is what we are do- ing here today." Or listen to Mrs. Les Anderson, the other cochairman and head of Keep Nebraska Beautiful and Keep Omaha Beautiful. She was honoring the other two winners, the Union Pacific Railroad and Safeway Stores. She said she was proud of business spon- sorship that had made many beautification programs possible, proud of her country, its system and of the overall improvement in the quality of life. Said Mrs. Anderson: "What was it (life) really like 150 years ago? For one thing it was brief. Life ex- pectancy was 38 years for males.... The work week was 72 hours.... The average pay $300. The women had it worse. House- wives worked 98 hours a week." Food was monotonous and scarce. In sum- mer people sweltered and in winter they froze, and- "Whatever American business has done to bring us out of that paradise of 150 years ago, I say let's give them a grateful pat on the back." The danger, as she see it, lies not in Amer- ican industry, but in what she called the "Disaster Lobby," made up of crepe hangers who for personal gain or out of ignorance undermine the American system. Jim Malkowski and Mrs. Anderson may not haveprecisely the same view of America. But they do agree that some Americans, including a number of forward looking busi- ness firms, are doing their part to make the country cleaner and to keep it beautiful. And that's our cheering word about a problem that is serious but not as hopeless as it is sometimes made out to be. THE SELLING OF THE one hour, with commercials, and featured a PENTAGON recitation of the script by CBS's charismatic Roger Mudd. Mr. Mudd did not write the Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, there has script; he was burdened with it. The show's been much controversy lately concern- producer works in New York. He is reported ing the documentary "The Selling of the to be thirty-four-years-old Peter Davis, whq Pentagon." Some serious charges have says he and his staff spent ten months work- been raised concerning this matter which ing on this "documentary." Mr. Davis does should be satisfactorily answered- I have no, appear to make any claim to objectivity in his work. He is making a charge: that recently read an article published in Air the Department of Defense spends a vast Force Space Digest, written by its senior amount of money on propaganda designed editor, Claude Witze. I should like to to win public approval of its programs. Armed bring this article to the attention of with cameras, scissors, and cement, he pro the Senate. It contains some more serious ceeded to make his case. allegations that the originators of the This magazine has neither the space nor documentary should answer to maintain the desire to do a detailed critique of "The their credibility. Selling of the Pentagon," but we have ex- Iask unanimous consent that the ar- amined enough of it to demonstrate that it leaves CBS with a credibility gap wider than ticle, entitled "The Wayward Press-- the canyons at Rockefeller Center. Here is Tube Division," be printed in the RECORD. an example: There being no objection, the article At one point, early in the script, Mr. Mudd, was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, the narrator, transitions to a new sequence as follows: in Mr. Davis' portrayal with a paragraph of [From the Air Force Space Digest, Mar. 15, four sentences. We will examine the sen- tences one at a time: Alum. "The Pentagon has a team of colo- THE WAYWARD PRESS (.TuBE Div.) nels touring the country to lecture on for- (No'E.--Following is the complete text of eign policy." the column "Airpower In the News," by The team to which he refers comes from Senior Editor Claude Witze, as it will appear the Industrial College of the Armed Forces in the forthcoming April 1971 issue of AIR (ICAF), with headquarters here in Wash- FORCE Magazine, the publication of the Air ington.There are four colonels on the team- Force Association.) two from the Army and one each from the The winter issue of the Columbia Journal- Air Force and the Marine Corps. There is ism Review, a quarterly - published at the also a Navy captain, and, totally ignored by Columbia University Graduate School of CBS, a foreign-service officer from the State Journalism, is devoted almost entirely to a Department. They are not "touring the coun- study of how the press has performed in coy- try." They have a briefing, on national-secu- ering the war in Vietnam. The only possible city policy that is given seven times a year, conclusion a reader of these eight essays can no more and no less. ICAF is not mentioned reach is that the press has done a deplorabe in the CBS script, and there is no reference job. No matter what epithets you might ward to the mission of the college. A TV camera- to hurl at the political administrations in man who visited the school could easily take Washington and Saigon, at the military a picture in the Lobby of a wall inscription hierarchy, at the military-industrial corn- that says: plex, and at the doves or the hawks, even "Our liberties rest with our people, upon more heated epithets could justifliz.bly be the scope and depth of their understanding thrown at the purveyors of ink and electronic of the nation's spiritual, political, military, signals. and economic realities. It is the high mission There is one examination of television's of the Industrial College of the Armed Forces performance, written by Fred W. Friendly, a to develop such understanding among our former president of CBS News, who indulges people and their military and civilian lead- In a bit of self-flagellation, confessing that ers." the "news media, and particularly broadcast The quote is attributed to Dwight D. Eisen- journalism" must share the responsibility for hover, who spoke those words at the dedi- public misunderstanding of the situation in cation of the college in 1960. He understood .Indochina. Speaking of the years when he, the requirement, perhaps more clearly than Friendly, was the man in charge at CBS, he any other man in our history. says, "The mistakes we made in 1964 and The ICAF national-security policy briefing 1965 almost outran those of the statesmen." is designed forthe education of Reserve of- One thing missing from Mr. Friendly's ficers from all branches of the armed forces, recitation is any suggestion that the televi- not primarily for the general public. The rea- sion medium lends itself in a peculiar way son the team, including the State Depart- to distortion of fact. This reporter has nearly merit officer, gives its In seven locations each forty years of experience on newspapers and year is to reduce travel- expenses by elimi- magazines, including more than a decade op- nating the necessity for Reserve officers to crating from the copy desk of a metropolitan visit the college. None of his was explained by daily. Television news was born and brought CBS. up within that same forty-year period. I MunD. "We found them [the ICAF team] have watched it closely and confess that I in Peoria, Ill., where they were invited to never was impressed by its impact until Lee speak to a mixed audience of civilians and Harvey Oswald was murdered on came>ra. Ni military Reservists." newspaper or magazine ever will duplicate Here we have a use of the word "found" that 1963 performance in Dallas. Yet, if I saw that would not be permitted by a competent it today, I would demand confirmation that newspaper copy editor. CBS was told that the event took place at all and that what we Peoria was on the schedule, and the CBS saw on the tube was not a clever compilation camera crew spent three days at the seminar of film clips, snipped from a wide variety of In that city with the concurrence and co- source material and glued together tc' make operation of the Defense Department, the a visual product that could be marketed to ICAF, and the Peoria Association of Corn- some huckster of toothpaste or gasoline, and -merce. Before departing, CBS was given full then turn out to be a winner of the Peabody information on the curriculum, the sched- Award. uling, the military and civilian participa- In support of this professional skepticism, tion, the costs, and the funding. The Asso- we have the performance of Mr. Fri"sndly's elation of Commerce was the sponsor, in this own CBS on February 23. The program was case, and was permitted to establish the billed as a "News Special" and was called rules under which civilians were admitted. "The Selling of the Pentagon." It ran for. Their seminar, billed. In Peoria as the "World Approved For Release 2004/03/30 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300100003-5 E 4804 roved For Release 2004/03/30 : CIA-RDP73B00296R000300100003-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -Extensions of Remarks Ma;1 20, 1971 THE REFUGEE SITUATION IN LAOS HON. JOHN G. SCHMITZ OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, may 20, 1971 Mr. SCHMITZ. Mr. Speaker, recent re- ports from one of our colleagues con-, cerning the refugee situation in Laos were highly disturbing. The general im- pression one got from the media report- ing of his statements on the refugee situation in Laos was that allied bombing operations were responsible for the dis- location of substantial numbers of Lao- tians and was, in fact, the principle cause of the refugee problem existing in Laos. It seemed strange to me that this should be the case in Laos when the major cause of refugees in South Viet- nam was Communist terrorism. When it was brought to my attention that our colleague had seen three USIS reports concerning the generation of refugees in Laos I asked the U.S. Information Agency if they would be good enough to supply me with copies of the reports which had been made available to my colleague so that I -could make my own assessment. I insert in the RECORD at this point the material which the USIA sent in response to my inquiry. The three surveys on the refugee problem in Laos are highly in- teresting and recommended reading for all those who wish to truly understand the refugee situation in that nation. The material follows: U.S. INFORMATION AGENCY, Washington, D.C., May 18, 1971. Hon. JOHN G. SCHMITZ, House of Representatives. DEAR MR. SCHMrrz: In response to your letter of April 27 to Mr. Shakespeare. I have enclosed exact copies of'the Laotian refugee survey reports given to Congressman Mc- Closkey in Vientiane. You may be interested to know that copies have also been given to the Senate Subcommittee on Refugees and will presumably form a part of the record of the recent Subcommittee hearings. The surveys in question were conducted by USIS in Laos at the request of the Am- bassador and were intended for the inter- nal use of the Embassy. In evaluating the results, it may help you to know that this was a purely informal inquiry into refugee attitudes and opinions. Since the USIS offi- cers involved are not professional research- ers, it was not possible to use scientific sam- pling techniques in selecting the inter- viewees. If I may be of further assistance in this matter, I hope you will not hesitate to call on me. Sincerely, had access to all three documents while he was in Vientiane. SURVEY OF REFUGEES FROM THE PLAIN OF JARS-SUMMARY-NO. 1 In late June and early July of 1970, USIS/ Vientiane American and local staff under the guidance of the Embassy Political Sec- tion conducted interviews with about 215 refugees from the Plain of Jars area of Laos on the conditions of life in the wartime Pathet Lao zone and their reasons for leav- ing it. (The results of an earlier survey on Plain of Jars refugees (March 1970) and a July survey of non-Plain of Jars refugees are not included in the material presented below. Both were less complete, detailed and con- clusive than the survey whose results are presented; their only substantial difference was their indication of higher levels of anti- pathy to the Pathet Lao.) The refugees were then living In twenty settlements In the Vientiane valley. Physical obstacleg such as bad weather and bad roads limited the scope of the interviewer's findings. Elaborate sta- tistical sampling methods were not applied to the selection of interviewees, who none- theless seem fairly typically distributed and generally representative of the population of their area in age, sex, education, occupa- tion, and villages of origin. By comparison to the general group of refugees, these peo- ple had lived with the Pathet Lao longer than the average time. In comparison to the gen- eral population of the Pathet Lao zone, ethnic Lao, as opposed to hill peoples, pre- dominate untypically in the Plain of Jars population. RESPONDENT'S BACKGROUND The great majority of the respondents left their homes In 1969, and more than 80% said they had moved one or more times be- fore their move from the Plain of Jars to Vientiane province. Seventy-seven percent said their children were with them; 20% said their children were with the Pathet Lao. Many had had children in Pathet Lao schools; the parents appreciated the schools when they were local (three quarters of the cases), but disliked it if the children were required to leave home for schooling. REACTION TO LIFE WITH THE PATHET LAO "Unity" (cooperative farming and com- munal arrangements for looking after chil- dren) (21%) and "morality" (17%) were positive aspects of the refugees' experience with the Pathet Lao; forced porterage (40%) (which 65% of the respondents had per- formed) and taxation (35%) were the nega- tive aspects most frequently mentioned. BOMBING Ninety-seven percent of the people said that they had seen a bombing attack. About one third had seen bombing as early as 1964, and a great majority had seen attacks fre- quently or many times. The Pathet Lao, 75% of the refugees re- sponded, had taught them to dig bunkers to avoid bombing attacks. When bombs dropped, all the villagers reported taking ref- uge either in a bunker Inside the village (28%), in a bunker outside the village (41%), or In the woods (31%). Somewhat fewer than two-thirds of those who answered this question had seen someone killed. Usu- ally a small number of deaths had been observed; 32% had seen only one person killed by a bomb. This applied to troops as well. Only 18% of the respondents had ac- tually seen Lao/Viet troops killed by bomb- ing, and 25% had heard rumors of such deaths. Isolated atypical answers to these questions were also received; one man said he had seen 112 persons killed,. other in- dividuals spoke of strikes that had killed 80, 20, 30 and 20 Pathet Lao troops respec- tively. Seventy-five percent said their homes had been damaged by bombing. Most of these attacks took place in 1969. :),:, of the peo- ple said bombing made he d, irv!ult for them; two-thirds holding that 11 made earning More than a bare subsist roe living im- possible in its intense pe~ioris. 88% said they had built a shelter in tie woods. 71 % of those questioned said tha united States aircraft did the bombing; ?7