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;
Nodis. No drafting information appears on the minutes. The meeting was
held in the White House Situation Room. John Waller, Chief of the Near East and
South Asia Division of the Directorate of Operations in the CIA, prepared a
briefer record of the meeting on November 12. (CIA Files, O/DDO Files, Job
79-0229A, Box 7, Folder 9, WSAG 1971) Another record of the meeting was drafted
on November 17 in OASD/ISA by Brigadier General Devol Brett. (Washington
National Records Center, OSD Files, FRC 330 76 0197, Box 74, Pakistan 381
(Jun-Nov) 1971)
SUBJECT
PARTICIPANTS
Chairman-Henry A. Kissinger
State:
Mr. Joseph Sisco
Mr. Christopher Van Hollen
Mr. Bruce Laingen
Mr. David Schneider
DOD:
Mr. Armistead Selden
Mr. James H. Noyes
B/Gen. Devol Brett
JCS:
Gen. John D. Ryan
Lt. Gen. John W. Vogt
CIA:
Lt. Gen. Robert E. Cushman
Mr. John Waller
AID:
Mr. Donald MacDonald
NSC Staff:
Col. Richard T. Kennedy
Mr. Harold Saunders
Mr. Samuel Hoskinson
R/Adm. Robert Welander
Mrs. Jeanne W. Davis
Dr.
Kissinger: (to Gen. Cushman) What is the situation?
(Gen.
Cushman briefed on the situation-text attached.)/2/
/2/ Based
on the attached briefing notes, Cushman reported that there had been numerous
clashes along the border between
When you
say the casualty rate in the Pakistani Army has doubled, what does that mean?
Gen.
Cushman: There are five or six casualties a day as opposed to three a day
before October.
Dr.
Kissinger: You mentioned the Pakistan Navy. Where is that?
Gen.
Cushman: They don't have much, but there are a few ships off
Dr.
Kissinger: What does State think?
Mr. Sisco:
I would make two points: 1) we will get a clearer determination of the
likelihood of war only when Mrs. Gandhi returns and we see how she plays her
U.S. visit and how she plays the situation when she talks to Parliament which
opens on Monday, November 15; 2) we should consider whether there is anything
we can or should do before Monday to encourage Mrs. Gandhi, or to strengthen
her hand in any attempt to keep the lid on.
Dr.
Kissinger: If she is trying to keep the lid on.
Mr. Sisco:
I agree-there's a real question. We have given her enough to get her off the
hook, if she wants to. We don't know whether she does. But I think we should
discuss what further diplomatic steps over the next 48 hours might help.
Dr.
Kissinger: Is it your judgment that war could come very quickly if she strikes
the wrong note on Monday with Parliament?
Mr. Sisco:
If she decides to continue the pressure on Yahya, I think there is likely to be
an intensification of the present situation. Indian strategy has been to
continue the pressure on Yahya and to suck
Dr.
Kissinger:
Mr. Sisco:
It's as two-faced as one can describe. For the purpose of our objectives, we
must assume that Mrs. Gandhi wants to put the lid on. The President made a real
impact on her and he gave her something to work with if she wants to use it.
But I am convinced that any indication of progress or lack of progress on the
political track will be the most decisive element in terms of deterring a war.
Dr.
Kissinger: If she wants to.
Mr. Sisco:
I think everyone is asking himself what we could do to prevent the balloon from
going up.
Dr.
Kissinger: Isn't there another way than meeting
Mr. Sisco:
Dr.
Kissinger: No, they started by saying Yahya must talk to the Awami League
leaders and he must not kill Mujib. Then when they got agreement to that, they
escalated to the position that Yahya must talk to Mujib.
Mr. Sisco:
I think the President's proposal to Mrs. Gandhi was very sensible. It's a happy
compromise if she wants to get off the hook.
Dr.
Kissinger: What did you think the proposal was?
Mr. Sisco:
Of the three alternatives, she seemed most interested in Yahya's possible
willingness to consider meeting with a representative designated by Mujib.
Dr. Kissinger:
Do you think that is a real proposition? What is it that will deter
Mr. Van
Hollen: It's not so much a question of our reinforcing Indian demands but of
providing a formula to give Yahya a way out short of meeting
Mr. Sisco:
That's what the President suggested.
Dr.
Kissinger: I could be wrong, but my instinct tells me that Yahya didn't
consider this as a serious proposal but more as a last resort.
Mr. Sisco:
I agree there was a clear distinction between that and the other two proposals.
He indicated only that he is willing to consider this. But not only is he
feeling the pressure in
Dr.
Kissinger: What do you suggest we do between now and Monday?
Mr. Sisco:
We could do nothing. Or we could call in (Ambassador) Jha and stress again the
necessity for them to keep cool. We could point out that we have put forward
some concrete proposals for the Indian Government to consider, that failure to
grasp the proposals would be a clear indication of their position, and that we
await a further indication of their views.
Dr.
Kissinger: What would this add to what you've already said?
Mr. Sisco:
Not a great deal.
Dr.
Kissinger: What would we tell the Pakistanis?
Mr. Sisco:
I think we should report the results of the President's discussions directly to
Yahya. We should tell him
Dr.
Kissinger: Mrs. Gandhi didn't indicate much interest in anything in her
conversations with the President. She spent most of her time telling him that
Mr. Sisco:
On the other hand, calling in the Indian Ambassador might reflect some undue
nervousness on our part. I don't think reinforcement of our position over the
next 48 hours is of overwhelming significance. I do think it is important to
report to Yahya on the discussions, however. I reiterate that if any action
along the political track can begin, it would be the most determining feature.
Dr.
Kissinger: You could also have made a good case that the best way to deter war
would have been to continue arms deliveries to
Mr. Sisco:
Even if the alternative would have been to get into an arms race with the
Dr.
Kissinger: It's too late now. We do not want to bring additional public
pressure on
Mr. Van
Hollen: Sultan Khan is only a senior civil servant. The channel for these
discussions has been Yahya to (Ambassador) Farland. We'd only complicate
matters if we tried to use Sultan Khan.
Dr.
Kissinger: Can the Soviets be helpful?
Mr. Sisco:
It would be highly desirable to talk to the Soviets. We could recall Gromyko's
conversations with the President and the Secretary and yourself (to Dr.
Kissinger), saying they had indicated they didn't want a blow-up in
Dr.
Kissinger: But we would not push the third course.
Mr. Sisco:
No one is suggesting that we push the third course or that we push Yahya. Those
are straw men.
Mr. Van Hollen:
The political track is the only likely track. We would merely pick up the third
track and try to explore it further.
Dr.
Kissinger: (to Mr. Sisco) I have cleared your cable./3/
/3/
Reference is to telegram 206661 to Islamabad, November 12, which instructed
Farland to seek an appointment with Yahya to brief him on the Gandhi visit and
to suggest that he consider the possibilities opened by the "cautious
support" the Indians had offered during the visit to the suggestion that a
political solution might be facilitated by talks between Yahya and a
representative designated by Mujib. (National Archives, RG 59, Central Files
1970-73, POL 7 INDIA)
Mr. Sisco:
The original cable was much too complicated. I did a shorter version which I
hope Al Haig has shown you. We would merely go to Yahya, say
Dr.
Kissinger: (to Mr. Selden) What is the Defense view?
Mr. Noyes:
I don't underestimate the psychological effect, but the physical effect of our
military supply actions with regard to
Dr.
Kissinger: But
Mr. Noyes:
Not from us, possibly, but they were getting them from
Mr. Sisco:
(to Mr. Noyes) Are you saying that our policy on arms
supply didn't immobilize the Pakistan Army?
Mr. Noyes:
They're not immobilized.
Dr.
Kissinger: Gen. Ryan, what do you think?
Gen. Ryan:
I have nothing to add.
Dr.
Kissinger: What do we do if war breaks out?
Mr. Sisco:
There are some other preparatory steps we can take over the next two or three
days. We are still operating on the private gambit with Yahya and Mrs. Gandhi.
If her statements on her return increase the likelihood of imminent war, I
think we should move into the UN Security Council and seek some sort of
restraining order. I am under no illusion about the practical effect of such a
resolution or that it will be an easy exercise. But I think it is important
that we go public before the balloon goes up. After it blows up, we will be in
the Security Council anyhow to get a cease-fire. With this in mind, I'd like to
pre-position a few things. We have started drafting a resolution and a scenario
for a move into the Council. This would, of course, be the first test of the
Chinese Communists, and I would expect them to be helpful. Of course, this puts
the Soviets in a helluva position. They would be confronted in the Council with
the same reality as we are. I would see this as a preempting move.
Dr.
Kissinger: What would the resolution say?
Mr. Sisco:
It would be very simple. It would note the situation,
call on both sides to refrain from further activity to exacerbate the situation.
We would have to weigh very carefully whether we wanted to call for everyone to
stop shooting. A cease-fire would be very complicated. The issue between
Dr.
Kissinger: What would be the operational significance of a UN resolution?
Mr. Sisco:
I don't overestimate the significance. Of course it can't prevent a war.
Dr.
Kissinger: What about timing? At what point would we say we have made all the
moves?
Mr. Sisco:
That could come later.
Dr.
Kissinger: A Security Council resolution doesn't do a damned thing. What could
it do?
Mr. Sisco:
It would draw world attention to the situation, expose the facts, including
what is happening militarily, and clarify where the responsibility lies.
Dr.
Kissinger: Both sides would claim the other side has made the first move. The
Pakistanis aren't so stupid as to challenge
Mr. Sisco:
Any restraining order would obviously be pointed more toward
Dr.
Kissinger: What if the Indians say they can't control the situation-that only
the Pakistanis can control it? Wouldn't this give them another excuse to go to
war to defend the UN resolution?
Mr. Sisco:
A restraining order wouldn't reinforce
Dr.
Kissinger: But
Mr. Van
Hollen: The public would be made aware that it is Indian forces which are
continually crossing an international border.
Mr. Sisco:
I don't overestimate the practical effect of a UN resolution, but what is the
alternative?
Dr.
Kissinger: If Mrs. Gandhi wants a way out, we should try to give it to her. But
we have broken our backs to help her and what has she done? She hasn't accepted
one thing we've offered. She has said friendly things about the President, but
they were not related to what he said. She's merely trying to jockey us into
position as the villain of the piece. The question is how are we restraining
her by giving her two-thirds of what she wants and letting her use that as a
basis for the next move? We should just say that the use of force is not
justified.
Mr. Sisco:
There will have to be some expressions along this line in the SC. It will be
made very clear that the Indians have refused every offer.
Dr.
Kissinger: Would you want to go into the Council by next Tuesday/4/-the timing
makes a difference. Would you see the debate as being on military intervention
or on political atrocities?
/4/
November 16.
Mr. Sisco:
The debate would have to cover both. To return to your earlier point, I see no
way in which the SC could be turned around so as to justify Indian military
action. I agree the practical result of SC debate is likely to be nil in terms
of practical deterrence, but I don't have a better alternative.
Dr.
Kissinger: (to Cushman) What do you think?
Gen.
Cushman: We think there is a good chance that these acts are designed to
provoke war. They may, however, be to assist the guerrillas so that they can
solve the problem themselves. We may know more after Mrs. Gandhi speaks.
Dr.
Kissinger: When will that be?
Mr. Van
Hollen: She gets home Saturday and Parliament opens on Monday.
Mr.
Schneider: She may say something at the opening of Parliament, but may schedule
her formal report later.
Mr. Sisco:
We may have a little time beyond Monday.
Gen.
Cushman: Mr. Sisco's plan might have a good effect domestically if it were
pointed at
Dr.
Kissinger: But we won't get that.
Mr. Sisco:
I agree. We don't get a resolution pointed at
Dr.
Kissinger: (to Ryan) Do you have any thoughts or
recommendations?
Gen. Ryan:
What assurance do we have that the Paks won't preempt the situation and move
against the Indians?
Mr. Sisco:
That's a definite danger.
Dr.
Kissinger: If they will lose
Mr. Van
Hollen: It might be easier for them to lose it in a war.
Gen.
Cushman: They know they can't get rid of the guerrillas unless they remove
their base camps and sources of supply.
Dr.
Kissinger: If
Mr. Van
Hollen: But it's also possible that we would be helping Yahya out of a box
short of war.
Mr. Sisco:
Yahya doesn't think we have been pressuring him. He's a desperate man. I was a
little surprised at how much we got from him in his discussions with
(Ambassador) Farland.
Mr. Van
Hollen: Yahya asked for suggestions from Farland, including political
suggestions.
Mr. Sisco:
I'm not suggesting we should pressure Yahya. I just want Farland to tell Yahya
about the discussions with Mrs. Gandhi.
Dr.
Kissinger: I understand. I cleared your cable.
Mr. Sisco:
Our good friend Bhutto is in Communist China now. He was one of the chief
causes of the trouble originally, advising Yahya not to accommodate Mujib. Now
he is saying he should deal with Mujib. He is only complicating Yahya's
position.
Mr. Van
Hollen: Or easing it, possibly.
Dr.
Kissinger: Is Bhutto coming here?
Mr. Van
Hollen: No. They floated the suggestion, but we said we would leave this to
Yahya.
Dr.
Kissinger: What do we do when war breaks out?
Mr. Sisco:
We might talk a little about our contingency plans./5/ The
first steps should be close consultations with the Russians and the Chinese
Communists.
/5/ An
undated paper outlining contingency planning in the event of the outbreak of
war between India and Pakistan and an attached analytical summary of the paper
dated November 11, the former apparently prepared in the Department of State
and the latter by the NSC staff, were forwarded to Kissinger under a covering
memorandum on November 11 by Hoskinson and Richard Kennedy. The covering
memorandum and both papers are in the National Archives, Nixon Presidential
Materials, NSC Files, NSC Institutional Files (H-Files), Box H-082, Senior WSAG
Meeting, South Asia, 11/12/71. The analytical summary is published in Foreign
Relations, 1969-1976, volume E-7, Documents on
Dr. Kissinger:
(to Sisco) When you go to the Security Council, you will not approach the
Chinese in
Mr. Sisco:
We will review every step of the scenario before we move. If we go to the UN,
though, all the SC representatives will be around the table.
Dr.
Kissinger: No one is saying you can't talk to them at the table.
Mr. Van
Hollen: We envisage a variety of steps: a cease-fire resolution in the SC;
termination of military supply to
Dr.
Kissinger: You can count on that.
Mr. Van
Hollen: (continuing) Diversion of American ships containing military supplies;
cessation of military training for both countries; a broad range of activities
concerning military supply. Termination of aid to both sides-
Dr.
Kissinger: But the decision may be to terminate aid only to the country that
started the war.
Mr.
MacDonald: We have our data organized to accommodate any decision on an aid
cut-off.
Mr. Sisco:
There is a prior question of overriding and fundamental importance-if there is
a war, we will have to come to an understanding on the non-involvement of the
major powers.
Dr.
Kissinger:
Mr. Sisco:
We will have to talk to the Russians and the Chinese Communists-to give them
some signal as to our intentions. I don't think big-power involvement is
likely, but it will require some exchange of views. We could all get together
and concert in the context of the Security Council to bring about a cease-fire.
The Russians will drag their feet if
Dr.
Kissinger: In the West as well as the East?
Gen. Ryan:
In the West too. The Paks are outnumbered 3 to 1. The Indians have better air
equipment too.
Mr. Sisco:
The Paks are no match and Yahya knows it.
Gen. Ryan:
Neither country could sustain a very long war without outside aid, but
Mr. Van
Hollen: On contingency planning generally, the WSAG Working Group has been
reviewing all the various steps we could take in military supply, economic
assistance, trade, air services, evacuation, etc. We are keeping everything up
to date. The only question is the political framework.
Mr. Sisco:
(to Van Hollen) You had better mention the ships.
Mr. Van
Hollen: There are two ships from MIDEASTFOR which are due to call at
Mr.
Selden: One has a critical fueling problem.
Dr.
Kissinger: I see no problem with this.
Mr. Sisco:
We just wanted to be sure both you and the President knew about it.
Source: Document 183, volume XI,