WASHINGTON POST ARTICLE: U.S. ESCALATES WAR IN LAOS, HILL DISCLOSES; CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 14 APRIL 1970

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
4
Document Creation Date: 
December 12, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 2, 2002
Sequence Number: 
2
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 20, 1970
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3.pdf658.35 KB
Body: 
i,1 WASHINGTON POST Approved For Release 290/R221c~IA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3 U.S0 Esca1ates reasons unrelated to national security. 'h iii Censorship took out ofte transcript all summary figures ar" ra iLaos - on costs; every refernece to the Central Intelligence Agen-. cy's operations, which include training, equipping, supplying. js1ose and directing Gen. Vang Pao's "clandestine" army of UP os : ;., 36,000 00 Me o tribesmen in Laos: all references to the use of Thailand's forces in Laos; do-1 wasmnaton Pose Staff writer from Laos; .figures showing SEN. STUAiT SYMINGTON The United States is engaged in "heavy escalation" of the escalation of American air . . . relelases testimony its air war in Laos while trying to de-escalate the war in ingk pauses""aor therha t in th0 The SymiY~gton subcommit- Vietnam, a Senate inquiry disclosed yesterday. air war against North Viet- tee was focused primarily subcom on When the American bombing of North Vietnam ended nam, 1' other critical facts. the war in the north. But both on Nov. 1, 1968, U.S. air power shifted to hit the predom, Por,ions of the story can be portions of the Laotian con- reconstructed or estimated, flict interact with the war in inant.ly North Vietnamese troops in Laos, the record however, despite the deletions. Vietnam, militarily and diplo- ;shows. The, U.S. bombing of Laos, testified William H. Sul- A typical deletion in the matically. Laos, secretly begun in 1964 by livan, former ambassador in " r total cost of all U.S. Sullivan, who worked on the East Asian transcript reads: fPresident Johnson, was report- ry of and now state for assistant s, ed to have doubled in Mav, activities in Laos, including 1962 1962 ador' Geneva to Laos accords, became m-amba ~1969, and nearly tripled last and Pacific affairs. air operations against the no bar, ssad i-to Laos Leonard . 1964, August. After more than 100 meet- Chi Minh Trail, is about (de Unger. i ings with administration offi- feted) billion a year. Of this, A Senate head Relations cials, Symington's subcommit- leted) billion y dear billion North Vietnam failed to subcommittee headed by Sen. - tee on U.S. commitments Stuart Symington (D Moe Yen is related directly to our ef- comply with the 1962 Geneva terday made public the van- abroad salvaged 237 pages of forts In South Vietnam." neutrality agreements "from censored transcript. U.S. air strikes in Laos have their inception," Sullivan testi--month `s results e six President; Nixon pierced the. been reported to run up to 600 fied, withdrawing only a token str trug ggle wit h h the Executive tive number and retaining About over . Branch releasing testi? censorship deadlock when he or more sorties a day. 6,000 troop, while the United mony taken en last October about disclosed, on March 6, ,a few The transcript shows that in States oops but all its bed the secret U.S. role in Laos. selected portions of U.S. activ- northern Laos the average sor?. men. It shows that by agreement ities in Laos, emphasizing that tie c6sts'$3,190 and delivers 2.2 United States, in No- with Laotian Premier Sou- they began under "two pre-'tons of bombs. This would add Th~ vious administrations." up to a cost of $1,914,000,f or a vember, 1962, agreed to provide. va Phouma the United But the new record shows'day of 600 air sorties. supplies and repair parts for ,States responde ponded in 1st viola- that the war in Laos involves President Nixon on March 6 U.S.-supplied equipment and tions of 1962 Gen viola- far more than "1,040 Ameri-originally said that "No Amer- other material "as permitted" 'cod Laotian of an Geneva neutrality by ac- cans . . stationed in Laos" lean stationed in Laos had under they Geneva accords, them tooo. . The U.S. as the President's guarded 'ever been' killed in ground said Sullivan. Then in 1963 share of this North Vietnamese and Pathet violating statement listed. combat operations." But the decision ha s bout ' The hearings disclose, as inquiry, confirming Lao troops broke the accords, figures "billions of f dollars," and about he said, by attacking neutral- 200 American lives, the record subcommittee sources put it disclosed in the dispute over forces and "in 1964 North that "tens of thousands" of that statement, shows there Vist ietnam began markedly tol indicates. Americans are involved in the have been "something under : et -_ e support to the tiro, the American Ambassa training, advisory, supply and , killed in Laos." Most of these dor in Vientiane virtually has intelligence work - operating were airmen, but nearly 50 are operated as co-commander of from Thailand, from South listed as "civilian and ?mili- the war in northern Laos: he controls a U.S. mission of air, Vietnam and from U.S. air- lacy personnel assigned to craft carriers at sea. the U.S. mission in Laos.. ground and intelligence advis- Symington expressed the. There are "two wars" in ers that coordinates American hope, in making the transcript Laos. One is. what began as a and Laotian air and ground there n Laos; public,. that it. will help pre- "civil war". in the north, in operations "another Vietnam." which the main Communist r the northern arranges trainingbases (p s; in No conclusions or findings forces consist of constantly in- marine s foir in at A Thailand) of Lao troops, and accompany the report, partly creasing numbers of North Vi. supplies American military because it is incomplete. The etnamese troops; this is the and economic funds to Laos subcommittee staff noted that air and ground war that the that are larger than the Lao- It had gained release of 90 per American Embassy mission in cent of the transcript, but Vientiane is deeply engaged in tions' own contribution to chief consultant Walter 11, running, The other war in their nation's economy. Pincus stated In a covering, Laos is the American air war The Laotian Premier "made letter that the public's "right against the so-called Ho Chi d t us it clear that he wante ~: ~h}~}~ o }~, t) 1 say as little as possihRr'I 1X to avo 1, 1 / ,~~l t . r 2ii~ ib* PA j American military action , in to avoi e s W 99 administrations or officials for North to South.yjetnam. {pro-t,vmniuula.J [ aUl.. and its use of the Ho Chi Minh trail .." 411n the same spirit, of pro- portionate response to North Vietnamese violations of the agreements," Sullivan testi- fied, "and as part of our effort to assist south Vietnam in Its. defense," the United States; began "air operations" and considerably expanded its ground support. Sullivan insisted the United States is free to "terminate" its operations in Laos at any time. The "fi.rst U.S. reconnais- sance flight was flown over the 0106 2p3rt of Laos May 19, 1964, after consultation with con Uinued Approved For Release 2002/01/22 : CIA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3 Primo Minister Souvannalheing very carefully slruc- Phouma the previous day," tured," Sullivan testified. The agreement held admira- That was acknowledged by bly for six years. The Russians the United States on June 6 of know what was going on, the that year-when the first "un- record shows; So did the North armed" plane was shot down. Vietnamese and Pathet Lao. But armed escort planes were The American public was de- secretly added in the mean- pendent upon its newsmen-if time; the first of these was they could pierce the secrecy shot down June 7, 1964. barrier. By agreement between Sou- Sullivan gave the adminis- vanna and Ambassador Unger, tration's principi explanation said Sullivan, it was decided for official secrecy about that "Firing on ground targets American operqtions in Laos: by the escort aircraft would to maintain the "initial under- not be acknowledged and standing we had, with the Sovi- would be kept out of discus- ets" in 1962 about neutralizing sion with the press on grounds Laos. Even if a Soviet official of being an operational mat- "reads things in the 'newspa. ter." pers . . . he does not have to "The United States began take any official cognizance of bombing of Lao territory them. But if they are made di, along the Ho Chi Minh trail in rectly by U.S. officials he does early 1965," Sullivan said, ini- have to take cognizance of tially bombing jointly with the them..." Royal Lao Air Force, For the United States to said "It involves no stationing of U.S. combat forces, no com- mitments and, in comparison with Vietnam, a fairly modest and inconspicuous deployment of personnel and resources." But Col. Robert L. F. Tyrell, chief U.S.. air attache in Laos and actually the U.S. air oper- ations commander there under the ambassador, testified that in addition to conducting air strikes in Laos from multiple bases in Thailand, "we have had aircraft operating from Danang, Pleiku (in South Vietnam) ... and also from the 7th Fleet." The air operations center In Laos is "staffed by Lao and Americans," said Tyrell. The testimony revealed that logistics support for U.S. army and air attaches In Laos has been covertly handled from ]American bases in Thailand, were the "cover title" ' of dep- iuty chief of the American mil- itary assistance group in Thai- land conceals the Laos sup- port function. In Thailand, Lao are taught to fly, their troops are trained, their planes are repaired. The tesitmony also showed that President Nixon's March 6 statement about the number of Americans "stationed" in Laos hides the fact that other American personnel-the number was censored-"drift in and out" of Laos on "tempo- rary" assignment. Sullivan testified: "The orig- inal understanding between my predecessor and the Prime Minister of Laos was premised upon statements being admissions publicly to edd ue." He did, f Symington said he discov-! ered in 1965, when he was In! Southeast Asia during the 37-~ day halt in the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, that in "one day there were, nevertheless, 378 strikes against Laos, so that must have meant, at that time, the planes which had been hitting North Vietnam were shifted to hitting Laos." "Heavy Escalation" - In 1069, he said "the figures which Col. Tyrell shows em- phasize there has been a heavy escalation of our mili- tary effort in Laos." The record disclosed that the United States is not only pay- ing more than half the cost of operating the Royal Govern- ment of Laos, but until this year il; was paying, as well, two-thirds of the costs of operating all of the Laotian embagsles in foreign countries. Symington said that as the result - of th tr sf ti e an orma on Vietnam continues to deny it t h a t t Laos has experienced has some 67,000 troops there,, ih h th U S i l said Sullivan, "gives them a totally - unfair, totally 'legal protection." . ' "In the meantime you are deceiving the American peo- ple and the Congress," count-.' ered Sen. J. W. Fulbright. Similarly, Sen. Symington. said:. "We. say we are an open society, and the enemy is a closed society ... Here we are telling Americans they must fight and die to maintain an' open society, but not telling, our people what we are doing." Sullivan countered; "I-must - say, Mr. Chairman, -that I- con sider.these hearings as a very sincere token of an open so- ciety." Symington, who is a'mem- ber of both the Senate Armed rug e . nvo vement in Its war,' it Is now "impos sible for Laos to live without the United States'." ' , , Services Committee and For- eign Relations Committee and. has inspected U.S.- operations, in Laos, was surprised to find' that t h e s e activities were, greater than he knew. He told Sullivan that he had not.known that U.S. forward air controllers "were working with Laotian troops in the- planes with them, targeting Laotian bombers." The record showed the, American forward air control-; lers were not even requested by the Laotians, but that the' U.S. "country team determined they were necessary . " .A simiar indication of Amer- ican control at both the re- questing and the complying) I Pao "was considering moving bd F Ref a o2M/#t$fi2 lines" but the. American Em-, bassy urged,' :him:..'Sto contin? CIA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3 April 14, 1970, CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-, SENATE aerospace industry can make a meaningful long-range contribution in pre-fabricated housing field, especially in the electrical, water and air cooling systems for such homes.... aerospace managment and work- ers who can build 30 engines for Apollo 11 most certainly have the work experience and required skills to move in the direction of providing a new power source for automo- biles ... a power source that is cheap, effec- tive and clean. And certainly a team that can 'house' astronauts can come up with a mass rapid transit vehicle to 'house' commuters, especially for those who lack job opportuni- ties because of no serviceable public trans- portation." We are attempting to say that we must view a healthy employment picture in terms of a balanced, diversified economy, recogniz- ing that national security is an all encom- passing concept. We must bring balance and reason into economic growth . we must bring enlightenment and imagination into our policy decisions. Perhaps a young 17th Century French philosopher and mathematician said it all when he observed: "We do not display great- ness by going to one extreme, but in touching both at once, and filling all the intervening space." Mr. Chairman and members of the commit- tee, we appreciate your kind attention to our remarks and again wish to commend you for holding hearings on the most vital issue of the tiny. Thank you. LAS O NEXT STEP IN THE BIG MUDDY" Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I in- vite attention to an excellent article on Laos, written by the Senator from Cali- fornia (Mr. CRANSTON) which was pub- lished in the Nation on March 30, 1970. The article, subtitled "Next Step in the Big Muddy, ' lucidly sets forth the haz- ards of the Laos situation and the danger that the United States might be drawn into a wider war in Southeast Asia. I ask unanimous consent that Senator CRAN- sToN's article be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the Article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: LAos: NEXT STEP IN THE BIG MUDDY (By Senator ALAN CRANSTON) WASHINGTON.-The people spoke In.. 1968, and they spoke against the war in Vietnam. But now It is 1970, and American men are still fighting and dying there. Some troops have been withdrawn, but the Nixon Admin- istration has never made it plain that it in- tends to get all our fighting men out of Vietnam, this year, next year, or any year. It, like the administration before it, seems either unable or unwilling to muster the courage to change our course. Now there looms the danger of a new Viet- nam in Laos. The war in Laos and the war in Vietnam are separate parts of the same conflict. The Administration, it seems to me, is pur- suing a double-risk policy that could keep American troops in Southeast Asia for years. On the one hand, there is convincing evi- dence that U.S. military involvement in Laos is being escalated in much the same way that we escalated in Vietnam in 1964. On the other hand, Vietnamization is beginning to look more and more like a convenient way for us to create an army of`South Vietnamese mer- cenaries to continue a conflict that is neither in our national interests nor in those of the Vietnamese people. The war between Communist and other factions in Laos had been sputtering along in a sleepy fashion for years, both sides taking pains to avoid each other whenever possible. Sometimes one side would win, sometimes the other; it depended on the season of the year and the zeal of the local commanders. In recent years, however, there have been alarming changes in the situation. The United States has created a secret mercenary army of Meo tribesmen. It is commanded by Laotian officers, but its men are recruited, paid, armed, trained and advised by the CIA, and by U.S. military officers. The regu- lar Laotian army seems to have been re- placed on the battle lines by these Meo mercenaries. That, Nationalist Chinese and Filipino troops also are reported in Laos. Last summer, the Meo went on the offen- sive and overran North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao positions on the Plain of Jars. The Meo displayed more initiative and de- termination than is generally seen in Laos. Predictably, the offensive alarmed the other side. A counterattack was launched and dur- ing the last few weeks, our badly extended mercenaries were pushed back. So the vio- lence on the ground has increased, in part because of American involvement in the war. While U.S. efforts were helping to escalate the ground war in Laos, American planes were stepping up the air war at an incredible rate. American air activity there jumped from 4,500 sorties a month when the United States was still bombing North Vietnam, to between 12,500 and 15,000 a month today. Much of the increase is our response to ex- panded use of the Ho Chi Minh Trail by the North Vietnamese, but American bombing missions into other parts of Laos are also sig- nificant factor's. The exact nature of the bombing is not known because, like the other aspects of our involvement in Laos, the operations are shrouded in secrecy. In almost every way, the war in Laos has been a secret war. The Administration has kept it that way because the United States signed a treaty declaring we would keep our military personnel out of Laos. -Specifically, the Geneva Accords, signed by the United States and thirteen other coun- tries in 1962, state that "the introduction of foreign regular and irregular troops, foreign pare-military formations and foreign mili- tary personnel into Laos is prohibited." The treaty defines foreign military personnel td include "members of foreign military mis- sions, foreign military advisors, experts, in- structors, consultants, technicians, observers and any other foreign military persons. .." In short, the United States is violating the Geneva Accords` and has been violating them for many years. So the Administration has tried to keep the press at bay and to avoid testifying publicly on the real nature of our involvement in Laos. The Communists, of course, know ? what we are doing. It's no military secret to them that we bomb them or that our mercenaries attack them. The Communists are violating the Geneva Accords-and won't admit it. The United States is violating the Accords- and won't admit it. "Civilian" pilots hired by the CIA and AID fly our mercenaries and their supplies around the country, and the government covers the whole thing up as a relief operation to pro- vide supplies for refugees. When the planes are shot down, the embassy in Vientiane simply attributes their loss to bad weather conditions. The Administration conveniently forgets how this practice distorts and per- verts the whole concept of foreign assistance. Meanwhile, our military planes blast away from the air with a considerable degree of immunity. There are those who seem really not to care if the same friendly village is hit three times-as actually happened in Laos-or if women and children in unfriendly villages are burned to death. Money for the secret army and the disguished air flights is buried in CIA and AID budgets, hidden from S 5687 the people and their elected representatives. A congenial host perpetuates this sham by piously repeating from time to time that "there are no foreign troops in Laos except North Vietnamese." Souvanna Phouma knows perfectly well. that his statement is nonsense. Enterprising reporters have proved it nonsense. Senators and Representatives know it is nonsense--and are asking the Ad- ministration to set the record straight. President Nixon has responded by issuing what he calls a precise description of Ameri- can activities in Laos.' He reported, among other things, that "no American stationed in Laos has ever been killed in ground com- bat operations" A day later, the Los Angeles Times disclosed that Capt. Joseph K. Bush, Jr., an American military adviser, was killed in ground combat at Muong Soui, on the western edge of the Plain of Jars, on Feb- ruary 11, 1969. The White House acknowl- edged that Captain Bush had been killed by hostile fire, and stated that the President had not been told of his death. He, like the American public, learned about it from an American press which, fortunately, has re- fused to be intimiated by the Administra- tion's efforts to soften or silence its report- ing of the wars in Southeast Asia. The White House then went on to argue that Captain Bush was not killed in Laotian "ground combat operations." However, he was awarded a Silver Star posthumously,' and the citation says that he killed two enemy soldiers before he fell while defending a compound at Muong Bout. It is impossible, perhaps, to define "ground combat," there being so many ways to inter- pret the mission of men who, in fact, engage in ground combat. But there is a second nicety of definition in Mr. Nixon's state- ment 'that we must not gloss over. The three key words are "stationed in Laos." I have asked the President how many men not "stationed in Laos" have been killed there. The question needs answering because I have talked with young Americans who were stationed in Vietnam and who tell me they were sent across the border into Laos. They say they were armed, and on military missions. They say they were under orders that, if captured, they were to tell the enemy that they had become lost, misread their maps, and strayed into Laos. They were to say that they thought all along that they were inside Vietnam. One former GI tells me has was sent with others to pick up American dead in Laos and to bring them back to Vietnam. The slain would then be counted as casualties in Viet- nam, not casualties in Laos. The President's statement on Laos also sought to persuade us that most of the inter- vention on the ground in Laos is by North Vietnam, not by the United States. He de- clared that 67,000 North Vietnamese troops are in Laos, and compared this to what he declared to be a total of 1,040 Americans directly employed by the U.S. Government in Laos, or employed on contract by our gov- ernment, or by government contractors, in Laos. But Mr. Nixon rnade no reference to our army of Meo mercenaries. They change the comparison considerably. Estimates of Meo troop strength run as high as 40,000 men. I have asked the President to divulge the maximum number of Meo tribesmen that have been on the American payroll during the Johnson administration, and during his own Administration. There are those in the present Adminis- tration who seem determined to make an- other bad little war into another bad big war. But it won't be as easy to embroil the nation as deeply in Laos as it has become em- broiled in Vietnam. The U.S. Senate has made it more difficult for this Administra- tion-or any adminnistration-to send full battalions and divisions of American troops into Laos. Congress adopted an amendment to the Armed Services Appropriations bill, Approved For Release 2002/01/22 : CIA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3 S 5688 Approved For Release 2002/01/22 : CIA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE April 14, 1970- Offered by Sen. Frank Church of Idaho, stipu- lating that none of its funds could be used to Introduce ground combat troops into Laos or Thailand without prior consent of Con- But even with the Senate amendment, even with the strong concern and criticism in Congress, and the accurate and deter- mined reporting by the press, 'we're already knee-deep in a new Big Muddy. Meanwhile, the old Big Muddy oozes along, sucking up lives and dollars at a steady rate.. .There is a great danger that the Nixon Ad- ministration still seeks victory in Vietnam; at the least, it is obviously planning to use American artillerymen, airmen and support troops to prolong the conflict. Under Richard Nixon, Vietnamization has become just another way of paying for- eign -troops to fight a war the Administra- tion wants to wage. In Laos we hire mer- 'cenaries; In Vietnam a more sophisticated method is used. The Saigon generals forcibly conscript Vietnamese boys into their army. We pay their salaries indirectly through for- eign assistance; we provide their arms, equip- ment and training directly. Then these youngsters go out and do the dirty work for us and for the repressive dictatorship which most of them dislike and distrust. The dirty work, of course, is to kill other Vietnamese. The President's form of Vietngmiza,tion will not end the war. It will prolong it. His form of Vietnamization does not mean that we are going to pull all our troops out. Some- ,inCluding combat troops--will, be in Viet- nam Indefinitely. A secret timetable is not a timetable at all; It is a device, whereby an administration attempts to claim credit for the things it does, meanwhile hiding all that it isn't doing or could bedoing faster. It is as if a railroad announced that all its trains were running on time-but refused to publish a timetable, President Nixon's form of Viptnaipization means we shall continue to prop up the Thieii-Ky clique-as repressive and unrepre- sentative today as it has ever been. I would support a policy of providing a truly repre- sentative government in South Vietnam with enough assistance to match the outside as- sistance given to insurgents who seek its Overthrow. But the said fact is that there is no representative government in Saigon, nor any sign that one will emerge in the future. The sea fact is that, instead of mov- ing toward peace in Vietnam, we are simply moving toward another kind of war-a war that resembles on a much larger scale the conflict in Laos. Unlike the war in Laos, the war in Vietnam is no secret. The American people are aware of it, hate it, and want us. to get out of it. After a grace period for the Nixon Adminis- tration that lasted ten months, Americans and their elected officials renewed their de- mands for an end to that war. Reacting to this pressure, the Administra- tion began the gradual withdrawal of front- line American combat troops-while our air and support troops remain the same. Fewer American lives are being lost, the number of troops in Vietnam is going down instead of up, and the immediacy of the war begins to fade from public concern. To keep it fading, the Administration has attacked the mass media-which has re- ported the war to the. Americanpeople as its reporters have seen it. At the same time, reporters In Laos who tried to tell the story found that they had thereby forfeited some of their rights to protection as American citizens. On February 24, the press reported that one plane per minute was leaving the secret American-run base. at Long Cheng in Laos. It also revealed that many armed Americans in civilian clothes were active in the battle then sputtering on the Piain, of -Jars. The plucky reporters who filed that story were arrested by Laotians. And the American ambassador in Laos promptly declared: "The American Mission has lost any interest in the press whatsoever because of what happened this afternoon." I was under the illusion that embassies overseas were supposed to protect American citizens, not to wash their hands of them. But the secrecy of this dirty little war has prob- ably given Ambassador Godley the illusion that he is a Roman proconsul. It's no wonder then that he speaks more like Pontius Pilate than like an American official. It is the kind of mentality that got us into the Southeast Asian quagmire in the first place. The American press continues to report on American activities in Laos and Vietnam. But it will take more than journalism to keep Laos from becoming another Vietnam, and to keep Vietnam from turning into a giant Laos. Specific steps must be taken: All our fighting men must be withdrawn from both countries. The withdrawal must be on a timetable announced in advance. If a true representative government should come to power in South Vietnam, the United States should provide enough assistance to match the outside assistance given to in- surgents seeking its overthrow. It may be more hygienic for us at home to know that our tax dollars, which pay for bombs and napalm and foreign mercenaries, are responsible for more and more of the kill- ing in Vietnam, and American foot soldiers for less and less. I submit that to the Viet- namese girl who is raped, it make little dif- ference whether Americans of South Viet- namese assault her. And it makes little difference to the people of a Vietnamese or Laotian village whether the American weap- ons that kill them are handled by American citizens or American mercenaries. They are dead: we helped kill them. Surely that is all that counts to those who may survive. And it is all that should count for us. No matter how you slice it, or paper it over, or patch it up, this is an unjust, immoral and unnecessary war. I am truly sorry for the people of Southeast Asia who bear the bur- den of it. They deserve better leadership than either side in the conflict can give them. But we cannot select their governments for them, and we cannot order their societies for them. That is their responsibility, not ours. Our first responsibility is to peace. The Nixon policy will not bring peace- --it will only bring more war and more killing. As long as we continue to support an unpopu- lar government in Saigon and as long as we refuse to send a top-level negotiator to Paris, there will be no peace in Vietnam, Our second responsibility is to ourselves. And we cannot begin to meet that responsi- bility until we get our troops all the way out of Southeast Asia. The issue is not whether Americans fight the war or Vietnamese light the war. The issue is the war itself. The issue cannot be diffused. It will not go away. It will haunt the dreams of a generation of Americans for years to come. We shall not be whole again until it is ended. We must at last be true to the best of our heritage, not to the worst. THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF THE KATYN FOREST MASSACRE Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, in April 1940, the Soviet Union cruelly and ruth- lessly murdered more than 15,000 Polish officers. These young men were com- pletely defenseless, having been captured during the Stalin-Hitler rape of Poland which began in September 1939, The site of this infamous deed is a name which still brings shudders of revulsion to free men: The mass graves were located in the Katyn Forest in eastern Poland. Invading German armies discovered the mass graves at Katyn containing more than 4,000 corpses,. The Interna- tional l ed,Cross was summoned and in- vestigated, fixing the blame on the Rus- sians. The Reds made an effort to lay this vicious massacre at the feet of the German armies, but subsequent investi- gations, including one by Congress, leave little doubt that the Soviets were re- sponsible. We also learned that the Rus- sians loaded more than 11,000 bodies of these young patriots on barges, sailed them into the White Sea, and sank them by shelling them. Mr. President, on the 30th anniversary of this melancholy event, it is well for Congress to remember this tragedy and pay tribute to the brave young men who fought and died defending Polish liberty. When we sit down to negotiate with the Soviet Union at Vienna and elsewhere, we should remember that we are dealing with a regime which countenance mass murder and used mass murder as an in- strument of its national policy. World War II began, as we know, in defense of Polish freedom. It ended in the subjugation of Poland. The Russian masters of Poland doubtless had an easier time setting up their puppet regime because of Katyn. Had these young, vigorous, talented, and freedom- loving officers survived the war, they doubtless would have opposed the ty- rant' of a Stalin puppet regime in 1945, just as they fought a Hitler-Stalin take- over of Poland in 1939. WOMEN AND THE LAW Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, equal justice under law is one of the funda- mental principles on which our Nation was founded. The legal realities, unfor- tunately, sometimes fall short of this principle. I am speaking of legal discrimination against women. In a most interesting article, entitled "Women and the Law," in the March issue of the Atlantic, Diane Schulder, a New York attorney, discusses flagrant injustices in the areas of employment, civil rights, welfare law, criminal law, and abortion law. It is time to stop treating women as second-class citizens. To all persons con- cerned with injustice in American so- ciety, I commend this thoughtful ar- ticle. I ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: WOMEN AND THE LAW (By Diane Schulder) The United States Constitution once blatantly described the black man as three fifths of a man and the Supreme Court de- cided that black people did not qualify as "citizens." Women in our legal history have not been treated much better. Most sex-dis- criminating laws have been explained as "protective" of women; women's innate in- feriority has been assumed. The Supreme Court made this clear in 1908: .. , history discloses the fact that woman Approved For Release 2002/01/22 : CIA-RDP72-00337R000300010002-3