THE PRESIDENT'S DAILY BRIEF

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
05974329
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
11
Document Creation Date: 
April 27, 2019
Document Release Date: 
April 30, 2019
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 15, 1968
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PDF icon THE PRESIDENTS DAILY BRIE[15617739].pdf187.75 KB
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Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 C05974329 The President's Daily Brief Top Secret 15 March 1968 23 Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 C05974329 3.5(c) - -TOP ECRE1 DAILY BRIEF 15 MARCH 1968 Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 1. North Vietnam 2. South Vietnam 3. Japan 4f-� 4-7 Commu- nist forces may be preparing for an- other round of coordinated attacks in various areas of the country in the near future. The local Communists are taking dead aim at all US activities in Japan and Okinawa related to the war in Viet- nam. The prospect is for more demon- strations, perhaps violent ones. Sato, who faces upper house elections early this summer, is in a cautious mood and will try to avoid doing anything that might further stir up this hornet's nest. 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2)c 3.3(h)(2)' Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 3.5(c) Tor SECRET - 4. Panama Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 5. Eastern Europe TOP SECRET Last night the assembly finally voted to impeach President Robles. The trial is set for 24 March. The Presi- dent was not suspended from office last night, as he legally could have been. His removal is likely to await the ex- pected guilty verdict, probably on 27 or 28 March. General Vallarino's day of decision could thus be nearly two weeks away, but the chances of a compromise solu- tion now seem remote indeed. New street demonstrations took place in Poznan and Lodz yesterday. Warsaw students have not yet been brought to heel. The party continues its heavy-handed efforts to discredit the student "agitators," but there is some evidence that it is now groping for ways to open a dialogue with them. In Czechoslovakia there was more bad news yesterday for the beleaguered Novotny. The suicide of Deputy Defense Minister Janko dramatizes the despera- tion and isolation of those who tried to save Novotny last January. Janko was in command of the armored forces and was probably partly responsible for the ill-fated effort to bring out tanks in Novotny's behalf. In Moscow, the press and radio are silent on recent Polish and Czech de- velopments. We have no doubt, however, that the men in the Kremlin are watching these events intently, even anxiously. � Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) 3.5(c) 6. Thailand 7. Sweden Tor SECRET _Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 Bangkok is making a long-overdue reappraisal of its efforts to suppress Communist-led guerrillas in the north. Senior army leaders now admit that they have made little progress against the guerrillas, that their forces are suffering increasing casual- ties, and that the government's harsh tactics against the local tribesmen have only worsened the situation. The government is now seeking new approaches. There is no sign yet, how- ever, that it realizes that its best hope for a lasting solution is to win over the people in the affected areas. Leaders of the principal opposi- tion parties have publicly closed ranks behind the government on the matter of Ambassador Heath's recall. This was perhaps to be expected. Now the Swed- ish press is beginning to take a healthy look at the basic issues, especially the damage to Sweden's neutrality brought about by the antics of Education Minis- ter Palme. The ambassador's recall is also getting a lot of attention elsewhere in Scandinavia, but editorial opinion is mixed. Some papers--and most of those in Denmark--are blasting the US for try- ing to "intimidate" Sweden. Others are critical of Sweden for moving beyond neutrality toward the Communist position on Vietnam. Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) 3.5(c) Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 �To FOR THE PRESIDENT'S EYES ONLY Special Daily Report on North Vietnam Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 luv-Seeret 3.5(c) 16 15 March 1968 Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 C05974329 Special Daily Report on North Vietnam for the President's Eyes Only 15 March 1968 I. NOTES ON THE SITUATION Tor SECRET - 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 C05974329 3.5(c) TOP SECRET TOP Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 * * * North Vietnam Continues Postwar Reconstruction Plans Hanoi has never dropped its reconstruction plans. Although some major aid projects were suspended in 1965 and 1966, projects like the Thac Ba hydropower plant have been receiving periodic maintenance to prevent their deterioration, -2- 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 3.5(c) :10P SECRET Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 Another index of Hanoi's continuing investment for the future is the large number of North Vietnam- ese students that have been sent abroad for long periods of study in the Soviet Union and Eastern Eu- rope. * * * II. NORTH VIETNAMESE REFLECTIONS OF US POLITICAL ATTITUDES ON THE WAR Comments on Foreign Relations Committee Hear- ings: Initial Hanoi commentary on the Senate For- eign Relations Committee hearings has centered on the statements on the Gulf of Tonkin incident. A Hanoi domestic broadcast on 13 March noted that Secretary Rusk was "strongly criticized" at the hearing when he "pleaded for the US aggressive pol- icy in Vietnam." According to this account, Rusk TOP SECRET - -3- 3.5(c) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) 3.3(h)(2) Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 3.5(c) *TOP SECRET Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 was "forced" to give a clear explanation about the "fabrication" of the Tonkin incident. The broad- cast also said that severe questioning of Rusk on this point reflected the "great worries" of a num- ber of US senators about the consequences of dif- fering views on Vietnam policy in the US. State- ments critical of US policy by Senators Morse, Fulbright, and Mansfield were offered to support that contention. The Hanoi party daily, Nhan Dan, in an_article broadcast on 14 March, also offerTa�a detailed dis- cussion of the Tonkin debate both prior to and dur- ing the Senate hearings. It alleged that the administration's claims concerning the incident were "deceitful and slanderous maneuvers" and that American public opinion was finally seeing throughL "Johnson's facade." Nhan Dan claimed that the reason the incident wTg-TeTER- discussed now was primarily because of recent US "failures" in Viet- nam. Summing up its view of the Senate debate, Nhan Dan claimed that never has the US been criticizTU-- 'FHB' condemned so strongly and isolated so seriously as it is now. Never has it been confronted with so many difficulties and such grave internal strife as now. Antiwar opposition, the paper contended, will grow as Communist successes in Vietnam mount. * * * Antiwar Activity: Hanoi, in its English lan- guage broadcast on 13 March, noted that some 1,000 New York University students and faculty members had recently demonstrated against Dow Chemical Com- pany recruiting on the campus. The broadcast also reported that a political party called "For Peace and Freedom" has come into being in Pennsylvania. One of the points in its program, according to the Hanoi statement, is to demand an end to the "dirty war pursued by the US in Vietnam." Tor SECRET - -4- Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 005974329 3.5(c) 3.5(c) Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 C05974329 Approved for Release: 2019/04/17 C05974329