Telegram
from the Department of State to the Consulate General in Calcutta/1/
/1/ Source:
National Archives, RG 59, Central Files 1970-73, POL 27 INDIA-PAK. Secret; Immediate; Nodis. Drafted
by Constable; cleared by Laingen, Schneider, Van Hollen, Sisco, and Saunders; and
approved by Irwin. Repeated to
173942.
Subject: Contact with Bangla Desh
Reps. Ref:
/2/ On
September 20 the Consulate General in
/3/
Document 149.
1. In view
of fact no USG official has yet had contact with any member political
leadership of BD, PolOff authorized meet with BD
"Acting President" Nazrul Islam. We see
meeting as means: (a) to establish whether any interest in BD "govt" in negotiated settlement at this stage; (b) to
learn what are current negotiating demands of BD reps and (c) to inform Nazrul Islam, and through him BD cabinet, that we have
already passed on to Pres. Yahya word of possible BD
interest in negotiation and that latter's reaction was one of interest./4/
/4/ Yahya reiterated his interest on September 21. (Telegram
9582 from Islamabad, September 21; National Archives, Nixon Presidential
Materials, NSC Files, Box 626, Country Files, Middle East, Pakistan, Vol. VII,
Sep-Oct 1971)
2. We
believe it is important at this stage that high level official in BD govt be at least aware there has been expression of
interest in negotiated settlement on part of Yahya
govt. You should, of course, continue to take stance that we are neither
proposing negotiations nor taking any part other than that of messenger. In
this role, you may if occasion warrants offer to pass any BD message on
negotiation or reaction to your information on Yahya's
position back to President Yahya.
3. You
should also use opportunity of meeting to urge BD "govt"
and Mukti Bahini to respect
UN relief operations in
/5/ An instruction to this effect was transmitted on September 8
to
4. Dept
believes it would be useful, if opportunity arises in
meeting with Nazrul Islam, determine if there is
channel other than Qaiyum to Nazrul
and BD cabinet./6/
/6/ Printed
from an unsigned copy. A week after receiving this instruction, the Consulate
General indicated that it was "stymied" in its efforts to arrange a
meeting with Islam. The only channel to Islam remained through Qaiyum. Qaiyum sent a message
that Islam was still keen to talk to a political officer but was seeking
permission from the Indian Government to do so. (Telegram 2570 from
Source:
Document 150, volume XI,