Memorandum
from Harold Saunders and Samuel Hoskinson of the
National Security Council Staff to the President's Assistant for National
Security Affairs (Kissinger)/1/
/1/
Source: National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 597,
Country Files, Middle East, India, Vol. IV, 1 Jul-30 Nov 71. Confidential.
Sent for information.
Washington, July
3, 1971.
SUBJECT
Refugee Aid in India and Relief Assistance
for East
Pakistan
India
You have
agreed in principle to the distribution of U.S.-supplied food to the East
Pakistani refugees by Indian Government agencies, but have asked "what
this means."
The U.S. voluntary agencies and
international humanitarian organizations simply do not have the capacity to
distribute on a timely basis all of the 105,000 metric tons of wheat being sent
to the refugees. Only the Indian Government agencies experienced in food
storage, handling and distribution and actually running the refugee camps can
handle the size that this job has become. The U.S. voluntary agencies and
international agencies will continue to play a vital role in supplementary
feeding and in coordinating international contributions, but the main burden
for distribution must now fall on the Indians themselves.
In terms
of mechanics, this means that we will at least in part be replacing the
substantial amount of food that the Indian Government has already distributed
from its tight emergency and price control stocks and which the U.S. voluntary and
international organizations have diverted from their important normal feeding
programs in India. They have done this in
order to move quickly to stave off famine among the refugees until emergency
supplies from abroad actually arrive in India (there is a several
week lag). The rest of the food will upon arrival go directly to the U.S. voluntary agencies,
international organizations with feeding programs and to the Indian Government
agencies for immediate shipment to and distribution within the refugee camps.
The U.S., as part of its food
agreement, will insist that the UN High Commissioner for refugees have access
to distribution records.
There is,
of course, also a political angle with the Pakistanis but as the magnitude of
the refugee problem has become increasingly clear it has receded considerably. U.S. assistance has all been
in response to several international appeals by U Thant
and under the general auspices of the program established by the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees. Moreover, the Pakistan Government has insisted that
they only have the army distribute any food we put into East Pakistan and can
hardly, therefore, complain about Indian Government involvement with refugee
feeding.
In short,
what this boils down to is that distribution in part through Indian official
agencies is the only approach mechanically possible under the circumstances. We
will keep the UNHCR and the voluntary agencies intimately involved and insist
on the best safeguards possible under the circumstances.
Pakistan
At the
same time, Maury Williams has reactivated the cyclone disaster committee of
last fall to prepare for the contingency of large-scale food shortages in East
Pakistan later this year./2/
/2/ The
Consulate General in Dacca reported on July 6 that
there was a serious threat of famine in East Pakistan, and that prospects for
averting widespread hunger were not good. (Telegram 2507 from Dacca; ibid., RG
59, Central Files 1970-73, SOC 10 PAK)
Facts on
the situation are still incomplete, but these seem to be the main elements:
-People
throughout East
Pakistan
are probably already experiencing food shortages and the situation in the
cyclone-affected areas is especially severe.
-The most critical problem is getting food off the ships, through the
port of
Chittagong and on to distribution
points inland. Port operations are resuming only very slowly, the road and rail
transportation out of Chittagong is disrupted and, for a
variety of reasons including Bengali insurgent operations, inland water
transportation is unable to make up the difference.
-The political situation may also provide a major impediment to food
distribution since the West Pakistanis are clearly not well informed about some
important aspects of the food supply problem, civil administration is in
disarray and food distribution will probably be used to strengthen the regime's
political image.
-President Yahya has made a formal request to the UN
for assistance and has agreed to the stationing of a UN representative in
Dacca to help assess
requirements and coordinate the sending of supplies from abroad.
-The US stands ready to resume
shipments promptly of 170,000 tons of wheat under the existing PL-480 program,
to sign an agreement for another 150,000 tons for the disaster area and to
negotiate a new PL-480 agreement as soon as the food can be moved. The
Pakistanis have requested 250,000 tons of food grains over the next six months.
Right now, however, the limited pipeline is full and some 200,000 tons of
PL-480 wheat alone has been temporarily diverted from East to West Pakistan. In addition, another
250,000 tons from non-U.S. sources are stored in West Pakistan awaiting shipment to
the East.
So far we
have provided about $2 million in grant assistance for boats and foreign crews
to be used for distributing food and other emergency relief supplies.
Negotiations are also under way with the Paks on a
$4.9 million rehabilitation program for the area devastated last winter by the
cyclone. This money is what still remains from the total of $7.5 million
appropriated by Congress for cyclone disaster relief.
Source: Document
89, volume XI, South Asia crisis 1971, Department of State.