COMMENTS ON A CITIZEN S WHITE PAPER ON AMERICAN POLICY IN VIETNAM AND SOUTHEAST ASIA BY MARCUS G. RASKIN

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CIA-RDP79T00472A000700030018-0
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13
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December 14, 2016
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April 4, 2003
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18
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May 15, 1965
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MEMO
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SJA) Approved Far Release 2003/05/16: CIA-RDP79T004,72A0007(00030018-0 Cqt,ii:Inqq110 15.1t. 4 n "A Citizen's White Vietnam and Southeast Raskin White Paper' is a critical re-- and policies in South Vietnam by certain recommendations for etical projection of the course ight take if those recommenda- Saakin's argument, however, is lysis that is at best to, and and often flies directly . His theses are argued with tay more peenion than precision, his diction is faulty as bin logic, and his recommendations-- y are not patently absurd-...appear to relate to a locr24 quite different from that in ehich we actually live. Throughout his paper, Mr. Raskin seems to accept Communist claims or public statements of intent at face value, gives uniform credence to the Communist version of disputed events, and systematically denigrates or distorts the motives of the OS government, its officers (at ail levels) who have been concerned with the problems of Vietnam, and the South Vietnamese with whom the VS has been allied and ehose struggle for independence the VS has endeavored to support. 2, The errors inaccuracies and direct perversions truth in Vt. n s paper are so numerous that a cursive recital and critique would require a monograph inset as long as his original text. (Detailed comments greaser errors of fact are given in this memoran. ppendix.) Xt. Raskin first sets the stage for his discourse by a brief review of the immediate post-World War Il background of VS involvement in Indochina..a review ehose tone is epitomized by his characterization of the Sohumen Plan as Han attempt to fashion a cool and steel aorta" and whose level of factual accuracy, by his com- plete inversion of the actual temporal sequence of the *convening of the 1954 Geneva Conference, Pierre Mendes- Pranoe's *occasion to power, and the French National As- sembly vote against the 'CDC Approved For Release 2004/4/1e==. bAi,RDP79T00472A000700030018-0 Approved tsr Release Z003/05/16 : GIA-RDP79T0f472A000700030018-0 firvocurrvri I ii'LL rewritten the history of 1945.54 to suit his covenienco, Mr. Raskin then proceeds to re-. write the history of Vietnam during the 1954.1960 period In which the current Communist insurgency in South Viet- nam began. After placing the entire responsibility for the insurgency on Diem (which in inaccurate) and contend- ing that the North Vietnamese took no hand In Southern troubles until after 1960 (which is untrue), lir. Raskin embarks on an analysis of the period from 1940 until the present day-'- an analysis Nanoi would probably be delighted to publish in its own journals an an example of "ndvancedr Americen thought but one 'which bears virtually no relation to the actual course of events and which, in the bargain, systematically portrays DS officials in Vietnam as fools and their Vietnamese associates as knaves. Then comes short discourse on the genesis of current US military policy, a discourse whose logic and grammar are bard to follow but sees intended to imply that the DS military establishment consists of brutes insensitive to human life and probably prone to sinister domestic political designs. 4, Turning from his demonstrably inaccurate account t and patently distorted view of the present, looks to the future and, after a short aside (Pities of current US barbarism (torture and of innocents), offers a set of policy proposals not only naive but betray an ignorance or at ard of the actual course of recent his- es Mr. Raskin advocates an International mechanism which, he contends, "has worked situationr; but he quite ig. his system has already been tried in Laos th a notable lack of success.) Mas h 4444 Mr. Malkin concludes with a few d pro octions which beer little, if any, re- situation in Asia as it actually now exists the political world in which we actually history of Indochina in the two decade's since 14 War II is an incredibly complex subject of which the truth is imperfectly known argely dependent on one's angle of vision. concerning 'whom evente..in their very se. e let alone their genesis or significance-- 1 inevitably differ and too confident of ignorance or disingenuous special Approved For Release 20 i,p)AADP79T00472A000700030018-0 Approved Fgr,Release 2003/05/16 : CIA-RDP79T004p000700030018-0 C piesding. Sia.tisrly,the infinitely ccspUoated probless of Victias involve topics over which honorable SIM can nd obviouslydo disagree. Our objections to Mt not from the fact that it le criti ? or from its advocacy of policies on which the VS Government is from its uniformly tendentious np. 0 denigration of VS motives, and of those areas of historical fact to intellectually honest dispute. e current situation in Indochina tion whether or not ]they are critical 113 role therein, but we believe Mr. sits all claims to consideration as a Approved For Release 200 neMWTRI7,7079T00472A000700030018-0 IOLA Approved Fcrr?Release 2003/05/16 : CIA-RDP79T0047.2A000700030018-0 Deta Amer IAL APP NDIX Comments on "A Citizen's White Paper on Policy in Vietnam and Southeast Asia" by Marcus 0. Raskin In the interests of spacel the following comments are keyed to footnotes which have been marked on the at- tached copy of Mr. Raskin's text4 SECT/ON I. 1. Part of our present problems did indeed derive from misconceptions during World War II about Indochina and the "Indochinese" (no such people exist), but there is no resemblance between what President Roosevelt had in mind and what would now be termed a "neutralized area." 2. In March 19450 the French wanted Indochina back period, and wanted to take up as if nothing had happened in Indochina during the interval between 1940 and 1945. This was the root of most of France's subsequent political troubles in the area. 3. This paragraph is a grossly oversimplified and distorted summary of a critical and delicate period in VS-French relations. 4. Quite the reverse, Ho was willing for a time to dicker politically with the French because his own position was weak and because he then thought the Communists would take power in France. 5. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The French Communist Party consistently opposed and systemati- cally sabotaged the prosecution of the war in Indochina. 6. This, again, is simply not true. 7. This is the first time we have ever seen the Schuman Plan described in a non-Communist publication as a sinister cartel intended to place Western Europe in economic fiefdom to the United States. A-1 Approved For Release 2003/05/161 Cl =RbP79T00472A000700030018-0 Approved For lease 2004Mth .fif:79T00472A6100700030018-0 8, The sentence to which this note is appended suggests a causal connection between the Schuman Plan and US support of French activity in Vietnam which simply did not exist. The following sentences are tendentious and mendacious. 9. The United States dealt openly in Vietnam, in support of an ally, but certainly not directly; aid to Vietnam was funnelled through the French and its ac- tual employment controlled by the French. The US did not assume a direct role until 1954. 10. Another distortion; the problem was not French inability to organize indigenous political groups j'ut Wrench intransigeance on even discussing the possibility of eventual independence. 11. Another garbled and inaccurate summary of a complex set of events. The French, incidentally, did not lose their military position after Dien Bien Phu; they lost their political will to carry on. 12. We see nothing sinister in the fact that these officers of government,,charged with official responsibility for or seized of legitimate official interest in Far East- ern affairs)yere uniformaly opposed to a course of action they considered adverse to US interests. The remainder of this paragraph sets forth yet another distorted and oversimplified summary of a complex sequence of events. 13. This sentence and the paragraph which follows propounds a thesis based on a complete inversion of the actual sequence of events. The Russians did not pressure the Viet Minh into a conference "in exchange" for a French vote against the EDC. The Geneva Conference was already in sesaion when Mendes-France became Premier and the Assembly vote came after the conference, not before. Mendes- France knew that the VietMinh were already prepared to give serious consideration to partition when he became Premier; on the strength of this knowledge he made his grandstand play of promising to resign if he could not effect a settlement of the war within ten days. The Rus- sians did take advantage of Mendes-France's position by offering to put pressure on the Viet Minh in return for a scuttling of EDC, but it was Mendes France who was out- maneuvered; for he accepted partition at the 17th parallel although there are excellent grounds for thinking that the Viet Minh would have been willing to settle for the 18th. In any event, Mr. Raskin's version of th4se events is simply wrong on factual grounds. Approved For Release 2003/05/16 :t1R-RDP79T00472A000700030018-0 sa? Approved Fox,Release 200310w'iv.-:-.LIAAP79TOO4IA000700030018-0 13. Article 19 of the 20 July 1954 "Agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities in Viet-Nam" (to which a dis- torted reference is here made) also says that the zones assigned to the respective forces (i.e., North and South Vietnam) "are not to be used for the resumption of hostili. ties or to further an aggressive policy," a provision which North Vietnam has systematically and flagrantly violated and on which it was specifically charted with viola- tion by the Canadian and Indian members of the ICC in 1962. Mr. Raskin also ignores Articles 17 and 18* which North Vietnam has also consistently and systematically violated. SECTION II 1. You cannot "view" anything "rhetorically" nor can you simultaneously "liberate and contain" an enemy. More to the point, Mr. Raskin is giving a highly colored description of the US view in 1954 that Communist nations were embarked on a policy of expansion which constituted a serious threat to the vital interests of the US and its allies, for whose defense the US had assumed formal respo bility by treat$ obligations. 2. Another set of distortions. Dulles, in fact, simply felt that the line now had to be drawn in Indochina as it had been drawn in Korea. S. Every sentence in this paragraph is replete with factual errors. Sao Dai never backed Diem against General Minh or the sects (he did exactly the reverse). The Binh Xuyen's control was confined to Saigon-Cholon and did not extend "throughout South Vietnam"; Gen. Hinh was not fEir original "first choice" but an alternative that Sao Dai and the French came to consider better than Diem for their pur- poses. 4. He not only seemed to be; he 5. Gen. Minh never had much Vietnamese support and, again, the Binh Xuyen's pawer never extended much bebond Saigon. 6. This sentence is one of Mr. Raskin'of two sops to "objectivity." 7. The actual number was around 900,000; Mr. Raskin neglects to mention that, by contrast, the number leaving South Vietnam for the North was infinitesimal. A-3 Approved For Release 2003/05/l6-. paTT00472A000700030018-0 t Approved Fo Release 2003/05/16 : CIA-RDP79T00432A000700030018-0 6. These were operative reasons, but the main reason, which Mr, Raskin neglects to mention, was fully justified fear of Communist brutality and oppression. 9. Technically accurate, but nonetheless a distor- tion. Diem had no real power base other than a small group of Central Vietnamese Catholics and did welcome the support of the northern Catholic refugees. The religious issue as such, however, did not then exist, nor did it arise for several years. 10. The election was quite genuine (hence the quotes e tendentious) and though it was certainly not free in e Western sense, few observers at the time questioned the fact that Diem was overwhelmingly preferred by the South Vietnamese people to Bow Dai. 11. These fears were well founded and were based on North Vietnam's overwhelming numerical superiority (a result of Mendes-France's accepting partition at the 17th parallel) and realistic knowledge of how elections are run in areas under Communist control. 12. The Hanoi government never did any such thing. It did initially concentrate on consolidating its contb* over the North, but the reason was that it expected the Diem regime to collapse and anticipated acquiring control over all of Vietnam through the scheduled 1956 elections. As soon as it became apparent that Diem had a chance of surviving and that the elections were not going to be held, Hanoi issued orders to the cadre it had left behind in the South (in violation of the Geneva Accords) to begin terror- ist and insurgent activities. 13. Diem's errors and mistakes certainly contributed to South Vietnam's problems, but what turned "the wheel of fortune" was Hanoi's calculated decision to begin an insur- gencicampaign in order to effect the downfall of the Saigon goveenment when it became apparent that this government had a chance to survive. 14. A tendentious account indeed of Diem's move to break the Chinese stranglehold on economic life and to force the Chinese community to accept the responsibilities of citizenship. The moves were tactically bungled on occa- sion 1011t strategically sound and politically essential. The disruption of the economy was a very short-lived tempo- rary phenomenon. A-4 Approved For Release 2003/05/16 : CIA-RDP79T00472A000700030018-0 TiR ' Approved For%Release 200 01479T0047-21A000700030018-0 15. This whole paragraph is tendentious* the Viet Cong (no longer Viet Minh) were a threat to internal se- curity, but Diem needed no Wing on this score; indeed be was more aware of the implications of the rising insur- gent menace than were some Americans. Devilliers (from whom Mt. Raskin seems to have borrowed heavily) hardly classes as an objective or unbiased source. 16. This change in emphasis was necessitated by the rising pace of Communist-directed insurgency. 17. This assignment of the adjective "treacherous" to a North Vietnamese operation is the other of Mk. Raskin s two sops to objectivity. 18. gr. Raskin uncritically accepts the Communist propaganda version of a very minor incident of alleged food poisoning in a South Vietnamese prison in December 1958. NO prisoners died and there were strong grounds at the time for thinking that the incident* picked up and replayed with suspicious alacrity by a variety of Vietnam- ese Communist propaganda organs had been planned from the outset as a stage maneuver. Armed bands of Communist- controlled rebels were active in the south at least two years before this "incident" occurred. SECTION 11I. 1. That is to say* Communis nations' prefer to wage aggression by subversion and terrorism rather than the ? more risky methods of frontal military assault. 2. Absolute nonsense and a complete perversion of the truth. The activity of the Communist rebels in the South was initiated in response to Hanoi's orders and by 1960 Hanoi was supporting and directing a growing civil war. The remainder of the paragraph continues in a similar distorted vein. 3. The National Liberation Front was created* by Hanoi* in the fall of 1960 because the war had reached the stage where the Communists felt the need of a political "front" mechanism. The remainder of the paragraph is in- accurate and disingenuous. 4. The recommendations made were dictated by the objective realities of the then current situation* not by the OSS background of Mt. Rostow or Mr. Hilsman. A-5 Approved For Release 2003/05i146; Witt)P79T00472A000700030018-0 Approved Far* Release 2003/0E 00474A000700030018-0 6. There was, admittedly, considerable peasant apathy towards Saigon, but hardly total alienation. 6. Distorted and untrue. In 1962 US pilots were doing very little flying Oxcept on training missions) and though South Vietnamese pilots could have been more discriminating in their target selection, the picture was nowhere near so stark as Mt. Raskin paints it. 7. Both, unfortunately, did occur; but it is false to say they were commonplace. The following sentence is simply not true. 8 This whole paragraph is overdone and distorted, and the one which follows merits even harsher criticism. 9. Another gross overstatement of an admittedly existent problem. No troops in combat are excessively gentle towards the source of hostile fire. 10. This statement is simply not true, nor are the two sentences which follow. 11. A prime example of Mr. Raskin's technique of elliptical telescoping and distortion. The US was respond- ing to an unprovoked attack on the high seas (which Mr. Raskin neglects to mention) and our Tonkin Gulf actions had a number of favorable results as well as stimulating the Communists to their own retaliation. 12. Gross exaggeration. 13. The account of this period during which Khanh? as a de facto as well as de Jure head of the military establish- miff was very much in rower--is quite distorted. 14. The contention that the US had "lost" the war and the analysis which precedes it will simply not stand up under scrutiny. 15. This in simply not true. 16. Nor is this. 17. Few believed the supply routes would dry up; many (with reason) felt the bombing had military value. Obviously the bulk of the evidence and comments involved were contained in highly classified material to which Mr. Raskin would not have access. From his former service on the White Rouse staff, Mr. Raskin should have realized this. Approved For Release 2003/05/16 ? CIA-RDP79T00472A000700030018-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/%414uffiritTUF0472A4,80700030018-0 tu A distorted overstatement of a very complex 19. An 'Omitted joke suddenly becomes the whole 20. The figure never was this high, and this is certainly not the situation today. Instead, there are signs that the bulk of the Viet Cong regular units are converting to a 7.62 mm family of weapons all of which (and the ammunition they use) must be supplied from ex- ternal sources. 21. AS in Burma, perhaps, where insurgency is chronic and endemic? 22. Quang Lien's fuzzy-minded peace movement, which was directed against all foreign troops including those sent from North Vietnam, was explicitly disavowed, and quashed, by the Buddhist leadership. 23. The gas employed #in very limited are as not lethal. Pilots are never allowed to "pick their own targets" in the sense that W. Raskin is implying. (They may under certain conditions, as when patrolling a desig- nated stretch of road, be permitted to select targets of opportunity from within precisely defined categories, but that is something quite different from the notion Mr. Raskin seems to be conveying.) 24. Mr. Raskin depicts the administrative structure the US Government as some kind of sinister cabal. 25. Their verbal response would hardly be described as mild. Their physical response has obviously been limited by their own weaknesses in areas where they are faced with overwhelming US strength. 26. Is Mr. Raskin suggesting that the US should let other nations, particularly its avowed enemies, se- lect its means or define its ends? 27. The US bombings were prompted by wanton attacks on US personnel, timing was dictated by the Communists who launched the attacks at times and places of their, not our, choosing. So far as we (though perhaps not the Vorth Viet- namese) were concerned, the presence of Kosygin was acci- dental and irrelevant. A-7 Approved For Release 2003/0116 o1A-RciP7 TO0472A000700030018-0 Approved Fox. *Release 2003/05/16 : CIA-RDP79T0041?A000700030018-0 MOIDEVIIP4 B 28. This is simply not trues if anything, the area of GYN control in the region around Saigon has been expend- ing in recent months (not contracting), American quarters have never been bombed regularly, parts of the Embassy were severely damaged but the Embassy itself was certainly not destroyed (indeed, its continuous use was never sus- pended), the Viet Cong control no towns. Mr. Raskin simply has no respect for factor apparent interest in them. 29. This is also just plain false. US Marines are in he Da Nang area and at Phu Bait both regions under VM control when the Marines arrived (though admittedly the Marines were landed to ensure the continuation of that ntrol). It is perversity to claim that the Marines re- main in Da Nang on VC sufferance, for this is simply not true. 30. A gross distortion. Some officials may have questioned the competence or skill of individual ARVN units, but no responsible US official has ever made state- ments such as these either in public or in privileged of,- ficial communications. 31. And apparently Mr. Raskin is prepared to accept ommunist claims or boasts uncritically at face value. 32. The retired officers of the Titanic would hardly be the most qualified commentators on matfers of nautical safety. 33. This sentence would make more sense if one sub- stituted "not possibly" for "only." The type of conference De Gaulle was advocating would almost invariably result in Communist control over all of Vietnam. 34. If De Gaulle ever made the unqualified assertion that the Chinese and North Vietnamese wanted to negotiate (which we doubt) he was wrong. Hanoi has evinced cold disinterest in any form of negotiations except under con- ditions involving US surrender. Peiping has been adamantly and vituperatively opposed to negotiations and to any who advocate them at the present time. 35. Malaysia, a political idea vindicated by a UN- supervised popular referendum, cannot be described with any pretense to objectivity or acCdirfAy as a "British Uffation," though Sukarno, of course, consistently uses such formulations to justify his policy of aggression. A-9 Approved For Release 2003/05/16: CIA-Rpff,61-00472A000700030018-0 tqLig 01,04 4 Approved Forftelease 2003/Q1MBEITEK9T0047214-000700030018-0 38. This whole paragraph is ssue of misrepresen- tations, untruths, and distortions, 37. This seems regrettably true. It is certainly not understood by Mr. Raskin. 38. Given the highly vocal activities of a number of Congressmen--including Senators Morse* Church, Ful.. bright and others--Congress could hardly be described as silent. From the standpoint of accuracy, this statement is about on a par with many of Mr. Raskin's other conten- tions. 39. We see nothing sinister in the President's listen.,? ing to and occasionally acting upon the foreign policy information and. advice provided by those agencies of gov- ernment tasked by lawful statute with providing such ser- vices. 40. This is not only the "official position," but it also happens to be the truth. And it is not open to serious question by anyone who is well informed or willing to face facts as they exist. 41. We do not regard Mr. Matsumoto as a particularly competent or qualified observer and disagree with his find- ings. If he believes that the US Mission in Saigon thinks that only 30% of the VC are Communists* then he is greevously misinformed. 42. 1 is correct, 2 is wrong, 3 is fooltabneas,. and 44, as written, makes no sense at all. 43. The insistence referred to is based on a realistic appraisal of who controls the Viet Cone and an unwillingness to be duped into accepting the Communist front tactic on its own pretentious. 44. Mr. Raskin is apparently ignorant of Hanoi's oft reiterated and quite unequivocal position on reunification and the echoes of this position voiced by HanoiRAI wholly - controlled puppet the P. 45. However, we are determined to ensure that this activity is not bossed from Hanoi or Peiping. 46. Nonsense. Hanoi has never indicated the slightest willingness to consider a neutralization of North Vietnam and, in fact, has repeatedly and adamantly insisted that this point is not negotiable. Approved For Release 2003/05/16 : CIA-RDP79704172A000700030018-0 Approved For-Release 2003/05/16 : CIA-RDP79T004714000700030018-0 11411AL 47. Apparently Mr. Raskin and the unnamed diplomats be r fers to do not see a continuation of Hanoi-directed izwurgency in the South as any inhibition to meaningful negotiations. 48. Xxcept for such trivial matters as collapsing the morale of our South Vietnamese allies, confirming the Chinese thesis about the non-Communist world's inability to cope with aggression by subversion (i.e., "wars of national liberation"), viOdication of the "paper tiger" image of the US so loudly trumpted from Peiping and Hanoi, a strengthening of the Chinese hand in the Sino-Soviet dispute, an encouragement to the incitement of similar insurgencies in Thailand and elsewhere, and a serious re- appraisal by all our Asian allies of US constancy and ability to defend them from subversive assault. Aside from such considerations as these, of course, the cost would be trivial. ONS V V and VI, we believe do not require comment; we could add that will not be readily apparento any objective reader. 1:1111 A ikg Approved For Release 2003/05/16 : CIA- P79T00472A000700030018-0