Minutes
of Senior Review Group Meeting/1/
/1/
Source: National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, NSC
Institutional Files (H-Files), Box H-112, SRG Minutes, Originals, 1971. Secret; Nodis. No drafting
information appears on the minutes. The meeting was held in the White House
Situation Room. Another record of the meeting was prepared on August 9 in
OASD/ISA by Brigadier General Brett. (Washington National Records Center, OSD
Files, FRC 330 76 0197, Box 74, Pakistan 092 (Aug-Dec) 1971) A brief record of
the meeting was prepared in the CIA on August 2 by John H. Waller, Chief of the
Near East and South Asia Division, Directorate for Plans. (Central Intelligence
Agency, O/DDO Files, Job 79-01229A, Box 7, Folder 8, NSC 1971)
SUBJECT
PARTICIPANTS
Chairman-Henry A. Kissinger
State
John N. Irwin, II
Christopher Van Hollen
Thomas Thornton
Defense
Warren G. Nutter
James H. Noyes
B/Gen. Devol Brett
JSC
Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt
CIA
Richard Helms
John Waller
AID
Dr. John Hannah
Maurice Williams
Herbert Rees
Treasury
John McGinnis
NSC Staff
R/Adm. Robert Welander
Harold H. Saunders
Jeanne W.
SUMMARY OF
CONCLUSIONS
It was
agreed to
-Prepare a
comprehensive relief program for
-Prepare a
telegram, to be approved by the President, outlining an approach to Yahya telling him what needs to be done on refugees, food
relief, etc.
-Talk with
the British about a joint approach or separate but concurrent approaches to
-Talk with
the Russians to get a mutual assessment of the situation.
-Develop a
contingency plan for a possible Indian-Pakistani war.
-Schedule
fifteen minutes at the beginning of the next NSC meeting for the President
again to express his views on the subject.
Mr.
Kissinger: This is a continuation of our meeting last week on this subject./2/
/2/
See Document 105.
Mr. Irwin:
Our basic feeling is that we should do something, and we recommend some
movement along the lines of the scenario we have prepared./3/ We think we
should try further with the Pakistanis to seek some restraint on military
activity and persuade them to take steps to reduce the flow of refugees and
move toward some form of political accommodation in East Pakistan. We should
also try to counsel restraint on
/3/ An undated "Scenario For Action In Indo-Pakistan
Crisis" was drafted on July 29 in NEA/INC by Quainton
and circulated to the Senior Review Group. (National Archives, Nixon
Presidential Materials, NSC Files, NSC Institutional Files (H-Files), Box
H-058, SRG Meeting,
Mr. Helms:
There are indications that
Mr. Irwin:
We think we might also talk to the British and the Soviets. We can talk with
the British about a joint or separate but concurrent
approaches to the two states, and to the Soviets about getting an
assessment of the situation.
Mr. Helms:
Has anyone given any thought to involving the Shah of Iran in working with
Mr.
Kissinger: We're not out of gas with Yahya. I think
he will do a lot of things that are reasonable if we concentrate on the refugee
problem. One thing he will not do is talk to the Awami
League, at least not as an institution. He might talk to some League leaders as
individuals.
Mr. Irwin:
Ambassador Farland thinks there is a bare possibility
that he might talk to the Awami League.
Mr. Van Hollen: Yahya's estimate of how
far he might be able to go with the Awami League
depends on whether or not he thinks he might be cut down from behind by his
military leaders. Farland thinks it's worth trying to
move him a step further. There has been no progress along the lines of the June
28 formula./4/ The flow of refugees is continuing, the
insurgency is on the increase and there has been no move toward political
accommodation. As a result, the Indians are still actively supporting the
insurgents and they are facing the prospect of famine in October or November.
We have to think of some way of breaking out of this vicious circle.
/4/
See Document 84.
Mr.
Kissinger: What are the Indians after? Do they want a political accommodation
or do they want to split off
Mr. Irwin:
It's impossible to know. They would probably prefer to split off
Mr.
Kissinger: Is it possible to ask the Pakistan Army to with-draw to its barracks
when
Mr. Irwin:
I don't think so, but we might work toward this. If conditions improve, this
might be our goal.
Mr.
Williams: I wouldn't want to take the Army out of its role of maintaining
security. You can take them out of the civil administration, though-out of
Government House-without insisting that they return to their barracks.
Mr.
Kissinger: Why is it our business to tell the Pakistanis how to run their
government? We can appropriately ask them for humanitarian behavior, but can we
tell them how to run things?
Mr.
Williams: It is not our business as such, but we can tell them what we think as
a friend and counselor.
Mr.
Kissinger: What would an enemy do to
Mr. Irwin:
What would they have to do to get the refugees to go back?
Mr.
Kissinger: In part,
Mr. Van Hollen:
Mr.
Kissinger: So we have the following problems which are, to some extent linked:
1) the refugees-how to stop and reverse the flow; 2) political accommodation;
3) the threat of famine and the necessity for humanitarian relief, which in
turn would affect the flow of refugees; and 4) the nature of an East Pakistan
government. On famine relief, we must get a program started under any and all
circumstances. If famine develops, it will generate another major outflow of
refugees. This is one thing we can do something about. I think we can get
considerable Pakistani cooperation on this.
(Mr.
Kissinger was called from the room at
Mr. Irwin:
(to Dr. Kissinger) You mentioned the question of
tilting our policy. The State Department is not trying to tilt the
consideration of this matter. We have problems of political stability, refugees
and the prospect of famine. Fundamental to each of these is the question of
some move toward political accommodation. It will be very hard to solve these
problems unless there is some start in the political field.
Mr.
Kissinger: The relief effort has to be undertaken anyway.
Mr. Irwin:
If there is not some move toward political accommodation we may not be able to
carry out relief efforts. We can get the food there but if we can't get it
distributed to the people who need it our relief efforts won't succeed. The
whole distribution mechanism can be upset by the cross-border operations.
Mr.
Kissinger: The cross-border operations depend on
Mr. Irwin:
I agree, so the question is how to stop the cross-border operations. If we can
do it by direct pressure on
Mr.
Kissinger: But the famine will start in October. Under the best possible
scenario, political accommodation will have barely begun in October. The relief
plans have to be started fairly soon.
Mr.
Williams: "Political accommodation" is a shorthand expression. What
is more important is some effective administration. Traditionally, in this part
of the world, that means a civilian administration. The ability to mount an
effective relief effort depends on how much of the civil administration is left
intact.
Mr.
Kissinger: Are we to tell the Pakistanis that unless they install a civilian
administration we will let the famine develop?
Mr.
Williams: No, but we can tell them that unless they install an effective
civilian administration it will be harder to prevent famine.
Mr. Irwin:
We are doing everything we can to prevent famine. We can get the food to them
and try to see to it that it is properly distributed.
Mr.
Hannah: There will be damned little satisfaction in getting the food to the
ports if we can't get it where the people are. The Pakistan Army just isn't
used to this kind of an operation, plus the fact that they are still under
pressure from the guerrillas. They have invited the UN in to give overall
direction to the program but that won't get the food delivered. And
Mr.
Kissinger: Have the Paks said they won't let us in?
Mr.
Williams: They have approved a UN presence in principle, but they still haven't
actually admitted them.
Mr.
Kissinger: They told me they hoped we would get the UN people in faster.
Mr.
Williams: It has been approved in principle in
Mr.
Kissinger: We have no problem with the list of things that have to be done. We
have to tell Yahya that this is what needs to be
done, but why do we have to tell him that it has to be done by civilians?
Mr. Zumwalt: He can't do it with civilians while he is fighting
a war. The prevention of famine and our interest in supporting Yahya dictate more help in granting him military supplies
than we are apparently prepared to give him. This relates to the spare parts he
needs to keep his vehicles moving. He has to keep the roads and waterways open.
If we cut off his source of spare parts he can neither fight
a war or distribute supplies-both because he couldn't stop the
cross-border operations which could interdict the relief distribution and
because he wouldn't have the vehicles to move the relief supplies themselves.
Mr.
Waller: We have a report from
Mr.
Kissinger: If we are faced with a huge famine and a huge new refugee outflow in
October and we're still debating political accommodation, we'll have a heluva lot to answer for. We need an emergency relief plan
and we need to tell Yahya that this is what has to be
done to get the supplies delivered. Yahya will be
reasonable.
Mr.
Williams: There doesn't have to be political accommodation to get the civilians
in.
Mr. Van Hollen: But the two things are directly related. We should
be and are preparing a relief program, but its implementation depends on the
governmental situation in East Pakistan-not on the
Mr. Helms:
Our problem is to provide the food and get it in place. How can we assume the
responsibility for its distribution? We should confine ourselves to doing the
things we can do. It's up to Yahya to decide how the
food should be distributed. He has an interest in keeping
Mr.
Williams: We can get the food there.
Mr.
Kissinger: We can go further than that. (to Williams)
You made a good presentation at the last meeting on the necessity to marshal
water transport and things like that. The resources seem to be more under Army
control than civilian control. If we told Yahya these
things were required for distribution and we will help, we might make real
progress. But if, on top of that, we tell him he must end the insurgency and
have some sort of political accommodation, we won't make it in time for
October. Yahya's mind just doesn't work that fast and
the structure isn't there.
Mr. Irwin:
I agree we should do all you say, but we would go a step further. We would
point out that there should be a start in a direction that might accomplish
political accommodation.
Mr.
Kissinger: What do we mean by "political accommodation?"
Mr. Van Hollen: We shouldn't have a blue print. But, in order to
create a viable institution, Yahya must agree to deal
with the true political representatives in
Mr.
Kissinger: The question is whether we have to have political accommodation
before we can get a relief program.
Mr. Irwin:
Not before the relief program starts. But if there is not some effort in this
direction, the cross-border operations will intensify and there will be more
disruption of the relief efforts. If we can stop the cross-border operations by
Mr.
Kissinger: Will
Mr. Van Hollen: The extent to which
Mr.
Hannah: Why not approach it the other way around. Tell Yahya
that the best way to thwart the Indians is to get better food and better
conditions in
Mr.
Kissinger: We can tell him what is needed to distribute the food as long as our
programs are moving ahead.
Mr. Irwin:
We're not really disagreeing with you.
Mr.
Kissinger: But you're saying the next turn of the wheel is conditional-that
nothing will move until there is a start on political accommodation.
Mr. Irwin:
No we're not.
Mr.
Williams: No.
Mr. Zumwalt: Even if all the food gets through, the famine will
still probably occur. Both the Indians and the Soviets would prefer famine
rather than see Yahya win. The Chinese would probably
prefer famine to seeing
Mr.
Kissinger: I agree with John Hannah. If we can be forthcoming with Yahya on something, we have a better chance of getting some
political accommodation than if we hector him and try to put the squeeze on
him.
Mr.
Hannah: We should continue to do everything we have been doing. We should get Yahya to accept UN direction. We should recognize, though, that
even when the UN people are there, it won't work unless the US gets involved in
an operation to marshal all existing resources, similar to the recent flood
relief operation. We can give him the backstopping of the UN, but we'll still
have to furnish the food and get it there, and provide some management once
it's there.
Mr.
Williams: The food that is moving to
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Williams) Maybe you should go there and
tell Yahya what is needed to break the bureaucratic
log-jam.
Mr.
Hannah: It would be more effective if we could get a representative Pakistani
to carry the message to Yahya. We can reinforce it.
How about Shoaib?/5/
/5/
Mohammed Shoaib, Vice President of the International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
Mr.
Williams: He's traveling for the World Bank.
Mr. Irwin:
We would like to move ahead as you are suggesting. In addition, we think it
would be better to start some move toward political accommodation.
Mr.
Kissinger: My personal judgement of Yahya is that if we do something for
him, then ask him to move in a direction of political accommodation, he
would be more likely to do it. We're really debating timing. Can we get a
comprehensive program of relief and get it to Yahya
together with our judgement as to where the
bottlenecks are. We can then get someone to talk to him.
Mr.
Williams: This is all in train-he's not in real
trouble at the moment. When the harvest fails, then there will be trouble.
Mr.
Kissinger: The situation isn't going to get any easier in the next two months.
If there is another great outflow of refugees, the domestic problem in
Mr.
Williams: It's a matter of internal transport.
Mr.
Kissinger: I understand that, but let's keep that a technical problem.
Mr.
Williams: We'll put together a comprehensive relief package.
Mr.
Kissinger: Let's put it all together-what has moved and where the bottlenecks
are.
(to Irwin) With regard to your scenario, I doubt that Yahya can withdraw his army to their barracks under present
circumstances.
Mr. Irwin:
We took that out of the paper and substituted a restoration of the civil
administration, leaving the maintenance of law and order to the police and the
provincial para-military forces.
Mr.
Kissinger: Your idea would be to go to Yahya with the
whole program. If you do, he'll say "I'll do everything but the political
steps."
Mr. Van Hollen: We can tell him that to the degree he can do these
things, it would help clamp down on the Indian cross-border operations and
establish a UN presence on the Indian side of the border. If he makes some
political moves,
Mr.
Kissinger: How would we get
Mr. Van Hollen: We could tell
Mr.
Kissinger: The right direction to them is the Indian direction. What is the right
direction?
Mr. Irwin:
For Yahya to begin to deal with the elected
representatives in East Pakistan-maybe not the Awami
League. This needn't be conditioned to doing other things.
Mr.
Kissinger: We're holding up military shipments to
Mr. Van Hollen: In many ways. In general we have been very
forthcoming with
Mr.
Kissinger: We should tell him he should do these things on refugees but tie it
to political accommodation?
Mr. Irwin:
It wouldn't be tied to political accommodation.
Mr.
Kissinger: Would we tell him that our efforts with
Mr. Van Hollen: They are not contingent on political steps. We have
been doing these things all along. We can tell him that our success with
Mr.
Nutter: We have the very practical problem that 90% of his transport is of US
origin. If we cut off his spare parts he won't have a transportation system.
Mr. Zumwalt: Or he won't be able to maintain sufficient order
to prevent the insurgents from cutting the system. If we don't give him some
spares that are classified as lethal, the Pakistan Army will be relatively
limited. They could do a better job than if we bring their military machine to
a halt by withholding spare parts. We can use the military capability to keep
the lines open and use the vehicles to deliver food.
Mr.
Williams: I think your first point is valid but I question the second. The
UNICEF vehicles have been commandeered by the Army and they aren't using them
to move supplies.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Irwin) Your proposed scenario says (reading) ". . . our
hold on military shipments . . . should not be lifted until there is an end of
military activity against the civilian population and until the army is
returned to its barracks and effective civilian administration is in operation."
In other words, until after
Mr.
Hannah: What about the spare parts for the trucks now under order? Are they
being shipped?
Mr. Zumwalt: The licenses will run out in a few weeks.
Mr.
Williams: Shipments will cease on August 13.
Mr. Zumwalt: At just about the time the famine is hitting, we
will likely see a breakdown of transport and of the ability to maintain
sufficient order to get food supplies through.
Mr. Irwin:
If by giving the military some trucks they would use them to move supplies, no
one would object. By giving trucks and spare parts to the military, even though
we did our best to see that they were used for food distribution, you would be
certain to arouse political opposition here.
Mr.
Kissinger: Can we see a cable on what you would tell Yahya.
I will schedule fifteen minutes at the beginning of the next NSC meeting so
that all of the principals can hear the President's views again on this
subject. Let's see a cable of what we want to tell Yahya.
We're very receptive here to anything we should say on what he should do on
refugees.
Mr. Irwin:
To sum up, anything in any area that we can do without getting into the
question of political accommodation, we should do. Political accommodation will
be treated separately.
Mr.
Kissinger: In general, of course, I'm in favor of representative government and
we should urge Yahya to restore an increasing degree
of participation by the people of
Mr. Irwin:
We don't disagree. In addition, we are saying it might be helpful if Yahya could make a start in the direction of political
accommodation.
Mr.
Kissinger: If it can be done in a non-conditional way.
Mr. Irwin:
There are no conditions.
Mr.
Kissinger: Let's draft a telegram and I will show it to the President.
Mr. Irwin:
Warren (Nutter) and Admiral Zumwalt have raised a
good question on military supply.
Mr.
Kissinger: We can't do anything on military supply until these other things are
in train.
Mr.
Nutter: There will be a de facto embargo about mid-August.
Mr.
Williams: Aren't these truck spares available commercially?
General
Brett: They're all made to military specifications.
Mr.
Kissinger: Would it be possible to release some spare parts for transport
alone?
Mr. Noyes:
Some truck parts are interchangeable with tank parts.
Mr.
Williams: The Army should have spare parts for its vehicles. Their mobility is
important. But the UN people in
Mr. Van Hollen: What about possible discussions with the British?
Mr.
Kissinger: That's a good idea.
Mr. Van Hollen: How about with the Soviets?
Mr.
Kissinger: What would we tell the Soviets? Who would talk to them? Another Sisco-Dobrynin conversation?
Mr. Van Hollen: It should probably be the Under Secretary.
Mr.
Kissinger: That would be useful.
Mr. Irwin:
We could suggest a mutual discussion and assessment of the situation.
Mr.
Kissinger: We also need a contingency plan in the event of an Indian-Pakistani
war.
Mr. Van Hollen: We have done some work on it, but it needs more.