Minutes
of Washington Special Actions Group Meeting/1/
/1/ Source:
National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, NSC Institutional
Files (H-Files), Box H-115, WSAG Minutes, Originals, 1971. Secret;
Exdis; Codeword. Sent for information. No
drafting information appears on the source text. The meeting was held in the
White House Situation Room.
SUBJECT
PARTICIPANTS
Chairman-Henry A. Kissinger
State
John N. Irwin
Joseph Sisco
Anthony C.E. Quainton
Defense
David Packard
Armistead Selden
Brig. Gen. Devol Brett
JCS
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer
Lt. Gen. John Vogt
CIA
Richard Helms
John Waller
NSC Staff
Col. Richard Kennedy
Samuel Hoskinson
D. Keith Guthrie
SUMMARY OF
CONCLUSIONS
1. The WSAG
agreed that Option C of the contingency paper/2/ on a possible India-Pakistan
conflict seemed likely to be the most suitable strategy for the
/2/ The contingency paper on Indo-Pakistan hostilities is
summarized in the August 17 analytical summary prepared for the WSAG meeting;
see Document 125. Option C called for political intervention to localize the
hostilities and to work for a settlement which would remove the basic causes of
the fighting.
2. The
analysis of Option C will be expanded to include a scenario for US approaches
to the
3. The State
Department will prepare a study of a possible cut-off in economic assistance to
4. The
emergency and evacuation plans for
Mr.
Kissinger: I just wanted to have a brief meeting on the contingency paper. It
states three options, of which only one-Option 3-is likely to be operative. A
passive international approach would not be tolerated by either side. The logic
of events, taking into account the Soviet and Chinese involvement, would not
permit such an approach. Does anyone disagree with this?
No one
disagreed.
Mr.
Kissinger: As for military support to
We have an
overall interest in preventing hostilities. We do not want to be forced to
choose between 800 million Chinese and 600 million Indians and Bengalis. We
don't want
Let's
discuss this issue in two categories: (1) what we can do to minimize the danger
of an outbreak of war and (2) what we can do in case there is an attack.
We need to consider what we would say to the Soviets and to the Chinese and how
we could cooperate with the Soviets to prevent a war. Both the President and
the Secretary of State have warned the Indians that we will cut off economic
aid in case of war. But do we know what that means? No one has looked at the
consequences or examined the means of implementing a cutoff. This is something
that it is imperative to examine. Could we have some discussion on some of
these problems? What preventive actions can we take? What steps can we take to
limit the damage in case hostilities occur?
(to Helms) Dick, do we have enough intelligence on what the
Chinese, Indians, and Pakistanis are doing?
Mr. Helms: I
would like to ask John Waller to discuss that.
Mr. Waller:
[8 lines of source text not declassified] The overt
reporting speaks for itself. [1 line of source text not declassified]
Mr.
Kissinger: Do you lose them to the New York Times faster than you can recruit
them?
Mr. Waller:
The intelligence community has been assessing the critical collection problems.
Mr. Helms:
These are all being scrubbed down in our committee.
Mr. Kissinger:
Do you think the Indians will attack?
Mr. Helms:
My personal feeling is that they will not do so.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Sisco) What do you think?
Mr. Sisco: I
don't think they will launch an attack across the border. However, I believe
they will feel free to support the liberation movement in
Adm. Moorer:
[6 lines of source text not declassified]
Mr.
Kissinger: Are the Chinese reinforcing?
Mr. Helms:
No.
Adm. Moorer:
There are no indications yet that they are. We do know that the Indians have
activated some airfields near
Mr.
Kissinger: How quickly would the Chinese be able to reinforce?
Adm. Moorer:
It would be very difficult for them.
Mr. Helms:
The terrain is bad, and they don't have the necessary equipment. We would know
ahead of time.
Mr.
Kissinger: Did they reinforce in 1962?
Mr. Helms:
Yes.
Mr.
Kissinger: Did we know?
Mr. Helms:
Yes.
Mr.
Kissinger: What did the Indians think was going to happen?
Mr. Helms:
As I recall, the Indians had sort of decided to take on the Chinese before the
attack took place.
Mr.
Kissinger: Thus, their surprise was the result of a judgmental factor.
Mr. Helms:
In that part of the world one still has the problem of passions outrunning good
judgment.
Mr.
Kissinger: Passions don't have to run very far to do that in
Mr. Irwin:
If Joe's [Sisco's]/3/ scenario is correct, what steps could be taken to reduce
that possibility [that the Indians will stir up trouble].
/3/ These and following brackets are in the source text.
Adm. Moorer:
Doesn't it all boil down to whether the Indians take overt action? The
Pakistanis are outnumbered four to one. They certainly are not going to attack.
Mr. Irwin:
What would cause the Indians to take action?
Adm. Moorer:
The emotion you were talking about. Also the refugee problem.
Mr. Irwin:
There are several possible contingencies that could cause the Indians to act.
There could be a famine in
Mr.
Kissinger: Do we know what is going on at the trial?
Adm. Moorer:
It is expected to last two months.
Mr. Helms:
Until October.
Mr. Irwin:
All we can do with
Mr. Helms: I
think
/4/ Senator
Edward Kennedy (D-Massachusetts) completed on August 17 an 8-day fact-finding
trip to
The results of the trip were summarized in telegram 13221 from
Mr.
Kissinger: I'm not sure they would agree about that [Kennedy's return]
upstairs.
Mr. Sisco:
In this contingency paper there are a lot of unilateral steps indicated. I
think we ought to realize that in case of war there is really very little that
we can do unilaterally. We will have to rely on what parallel interests the
Mr. Kissinger:
We can figure that out.
Mr. Sisco:
By ourselves we have a limited capacity to influence the situation.
Mr.
Kissinger: What should we tell the Soviets and Chinese that we want them to do?
Mr. Sisco:
Before or after hostilities?
Mr.
Kissinger: Before and after. Has anyone talked to the
Mr. Sisco:
It is difficult to say exactly what we would tell them at the present juncture.
Mr.
Kissinger: Couldn't we say: "Cool your new friends?" Am I missing
something here? Why not say that to them?
Mr. Helms:
Sure. Why not? Conversation is cheap.
Mr. Irwin: I
see no problem. At some point we might move to that. The Secretary [Rogers] was
planning on seeing the Soviets, but the Soviet treaty with
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Sisco) You shake your head. Why?
Mr. Helms:
This is the time [to talk to the Soviets]. If you don't turn that stone and a
serious problem develops later, you will kick yourself.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Sisco) Is there something going on that
eludes me, Joe? Why are you so mysterious?
Mr. Sisco: I
have no problem with talking to the Soviets. Two weeks ago we prepared talking
points for that.
Mr.
Kissinger: Well, can I assume that we [the White House] will be told if you
decide to approach the Soviets?
Mr. Sisco:
Naturally we will have to talk to the Secretary [Rogers] about this.
Mr. Irwin:
Certainly.
Mr.
Kissinger: (to Sisco) What should we tell the Chinese?
It is so out of character for you to be reticent.
Mr. Sisco:
We have such good direct relations with the Pakistanis that we don't have to go
to the Chinese to ask them to urge restraint on the Pakistanis. I don't see any
immediate need to talk to the Chinese.
Mr.
Kissinger: When you think the time has come, will you give us a hint? A
reticent Joe Sisco is unknown. Usually when you come here you have already done
whatever is to be done. Maybe you have decided to change your strategy from one
of telling us afterward to not telling us at all. Anyway, we assume the State
Department will let us know when a message is to be passed to the Chinese. What
do we do when a war starts?
Adm. Moorer:
As for evacuation, there are 7,698
Mr. Sisco:
We should look at the evacuation plans.
Mr.
Kissinger: Can we get these plans in shape?
Mr. Sisco:
Some of the things we do in connection with evacuation are standard. We need to
get suggestions on what to tell the Soviets and Chinese.
Mr.
Kissinger: Can someone study what we mean when we say we are going to cut out
economic aid [to
Mr. Irwin:
What we do is cut down on Indian possibilities for economic development. This
increases the burden on the Indian governmental system, may stop their
democratic evolution, and might lead them to make a pact with the
Mr.
Kissinger: Can we cut off aid through the consortium?
Mr. Sisco:
We will produce a paper on this. Some of the steps might be to delay a
commitment on the 1972 development loan program, to mobilize other aid donors
to delay their assistance, to delay signing a PL-480 agreement, and to stop
things that are in the pipeline.
Mr.
Kissinger: Could you do that [prepare a paper]? We will also be getting talking
points for the Soviets and Chinese both before and after an attack. You will
let us know what you are doing on this, and we in turn will let you know about
anything we are doing here that may affect the situation.
Mr. Sisco:
We and the Chinese and the Russians have certain common interests in this.
Mr.
Kissinger: We can't have solo efforts on this.
Mr. Irwin:
Yes, we should coordinate as much as possible with the Chinese and Soviets.
Mr.
Kissinger: I mean bureaucratically.
Mr. Irwin:
Oh. I was looking at it from a somewhat broader perspective.
Mr. Helms:
Can we assume that the Chinese know about our efforts to keep
Mr. Sisco: I
think they ought to know that our basic policy is to be helpful in maintaining
the integrity of
Mr.
Kissinger: I agree. We should make sure that they don't misread us. Everyone
can get together and assemble these talking points. Let us have those for the
Chinese fairly soon.
Source: Document 126,
volume XI,