Secret
Memorandum for Dr.
Kissinger
From: Harold H. Saunders
Samuel N. Hoskinson
Subject: Situation in
We have recently received a series of related reports
suggesting that relations between
New Developments
As you know, both the Indians and the Pakistanis have in
recent weeks been taking increased measures of military preparedness. In some
cases, these surpass those made before the war in 1965. Forces on both sides
are now at a high state of alert, and other related measures have been taken
against the contingency of the outbreak of war.
The most recent, and most worrisome, report is that units of
The Indians also seem to be stepping up the pace on the
political front. As you know, they apparently played a guiding role in the recent
formation of a multi-party Bangla
Desh National Liberation Front which is to function
as an overall steering committee. The Front includes -- among others --
pro-Moscow Communists, who knowledgeable sources believe were brought in at
Indian and Soviet insistence. At a minimum, it broadens the base of the Bangla Desh movement and
strengthens the hand of the leftist hardliners against the remaining pro-West
moderates. In a related move, T. N. Kaul is being
publicly quoted as saying
There may also be a degree of Indian coordination with the
Soviets on bringing pressure to bear on
It is difficult to say exactly what this situation adds up to.
Most observers doubt that the Indians are preparing to initiate a direct
attack on either East or
At a minimum, it appears that the level of tension and the
danger of war, at least by accident, has increased
another notch in recent weeks. War may not yet be inevitable but there is a
certain grave sense of inevitability hovering over the subcontinent and
influencing actions on both sides. Under these conditions and with tensions running
so high events can gain a momentum of their own and lead to a
war that no one really wants but all are
willing to fight out of fear of losing if they do not mobilize and go on the
offensive.
What can we do
It seems to us the framework for policy-making falls into two
parts:
--Contingency planning can now be sharpened somewhat by
attempting a more refined estimate of the ways in which hostilities might
begin. CIA ONE is drafting a memo which covers these points. That
done, we can draw together the papers already done.
--Further diplomatic steps in the longer term, of course, lead
to the President's talk with Mrs. Gandhi if the situation holds that long. But
there is the more immediate question of what more should be done in the
immediate future. State is producing a paper on this, and I shall send you a
separate memo. Secretary Rogers' talk with Gromyko
will come a couple of days before Mrs. Gandhi is in
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