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. No
drafting information appears on the minutes. The meeting was held in the White
House Situation Room. A briefer record of the meeting prepared by James Noyes
(OASD/ISA) is in the
SUBJECT
PARTICIPATION
Chairman-Henry A. Kissinger
State
Mr. Joseph Sisco
Mr. Christopher Van Hollen
Mr. Bruce Laingen
Mr. David Schneider
Mr. Samuel DePalma
Defense
Mr. Warren Nutter
Mr. Armistead Selden
Mr. James H. Noyes
JCS
Adm. Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.
Capt. Howard N. Kay
CIA
Mr. Richard Helms
Mr. John Waller
AID
Dr. John Hannah
Mr. Maurice Williams
Mr. Donald MacDonald
NSC Staff
B/Gen. Alexander Haig
Col. Richard Kennedy
Mr. Harold Saunders
Mr. Samuel Hoskinson
Adm. Robert Welander
Mrs. Jeanne W.
SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS
It was agreed that:
1) The official Indian
statement on the "no-holds-barred" offensive/2/ and the comparable
Pak statements, should be reflected in our statement at the UN today;
/2/ Reference is to a
statement made by Defense Secretary K.B. Lall on
December 4 that
2) CIA will prepare by Monday
morning, December 6, an hour-by-hour account of events, along with whatever
conclusions they can draw;
3) The bland letter calling
for the Security Council meeting, proposed by the Japanese and others, is
satisfactory as long as the points in our original version of the letter are
covered in our announcement of the meeting call.
4) We should seek to speak
first at the SC meeting, after
5) We will introduce our
resolution at the time we make our statement, without co-sponsors if necessary.
6) We will go along with
general language on political accommodation but will not accept specific
language concerning Mujib's release.
7) AID will prepare a paper on
exactly what we have done in cutting off economic assistance to India and what
we will say publicly when our action becomes known; the paper should include
the reason why we have not taken the same action for Pakistan although this
will not be made public now.
8) Agriculture's desire to
ship 50,000 tons of vegetable oil to
Dr. Kissinger: Dick (Helms),
what's going on?
(Mr. Helms briefed from the
attached text.)/3/
/3/ Attached
but not printed. Helms briefed from
notes that described a combined Indian-Mukti Bahini offensive in
Mr. Helms: We sent you a copy
of a study yesterday on
/4/ Not
found.
Dr. Kissinger: If the Indians
have announced a full-scale invasion, this will have to be reflected in the
statement we're making this afternoon at the UN.
Mr. Van Hollen:
I'll check on it.
Dr. Kissinger: It's not in the
statement/5/ now and it should be.
/5/ In his statement to the
United Nations Security Council on December 4, Ambassador Bush introduced a
resolution that called for the cessation of hostilities, the withdrawal of
armed forces by India and Pakistan from each other's territory, and encouraged
both countries to avail themselves of the Secretary-General's offer to use his
good offices to promote a settlement. (UN doc. S/PV.1606)
Mr. Helms: So far as who
started it is concerned, we're no better off than we were yesterday. Nor do we
have any explanation as to why
Dr. Kissinger: (to Helms) Could we have by Monday morning an hour-by-hour account of
who did what when?
Mr. Helms: Sure. Have you seen
our latest paper?/6/ That covers most of it, although
it isn't listed by hours. Should we convert that into an hourly chronology?
/6/ Reference is to the
memorandum cited in footnote 2 above.
Dr. Kissinger: It would
help-and also what conclusions you can draw./7/
/7/ The CIA prepared a
chronology and covering memorandum entitled, "India- Pakistan:
Responsibility for Initiating Hostilities on 3 December 1971" in response
to this request. The documents are undated, but the chronology runs through
December 4, suggesting that they were prepared and submitted on December 5. The
covering memorandum concluded that it was difficult to determine conclusively
which country initiated hostilities, but the weight of evidence tended to
support Indian claims that
Mr. DePalma:
If you're going to include what
/8/ President Yahya's speech to the nation is summarized in the
memorandum cited in footnote 2 above.
Dr. Kissinger: I'm under
instruction from the President to tilt our statements toward
Mr. DePalma:
I'm just asking how you want it handled. We can use only the Indian statement or
both statements.
Dr. Kissinger: Is this an
official Indian statement?
Mr. Helms: Yes.
Mr. Van Hollen:
Is there an official statement on the Pak side?
Mr. Helms: By Yahya himself.
Dr. Kissinger: Have the
Indians said they are launching an all-out attack?
Mr. Helms: They've said they
have launched a "no holds barred" offensive on
Dr. Kissinger: Has Yahya said anything of a comparable nature?
Mr. Helms: He has said his
army would push the invader back into his own territory and destroy him.
Dr. Kissinger: Is that
objectionable? Can the UN object to someone driving an enemy back? The Pak
Ambassador called me the other day to say he had been told by someone in the
State Department to exercise restraint and wanted to know how he should do it.
I told him to go back and ask the person who told him.
Mr. DePalma:
If the statements track that way, both of them can be mentioned in our
statement.
Dr. Kissinger: Can someone
brief on what happened on the approach to the UN?
Mr. DePalma:
The UK,
/9/ Copies are in the National
Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, NSC Institutional Files
(H-Files), Box H-082, WSAG Meeting, South Asia, 11/24/71.
Dr. Kissinger: I thought we
were going to make an announcement.
Mr. DePalma:
We are. We can make the announcement in our own terms.
Dr. Kissinger: I have no
strong views on what the letter should say as long as we can get our version
out through the announcement. Our letter is the same as our press statement. Is
that what they object to?
Mr. DePalma:
Yes.
Dr. Kissinger: (Reading the
text of the proposed substitute letter)/10/ I don't care how the request for
the meeting is made as long as George Bush understands what he is to say. Are
there any views on this? Does it make any difference?
/10/ The letter submitted to
the Security Council President on December 4 requested an urgent meeting of the
Security Council to consider the deteriorating situation on the subcontinent
and was signed by the representatives of Argentina, Belgium, Burundi, Italy,
Japan, Nicaragua, Somalia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. (UN doc.
S/10411)
Mr. Helms: I don't think it
makes any difference.
Mr. Van Hollen:
We do need a letter, though-it shouldn't just be done
orally.
Dr. Kissinger: Go ahead with
the bland letter. We will put out our statement. Incidentally, whoever is backgrounding for the State Department has invoked the
President's wrath. He referred to UPI-5, saying he would like us to give the
impression of a unified, coordinated government. The President believes he has
been issuing some instructions in this matter, not just being kept
"appraised."
What will happen at the UN?
Mr. DePalma:
We don't know the hour of the meeting yet-it will either be this afternoon or
this evening. The opening statements will be made by
Dr. Kissinger: Do we have to
take account of what anyone else says?
Mr. DePalma:
The impact of our statement would be cleaner if it were not treated in the
press as one of several lines being taken.
Dr. Kissinger: I have no
objection to our speaking first after
Mr. DePalma:
On the resolution, there is a question as to whether we can get things lined up
in time to introduce it at the time we make our statement. We think it would be
better to have our co-sponsors lined up. If they begin to quibble with the
text, however, we will have to decide whether we want to take the time to work
out an agreed text.
Dr. Kissinger: But we have
told the Paks we are going to put in this resolution.
Mr. DePalma:
It's the one they expect.
Dr. Kissinger: Then we have to
put it in.
Mr. DePalma:
Alone?
Mr. Helms: What's the matter
with being for peace?
Dr. Kissinger: Is our
resolution so daring?
Mr. Helms: Why shouldn't we
hand the text out to the press before we make our statement?
Mr. DePalma:
We can't do that if we want co-sponsors.
Dr. Kissinger: It's a question
of whether we want a fan-dance or want to position ourselves. We want the
resolution tabled. We know it won't come out as it goes in. Having bitched
around for the last two weeks, the only thing we want now is to make our
position clear. Everyone knows we will end up with Indian occupation of
Mr. DePalma:
All right. We will make a minimum effort for co-sponsors. We will tell them we
will table our resolution at the time we make our statement. If they want to
co-sponsor, fine. If not, we will table it and the others can come in if they
like.
Dr. Kissinger: They'll play
with the language anyway. The possibility of their accepting it as is is zero.
Mr. DePalma:
They'll quibble with it.
Dr. Kissinger: Their quibbles
added together could be significant. If there is virtue in our speaking first,
after the Indians and Pakistanis, there is virtue in positioning ourselves and
getting our resolution in. We know nothing is going to happen at the UN.
Anything will be vetoed.
Mr. Van Hollen:
Both the Soviets and Indians will try to delay.
Mr. Helms: The headlines of
the past week all take the line that the
Dr. Kissinger: We will hit
hard on cease-fire and withdrawal of forces before political settlement. I've
talked to Secretary Rogers and that is his view too. I now assume that the
resolution will be introduced by us at the time of Bush's statement. If anyone
else wants to join us, fine. But there will be no hold-up.
Mr. DePalma:
Okay.
Dr. Kissinger: And we
understand that we will not go along with any specifics on political
accommodation. We will accept general political settlement language, but not
specifically related to Mujib's release. Is that
understood?
Mr. DePalma:
Yes.
Dr. Kissinger: How long can
Mr. DePalma:
Mr. Van Hollen:
They will spin it out as long as possible while they are moving militarily.
Mr. DePalma:
They can do it for three or four days, then something has to happen.
Mr. Helms: Just about long
enough to occupy
Mr. DePalma:
We can try to force a vote-to force them to veto, if there is any virtue in
that. It should be weighed against the remote possibility of getting something
useful.
Dr. Kissinger: It's
inconceivable that we will get anything useful out of this. The Soviets won't
tolerate it-the Indians won't have it.
Mr. DePalma:
One guy or the other will veto./11/
/11/ The U.S. draft resolution
(UN doc. S/10416) was vetoed by the
Dr. Kissinger: There will
definitely be a Security Council session today?
Mr. DePalma:
Yes.
Mr. Helms: That
Dr. Kissinger: What was that?
Mr. DePalma:
The President of the Council was shilly-shallying around about calling a
meeting.
Dr. Kissinger: When are we
making our announcement about the meeting?
Mr. DePalma:
I'm not sure.
Dr. Kissinger: On the question
of economic assistance, the President wants to go ahead on
Mr. Williams: Should our
statement also cover why we are not taking the same action for
Dr. Kissinger: No, let's keep
that back. We should have a reason, though.
Mr. Williams: Agriculture
wants us to point out that the price of vegetable oil in the
Dr. Kissinger: I know their
problem. Let me raise it with the President. I'll get you an answer by opening
of business Monday morning. (to Adm. Zumwalt) What's the military situation? How long can the Paks hold out in
Adm. Zumwalt:
Not long. Their logistics will grind to a halt-in one or two weeks if they're
not overrun sooner. The Indians may occupy some essential parts but stop short
of total occupation and let the guerrillas take the parts that the Indians
don't want to hold. The Soviets will probably convert the aid they had proposed
for
Dr. Kissinger: We'll meet
again Monday/12/ morning, unless something happens to require a meeting sooner.
We have the draft reply to Yahya, but we don't need
to do that now.
/12/
December 6.
Mr. Nutter: It goes without
saying that anyone relying on the newspapers for his information is convinced
that this is entirely the fault of the Pakistanis. They failed to come to some
political accommodation then they attacked
Dr. Kissinger: It's a well
done political campaign. We'll be paying for it for a long time. You'll look at
UPI-5, won't you?
Source: Document 224, volume XI,