Department of State
AIRGRAM SECRET A-259
TO :
Department of State
INFO :
FROM : AmConGcn
DACCA DATE: 12 March 1968
SUBJECT : An Exercise in Conspiracy: A Resume'
REF :
PROLOGUE
Late on the evening of December 8, Mirza Rameez said
good night to his girl friend on a dark
Early on the morning of December 9, an ex-college
teacher was roused by a frightened young man, one of his former students. The
young man told his former professor that the police were arresting his friends
"for a political plot" and that they were looking for him. He asked
what he should do. The teacher told him that if he did not want to be arrested
he should go "underground". The young man was clearly puzzled. He had
no idea of how one goes underground. His associates and the men of his
political party had not considered that their plot might be discovered; hence
they had made no preparation for flight. Besides, the young man added,
"only the communists go underground".
On December 22, a once bouyant young man now in
virtually a catatonic trance after two weeks of intermittent torture, mumbled
to a young Dacca attorney that "he had not meant to talk", dumbly
begging his fellow Bengali's forgiveness.
The young Bengalis were quieter than usual at the
In the quiet pre-dawn hours of a morning in early
January, army troops armed with submachine guns and rifles removed a slight manacled
man from the
Central Jail where he had been locked up for almost
two years. Word of his removal passed through the city b} the "bazar
telegraph"-"The army has taken Mujib"-but no one knew where.
Several law students met at a room at Dacca U's Iqbal
Hall and asked themselves what could they do about the army's seizing Mujib.
The old means of protest-mass meetings and demonstrations-seemed somehow
inadequate; but no one could suggest alternate tactics and some of the boys
were afraid. Some "old boys" (graduates) now in the Awami League and
teachers had been sympathetic, but had offered little help. `Better lie low for
awhile", they had been told. Still they had to make some protest: "We
Bengalis can't take this lying down".
Bewilderment, frustration, and fear again beset the
young educated
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of some
low-key investigation, numerous conversation, and cross checks, in Dacca and in
Chittagong, we conclude that an indeterminate number of Bengali civil and
military personnel, lower echelon politicians, and businessman were scheming
and talking for at least two years about overthrowing the Government in East
Pakistan and establishing an independent East Pakistan state. Some of the
alleged conspirators whose background we are familiar with are malcontent: and
personality problems. The plotting itself reflected naivete and inexperience.
The plot was nowhere near consumation when it was broken apart by the arrests
last December. Indian involvement, if any, in the scheming was probably
confined to the supply of some money to some of the would-be conspirators.
We conclude also that there existed no assassination
plot against President Ayub during his December visit to
GOP security - agencies probably learned of the
scheming through the loosemouthed talk of an unstable ex-Pakistan Air Force
officer, Mirza M. Rameez, who ` until December was Chittagong District Manager
of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA). The Special Branch of the East
Pakistan Police had Rameez under surveillance for several month, prior to his
arrest on December 8.
Irrespective of how amateurish the plotting may have
been, the fact that it existed is significant. The traditional Bengali
animosity toward the West Pakistani-dominated Central Government ha, now been
joined by extra-legal activity. The legacy of the conspiracy and the
consequences of the prospective military trials could widen the gulf of
mistrust between the two provinces. Moreover, if Sheikh Mujibur Rahman is '
dragged into a public trial for obvious political reasons without a convincing
case against him he could he enshrined as a martyr to the cause of
Source: The American Papers – Secret and
Confidential India.Pakistan.