Memorandum
of Conversation/1/
Washington, September 10, 1971, 4:20-4:50 p.m.
/1/ Source:
National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 626, Country
Files, Middle East, Pakistan, Vol. VII, Sep-Oct 1971. Secret;
Nodis. Drafted by Hoskinson on September 13. The meeting was held in
Kissinger's office at the White House. The time of the meeting is from
Kissinger's appointment book. (Library of Congress, Manuscript Division,
Kissinger Papers, Box 438, Miscellany, 1968-1976, Record of Schedule)
PARTICIPANTS
Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, Assistant to the President
Samuel M. Hoskinson, NSC Staff
Major General Inam-ul Haq,
Director General, Defense Procurement, Pakistan
Ministry of Defense
Z.M. Farooqi, Deputy Chief of Mission, Embassy of
Pakistan
Following
the initial exchange of pleasantries, General Haq led
off by saying he knew that Dr. Kissinger was very busy and that his remarks
would be brief and to the point. He had been discussing the technical aspects
elsewhere and did not want to get into these. First of all, he wanted to say
that President Yahya was very appreciative of this
opportunity for consultation on the military supply problem. Consequently, he
had sent General Haq to Washington to determine what could
be shipped now and our thoughts. President Yahya does
not want an embargo, but he had instructed him to determine what, if necessary,
could be shipped by the end of this month.
Dr. Kissinger, after indicating the US desire not to pressure Pakistan on this issue, said he
wanted to make sure it was understood that the President was not placing any
arbitrary deadline on a possible cut-off of military shipments to Pakistan. If Pakistan needed two or three
weeks beyond the end of September to wind things up, that was perfectly
alright. We were not holding a gun at Pakistan's head on this problem.
Our only point was that if the pipeline were dried up in the relatively near
future, it could remove some constraints on us and might make it easier for the
US to be more forthcoming
on economic matters. Dr. Kissinger concluded this series of comments by asking
Mr. Hoskinson to make sure that they were fully
understood by the remainder of the US Government.
General Haq indicated his understanding and agreement with Dr.
Kissinger's remarks. He especially welcomed the opportunity to have more time
for shipping items in the pipeline to Pakistan. He then noted that Pakistan also has some 50 tons
of presently unlicensed military supplies in warehouses in New York.
These, he
said, were important shipments that Pakistan would like very much to
obtain. (While Dr. Kissinger left the room for a moment, General Haq explained to Mr. Hoskinson
that they were mainly aircraft spares and valued at about $1 million.) Dr.
Kissinger responded that "we will look into these shipments." He
added that, while we would like to help as much as possible, we would not want
to limit our capacity to help in other areas by our actions on one limited
aspect of the arms supply problem. Again, Dr. Kissinger stressed that we were
not attempting to force or pressure Pakistan. General Haq indicated his full understanding of Dr. Kissinger's
comments.
Dr. Kissinger then went on to explain that we are trying to promote the
resumption of economic aid to Pakistan and will do our best on
this. Mr. Farooqi, at this point, said that Pakistan hoped that if we can
get over the arms supply problem it would be easier for the US to take the lead in the
consultations. Dr. Kissinger replied that indeed this was our intention and,
after indicating that Deputy AID Administrator Williams had discussed the
consortium question in Islamabad, he asked Mr. Hoskinson to explain what we had in mind. Mr. Hoskinson said that Williams had indicated we were pressing
for a consortium meeting right after the forthcoming World Bank/IMF meeting
here during which debt relief and humanitarian relief would be discussed. Dr.
Kissinger added that there might be something we could also do with some of the
$75 million held over from last year's appropriation.
General Haq shifted the subject by saying that Pakistan would like to have US assistance in obtaining
vital military supplies through third countries. Dr. Kissinger replied that we
would look at this with sympathy but there were problems and complications.
The conversation ended with General Haq explaining,
at some length, the West Pakistani view of the situation in East Pakistan. Among other things, he
alleged that the number of refugees was really much lower than the Indians
claimed and that this is why they would not accept UN observers; the Mukti Fauj were mostly Indians,
and India wanted to cut off the northwestern tip of East Pakistan to establish
the "Bangla Desh"
government. The General also asserted that the military imbalance between India and Pakistan was growing, especially
since India was receiving new
shipments of tanks from the Soviets as a result of the friendship treaty.
(After
leaving Dr. Kissinger's office, General Haq told Mr. Hoskinson he thought he would be staying on longer in
Washington since he now had more time and would at least want to settle the
"50 ton problem" before he reported the results of his trip to
President Yahya.)
SH
Source:
Document 145, volume XI, South Asia crisis
1971, Department of State.