Foreign Relations, 1969-1976, Volume E-7, South Asia, 1969-1972
Released by the Office of the Historian
MEMORANDUM
NATIONAL
SECURITY COUNCIL
MEMORANDUM
FOR: DR. KISSINGER
FROM:
HAROLD H. SAUNDERS
SAMUEL M. HOSKINSON
SUBJECT:
Gandhi Visit--Advisors' Meeting in Cabinet Room
The Advisors' Meeting in the Cabinet Room while you were with the President and
Mrs. Gandhi covered the full range of issues concerning the current situation
in South Asia. Joe Sisco did most of the
talking on the US side and T. N. Kaul for the
Indians. The general tone was friendly but firm on the issues.
Much
of the time was spent by Kaul explaining at length
the standard Indian positions. Beyond those, the major operational points to
emerge were:
--Sisco described Yahya's favorable
response to the idea that he open a dialogue with
certain Awami League or Bangla
Desh representatives, perhaps speaking on behalf of Mujib, and urged India to react positively to such ideas for getting a political
process started. He told Kaul it seems to us asking
the impossible to insist that the process start with Mujib.
Kaul's "tentative" response was that under
any conditions this probably would be a non-starter since the Bengalis are bent
on independence and only Mujib would have a chance of
settling for less, and even he might not now. Kaul
did concede--in response to an idea presented by Ambassador Keating--that it
might be "worth trying" to have someone talk to Mujib
in jail if Yahya would go along with it. The general
thrust of his response, however, was skeptical and negative. Mujib, he felt, had been out of touch and it might not be
very meaningful to involve him unless he were out of
jail and free to re-establish himself with his colleagues.
--Sisco also described Yahya's
acceptance of the idea of a unilateral Pakistani military withdrawal. Kaul's response was tentative but negative, saying that India could not afford to take security risks until the
political problem in East Pakistan was resolved. He added that India had no territorial
designs and was not trying to dictate the terms of a settlement between East
and West Pakistan but if attacked, India was determined that it would be a
"decisive war with decisive results. "
--Kaul stressed that it was putting the "cart before the
horse" to suggest Indo-Pak talks or the exercise of good offices between India and Pakistan. This was a problem between West and East Pakistan
and could only be settled by them. Moreover, India has little influence.
--Kaul stressed that "all" the refugees,
irrespective of their religion, "must" return.
Source: Document 149, E - 7, South Asia crisis 1971, Department of State.