TRENDS IN COMMUNIST PROPAGANDA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
49
Document Creation Date: 
November 17, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 7, 1999
Sequence Number: 
6
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 9, 1972
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4.pdf2.54 MB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 _l/ ~~ ~~~~;;.~,- T ~ IIIIIUi~~~~~~~~~~~~~-uilllllll FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION ~ SERVICE ~~IIII!Ill~~~~ii~~~l~lllllllll~ EI~II~S in Communist propaganda Confidential 9 FEBRUARY 1972 (VOL. XXIII, N0. 6) Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDCNTIAL This propaganda analysis report is based ex- clusively on material carried in communist broadcast and press media. It is published by P'BI8 without coordinatipn with other U.6. Government components. WARNING This document contains information afiecting the national defense of the United 8tatea, within the merning of Title 18, sections 799 and 795, of the U8 Code, as amended. Its transmission or revelation of its contents to or receipt by an unauthorized person is pro- hibited by law. dour i _ - [~deded IreM amswe~k dernpredinp eed ~ deetsulRestlee Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 CONTENT Topics and Events Given Mayor Attention . INDOCHINA i DRV Statement, Comment Contrast PRG Proposal With U.S. Plan 1 Truong Chinh December Remarks-on U.S. World.Policy Released-. 6 Pathet Lao S1:atement~Supports~PRG,.DRV.Plans.Lor Settlement., 7 Sihanouk's "Government" Rejects U.S, "Compromise-Formulas='. -. .. 8 PRC Statement Reaffirms "Unshakable"-Policy on Indochina.War 9 Kosygin, Moscow Coeunentators Support.PRG, DRV Stands 11 PRG's 10-Point Policy on Defectors Continues to Be Pressed 14 SINO-U.S. RELATIONS Chou Raises Taiwan issue; Comment AssaiJ.s Nixon Messages 15 USSR-U.S.-PRG KOMM1JNiST Reassures World Movement on SovieC Detente Policy.. 19 TASS Links "New Purges" to Mao's Anti-Soviet, Pro-U.S. Line.... 21 PR'~VDA Hits A1sop Portrayal of U.S.-as Peking's "Savior" 23 JAPAN Peking Condemns Gromyko Visit as a Move.Against China 24 PRC-PAKISTAN Peking Offers Limited Support During Bhutto's Visit . . 26 CHINA Politburo Member Hsu Shih~yu Reappears.After.8-Month.Absence. 29 East China Provinces Cite Chiang Ching's-Cultural Role ~ . MIDDLE EAST 29 Moscow, Cairo Urge Jarring Talks, Discuss Egyptian "Defenbe" 31 East Europeans View Cairo Pressures, French CP Sco;.es as-Sadat 36 (Continued) Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBZS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 CONTENT S (ConL?nued) FORCE REDUCTIONS IN EUROPE Low-Volume Soviet Comment Blames West for Delay in Talks 39 SOVIET-FRG TREATY Moscow Notes Start of Ratif ication~ Decries.Strauss "Draft" 41 TOPIC iN BRIEF; Salt Communique ... 43 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 FOR OFa ~~tAL U8E ONLY FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 TOPICS AND EVENTS GIVEN MAJOR ATTENTION 31 JANUARY - 6 FEBRUARY 1972 Moscow (2806 items) Peking (1660 items) Indochina (4%) 12% Indochina (23%) 28% [U.S., PRG Proposals (2%) 6%] [U.S., PRG (8%) 21%] Warsaw Pact PCC Meeting (23%) 12% Proposals Ulster Siruation (--) 5% Pakistani President (--) 20% China (4%) 4% Bhutto in PRC Rgyptian President (--) 3% Domestic Issues (36%) 20% as-Sadst in USSR UN Security Council (7%) 11% UN Secur~.ty Council Special Session in Africa (--) 2% Special Session in Africa These statistics are based on the voicecast commentary output of the Moscow and Peking domestic and international radio services. The term "commentary" is used to denote the lengthy item-radio talk, speech, press article or editorial, govern- ment or party statement, or diplomatic note. Items of extensive reportage are counted as commentaries. Figures in parentheses indicate volume of comment during the preceding week. Topics and events given mayor attentio?~ i:. terms of volume are not always discussed in the body of the Trends. 8on.e may have been covered in prior issues; in other cases the propaganda content may be routine or of minor significance. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 :CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY :.972 I iJDOCH I hA In the wake of the PRG'd 2 February statement elaborating on the first two points of its 1 July propcszl and rejecting the U.S. eight-point peace plan, Hanoi and Front propaganda has stressed alleged U.S. duplicity in negotiations and Vietnamese resolve to defeat the PJixon Doctrine and the Vietnamization policy. A supporting DRV Government statement came only belatedly on the 5th, the day after a PRC Government statement, although DRV Premier Pham Van Dong had promptly endorsed the PRG statement at a banquet on the 2d and DRV delegate Xuan Thuy had done so at the Paris session on the 3d. The delay in issuance of the DT.V Government statement may have merely been a function of Nanui's effort to return the PRG to the forefront of the negotiations. The statement echoed earlier propaganda in castigating President Nixon for having unilaterally, in his 25 January TV speech, disclosed a "distorted version" of the substance of the U.S.-DRV private meetings. Not unexpectedly, Hanoi as well as Front media merely repeat without amplification the "reasonable" elaborated demands of the PRG Char the United States set a date for total withdrawal from South Vietnam a-~d Chat Thieu resign immediately. While Hanoi propaganda following President Nixon's speech was largely devoid of personal abuse, a NHAN DAN Commentator article on the 7th reverted to more standard invective when it called the President an "utterly reactionary and ferocious hawk" who "only wants to settle the Vietnam problem by an aggressive war." Peking was prompt in weighing in with authoritative support for the 2 February PRG statement in the form of a government statement and a PEOPLE'S DAILY editorial on the 4th. In addition to supporting the PRG's position, the Chinese statement extended the demand for unconditional U.S. and allied withdrawal to apply to all of Indochina. Possibly with an eye on President Nixon's visit, the statement reassured Peking's Indochinese allies thaC its "unshakable established policy" is to support them in their war effur~. Unlike Peking, Moscow did not endorse the PRG statement with an official statement of its own. Bur Soviet media reported that Kosygin expressed support for the Vietnamese struggle and peace proposals when he received the DRV and PRG representatives in Moscow on the 4th. DRV STATEMENT, COMMENT CONTRAST PRG PROPOSAL WITH U.S. PLAN Vietnamese communist propaganda since the President's 25 January speech and the PRG's 2 February statement has insisted that the U.S. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 eight-point proposal is merely a device to continue Vietnamization while the PRG's "elaboration" of its 1 July propoc~al is further evidence of good will and a desire to reach a political settlement. Although the DRV Government statement endorsing the PRG elaboration was delayed, surprisingly, until 5 February, the PRG initiative had been welcomed--and repeated--by DRV delegate Xuan Thuy at the Paris session on the 3d. DRV Premier Pham Van Dong had "warmly welcomed the PRG stand in a banquet speech for the Hungarian delegation on the 2d without acknowledging the substance of the proposal. NHAN DAN gave editorial support to the PRG o!: the 4th; and Pham Van Dong, speaking on that day a4 a meeting for the Hungarians, spelled out the PRG's elaboration and called 1C a "rebuttal" to the U.S. eight points. The editorial said that the PRG statement "has put into sharp contras:. the U.S. imperialists' stand and that of our people on the Vietnam issue" and that "our people resolutely expose and denounce the deceitful measures of the eight-point plan." VNA's account of the 3 February Paris session quotes Thuy as saying that the DRV delegation "fully agrees wi?i:h and backs the PRG's elaborations on the two key problems in the seven-point solution, which fully conforms with the DRV stand." Thuy in his formal speech had gone on to explain that the DRV stand was that outlined in the nine-point proposal "which was handed to the United States privately on 26 June and made public on 31 January." (While the PRG has referred to the DRV's nine-point proposal, it has been reluctant to refer to the privata DRV-U.S. talks. Thus, both the PRG statement on ~:ie 2d and PRG delegate Nguyen Van Tien at Paris on the 3d said only that the "reasonable and logical" negotiating position of the communists is shown by the DRV's nine-point proposal "made on 26 June" as well as by the PRG's seven points.) Both PRG delegate Nguyen Van Tien and Xuan Thuy assailed the eight-point plan for failing to set a terminal date far U.S. withdrawal and for the suggestion that President Thieu resign dust a month before new presidential elections would be held. Thuy went into more detail regarding the U.S. plan, seeking to show that it makes U.S. withdrawal "conditional." He ridiculed the notion of withdrawing U.S. troops six months after an agreement, stating that this time period has no more significance than the 12-month period which the President had suggested in his May 1969 proposal. Thuy also claimed that the United States has put troop withdrawal in the framework of an overall settlement, including "such absurd points" as mutual withdrawal Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 (;~NFIDENTIAI, FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 and a cease-fire* that were mentioned in the U.S. October 1970 five-point plan--a plan, he said, which "we rejected." After assessing the U.S. plan as one serving the continuation of Vietnamization and the perpetration of numerous new "crimes," Thuy did not go on to refer to the assertion in the PRG statement of the 2d, repeated by Tien at the session, that the PRG "does not accept" the U.S. peace plan. Instead he said that "of course such a plan is not acceptable to honest, peace- and freedom-loving people." The NHAN DAN editorial on the 4th said that the President's "" plan for peace' definitely cannot be accepted." And the DRV Government statement on the 5th said: "In complete agreement with the 2 February PRG statement, the DRV firmly declares it does not accept President Nixon's deceptive 'peace plan' and unreservedly supports the seven-point solution of the PRG, whose two key problems have been elaborated." The DRV statement closely followed the language of the PRG statement in saying that in his eight-point peace plan the President "still refuses to set a spec if is terminal date for the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from South Vietnam and continues to pose conditions for the withdrawal of troops for the purpose of maintaining the U.S. stooge regime in South Vietnam. In suggesting the holding of elections within the framework of the present puppet administration and in the grip of its oppression and coercion, President Nixon has attempted to compel the South Vietnamese to accept the present U.S. puppet regime, to negate the PRG, the genuine and legal representative of the South Vietnamese people." While other portions of the DRV statement also closely paralleled the PRG statement, the DRV statement did contain additional passages touching on Hanoi's nine points. After referring to the DRV's consistent support for the "struggle" and peaceful proposals of the Pathet Lao and Sihanouk's government, it observed that the DRV position had been made clear in the nine points and specified the call for "U.S." respect for the 1954 and 1962 Geneva agreements, an end to U.S. aggression and intervention in the Indochina countries, and the opportunity * Point six of the U.S. plan calls for a general cease-fire throughout Indochina, ~o begin when the agreement '_.s signed, and says that as part of the cease-fire there will be no further infiltration of outside forces into any of the countries of Indochina. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL PBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 for the Indochinese peoples to settle their own affairs. Except in publicizing the text of the nine-point plan, Hanoi had mentioned its substance only in a 2 February NHAN DAN Commentator article. Hanoi had publicized the U.S. eight-point proposal as well as the DRV's n{.ne points* in the series of documents it released on 31 Januaey, but criticism of the U.S. stand has focused almost exclusively on point one on U.S. and allied troop withdrawal and point three on the political situation in South Vietnam. Initial comment on the President's speech had made passing acknowledgment that the proposal included provisions for POW release and cease-f ire and had mentioned the matter of U.S. aid to Indochina. But available propaganda since Xuan Thuy's statement at the Paris session on the 3d has not brought up any of the other points. PRG ELABORATIONS Hanoi seconds the Front in stating that if the PRG's elaborations are accepted, all other issues will be settled quickly. At the Paris session Tien said the elaborations demonstrated his s ide''e good will and flexibility. In one of Hanoi media's occasional departures from the practice of not reporting the post-session briefings, Hanoi radio's Mandarin and English services on the 7th carried some of the remarks made by PRG press spokeAman Ly Van Sau. The radio quoted Sau as explaining on the 3d that since President Nixon had objected to suggestions of a withdrawal date, "we do not set any date this time, but leave it to President Nixon to choose himself a terminal date without posing any conditions. We will discuss this matter with him." Hanoi also quoted Sau on the issue of power in South Vietnam: He noted that in view of President Nixon's "flagrant argument" that he could not overthrow his ally, "we have asked" that President Thieu resign and that his "bellicose policy be ended." * The general categorieR of the DRV's proposals are very similar to those of the U.S. plan. The additional point on the DRV side (No. 4) is the one calling for reparations. Otherwise the order is parallel: withdrawal, prisoner release, South Vietnamese settlement, respect for the 1954 and 1962 Geneva agreements, Indochinese settlement of their own problems, cease-fire, international supervision, and international guarantees. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 ATTACKS ON U.S. POLICY, Along with its deprecation of the U.S. PRESIDENT NIXON peace plan as a device to pursue Vietnamization, Hanoi has continued to ridicule the President for describing it as a generous and fair offer. Such ridicule was interjected at the beginning of a 4 February NHAN DAN Commentator article which cited the Pentagon papers in setting out to document the charge that the Nixon Doctrine is a continuation of consistent "aggressive" U.S. policy in Indochina. The article did not acknowledge any of the recent developments in negotiations, mentioning neither the President's disclosures in his 25 January speech nor the PRG's elaborations of its proposal. Commentator began by saying that "when Nixon argues about U.S. policy toward Vietnam, many people recall the Pentagon secret documents" published last summer. He added that "Nixon resorts to all means to show that he is right, strong, and generous, but daily events expose his acts ." The article reached back to 1954 to demonstrate the President's consistent "hawkish" attitude L-oward the war. An article also signed Commentator in NHAN DAtJ on the 7th, as reviewed by VNA, similarly failed to explicitly mention recent developments related to negotiations when it scathingly attacked the President. As reviewed by VNA, it said that the President "cannot, by whatever tortuous and truculent pleas, whitewash his crimes of prolonging and expanding the aggressive war." It added that he "has leaked out his design to maintain indefinitely in South Vietnam several scores of thousands of U.S. troops to carry on its war role, to bargain at the negotiations, and as a pretext for 'protective reaction' for every attack on North Vietnam." Commentator concluded: "Richard Nixon--utterly reactionary and ferocious hawk--only wants to settle the Vietnam problem by an aggressive war." As he had done on 27 January, Xuan Thuy at the Paris session on the 3d spoke of the President's "threats." Thuy took issue with the President for having "threatened" in his speech on 25 January "that in case the Vietnamese people pursued their dust struggle, he would fully meet his responsibility as commander-ia-chief of the U.S. armed forces." Comment on the President's speech, including the 31 January QUAN DOI NHAN DAN Commentator article, had observed that the President's "threats" expose the "deceitfulness" of the U.S. peace proposals. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 TRU~,~ CWINW DECEhIBER REMARKS ON U~S~ WORLD POLICY RELEASED VNA's press review on 1 February announced that Hanoi's papers that day devoted most of their space to- publishing the "important report" by Politburo member Truong Chinh, delivered aC the "recent" congress of the Vietnam Fatherland Front (VFF). Hanoi radio on the 1st and VNA on the 3d carried accounts of the report, which had been presented at the closing session of the VFF congress on 17 December and was briefly summarized by the radio on 21 December. It is not unusual for Hanoi to belatedly release mayor pronouncements in this fashion,* but it is possible that the timing of the release: in this case was influenced by the imminence of President` Nixon's visit tc Peking and the current state of Sino-DRV relations. Some. of Truong Chinh's remarks were obviously made with the President's trip in mind. Truong Chinh not only repeated the charge prominent in Hanoi's polemical propaganda last summer that the United States is scheming to split the "socialist bloc," but he also made an unusual, explicit ref e:.ance to the Soviet Union and China in warning against Che duplicity of the U.S. policy of negotiations.** Analyzing U.S. foreign policy since World War II, Truong Chinh held that from 1961 to 1968 the United States had attempted to take advantage of contradictions in the socialist camp--"especially . between the Soviet Union and China"--in order to "seek a temporary detente with the Soviet Union." Since 1969, according to Truong Chinh, U.S. policy has been guided by the Nixon Doctrine which holds, among other things, that the United States is "'ready to negotia_e' with a number of countries, especially with the Soviet Union and China, with a view to 'deterring' and 'containing' these biggest socialist countries ." In addition, Truong Chinh charged, the United States "makes the fullest use of contradictions between these * Truong Chinh's mayor 1968 Marx anniversary report, for example, was treated in this typical fashion in the media. The report was delivered at a congress some time in August 1968 and was summarized by VNA on 23 August, but the full text was not released until mid-September. ** Hanoi had studiously avoided direct mention of President Nixon's trip to Peking in its vitriolic anti-Chinese polemic during July and August. The only known explicit mention of the President's planned visits to Peking and Moscow in any DRV media appeared in the November issue of a journal of the Central Committee's propaganda department THOI SU PHO THONG (CURRENT EVENTS), in an article which charged the President with "Laing vague hints to create the illusion that those trips will help the United States to resolve the Vietnam problem." (See the 5 January TRENDS, page 4.) 0 ?" Approved For Release 2000/08/0 I~~~'T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 two countries and sows discord among the socialist countries in general in a bid to create favorable conditions for the United States, strives for 'detente' among the big powers, and continues to bully the smaller countries." Truong Chinh's formula for defeating the Nixon Doctrine included the prescription that "the spearhead of the world revolution" be directed at the United States as the "number one enemy;'that U.S. forces not be overestimated, and that opponents of the United States "strengthen their unity" and "be ready for united actions and foil by every means old perfidious plots and adventurous plans of U.S. imperialism." Truong Chinh went on, at another point, to propose that there be "three united fronts" to oppose the United States--fronts in Vietnam, in Indochina, and in the world. PATHET LAO STATEMENT SUPPORTS PRG. DRV PLANS FOR SETTLEMENT The Pathet I,ao scored President Nixon's eight-point plan and supported the PRG and DRV Govexatnent statements with an NLHS Central Committee statement on 6 February, having previously limited its reaction to routine-level radio and press agency comment scoring the eight points as "shopworn proposals." NLHS Central Committee statements have been the customary vehicle for Pathet Lao reactions to past initiatives, including the PRG's seven-point proposal of l July 1971 and President Nixon's 7 October 1970 five-point plan. The 6 February statement scored the U.S. proposal as a "plan to negotiate from a position of strength" and drag out the war, hoodwink the public, and "further Nixon's plan for another term in office." As in the earlier routine-level comment, it criticized the points on troop withdrawal and South Vietnam elections and ignored the points on respect for the Geneva agreements, international guarantees, and an international conference. "Only the seven-point political solution of which the two key points were elaborated" in the PRG statement and which was "fully approved" by the DRV Government, it said, is the "correct basis" for a Vietnam solution. The NLHS statement went on to describe the content of the PRG "elaboration." It concluded with the stock warning that "true to the point declaration of the Indochinese Peoples' Summit Conference," the Lao people ;ai11 cooperate wit's the peoples of Vietnam and Cambodia to "completely defeat" U.S. aggression in Indochina. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 S I HANOUK' S "G0VERi~1ENT" REJECTS U , S ~ "COMPROMISE PORMUI.AS'' Sihanouk's government, the RGNU, continues to denounce President Nixon's eight-point plan in a flurry of official comment, including a S February RGNU statement and an 8 February RGNU Foreign Ministry statement. These docuMents follow the initial reaction to the President's 25 January speech which iiad come in a 28 January statement by the RGNU Minister ~f Information and Propaganda, taking issue with the propoeal~: on a cease-fire and elections in South Vietnam. Earlier, a 26 January statement by the "interiot part" of the RGNU had not specif ically mentioned the President's speech when it ambiguously complained of U.S. "diplomatic" trickery regarding Cambodia.* The 5 February RGNU statement, reported by NCNA that day and by the radio of Sihanouk's front (FUNK) on the 9th, charged that the United estates, trying to find a way out of the military def~~uts being inflicted on it in Cambodia, is "doggedly inventing such deceitful tricks as 'on-the-spot cease-fire,` 'peace negotiations,' 'partition of Car,~bodia,' 'referendum,' 'international conference,' 'government of national reconciliation,' and other fraud~~.lent formulas of compromise." It claimed that President Nixon resorted once again to }'some of these formulas" in his eight-point proposal. All these attempts are "nothing new" in Cambodia, it said, adding that "in conformity with the directives" of the FUNK Political Bureau which met "recently" under the chairmanship of Sihanouk, the RGNU "categorically rejects" the parts of the eight-point proposal which relate to Cambodia. The statement reaffirmed the Cambodian people's resolve to struggle without retreat or compromise to drive out the U.S. force8 and their "lackeys," overthrow the Phnom Penh "clique," and build a new Cambodia. It sPid that this "dust stand" had been repeated many times, especially in thy: 76 January statement by the "interior part" of the RGNU and in the 28 January statement by the RGNU Ministry of Information and Propaganda. The language of the current statement echoed that used in the ambiguous 26 January statement, which alleged that President Nixon had "lately" advanced various schemes 'rsuch as a cease-fire on the spot, peace talks, partition * Sihanouk's RGNU also reacted officially to previous peace initiatives. President Nixon's five-point proposal of 7 October 1970 was scored in a number of statements both in the nr~.ne of the RGNU and Sihanouk personally, and a RGNU "spokesman's" statement supported the PRG'e seven-point plan of 1 July 1971. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FI3IS TRCNDS 9 FCIIRUARiI 1972 of Cambodia, settlement between the Lon Nol-Sirik Matak-Son Ng~c Thanh traitors and the FUNK, and many other formulae." Sihanouk has long registered opposition to such proposals as an "international conference on Cambodia" and a "partition of Cambodia," as in his reaction to the President's l0 October 1970 proposal for an Indochina conference. But the current statements came at a time when the DRV, in a 1 February foreign ministry spokesman's statement, was dismissing "Labri .~ted reports" that it .had engaged in indirect approaches to Phnom Penh concerning "a separate peace in Cambodia." Other current propaganda by Sihanouk's government and front similarly scores alleged U.S. proposals for a Cambodian settlement. Introducing a statement by Khieu Samphan--the RGNU minister said to be leading the struggle in the "liberated zone"--which denounced the "crimes of the Phnom Penh traitors," a FUNK radio announcer on7 February explained that the statement e~aborates the reasons for the RGNU's "categorical refection" of "aJ.l the formulas of compromise" with the United States and the "Lon Nol-Sirik Matak-Son Ngoc Thanh clique." The announc~~~ claimed that the President's eight-point plan "includes a part relating to Cambodia and especially shamelessly suggesting a settlement between the Phnom Penh traitors and the FUNK." A FUNK radio commentary on 4 February asserted that on 29 January the "U.S. military radio" reported that when General Westmoreland met the Phnom Penh leaders on the 28th, he was assured that the "clique's" support for Nixon's eight-point proposal "meant that certain regions in Kampuchea would remain under communist control," Assailing this "plan to partition Cambodia," the commentary expressed the "patriots"' determination not to yield or compromise. SUPPORT FOR RGNU support for the 2 February PRG statement PRG STATEMENT thus far has been minimal. It was hailed in the 8 February RGNU Foreign Ministry statement, which also condemned the U.S. eight points but discussed the content of neither. Failing to acknowledge that the PRG statement "elaborated" on the seven points, the RGNU foreign ministry statement merely demanded that the United State. "seriously respond" to the PRG seven-point proposal. LPA on the 6th briefly reported that Sihanouk, receiving the PRG Ambassador on 3 February, expressed support for the PRG statement, again without mentioning its contents. Sihanouk's meeting with the ambassador has not been reported by NCNA or by FUNK media. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CUNT! LDI~N'I'.T.AI, CDIS TRI~,NDB 9 L'IsllRUARY 1971 PRC S'- ATENIENT REAFF I RN15 '~IJNSWAKABI.E" P(YL I CY ON I NDOCW I NA WAR Peking weighed in promptly with authoritative support for the 2 February PRG statement reJecting President Nixon's eight-point proposal and "elaborating" on the PRG's seven-point plan. On the 4th a PRC Government statement and a PEOPLE'S DAILY editorial expressed support for the PRG's position and reaffirmed unwavering Chinese backing for the war effort in Zndochina. This represents the first government-1ave1 statement on Zndochina since the Lam Son 719 operation last winter. In July, Peking had issued the 4 July 1971 PEOPLE'S DAILY edi.Lorial endorsing the PRG's seven-point plan issued on 1 Jury. Peking's response may have been shaped with an eye on the President's visit to China this month. The government statement, extending the demands on the United States to apply to the whole of Indochina, declared it to be Peking's "unshakable established policy" and "an unshirkable internationalist duty" to support "the Vietnamese and the other Indochinese peoples" in their war effort. This sort of pledge, with its implicit reassurance to Peking's allies that their interests are not jeopardized by the forthcoming Sino-U.S. negotiations, has marked Peking's effort to allay any disquiet over the effects of the President's visit on Peking's position on Indochina. Thus, in~the point communique on DRV Premier Pham Van Dong's visit to the PRC last November, the Chinese reaffirmed their "unshirkable internationalist duty" to support the war effort to the end. At that time, however, the Chinese had further dramatized their commitment by declaring their readiness to undertake "the greatest national sacrifices"--a pledge not reiterated in the current statements. In addition to demanding withdrawal of U.S. and allied forces from all of Indochina,.the government statement called for the United States to end support for "the Nguyen Van Thieu puppet clique, the Lon Nol-Sirik Matak treacherous clique, and the rightists in Laos." .Indicating that the way to a settlement in Indochina does not run. through Peking, the statement reiterated Peking's position Chat the questions of the three Indochinese countries "can only be settled" by their peoples themselves "free from any foreign interference." In the absence of a settlement, the statement pledged "all-out support and assistance" to the peoples of the three countries until complete victory in their war. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Cl)Nb' I I)I~~N'I' I AI, I'll I h 'I'Itl?NI);I ~) I~'IslfltllAl(Y 1971. I'L/1CE Si:TTI_I:Mi:N'f The govc~rnmc~nt ytntument and thu ucl I tc~r. l.+i I. situ on.l.y thu PR(;'c~ NUVOn-point h.inn nncl .itsl rohr.uur.y oLciborution uu tho busa.s Eor. a dottlcmont whl.l.c C:CitiCiZl.n~ tho "decept.ive" eight-polnl- prc~posu.l udvuncod L)y Pr.es.ldent Nlxon on l5 Junuury. '1.'haugh the statoment didm.issed Wuehington's peace proposuas us "nothing but deceitful empty folk" so Long us the United States does not uncondit.lonally withdraw its troops and and support Cor 'i'I)ieu, none o.f Pek.ing's comment has cited the i'RG's ussertaon that at "does not accept" the President's proposal. (however, Peking has curried the texts of the PRG statement and the llltV's 5 February statement containing this assertion.) Peking's comment. has also ignored the PRG's reference to the POW quest:on and to folks with the Saigon administration on formation of u government of notional concord. While duly acknowledging the PRG's elaboration on "two key points" in its peace plan, Peking's supporting comment does not spell out all of the elements contained in the PRG's elaboration. Thus, on the matter of U.S. withdrawal, Peking's comment does not n)ention the withdrawal of advisors, weapons, and war mater.ials,. as demanded in the PRG statement. And on the political question, Peking has not echoed the PRG's demand for Thieu's immediate resignation though it calla for the United States to "stop supporting the Vietnamese traitor Nguyen Van Thieu." KOSYGIN, MOSCOW COrT~ENTATORS SUPPORT PRG, DRV STANDS Moscow has faiied.to support the PRG's 2 February statement with an official statement of its own, or to denounce President Nixon's eighC-point plan authoritatively. While Moscow has not issued official statements on Vietnamese communicc peace initiatives in the past, it did endorse the PRG's 1 July proposal in a PRAVDA editorial on 5 July--the day after Peking's editorial support in PEOPLE'S DAILY.* * A PRAVDA Observer article greeted the NFLSV's 10 points in May 1969, and the 8-point "elaboration" of 17 September 1y70 drew low-level comment although Podgornyy briefly praised it in a 23 September luncheon speech for the visiting Indian president. President Nixon's 7 October 1970 five-point plan drew only low- level Moscow comment. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CUNI~' LI)I~;N'I' LAI, 1!'11[1 'L'I(ISNUti 9 l~'I~;IIRIIAI(Y 1971 Kosygln rrecwlvod the URV and PRC rrmbassadore on 4 February who tnCormed him of thc~ PRG etutomant and the Ut(V "eland" on tho U.S. o4ght-point plan, according to a 'PASS report that Jay which wad also publ:4etrod .4n I'RAVDA on tli? Stlr. According to 'PASS, Koeyg4n expr.eeeod Soviet support L?or "the duet btruggle of tho Vietnamese peop.lo and the proposals of the DRV and PRG almc~d at a political settlement of the problems of Indochina." liut TASS d?ld not report, ae did VNA, that he promised that the USSR will "increase its political support as well as military assistance to the Vietnamese people." VNA also quoted him as saying that "although they have sustained heavy setbacks in Indochina, the U.S. imperialists are still stubborn and refuse to give up their aggressive designs in this region." TASS omitted this remark but reported that the Vietnamese envoys "resolutely rejected" the U.S. proposals as "nothing but an attempt to impose a solution of the Vietnam problem on an American pattern." As usual, Moscow duly reported the PRG and DRV statements. An initial factual report of the PRG statement inexplicably was not disseminated by TASS but a TASS-attributed summary which included the text of the "elaboration" was printed in PRAVDA on the 3d and IZVESTIYA on the 4th. The DRV Government statement of the 5th was promptly reported in a TASS item tine following day which included both the critici~ru of the President for having revealed the secret meetings and the DRV's declaration that "it does not accept" the U.S. peace plan and supports the PRG's seven-pcinC proposal. There were also the usual brief TASS reports of the statements at the 3 February Paris session and the post-session press briefings, which note that the delegates presented the PRG's "elaborations" on the seven points. Routine comment on the PRG's "elaboration" of its stand included a 4 February Shakhov commentary broadcast in foreign languages which reviewed the contents of the two points put forward by the delegation at Paris and commented that their acceptance would "facilitate the solution of other problems that stand in the way of ending the war and establishing peace in South Vietnam." Shakhov went on to criticize President Nixon for failing to mention an end to the air war or a date for troop withdrawal in hie eight-point plan, and added that it was also evident that the United States intends to preserve the Thieu administration "which is the main obstacle to solving the political problem in South Vietnam." A Kozyakov commentary Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CUNIrI;UI;N'1'tAl~ Ir1iI~ 'I'RI~NI);~ 9 IrI~;BRUAItY L~~72 broadcast in t;nglleh to North Amar:lca on the :)d, ecoring U.S. efCorte to exploit the POW issue, said that tho PRG "has dust restatod its peaco proposals" and it is clear that there would b? "no problom" of roleasing the prisoners if Washington would only %~rop its "aggraseive policy" in the South. Yuriy T.hukov, in a 5 February PIU1'/UA article on growl.ng U.S. public diseatiefaction with the Administration's polic'as oC? "protracting" the war, ignored the PRG'e "elaboration" in the course of a criticism of President Nixon's eight-point plan. Attacking characterizations of the President's program as "generous," Zhukov cited the DRV representative at Paris on 26 January as calling it a "treacherous maneuver aimed at deceiving the American electorate." Zhukov said chat Nixon's 25 January speech and Kiseinger's "verbose" press conference the next day "failed to satisfy sober-minded American figures," and he cited critical remarks made by several congressmen, including Representative McCloskey's remarks on elections in South Vietnam. In contrast to DRV media, TASS on the 7th briefly reported that in his interview with CBS the day before, Xuan Thuy reviewed the Vietnamese peace program and said that the demand for an end to U.S. oupport to the Saigon regime is "a very important element of the settlement." TASS added that Secretary Rogers, also interviewed by CBS? "implied" that the United States intends to continue supporting the South Vietnam regime and that he blamed "the other aide" for the failure to reach a peace settlement. ATTACKS ON Moscow has continued to point to the President's PEKING announcement of hla peace plan on the eve of hi.s visit to China as an example of Peking's "collaborationist" policies. Some commentators once again have sought to play on Vietnamese fears of a Sino-U.S. backstage deal on Vietnam. A Moscow domestic service commentary on 3 February cited "observers" as speculating that one reason for the President's announcement of the peace plan was to prepare "some initial positions for possible discussion of the In~'ochina problem with the Peking leaders during the forthcoming visit by the U.S. President to China." It added that "American ruling circles" apparently still hope to achieve "some kind of deal behind the backs of the struggling people of Indochina." A similar point was made in a Mandarin-language broadcast on 3 February, which went on to cite a NHAN DAN article as warning that "no brutal acts o# war or cunning and fanciful schemes" of the United Staten can dissuade the Vietnamese from their struggle. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 (:ONI'' I UI:N9' IAL D'U f.;3 'L'ItI~NpB 9 Lr1~JBItUAItY .1.972 PRG'S to-POINT POLICY ON DEFECTORS CONTINUES TO BE PRESSED Vietnamese, comnwnlet media cuntLnue to givo publicity to the appeal to personnel. of the Saigon government and army in?ltiated in tho LO-point statement of I'RG policy roleaeed on 25 January* and lator reiterated :Ln other authoritative comment, including th? 2 I~'ebruary PRG statement elaborating on the 1 July proposal and re~ecting the U.S. eight-point proposal. Routine comment, like the 2 February PRG statement, calla on armymen to re?pond to the 10-point statement and loin in forcing a U.S. withdrawal and the overthrow of Thieu. In hie 4 February speech at a meeting for the I~ungarian delegation, Pham Van Dong claimed that the "movement" in youth Vietnam to attain these communist goa~.s has been extended because of the PRG's "new policies." The practical application of she 10 policies ie pointed up in propaganda urging increased proselyting efforts. Thus, for example, an editorial in QUAN GLAL PRONG (LIBERATION ARMY), broadcast by Liberation Radio~on the 6th, maintained that the Front has "an extremely favorable opportunity to launch a vigorous and timely proselyting attack into the enemy's ranks." The dissemination of the PRG's policies among Chose "in the enemy's ranks" was seen by the editorial as a contribution toward the disintegration of the Saigon government and army and thus toward the frustration of Vietnamization. Ln addition to promoting the PRG's policies in routine comment, Liberation Radio has also begun broadcasting statements attributed to captured ARVN officers who acclaim the policies and appeal for Saigon servicemen to defect. A commentary in the 7 February QUAN DOI NNAN DAN hailed the communists' proselyting efforts in 1971, claiming Chat they "contributed significantly to gradually disintegrating" the Saigon army and were a "strong blow" at Vietnamization. Highly evaluating the impact of the new PRG policies, the army paper held that men in 3sigon's armed forces who "have clearly understood this mayor PRG policy" will "certainly not allow the U.S. aggressors to continue to coerce and deceive them" but will, "depending on their circumstances, contribute to the struggle to save the country and their families." * The 10-point PRG statement of policies toward elements associated with the Saigon government was discussed in the 2 February TRENDS, pages 20-23. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CUNI~'LDLN'L'.T.AL I~IiT.S '1'RI;NDS ~ FI.rili~~nRY 1.972 S I iV0-U, S, RELATIONS CWGJ RAISES TAIWAN ISSWE: COMMENT ASSAILS NIXON MESSAGES At a time when Peking has been taking care to leave the negotiating door open on Sino-U.S, issues, Chou En-lai Cook the occasion of a banquet for visiting Pakistani President Bhutto on 1 February to reaffirm Peking's deCermination to recover Taiwan. Rut while raising the issue, Chou'8 remarks on Taiwan avoided any mention of President Nixon's China policy, conveyed no sense of urgency on the issue, and were not echoed in hie formal speech at the banquet. Also during this period, Peking has directed a spate of criticism at U.S. policy on a range of issues outside the sensitive area of Sino-U.S. relations, focusing in particular on the President's Vietnam position* and his policy reports to Congress. Comment on these annual messages, including a 30 January PEOPLE'S DAILY Commentator article on r_he State of the Union and Budget messages, has been more authori`ative and thorough than the sparse NCNA accounts last year, t}iough Peking has discreetly avoided the personal invective Chat pervaded last year's comment. In keeping with this carefully tailored comment, Chou was cautiously tactful regarding U.S. leaders during a private conversation on 31 January with a group of visiting /.'+mericans. (In line ~~ith past Chinese coverage of such sesf~ions, NCNA merely reported those present at the meeting, providing no details on Chou's comments or on the topics of the conversation.) Judging from REUTER accounts of the session, in the course of a two-hour talk Chou reflected Peking's public p~~sition on the President's eight-point peace plan for Indochina, stating that he thought "it would not be possible" to end the conflict on this basis, bur he added a favorable comparison of U.S. leaders with Soviet officials by observing that the Americans, unlike tits Soviets, had not attempted to ridicule Peking at last fall's General Assembly session. Making a bow to Kissinger as ~. "man with whom one can argue," Chou reportedly refused to be drawn in when one of the visitors described the Presidential advisor as "Nixon's Metternich," rejoining that it would be impossible for such a figure to appear today. * See the Indochina section of the TRENDS this week and last week. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: ~I~l~~~~'~'0875R00030~~~~B~ARYS1972 Along with Chou, the Chinese offici.ale meeting the American groupr- which included several members of nn organization advocating the rapid establishment of relations between Washington and Peking-- included Vice 1!oreign Minister Chiao Kuan-hua and several of the foreign ministry experts on American affairs who were in Peking's delegation to the United Nations last fall. This turn~~ut of officials was consistent with previous occasions when the Chinese practiced "people's diplomacy" with visiting Americana. PRESIDENTIAL MESSAGES Following its initia]. reaction to the President's State of tie Union message in an NCNA acco+~nt of 24 ,~anuary,* Peking has directed a volley of criticism--highlighted by the 30 January PEOPLE'S DAILY Commentator article--against the foreign policy and domestic programs put forth in the annual messages to Congress. The overall thrust of the criticism is similar to last year's commwnt in depicting the United States as a declining power beset by internal and foreign problems and _;x assailing the President for making "empty promises" in his policy si:atemente. Peking may have offered more esxtensive and authoritative comment this year to demonstrate that its invitation to the President dose not imply approval of hie policies. In line with the 24 January NCNA account of the State of the Union message, the Commentator article focused on U.S. foreign policy, attacking the President on a number of issues while avoiding any gratuitous comment on issues directly involving Sino-U .S. relations. The article discussed in some detail the President's pledge to honor existing treaty commitments, commenting that this demonstrated U.S. persistence in infringing on the sovereign rights of various countries, but it refrained from citing the Taiwan question as a case in point. Calling attention to the President's discussion of defense needs, Commentator viewed this as directed chiefly against the Soviet Union, making no attempt to draw implications concerning Chinese interests. Comment on U.S. domestic problems repeated familiar claims that the U.S. trade ir.~balance, expanding national debt, and deficit budget underlined the decline of the American economy and the weakening of American power abroad. Supporting this portrayal of U.S. decline, a 3 February NCNA account of the President's 27 January economic report echoed the keynote of the New Year's point editorial--that the world is undergoing a propitious "upheaval"--in predicting that the present "turbulent world situation" will soon develop into "ever greater upheaval." NCNA elaborated on the editorial's claim that the United States is facing growing competition from other capitalist countries and must intensify "its scramble for world hegemony" with the Soviet Union, thereby sharpening "the basic contradictions" in the world today. The notions of an "upheaval" and sharpening "contradictions" have been key elements in Peking's rationale for the invitation -o the President and its flexible mouse in the international community. * See the TRENDS of 26 January 1972, pages 17-18. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 C~~~~00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 TAIWAN ISSU~ Chou En-tai's pointed reminder on 1 February of Peking's resolve to recover Taiwan may have been intended more for the PRC's allies than for the United Stater,. Chou made his refe.-ence to Taiwan in a tonal addressed both to the Pakistani guests and to Prince Sihanouk and other Cambodians present. Observing that Cambodia, Pakistan, and China have common aims because their territories have been inva3ed and split, Chou declared in pro forma terms that the Chinese must strive to "liberate" Taiwan. In raising the Taiwan issue in this aetti.ng, Chou may have been indicating that the PRC-U.S. alinement on the Indian-Pakistani conflict and Peking's invitation to the President do not imply a willingness to compromise basic ob~ectivea. Chows message may also have been intended for the North Koreans and the North Vietnamese, who have linked their unfulfilled revolutionary goals with Peking's claim to Taiwan. This claim, :Cn fzct, was moat recently voiced by a Chinese spokesman at a reception markl.ng the North Korean army's snniversary on 7 February, when PLA Deputy Chief of Staff Chang Tsai-chun accused :-he United States of continuing its military "occupat-ion" of Taiwan and underscored Peking's determination to gai~~ control of the island. The most authoritative recent Chinese comment on the Taiwan issue was contained in an unusually lengthy passage it- the New Year's point editorial reiterating Peking's demand for a withdrawal of U.S. forces from the island and straits. The editorial reaffirmed opposition to any resolution of the issue that would dilute Peking's claim to sovereignty over the island. The editorial specifically denounced formulas advocating a solution on the basis of "one China-one Taiwan," "one China-two governments," the status of Taiwan remains to be determined, or an independent Taiwan. Peking has occasionally added or omitte~ formulas in commenting on this issue, attempting to clarify or underline its claim in the light of ongoing international developments affecting the Taiwan question. Thus, in response to publicity for a movement demanding Taiwan independence at a rime when the ROC's inter- national statue was being eroded, Peking initiated polemical attacks on the notion of Taiwan independence and incorporated it as one of t:ie formula8 found objectionable. Similarly, in response to .a Japanese shift from full support for the ROC to a position that .there is only one China but two regimes in control of different territories, Peking included the formula "one China-two governments" among its polemical targets. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 Peking's propaganda attention to these formulas and the views they encapsulate has been notably strong in the past year, reflecting concern over a possible tendency within the inter- national community to accept a permanent alienation of Taiwan from PRC sovereignty. Peking's uneasiness on this score was most sharply demonstrated last spring in reaction to a press briefing on U.S. policy Coward Taiwan by State Department spokesman Charles Bray.* Taking forcef u1 issue with Bray's statement that "the status of Taiwan remains to be determined" and is aub~ect to future international resolution, Peking did no mire than acknowledge that Bray also suggested that the Taiwan question should be resolved by agreements arrived at between the two rival Chinese sides. Peking has since given much polemical attention to the unseCtled- status formulation, grouping it in the list of formulae regularly denounced. The notion of an international resolution of the Taiwan problem raised in the Bray brief ing kas also been denounced in Chinese attacks an the Taiwan independence movement. In addition, Peking has voiced indirect criticism of thib position by persistently emphasizing that the Taiwan problem is an internal Chinese affair that "brooks no foreign interference." In notable contrast to this extensive attack on the notion that Taiwan's statue remains unsettled, Peking has remained s1~.ent on the suggestion floated in thr_ Bray brief ing that the Taiwan issue should be resolved by agreement between Peking and Taipei,. failing to take note of subsequent speculation along this line. This silence suggests Chat Peking may be deliberately leaving open the .possibility of an +.ccommodation with the rival regime that would protect the interests of those on Taiwan without compromising Peking's claim to sovereignty. Against the back- ground of indicAtions in the past that Peking would be willing to engage in direct talks with the Chinese Nationalists, and given such mayor recent developments as the seating of the PRC in the United Nations, it may be signif icant that Peking has been softening its criticism of the Taipei regime. While maintaining the basic position that Chiang Kai-shek's regime is not a legitimate government and continuing to characterize it as a "clique" and a "gang," authoritative Chinese comment no longer refers to the regime, or to Chiang himself, in Ruch terms as "traitor," "political mummy," or "political corpse"-- terms that remained in currency until early 1971. * Peking's reaction is discussed in the TRENDS of 5 May 1971, pages 11-14. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 USSR-U, S,-PRC KANMUNIST REASSURES WORLD MOVEMENT ON SOVIET DETENTE POLICY Against the background of a rising crescendo of Soviet bloc attacks on the development of Sino-U.S. relations as the dates of Preaidei:t tdixon'e tripe to Peking and Moscow draw nearer, a lengthy editorial in the year's rirst issue of KOMMUNIST offers an elaborate defense of Brezhnav's detente line and is at pains to distinguish it from the Maoist leadership's "intrigues." The editorial, in the issue of the CPSU theoretical ~ourrial signed to the press 4 January, seems addressed both to domestic part; cadres and to allied communist states whose interests could be affected by the course of Moscow's "peace program." Thus KOMMUNIST assures its readers that Soviet foreign policy moves are both "completely in keeping with the Soviet people's fundamental interests" and have already led to "an indisputable strengthening of the national liberation movement." It pictures Moscow, in the pursuit of "peaceful cooperation and negotiation" with the West, ae eschewing any "unprincipled, unstable foreign policy compromises" at the expense of either Soviet national interests or the interests of the national liberation movement. And the thrust of the point is sharpened by the editorial's specific denigration of Peking's current diplomatic ventures as self-serving politicking, motivated by "hegemonistic" ambitions and "anti-Sovietism." Elaborating the ideological rationale for Soviet foreign policy initiatives since the 24th CPSU Congress, the editorial invokes Lenin on the need to "exploit differences between opponents"--but "only the profound differences explained by the most deep-seated economic causes," for "if we attempt to exploit petty chance differences we shall end up in the position of a petty politicker and cheap-skate diplomat."* KOMMUNIST argues that "contradictions" in the capitalist world, particularly 1n the economic and political area, are more ripe for exploitation than in the past when capitalism was essentially "monolithic." It goes on to replay a theme that has been prominent in Soviet comment making the * Accusing Peking of following a non-class foreign policy, Moscow has taken the Chinese to task for extending the invitation to President Nixon as part of an effort to isolate the Soviet Union as the main enemy. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 case for improved 11.S~-Soviet relations, stating that those "imperialist politicians" who resort to threats againsC socialism are today counterbalanced in some states by proponents of coexistence who proceed from "a more sober assessment of the present balance of forces." The editorial cites Soviet relations with France, Italy, Canada, and the FRG as good examples of the successful development of relations on this bas:~s. It brings up the SALT negotiations in the same context as evidence of the CPSU's efforts to "implement disarmament," and in the same vein it observes that President Nixon's visit to Moscow in May "could open up more favorable prospects 1n relations with the United States, too." At pales to demonstrate that there is "no disparity between the CPSU's words and deeds," between its peace offensive and its support for its socialist allies and the national liberation movement, the editorial pledges Soviet loyalty to proletarian internationalism and specifically reiterates Soviet resolve to support thy: DRV and to back the Arab states against Israel. To buttress tine case for Soviet detente policy as serving the best interests of the world communist movement, in essence the dictum that what is good for the Soviet Union is good for the world movement, it contends that since Soviet foreign policy is Marxist-Leninist it organically combines the best interests of the Soviet people with those of the national liberation movement. With such allies as the DRV and GDR evidently in mind, and perhaps hardlining elements in the Soviet Union as well, it argues that consolidating peace and the people's securi*_~ represents a gain for everybody and cannot be coc.- sldered a loss for anybody but the inveterate enemies of ~.ankind. For world socialism, 1t constitutes the direct implementation of its very important foreign policy objectives and a direct guarantee of its peaceful development. Therefore, successes for the cause of peace are primarily successes for the world socialist community, a decisive factor in world politics. And in this sense the implementation of the foreign policy program advanced by the CPSU signifies the further consolidation of socialism's positions in the struggle against world imperialism and a further shift in the balance of world class forces in favor of soclalism~ CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 ? KOMIrIUNIST declares that Soviet foreign policy "has the complete support of the communists and of all the Soviet people" and is in "keeping with their fundamental interests, aspirations, and hopes." Communists, it says, "are realists" and understand that many "urgent questions still remain unresolved in U.S.-Soviet relations"--hence the need to pursue the policy of coexistence and to try to "resolve problems through negotiations." It is here that KOMMUNIST adds the caveat, for the benefit of the doubters, that our country does not seek unprincipled, unstable foreign policy compromises with the capitalist countries. Loyal to the Leninist approach, the USSR deals a firm rebuff to imperialist encroach- ments and resolutely supports the liberation movement and revolutionary forces. The implied invidious comparison is made explicit in ensuing passages contrasting Moscow's principled support for the national liberation struggle worldwide with "the flagrant disparity between Peking's practical politics" and its pretensions to leadership of world communism. The editorial does not specifically mention President Nixon's impending trip to Peking, but it points to Chinese "intrigues" with the West and to alleged U.S.-PRC collusion in the India-Pakistan conflict as evidence that "the Maoists are ready to sacrifice the national liberation movement" for their own "hegemonist aims." The editorial winds up with the stock call for heightened vigilance against "anticommunist ideological subversion." It calls on foreign policy, ideological, and propaganda organs "to raise their standard of effectiveness" in combatting Western "bridgebuilding" efforts and in countering "the ideas of military blackmail [a Chinese ;,barge against the Soviets], 'convergence,' the 'two superpowers' [Peking's label for the United States and the USSR], nationalism, and anti-Sovietism." TASS LINKS ~~NEW PURGES" TO MAO'S ANTI-SOVIET. PRO-U.S. LINE ? On the eve of President Nixon's viRit to the PRC, Moscow has intensified its efforts to discredit the Chinese leadership and to portray an ongoing internal crisis in the country linked to dissension over Maoist policies toward the Soviet Union and the United States. And it has unearthed an early quotation from Mao to indirectly warn Peking against forming an alliance Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : C~~>~~~~~75R000300~0 30 TRENDS 9 FEDRUARY 1912 with the United States that would inevitably be directed against the Soviet Union and amount to an end of the Chinese revolution. A TASS comQ-entary on internal developments in the PRC--published in the central press on 8 February and subsequently broadcast in abridged form in Mandarin to China--said that "a wave of mass purges" has spread from Peking to othtlr parts of the country. Citing Western press reports and "informed Peking sources," it alleged that Mao'e group, having won the latest round of internal strife, is now trying to rebuild the greatly depleted Chinese leadership with Its own supporters and has entrusted to a special team the Cask of preparing "black lists" of Lin Piao followers. Quoting "well-informed sources close to the Peking leadership," TASS said many people, fearful of being purged, are trying to leave the country Illegally. Stating that "high-ranking" Chinese officers who had attempted to flee the country last September and October had been arrested, Cried by a tribunal, and in most cases sentenced to death, TASS claimed Chat such "executions" have already beer,. carried out in several Chinese cities., It made no reference to the reported crash of a Chinese plane in Mongolia last September. Implying that Mao's "anti-Soviet" line and rapprochement with the United States are mayor factors in the Chinese internal struggle, TASS commented that the "wholesale purges and arrests are accompanied by the stepping up of anti-Sovietism in the PRC." At the same time, it said, Peking 1s curbing its t~nti- American propaganda "in all places where the J.S. President is going to visit 1n February." In effect warning Peking against a Sino-American deal that would redound against Soviet lntcrests and underscoring the charge that M.ao has abandoned anti-imperialism, TASS quotes the Chairman as saying at an unspecified date in the past: "Imperialists are going to fight against the Soviet Union, against the communists. If you form an alliance with the imperialists, they will urge you to go fighting to tl~e north and nothing will remain of your revolution. The situation is now clear: it is either the policy, of union. with Russia,. union with the socialist state, or the policy of union with imperialists, union with imperialism." Radio Moscow's Chinese audiences have also-heard continuing comment calculated to fan party-military tensions in the PRC, including an 8 February broadcast targeted at the PLti which pictured "the new purge in the PLA" as a tragedy both for the Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-I~~~7A~5R00030005 ~I ;1~'I'ItI~;NI)h 9 1~'I:IiItlIAIZY 19%2 ranks." Lt is apparent from last October.'s Sov:lot-I~gyptlan communique, Budapest said, that the Soviet Government 1H ready to oL?fer every assistance to "eliminate the consequonces of Israeli aggrese:Lon" but, ae Moscow continues to etr.ese, the solution must be a peaceful settlement on the basis of Security Council Resolution 242. An MTL commentary on the 3d regarded Washington's latest arms commitments to Is>:ael as causing as-Sadat domestic political difficulties because they provided ammunition to "those circles pressing for war without delay." MTI asserted that as-Sadat with difficulty opposed this pressure and insisted on a settlement bayed on Resolution 242; it was to that end, MTI added, "that he applied the means of military pressure a8 well." A commentary broadcast by Budapest in English to Europe on the 3d advanced f?.he idea Chat a Middle East solution lies in guaranteeing the existence of the state of Israel "to avoid the possibility of any repetition of the aggression and the aggressive seizure o,: territory." Also noting Soviet orienta- tion toward a political solution, the commentary declared that while Soviet support ha8 made it possible for Egypt to increase its defense capabilities, the "Egyptian defense zone. . does not represent any threat to Israel." FRENCH CP While Poland and Hungary profess an understanding of as-Sadat's domestic pressures, a L'HUMANITE article by Jacques Caubard on 25 January, in the wake of the student sit-ins and demonstrations in Egypt, assailed the Egyptian president for a variety of policy mistakes. The Cairo University incidents, it began, revealed the unrest brewing in Egypt ever since an "ambiguous policy" was embarked. upon following Nasir's death. Ticking off the errors, L'HUMANITE took as-Sadat to task for trying to win Washington's gocd will in the matter of a partial settlement an reopening the Suez Canal, and claimed that the "concessions thereby implied" constituted one of the reasons for the break last May between the president and former Arab Socialist Union leaders. Furthermore, L'HUMANITE complained of "the participation of the Egyptian army" in the "bloody opera*_ion" to reinstall Sudan's president last summer which it said increased the unrest in Egypt. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 UUNh I UU;N'I' 1 AI, Irlf LN 'I'IthNU4 9 NISBItUAI(Y I y Jl As for I~Ls dumustlc pul.lcy, L'IIUMANt'l'L point?d crltdcully to as-Sadac's abrogatJon of a number of measures dlrectvd ugnlnst h[g landownar.s and the Moslem Brotherhood and other. measures boncfiting members of the Ca.lro bourgeoisie. AN lE that worun't enough, L'NUMANiT.E added, the "polir,ica.1. organization of the 'home front'--a weak point even under. Nnsir--was making no progress." M y solution to this tense situation, the paper concluded would depend on answers to questions being asked ~y fire majority o1` the Egyptian people: With whom and how can the struggle for the survival of independence ba waged in 1972? Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CI~_,~p~~~,~~Q~15R00030001~1iP,Q61'f11;NU!{ !) I~'I~,IIIt11AItY L'J%2 .,'!9- FORCC fZFllUC1'IONS IN CUROf LOW VOLUME SOVIET COf~'WIEPIT DLAM~ES WEST FOR DELAY IN TALKS Moscow contl.nuas routinely to hull L?he dacl.uraL?ion on I;uropeun security and cooperation adopted by the participants in the 25-26 January Prague meeting of the Warsuw 1?act'e Political Con- sultative Crmmltteo. Propaganda focuses on the call for o European security conference to tl~e vireuul exclusion of tl~s document's passage on force and armaments reductions in Europe. 'Chus the 28 January statement by the CPSU Central Committee Politburo and the USSR Council of Ministers in support of the activities of the Soviet delegation at the Prague melting ignored the force-reduction issue entirely whits taking note of the call for a security conference. >3ditorials in IZV)rSTIYA on 28 January and in PRAVDA on 28 January and 3 February followed suit in their treatment of the Prague meeting The low-level propaganda touching on the force-reduction issue seams clearly aimed at placing the blame for a delay in the talks on the West. Aforeign-language commentary on 31 January, for example, charged that the forces opposing detente in Europe "cannot conceive of a European policy that is not defined in terms of blocs." These same elements, according to the commen- tary, seek to strengthen NATO and "apply a brake to the solution of the problems of reduction of arms and armed forces in Europe," Dealing with the force-reduction issue at greater length, a Moscow radio talk for Italian listeners on 2 February complained that the West has limited itself to "general phrases o?a.the desirability of reductions but has given no concrete reply--if it has replied at all--about opening real negotiations." The West's proposals "to take preliminary soundings.do.not promote the solution of the question," the commentary said. While chiding the "Western countries," presumably NATO, for failure to respond to proposals for talks on .force reductions, the commentary stres3ed, as did the Prague declaration, that-the matter "must not be the prerogative of the political-military alliances." The commentary's reference to the West's "preliminary soundings" is presumably an allusion to NATO's designation of former Secretary General Brosio as the emissary to meet with Soviet officials in Moscow to explore the force-reduction issue. Moscow propaganda in early October 1971 had acknowledged that Brosio had Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CIJNIICllI;N'I'LAL FBI4 '1'RENUS 9 IrILIiRUARY 1972 been e8loctoJ Cox this to?k, but hao since maintained a virtual silenc? on hie so far fruitles? mi?sion. Zrr g rare recent mention of tha Broeio aseigcuaent, a.Commentator article in the December 1971 issue of MEZHDllNARODNAYA ZHZZN (?igned to .the preps on 22 November) noted in passing that Brosio had~been selected to conduct "probing coneultatione"~on the quostion of force and armaments cute. Consistent with this reticence, available.Mc+ecow propaganda on the l February National Press Club speech of tho current. NATO. secretary general, Joseph Lune, hap not acknowlodged.his reference to the Aroeio mission, instead focusing on.the~elements in. the address wi~ich "reek of the cold war." A PRAVDA article reviewed by TASS on the Sth, for example, said Luna urged that preparations for a European security conference ''be dragged out. for a long.. period." And TASS commentator Kornilov on. the 2d, noting Lune' remarks on the need for increased military.oponding by the alliance's members, concluded that.the epeecb pounded."in especially sharp dissonRnce"'in the wake of ::be Warsaw Pact's Political Consultative Committe~s~neeting. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CONI~'.LUIaN's'LA1. l.~Bl:B '1'Itls'NDS 9 I!I~aiRUAIZY J.972 SOVI FT-FIG Tl~ ATY MOSCOW NOTES START OF RATIFICATION. DECRIES STRAUSS "DRO~T" In a one-sentence announcement, Moscow media on 2 February reported that the USSR Council of Ministers had approvers the Soviet-West German treaty, signed on 12 August 1970, any pre- sented it for ratification to the USSR Supreme Soviet Presidium. This Soviet action comes against the background of intensified. West German debate in connection with the beginning of the parliamentary ratification process for the Moscow and Warsaw treaties, with CDU Chairman Barzel visiting Washington to present the Bonn Opposition's~views~on the Sovie~ treaty and CSU Chairma~t Strauss offering his~own~alternative "drafC treaty." The USSR Council of Ministers' approval followed by two days the publication of what Moscow radio commentator.Zholkver described on the 3d as Strauss' "absurd proposal." In a vitriolic attack on the "revanchist" Strauss, PRAVDA's Mikhaylov on the 4th declared that this "draft treaty," among other. ,things, views the FRG-GDR and GDR-Polish borders as "'demarca- `tion lines,' the settlement of which should be postponed Moscow media note, but discount, the possibility that the Br.3ndt-Scheel coalition may not auccet.a in obtaining p.~rlia- meni:ary ratification of the two treaties. Propaganda continues to carefully avoid explicit discussion. of the "reverse linkage" issue--the notion that Bonn must now ratify the Moscow treaty before the USSR signs the final quad-.- ripartite protocol on the Big Four Berlin agreement, turning . around Bonn's prior insistence on a.Berlin settlement before the treaty can be ratif ied, However, Zholkver's widely broad-. cast commentary on the 3d made one of.Moscow's moat direct public allusions yet to the reverse linka;;e issue. Pointing. out that the "basic," "all-European" importance of the Moscow treaty is the most unequivocal confirmation-.o#-the inviolability of the current European borders--that is, recognition of.the . postwar status quo in Central and Eas:. Europe--Zholkver declared that the treaty is already exerting.a "f avorable influence" on the course of European affairs even before its ratification, reflected, for example, in the Big Four agreement on "West Berlin." Zholkver cited an explicit cause-and-effect relation;--. ship between the USSR-FRG treaty and.the agreement on Berlin, implying that without the former the latter cannot. be fulfillred: "Everyone now recognizes that this [agreement] became possible . as a result of the conclusion of the treaty between the Soviet Union and the FRG." Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Cf~NlriDl;N'l':~AL 1~'B15 TiiBNDS 9 FEBRUARY 1972 Dier.ussing tho internal Weat German debate.ou th? ratification ~~f the treritioe, routine Sovier propaganda.hae stressed that an . ever-increasing majority of~the~West.G?rman population, as reflected in Woat German public opinion polls, favore.ratifi- ~~ation. Tho comment has also cited reF3ated-public.reaesurances... 'oy leaders of the Brandt-Scheel coalition that ratification will be successful, has pointed out that Barzel return?d empty-handed . i~om hie week-long visit to the United States at the end of. January in an attempt to get Washi.:gton's s~upp art for the Bonn Opposition's stAnd, and has noted that even the CDU/CSU Opposition is not united in opposing tha treaties. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4 CON)! ZpCNTZAL FBZS T1tEivi~S 9 FCBRUARY 1972 TOPIC IiV BRiFF SALT CONNhJN I QUE Consistent with Moscow's current low-keyed treatment of the strategic arms limitation talks (SAINT), no Soviet propaganda. fanfare has accompanied the windup of the sixth session of t:he negotiations in Vienna on 4 February. TASK and Moscow radio on the 4th promptly carried the text of the communique, which appeared in the central press the next day. The communique notes that in accord with the 20 May agreement between the United States and the USSR, the two sides continued discussing questions concerning a treaty on the limitation of ABM systems and "tnterim agreement on some measures in the field of limitati~~n of strategic offensive weapons." It says that "I~rogrese has been made on some questions" and that the delegations "express resoluteness to continue efforts for ru Ching an agreement." The talks are to resume in Helsinki on 28 March, according to th~ communique. To date, there has been no followup comment fr~~~: Moscow. The last two SALT sessions--which ended on 24 September and 20 May 1971-- occasioned a low volume of comment hailing the progress at the talks. Approved For Release 2000/08/09: CIA-RDP85T00875R000300050006-4