Backchannel
Message from the President's Assistant for National Security Affairs
(Kissinger) to the Ambassador to Pakistan (Farland)/1/
/1/ Source:
National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 643, Country
Files, Middle East, India/Pakistan, December 1-10. Top
Secret; Sensitive; Exclusively Eyes Only.
Washington, December 7, 1971, 8:43 p.m.
Please
deliver as soon as possible to President Yahya the
following message from President Nixon.
"Mr.
President,
Thank you
for your December 7 message/2/ which underlines the grave situation which your
nation faces. I want you to know that you have the understanding and support of
the United States at this critical hour.
We will continue our strong efforts to bring peace to the subcontinent, effect
the withdrawal of Indian forces from your country, restore the territorial
integrity of Pakistan, and see to it that
political, not military, solutions are found for regional problems.
/2/
Document 242.
I would like
to supplement the full reports I know you have been getting from Ambassador Raza in Washington and Ambassador Farland by reviewing the various steps my government has
been taking to work toward our mutual objectives.
The United States has made a series of
strong démarches to India in New Delhi and in
Washington, including my recent
meetings with Prime Minister Gandhi, which made clear that the American people
and government would not understand a resort to war. Since India began its incursions,
we have taken the actions that we warned the Indian government would occur. Thus
on December 1 and 3 we cut off all arms shipments to India. Since late November we
have used administrative techniques to delay economic assistance to
New Delhi. On December 6 we
suspended certain categories of economic assistance to India totaling $87.6 million.
We are now reviewing all our remaining economic assistance programs for India.
Since the
outbreak of full hostilities, the White House and the State Department have
issued a series of statements deploring Indian actions and fixing major
responsibility on New Delhi for the present crisis.
Today Dr. Kissinger is holding a background session with the press at which he
will make clear our concerns and policies in South Asia and will point out the
dangerous implications of Indian and Soviet actions.
In the
United Nations, the United States, in close consultation
with your country and other interested parties, worked for passage of Security
Council resolutions that would call for withdrawal of forces in addition to a
ceasefire in the subcontinent. We are now making efforts to have the UN General
Assembly take action on the subcontinent situation and will continue to insist
that any resolution must include a call for withdrawal of outside forces.
With respect
to the Soviet
Union,
the United States has repeatedly
underlined the dangerous implications of the Indian resort to war and the
Soviet responsibility to exercise restraint. The latest U.S. representation is an
urgent personal letter/3/ which I sent to Secretary Brezhnev on December
6, 1971,
which makes unequivocally clear that India's aggression, with
Soviet support, is unacceptable to the United States. I pointed out that the
Indian forces, with Soviet backing, are attempting to impose political demands
and dismember Pakistan, and that such actions run
counter to the recent trend in Moscow-Washington relations. I called on the Soviet Union to use its influence in
New
Delhi to restore the territorial integrity of Pakistan and to halt military
action. I stated that 'it would be illusory to think that if India can somehow achieve its
objectives by military action the issue will be closed.' I said that, on the
contrary, this 'would long complicate the international situation and undermine
the confidence' of US-Soviet relations, having 'an adverse effect on a whole
range of other issues.' I declared that such a turn of events would be a
'painful disappointment' and that the spirit in which the May meeting in
Moscow was arranged requires
'the utmost restraint and the most urgent action to end the conflict and
restore territorial integrity in the Subcontinent.'
/3/
Document 236.
We shall
continue to underline to both New Delhi and Moscow that their current
actions cannot but have a seriously harmful impact on our relations with them.
We are
keeping the People's Republic of China fully informed about
the various measures we are taking in your support and have made clear that we
welcome the strong efforts it is making in your behalf.
In my
December 6 meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau I emphasized the grave
implications of Indian actions and the need for peace, withdrawal of forces,
territorial integrity, and political solutions in the subcontinent. I shall
make equally strong representations in my upcoming meetings with the leaders of
France, the United Kingdom, the Federal Republic
of Germany, and Japan.
Mr.
President, I, of course, recognize that all these
steps and those taken by your other friends have to date failed to deter India or the Soviet Union. I want you to be
assured that we shall continue to make our own efforts, to encourage the
efforts of others, and to search for new means to make clear that aggression
across international borders cannot be allowed to go unpunished.
My thoughts
are with you in this difficult hour for your nation."/4/
/4/ Farland sent a backchannel message to Kissinger on December
8 in which he reported that President Yahya was
visibly touched by President Nixon's letter and expressed his appreciation. In
the course of their conversation, Yahya described the
situation in East
Pakistan
as "beyond hope," and told Farland that he
anticipated that the death total among Biharis and
supporters of his government in East Pakistan could run into the
millions. (National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 134,
Kissinger Office Files, Country Files, Middle East, India-Pakistan)
Sincerely,
RN
Source: Document 243, volume XI, South
Asia crisis 1971, Department of State.