ADMINISTRATION POLICY IN VIETNAM

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
22
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 25, 2003
Sequence Number: 
17
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 29, 1965
Content Type: 
OPEN
File: 
Body: 
Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 April 2,9, .1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -HOUSE Welfare. Also on Tuesday H.R. 2985, the Community Mental Health Centers Act Amendiii nts of 1065 under an open rule with ~ hours of,,debate Also on Tuesday H.R. 5401, the Interstate Cvm- merge Act. ginendinents, under' an en rule with 3'-hours of debate. On Wednesday H.R. 7657, authorizing defense procurement and research and development. On Thursday H.R. '7717, authorizing appropriations to the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration. '' On Friday and the balance of the week H.R. 2984, the Health Research Facil- ities Amendments of 1965, under an open rule with 3 hours of debate. This announcement is made subject to the usual reservation that conference reports may be brought up at any time and that any further program may be announced later. Mr. Speaker, will the gentleman yield further for the purpose of making some unanimous-consent requests? Mr. LAIRD. I am glad to yield to the majority leader. ADJOURNMENT OVER TO MONDAY .: NEXT 'Mr. ALBERT. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that when the House adjourns today it adjourn to meet on Monday next. The SNEAKER. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman from Oklahoma? There was no objection. Mr. EDMONDSON. Mr. Speaker, will _the gentleman yield to me for a question? "Mr. LAIRD. I yield to the gentleman from Oklahoma. Mr.. EDMONDSON. Mr. Speaker, I take this time to ask the distinguished 'majority leader if we can, expect early programing of the emergency basin au- thorization bill which was reported yes- terday by the House Committee on Public -Works, with regard to which there is a growing emergency in terms of monetary authorizations for contracts? `Mr. ALBERT. Mr. Speaker, if the gentleman will yield further, I would say that, of course, when the rule is granted on that bill I think we can as- sure the gentleman of early programing. 'Mr. EDMONDSON. I thank the - man very much. AUTHORIZATION TO RECEIVE, MES- SAGES AND SIGN BILLS Mr. ALBERT. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous' consent that notwithstand- ing the adjournment of the House until Monday next, the Clerk be authorized to receive messages from the Senate' and ,that the .S.peaker' be authorized 'to sign ally enrolled bills and joint resolutions duly passed by the two Houses and found truly enrolled. The SPEAKER. Is , there objection to the request of the gentleman from Oklahoma.? There was no, objection. DISPENSING WITH CALENDAR WEDNESDAY BUSINESS Mr. ALBERT. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that the business in order under the Calendar Wednesday rule may be dispensed with on Wednes- day next. The SPEAKER. Is there objection to the. request of the gentleman from Oklahoma? There was no objection. GENERAL LEAVE TO EXTEND Mr. POWELL. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members of the House be given 5 legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks in the RECORD with relation to the bill H.R. 4714. , The SPEAKER. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman from New York? There was no objection. ADMINISTRATION'S" POLICY IN' VIE'I4NAM (Mr. CABELL asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute, and to revise and extend his remarks, and to include extraneous matter.) ,Mr. CABELL. Mr. Speaker, in these days when a better understanding is so important on the part of the American people concerning the administration's policy in Vietnam, it is gratifying to know that our news media is so dili- gently trying to keep our Nation in- formed. I pay tribute especially to the Dallas Morning News, a great newspaper, which has so strongly expressed its sup- port of our President. At this time, I would like to include in the RECORD an editorial which appeared in the Dallas Morning News on April 21, 1965 L.B.J.'s DIVIDENDS Dividends from the President's recent policy speech on Vietnam are coming in. Even if nothing ever comes of the offer of peace with honor, as matters now stand we will have received important cold war gains just by making it. The speech was not only a combination of sweet talk-which the neutralists like-and strong action-which the Reds understand. It was also an example of Johnson political jujitsu: It threw the Communists off balance at every level' from the diplomatic to the tactical. On the tactical 'level, the northern Viet- minh` officers of the Vietcong are -having a topgh time trying to get any new recruits in the South. Furthermore they are losing the ones they have. The United States is accen- tuating the positive goal of development and it sounds good to many Vietcong troopers, apparently. On the diplomatic level, it is now the Red North Vietnamese and their Chinese "big daddy" who are telling the neutralist peace- seekers to go jump in the lake and warning the U.N. to mind its own business. While this doesn't affect the military situation, it costs the Reds points among the Afro-Asian nations. In between, 'it , made necessary an _em- barrassin,g switch . in the party line of the 8567 leftist movements in this country. Hereto- fore, they had covered their goal of a free world surrender with the reasonable sound- ing appeal for negotiations. The two terms are synonyms in their book, anyway. Now they can no longer use "negotiations" as a cover and must campaign more explicitly for a sellout. All in all, it appears L.B.S. has won an inning in the Reds' own political warfare game. OF (Mr. BROWN of California asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to revise and ex- tend his remarks.) Mr. BROWN of California. Mr. Speaker, because of the urgency of the problem of Vietnam, I would like to dis- cuss the implications from the answers on the Vietnam question in the recent questionnaire which I sent to constitu- ents in the 29th District of California. There were four policy choices avail- able. These choices, with the percentage favoring each one, are as follows: -Percent 1. Expansion of the war------------- 42 2. Continue current level, without ex- pansion -------------------------- 12 3. Seek negotiated settlement---------- 29 4. Immediate withdrawal-------------- 11 Six percent did not give a choice or did not answer. Looked at another way, 54 percent favored continuing or expanding our effort, while 40 percent favored negotiating or withdrawing. Still an- other way of interpreting the results is that 52 percent disagree with the 42 per- cent who favor expansion. . We. have analyzed these total responses in several different ways, and there are significant differences based on political preference, sex, religious preference, age, and education. I should mention, inci- dentally, that our sample of 13,000 is extremely' close to the average of all voters in the district in terms of political . affiliation and most other characteristics. It is slightly biased in favor of men, but I suspect that may result from husbands and wives collaborating in some cases and sending in the results under the husband's name. The returns are also biased in favor of the better educated, who, generally, are less afraid of ques- tionnaires. .Broken down by political preference, the results show only 34 percent of the Democrats favoring No. 1, but 54 percent of the Republicans favoring this course. An equal percentage of Democrats-34 percent-favor No. 3, a negotiated. settle- ment, but only 21 percent of the Repub- licans favor this alternative. About 10 percent of both parties favor the fourth choice-immediate withdrawal. On the basis of sex, the women are evenly divided on policy, with 46 percent favoring No. 1 and No. 2 and 46 per- cent favoring No. 3 and No. 4. The men, on the other hand, favor No. 1 and No. 2 by 60 percent, with 37 percent favoring Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000.300150017-5- $568 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE April 29, 1965 "There is no significant difference be- tween Catholic and Protestant responses, but the Jewish and "other",respondents, who represented about 13' percefit" of the total, were much more strongly In favor of negotiations-40..percent-and much less in favor of expansion-27 percent. The distribution of responses based on education was quite interesting, and somewhat difficult to explain. For all of those having less thana high school`edu- eation-11 years of schooling or less- more supported No. 3 and No. 4 than sup- ported No. 1 and No 2. For these with 12 years through 1G years of education, which was the largest grouping, opinion was strongly in favor of No. 1 and No. 2. For the "egghead" group-17 through 2! years of schooling-more favored ne- gotiation than expansion. The responses of this, group were about the same,` in proportion, as the responses of those with less than high school education. With regard to age, the significant re- sults were that those under 30, who have never experienced war, were much more strongly in favor of continuing or ex- panding ,the military action than any other age group. Those 30 and over, whose generation participated in one or more wars, are considerably less en- thusiastic. In a very general way, the profile which emerges from this data is that the citizens of the 29th Congressional District in California ,are'leaning toward a. . hard-line, expand-the-war policy, led by those who are young, college edu- 'ted, Republican, and male. Those who are holding back, leaning toward a ne- 60ated settlement, tend to be older, with either more or less education than thehard-line group, Democratic, more predominately female, and of a minority religious belief. A number of interesting questions are raised as to how I should be guided by results such as these. Which "group" do'3"seek counsel from? Frankly, I be- lieve that my course should be to decide ply stand for myself, based on the best knowledge and judgment I possess. Having done that, I should make my position clear to all, and we should en- doufage la dialog, a broad exchange of ttlis; to seek to achieve better under- itanding by, all citizens and more rea- sonable decisions, by our Government. We will rarely find that any of us are all right or all wrong. 13y exchanging views, we may each come a little closer to the truth. Obviously, there is no clear concensus of opinion indicated by the questionnaire results, and a lot of controversy is shown. 'A may be anticlimactic for me to in- dicate, again, that I feel 'that our coun- try is following the wrong policy in Vietnam. A TRI$UTE TO THE PEOPLE OF RUSSIAVILLE, IND. (Mr. ROUSH asked and was given per- mission to address the House for 1 min- ute and to revise and extend his. re- marks.) Mr. ROUSH. Mr? Speaker, I take this time to pay tribute to the people of the town of Russiaville in my district in In- diana. On Palm Sunday a terrible, de- vastating storm cut a swath through my district which destroyed millions of dol- lars worth of property and claimed scores of lives. The town of Russiaville Is a small and unincorporated town. They lost their post office and all of their pub- lic facilities, schools, and churches. However, the People of Russlaville are determined people and, despite this loss and despite the fact that they have not been able to determine how they might receive aid from either the State or the Federal Government because of the fact that they are not incorporated, they have banded themselves together with a determination which I think is com- mendable. I would commend their ac- tions to the people of this country as an exemplification of the American spirit. I would trust that the Members of the House might give these people their moral support as they strive and en- deavor to rebuild a community of very fine people. They already have formed a nonprofit organization and will use the funds being obtained toward gaining legal recogni- tion of their town. They have taken the initial steps which I am certain will lead to a new Russiaville replacing the scars left behind in the devastation of the orig- inal. (Mr. O'HARA of Illinois asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute, to revise and extend his remarks and to include extraneous mat- -ter.) [Mr. O'HARA of Illinois addressed the House. His remarks will appear here- after in the Appendix.] SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE RE- VOLVING FUND? NO, NO (Mr. ICHORD asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend his re- marks.) Mr. ICHORD. Mr. Speaker, the re- cent recommendation of the Bureau of the Budget for a $100 million cut in the U.S. Department of Agriculture Soil Con- servation Service and to establish a re- volving fund for the conservation pro- gram is shortsighted planning and is damaging, to say the least, to an effec- tive program which has been one of the most successful ventures of the Federal Government in conserving for the future. The Soil Conservation Service, Initi- ated in 1929, has without doubt returned dividends amounting to many, many times the original investment of the Gov- ernment. Created to conserve America's farmland and to protect it from washing, eroding, and devastating windstorms, the Soil Conservation District has been one of the most productive farm programs ever devised. It is my understanding the proposed reorganization of the program would require that participating farmers pay 60 percent of the cost of conservation practices. Let me reflect briefly on the accomplishments of the Soil Conserva- tion Service. The program was conceived at a time when the farmers of the United States could ill afford to spend money to con- serve and rehabilitate America's greatest resource-the soil, which is the base of our economy. In 1936 when the conser- vation, programs were born, much of our farmland had been both "misused and abused" through lack of funds for re- habilitating the land and also through lack of information about conservation practices. At that time duststorras, gullies, and damaging erosion were steadily and alarmingly consuming cur topsoil. Millions of acres had been rendered unfit for crop use as a result. But the advent of conservation policy in 1936 has had miraculous effects. After 30 years of technical assistance through the Soil Conservation Service nearly 3,000 soil and water districts with nearly 2 million operators operating 648 million acres of land are engaged in conserva- tion practices. They have applied 40 million acres of contour farming, nearly 20 million acres of striperopping, 1.2 million miles of terracing; planted 11.3 million acres of trees; and have built 1.3 million ponds. In 1964 alone the Soil Conservation Service provided direct services to 1,123,801 landowners and farmers. Between 1 and 2 million acres of cropland were converted to other uses during the year as a result of conserva- tion plans worked out by the Soil Con- servation Service. Through the operations of the Soil Conservation Service local needs and practices are worked out locally. The farmers themselves formulate the plans for conservation practices. and are able to control and manage the same. By working together on a distriotwide plan, countless advances and forward strides in meeting flood control problems and other agricultural problems have been made. Improvements in living standards can form better use of the land and water resources. It is recognized that our future pros- perity will depend on the foresight we have now in planning for the future use of all our resources. Is it not preposteer- ous then to even suggest that this pro- gram of vital importance and significance be reduced? Every American, man, woman, and child has an interest in maintaining and conserving the produc- tivity of our soil and for that reason careful thought must be given. The cost- sharing program proposed by the Bureau of the Budget would not work, It would not do the job the present program is doing. The $20 million which the Bu- reau of the Budget wants to delete from the appropriation is a mere drop in the bucket compared to the returns from the investment. Does the Bureau of the Budget actually believe that the Amer- ican farmers can afford to engage in roil conservation practices to insure that the land will be productive and fertile for future generations? It really is not his job. It is the responsibility of the Gov- ernment to plan far in advance for the future. I strongly oppose the revolving fund proposal and any reduction in ben- efits and operations of the Soil Conserva- tion Service and the agriculture conser- vation program. A STATEMENT ON THE MARCH FROM SELMA TO MONTGOMERY, ALA. (Mr. REID of New York asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute; to revise and extend his re- Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 April 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ENA 8655 8. Calls upon the United Nations, Inter- He does not quite use that phrase from much-deserved honor that has come to es ted governments and appropriate non- the old days. But his explanations of the one of our colleagues, Senator GALE d need to governmental reco Chin the ooigani ations toscientific intensifyiresearch on all dominant power inCAsia aunist ppear to have been MCGEE ive h Wyoming, who on May 6 will aspects of population problems, including borrowed, almost in toto, from the old Times receive the Golden Fleece Award of the .medical research and research on economic, of London leaders about the need to recog- National Association of Wool Mariufac- social, educational, cultural and organiza- nize Hitler's Germany as the dominant power turers. tfonal problems involved in implementing in Europe. Senator McGEE has been interested in effective population programs; But just as credulity must always be rec- the encouragement of the wool industry 4. Urges all parliaments to exercise In- ognized as an Inalienable senatorial prerog- in the Nation and in his home State, fluence on governments to facilitate partic- ative, so the right of professors of political throughout his career in the Senate, ipation in the forthcoming World Popula- science to play at being realists must also be which actually started prior to his elec- tion Conference of outstanding scholars, acknowledged. What is not pardonable in scientists and other experts in all relevant any serious academic figure is simple, pomp- tion to the Senate,. when he served as fields from both developing and developed ous ignorance such as is revealed by Profes- assistant to the late, respected Senator countries; sor Mo t ? - - rgen resources for the growth and fairer dis- episode in Chinese history. m an excepclonal tribution of the world's wealth and for the This statement is the key to the second harmonious development of he world's Morgenthau argument, that if no one gets population, China's back up, China will leave her neigh- bors to "live peacefully In (her) shadow." U.S. POLICY ON SOUTH VIETNAM But the central fact of Chinese history, its most impressive-indeed, awe inspiring- Mr. CANNON. Mr. President, in the aspect, is the tirelessness with which the Washington Post of April 21, Joseph Chinese people have resumed the task of Alsop set forth in his column a well- conquest whenever an opportunity offered. reasoned and much-needed explication China, properly so-called, appears when of the wisdom of the Johnson adminis- her history begins as a rather small region the Yellow r tration's policy on South Vietnam. China has reguarlyexpanded wSince , henevere a Mr. Alsop discussed in detail the fal- strong central government possessed the lacies behind the wishful thinking of the means to do so. Even in this century, when critics of President Johnson who are China's government was weak for so long, arguing for peace at any price. He draws the geographical area of ethnic China-the an interesting parallel between those territory mainly inhabited by people of who would retreat in the face of the Chinese blood-has nonetheless more than doubled. Chinese Intervention and those Manchuria is fully Sinifled. Inner Mon- who, generation rago,,'counseled ap- golia is largely digested. The huge province I c m d o men this article to my collea- dive independence until the end of the Sec- gues, and ask unanimous consent that it and World War, is already beinc swallowed to extend the Wool Act fora 7-year period. I know that the Members of the Sen- ate will join me in congratulating the National Association of Wool Manufac- turers for the excellent selection they have made, for we all know the Wyoming Senator-and none better than I, these days-as an energetic exponent of every cause he undertakes. Senator McGEE's sponsorship of the Food Marketing Commission, last year, now holding hearings and making ex- tensive studies of the food-marketing in- stitutions of the Nation, is another splen- did example of his effectiveness. I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD a press release Is- sued by the National Wool Manufac- turers, announcing Its selection of Sena- tor MCGEE as one of this year's recipients of its Golden Fleece Award. There b i e ng no objection, the release be printed at this point in the RECORD, down. In one or two more generations the was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, There being no objection, the article Tibetans, if they survive at all, are only likely as follows: was order: ed to be objection, the article to survive outside Tibet. And the ancient NEw YoRx, April l8.-Three men of accom- was peoples of central Asia have heard their plishment-a U.S. textile executive, an inter- doom proclaimed. national wool promotion director and a U.S. (From the Washington Post, Apr. 21, 1965] Even in southeast Asia, both the Viet- POMPOUS IGNORANCE namese and the Thais are refugee Senator-will receive Golden Fleece Awards ion ago peoples, of the National Association of Wool Manu- (By Joseph Alsop) g pushed out of what is now China facturers at its 100th annual meeting dinner One proof of the wisdom of President John- xpe eChinese xpecting the Chinese to let their neighbors The w dsy 6 at the Waachie emo nt Ha tee son's Vietnamese policy is its marked sic- alone, if everyone is just nice to them, is The awards are given for achievement in the cess to date. really a great deal sillier than the old be-nice- recipients chosen field. One must always be prepared for bad news. to-Hitler arguments. As announced by Roger D. Newell, Newell But it must also be said that since the Pleiku That does not mean that the Chinese peo- Textile Sales aw, ds will go to: committee Co. arrangements episode drove the President to take deter- pie are evil or perverted. On the contrary, chairman, the awards will go to: mined action, he and his policymakers have they are enviably intelligent, industrious, Ely R. Callaway, Jr., 45, executive vi been calling the shots with quite unprece- courageous and in all ways talented. There president of Burlington Industries, Inc., and dented accuracy. is a grain of truth among Professor Morgen- a director of NAW..: who is active in the con- Another proof of the President's wisdom thau's silly chaff, in the sense that the tinuing effort to obtain safeguards against Is the kind of criticism his policy has thus formidable qualities of the Chinese people low-wage wool textile and apparel Imports. far invited. It is bad enough when Senator also make them a formidable problem. FmLSRIGHT allows himself to ruminate in One way to solve the problem, to be sure, miU.S. SenAL ng, a major wGo Ep oducing State who is public on the desirability of "stopping the is to recognize the Chinese as the Asian her- one of the most active Senate leaders work- bombings," Apparently the Senator believes renvolk, and to allow them to gobble their ing on the wool product import problem, that this is the best way to promote negotia neighbors at will, even though their neigh- which President Johnson has publicly recog- tions on an acceptable basis. One can only bors happen to be our friends and allies. nized, pledging that his administration will prery that .c redulity is a cherished senatorial If Professor Morgenthau possessed enough vigorously seek a solution. forthrightness A more detailed reply is demanded, how- he co could not be called nignora t, although International VWool4Secretariat, London, ever, by the increasing barrage of such pieces he might perhaps be criticized on other which recently launched a worldwide wool as one just published by Prof. Hans J. Mor- grounds. genthau, of the University of Chicago. Mor- seems market promotion program handled here by e, however, to genthau is an Interesting figure; for he plays fast by our aallis;b totdef nd our ownstand awards wool bureau. vital Presenting the almost the same key role among the modern position as a Pacific power, and to hoe, of the oldest ntianna beh l ale of NAWM, appeasers that Geoffrey Damson, of the Times with hope, one of the olle a Francis, famous organiza ct ess of London played in the be-nice-to-Hitler power of time reason, time native strength of the and stelevision personality. Fr, fhe performed actress group in England before 1939. Chinese people will eventually bring the the same function In 1960 when sheherself The resemblance is curiously exact, more- present bout of Chinese governmental Stalin- received a Golden Fleece Award in a surprise over. "We are deluding ourselves in Viet- ism to an end. nam," says Professor Morgenthau and he ceremony. gives two main- proofs for this assertion. pr Mr. oud of said that N. "the association b that it First, he warns that we are getting Com- SENATOR MCGEE HONORED BY Proud of its century textile service bur tare munist China's back up, which he thinks NAWM and the wool textile industry are dangerous because he also thinks that the WOOL INDUSTRY recipients eto the future and ohs Golden Fleece Chinese Communists are "the wave of the Mr. MCGOVERN. Mr. President, I aeougimen with tman future." point because they years of achieve- call the attention of the Senate to a meat still ahead of them9" Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 8656 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE April 29, 1966' Mr. WILLIAMS of New Jersey. Mr. President, among the many nationali- ties which inhabit the area we refer to as the Middle East, few can claim as long a history as the Armenians. The Ar- menians enjoyed a long tradition of self- government, prosperity, and intellectual achievement. Although Armenia became a part of the various multinational empires which have ruled much of the eastern Medi- terranean area since antiquity, the Ar- menians were generally able to maintain their individuality and their traditions. We recognize, today, the right of all nationality groups to independence; yet this was a new and dangerous philosophy in the 19th century, when the Armenians formed nationalist groups and began to agitate for such Independence from the empire of which they then formed a part: the Ottoman. The Ottoman au- thorities tried to repress their movement, and began a brutal series of repressions in an attempt to convince the Armenians of the futility of their legitimate de- mands. Beginning in'1895, and lasting for over two decades, the Ottoman Empire took nearly every opportunity to literally mas- sacre the Armenians. In campaign after campaign, the armies of the empire slaughtered thousands upon thousands of men, women, and children in an effort to rid the empire, either by death or by Besides our household and personal effects, we own a 1964 Ford and a 1965 Mustang. We own U.S. savings bonds of face value of $1,250, have a savings account of $3,288.13, and maintain a fluctuating checking account of between $900 and $3,300. We have one son in college-at the University of Utah; one son on a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints; one son in junior high school, in Maryland; and our daughter is mar- ried. COMPANY COMMANDER STATES NEED FOR COLD WAR GI BILL FOR HIS MEN Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, recently I received a letter from a mili- tary officer, a company commander in the Army. As all know, few servicemen are closer to their rpen than is their com- mander; and this officer expresses deep concern for the future of his men when they return to civilian life. To illustrate the types of educational needs which the servicemen in his com- pany have, and to demonstrate the co- gency of this young officer's argument for the cold war GI bill, I ask unanimous consent that this letter, from Capt. Harry C. Calvin, be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, and inhuman of these campaigns began, Senator RALPH YARBOROUGH, the Armenians give us pause for refiec- u.s. senate, tion, for they prd'vide us with reassuring Washington, D.C. and moving proof that the will of a peo- HoN. SENATOR YARBOROUGH: I am an officer ple to self-determination and liberty can (class of 1960 USMA) in the Army with a never be eradicated, no matter what the permanent home in Houston, Tex. means. I am writing to you about the need for a cold war GI bill which will enable many of FINANCIAL STATEMENT BY SENATOR MOSS Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, I believe that all public officeholders and those who seek public office should make full disclosure of their income, financial as- sets, business relationships, and every other matter which might be a basis for conflict of interest. I know of no con- flict of interest on my part. I receive an annual salary of $30,000 from the U.S. Senate. Since coming to the Senate, I have earned approximately $1,000 as honor- ariums for speeches.. I receive no income from the practice of law or from any business. Upon my election to the Senate, I withdrew from the law practice entirely; and since then I have received no income of any kind- present or future-from the law practice. I resigned from the board of two, and sold my stock, when elected to the Senate. I now have no connection with, or income from, any business corporation, partnership, or proprietorship. My wife and I own an equity of about $4,660 in the home in which we live in Maryland. I also own an unimproved lot in Holladay, Utah, with a value of less than $500. our deserving and capable citizens to attend vocational and technical schools so they will continue to be useful and contributing citi- zens to our Nation's economy. At the present time I am a rifle company commander in an infantry battalion. Fifty- eight of my young men are draftees, many from Appalachia and its borders. They have all done good jobs for me in the past year and served their country well. Some have -vol- unteered for Vietnam duty, but were not called to go because (fortunately) ground combat -troops have not yet entered that conflict other than as advisers. More than 75 percent of these men are high school drop- outs for various reasons. Many have taken the high school general educational develop- ment tests sponsored by the U.S. Armed Forces Institute and passed them, indicating their capability to learn. A few have good jobs to return to in 6 months when they are discharged, but most will be forced to look for work; some admit they will draw unemployment as they do not expect to find work available. If they could only attend some vocational or technical school with Government assistance, they would be able to contribute much more to our society than they probably will under the present condi- tions facing them. Another problem along this line is that pired they face bleak prospects of finding suitable jobs to augment their retirement income. Because they stayed in for a career they have been penalized by loss of the Gi bill education benefits. Last week it was brought to my attention that Government statistics revealed one out of five retired Army personnel were still unemployed 6 months after retirement. Don't you think they deserve some assistance to be taught a new avocation? A personal example I would like to point out is that my executive officer, in for a career, enlisted in the Army shortly after finishing high school. He was honorably discharged, attended college under the Korean bill of rights (Public Law 533), was commissioned an officer in the Army and now contributes much more to our coun- try than if he had been discharged only 1;o face a hunt for a job or the difficult task of going to school without any monetary assist- ance from the Government. This is only one example from millions of veterans that are , now contributing much more to the gross national product than they would had they not been able to attend schools with Government assistance. I urge you to do everything in your power to correct this deficiency in our national pro- gram to increase the economic welfare of our Nation's citizens. HARRY C. CALVIN, Captain, Infantry. GREAT PLAINS CONSERVATION PROGRAM Mr. YARBOROUGH. Mr. President, in a recent editorial entitled "Reaping the Whirlwind," which was Published in the New York Times, the problems of soil conservation and land cultivation in the Great Plains areas were discussed. I do not feel that the New York Times editorial was written with a full under- standing of the bionomics of the Great Plains. In the New York Times of April 25, 1965, there was published a letter which D. A. Williams, the Administra- tor of the Soil Conservation Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, wrote to the editor. In the letter, Mr. Williams explained the work being done by the Great Plains conservation pro- gram, and expressed the hope that a growing percentage of land will soon. be safely kept in cultivation, with regular conservation practices, I congratulate the New York Times for printing his letter. Having lived in the Great Plains and a portion of my home State being within the Great Plains area, I have given some study to the Great Plains, its people, production, flora and fauna, and ecology. Mr. Williams' letter is very helpful to an understanding of that great area between the Mississippi Valley and the Rocky Mountains. Because this let- ter contributes greatly to our under- standing of the problems and of what is being done to alleviate these problems in the Great Plains, I ask unanimous con- sent that it be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, some of my senior noncommissioned officers as follows: will be retiring in a few years. They have From the New York Times, Apr. 25, 1965] served us well from World War II and the Korean conflict through the present crisis PROGRAM To HALT GREAT PLAINS' SOIL EROSION in Vietnam. They were entitled to the GI To the EDITOR : bill of rights from World War II and the Your recent editorial "Reaping the Whirl- Korean war but now that these have ex- wind" excited considerable interest among Approved For Release 2003/10/14 :-CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 `April 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE I vise their own employees; and the President pro tempore would be charged with the su- pervision.of all other officers and employees of the Senate. PROPOSALS REQUIRING CONCURRENT ACTION,.OF BOTH HbUSES 1. Appropriations Committee procedures: House and Senate Appropriations Commit- tees would,_be authorized to hold joint hear- ings and half of the. appropriations bills each year would originate in each Chamber to expedite congressional business. (S. Con. Res. 28, introduced by Senator CLARK on March 7, 1963, and pending in Rules Commit- tee.) 2. Separate session for. appropriations:. (S. 2198, introduced by. Senator MAGNUSON, and cosponsored by Senators CLARK, NEUBER- GER, and HART; pending in Rules Committee.) This bill would divide the annual session of Congress into two parts: a "legislative ses- sion" which would begin on January, 3 of each year and end not later than the first Monday in November; and a "fiscal session" beginning on the second Monday in Novem- ber and ending not later than December 31. Under the proposed procedure, Congress would devote the early session to substantive legislation including authorizations. It could then recess for the summer and. come back in November to deal with appropria= tions. The. bill also changes the fiscal year to make, it correspond, with the calendar year, so that all appropriations bills will be enacted before the beginning of the fiscal year to which they pertain. ORDER OF BUSINESS 'Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may pro- ceed for not to exceed 7 minutes. The PRESXDING OFFICER, The Senator from Alaska is recognized for 7 minutes. The request is not necessary unless the Senator wishes to speak out of order. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me briefly? Mr. GRUENING. X yield. WELCOMING TO THE UNITED STATES THE INTER-AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. . President, with the concurrence Qf the distinguished minority leader, the Senator from Illi- nois Mr. DISKSEN7, I ask unanimous consent for the immediate consideration of House Concurrent Resolution 349, which was messaged to the'Senate this morning. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The concurrent resolution will be stated, The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A concurrent resolution (H, Con, Res. 349) welcom- ing to the United States the Inter- American Bar Association during its 14th conference to be held in Puerto Rico. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the immediate consideration of the concurrent resolution? There be- ing no objection, the concurrent resolu- tion was considered and agreed to, as follows: Whereas the Inter-American Bar Associa- tion was organized at Washington, District of Columbia, May 16, 1940, and is now cele- brating the twenty-fifth anniversary of its founding; and Whereas the Inter-American Bar Associa- tion will hold its fourteenth conference at San Juan, Puerto Rico, during the period May 22-29 1965; and Whereas this is the first time that the Inter-American Bar Association has planned a conference in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; and Whereas three previous conferences of the association have been held in the United States; and Whereas the purposes of the association, as stated in its constitution, are to establish and maintain relations between associations and organizations of lawyers, national and local, in the various countries of the Amer- icas, to provide a forum for exchange of views, and to encourage cordial intercourse and fellowship among the lawyers of the Western Hemisphere; and Whereas the high character of this inter- national association, its deliberations, and its members can do much to encourage un- derstanding, friendship, and cordial relations among the countries of the Western Hemi- sphere; and Whereas there were adopted by the Eight- ieth Congress, in its second session, and by the Eighty-sixth Congress, in its first session, concurrent resolutions of welcome and good wishes to the Inter-American Bar Association on the occasion of its holding conferences in the United States: Now, therefore, be it Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), That the Congress of the United States welcomes the Inter- American Bar Association during its four- teenth conference to be held in the Com- monwealth of Puerto Rico, and wishes the association outstanding success in accom- plishing its purposes; and be it further Resolved, That a copy of this resolution be transmitted to the Secretary General of the Inter-American Bar Association. Mr. MANSFIELD. I thank the Sen- ator from Alaska for yielding. THE MESS I VIETN -XI: OUR POLICIES IN HEAST ASIA ARE AIDING AND NOT THWART- ING IMPERIALIST COMMUNISM Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, dur- ing his press conference Tuesday, Pres- ident Johnson commendably rebuked those columnists who, speaking not alone for themselves but for the underlings in the Federal bureaucracy intent on justifying their past errors, are attempt- ing to stamp out any and all criticism, however justified, of our policies in Viet- nam. In answer to the question, do you think any of the participants in the national discussion on Vietnam could appro- priately be likened to the appeasers of 25 or 30 years ago? President Johnson incisively. reasserted the right of critics to bring out their point of view on the mess in Vietnam by replying: I don't believe in characterizing people with labels. I think you do a great disservice when you engage in name calling. We want honest, forthright discussion in this coun- try, and that will be a discussion with differ- ences of views, and we welcome what our friends have to say, whether they agree with us or not. And I would not want to label people who agree with me or disagree with me. I am gratified at the President's reply-as all right-thinking Americans should be-but not surprised. I would have expected no less from one nurtured in the finest traditions of the Congress where, in the Senate, the right to "take the floor" and speak out on any topic is assured. Of late, however, critics of our Vietnam policies have done so at the risk 8665 of vituperative comment in the press. Some of us who have done so have run the danger of being called beatniks, even though beardless. I commend President Johnson, there- fore, for his defense of his critics and in the same vein in which he said, "We want honest, forthright discussion in this country, and that will be a discussion with differences of views, and we welcome what our friends have to say, whether they agree or not." And I shall continue to criticize the current, unrealistic United States policies in Vietnam. President Johnson's statements about Vietnam at his press conference yester- day sounded reasonable but were un- realistic. Our administration's policy is unreal- istic because it does not take into account the facts of life in Vietnam and of history. It is unrealistic because it continues the past errors responsible for our being mired in the quagmire of Vietnam. It is unrealistic because it does not take into account the fact that we are dealing in Vietnam with human beings and not machines. It is unrealistic because it assumes a monolithic, absolute control of the Viet- cong by Hanoi that simply does not exist. By some sort of a process of self- mesmerization, those advising President Johnson have convinced themselves- and President Johnson, apparently-that the National Front of Liberation in South Vietnam is only a "front" for Hanoi. Of course, it is in part. But to say so does not mean that the National Front of Liberation has no entity of its own-that it has no aspira- tions of its own-that it has no will of its own. The National Front of Liberation will accept from Hanoi direction and control in its efforts to conquer all of South Viet- nam so long as Hanoi's objectives coin- cide with its own. But, by excluding the National Front of Liberation from the groups with which he is willing to negotiate, the President is being entirely unrealistic. Suppose we do go to the peace table with Hanoi and the latter should agree to discontinue its aid to the Vietcong. Does anyone realistically believe that Hanoi could then issue orders to the Vietcong to lay down their arms and be- come part of the one big, happy family of peaceful Vietnamese? Anyone who takes such an unrealistic position misreads history. After Dienbienphu in 1954, Ho Chi Minh, leader of the Vietminh, agreed to the armistice terms at Geneva., which provided for the temporary partition of Vietnam at the 17th parallel only be- cause those armistice terms contained the explicit agreement that free, super- vised elections would be held by July 20, 1956, leading to the reunification of Viet- nam. In a separate `declaration, the United States agreed to this reunification pro- vision. Then in 1956 the United States acceded to and supported the breach of this provision of a solemn international undertaking. Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 8666 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE April 29, 1965 In not even alluding at his press con- ference on Tuesday, April 27 and at Johns Hopkins on April 7 to this provi- sion of the Geneva agreement-a return to which he called for in his March 25 remarks-by not holding out the smallest hope of ultimate reunification of all of Vietnam-President Johnson, despite his oft repeated offer of unconditional nego- tiations, is in effect saying that one of the conditions of negotiations is the agreement in advance that this provision of the Geneva agreement was non- negotiable. In other words, while talk- ing unconditional negotiation we are in fact asserting a condition precedent to any negotiations. Such a condition precedent to nego- tiations ignores history. It conveniently slides under the rug not only the re- unification provision of the Geneva agreement, but also the fact that. for 800 years after it had ousted its Chinese conquerors and before it was colonized by force by France, the whole of Vietnam constituted one undivided, free, Inde- pendent sovereign country. I oppose U.S. policies in Vietnam--and have done so for over 13 months now-- not alone because they are unrealistic and are leading us down the path to a full scale, major war, but also because they are playing right into the hands of Chinese imperalist communism. Let us carefully and realistically ex- amine the direction In which our present policies are headed. We start out with the known fact that, having been a colony of China for over 1,000 years, and having expelled China by force of arms, North Vietnam is not anxious to be reconquered by China at this point in history. We have now been bombing North Vietnam for nearly 3 months and the makers of policy in the Pentagon and some of the pundits in the press are pointing gleefully to the fact that neither the Red hordes from Communist China nor the forces from Communist Russia have poured across the 17th parallel. But the fact remains that Hanoi does not need manpower either from Peiping or Moscow. It needs weapons and ma- teriel and recent reports of the installa- tion of missiles'in Hanoi and elsewhere in North Vietnam indicate that it is or will be shortly obtaining Russian weapons and materiel. As for men, Hanoi has sufficient for the time being to maintain its infiltration of the civil war in South Vietnam. Some may interpret the lack of Red Chinese fighting men in South Vietnam as restraint on the part of 'Red China. One explanation is that the Chinese are anything but unhappy about the situ- ation in which the United States finds itself. They-the Chinese-see the United States entrapped in a war on the con- tinent of Asia. . They see it realistically as a war in which we are losing American lives and spending vast sums of money. They see the escalation of this war as an intensification of these two condi- tions-more American lives sacrificed, more dollars expended. They see the Western white man--the United States-fighting all alone a small Asiatic nation on the continent of Asia and being held by that small nation at least to a standstill. They note that the United States has been fighting this war allalone. They see this war alienating from the United States the support of the neu- trals and its allies. Why should the Chinese not be more than content with this situation and let it develop without specific action on their part? For despite the allegations by some spokesmen for the administration- and indeed the President's own reference to Communist China-that China is be- hind the Vietcong it is more than evident that to date the Chinese have shown a complete self-restraint as far as any military action is concerned. There is another explanation for Chi- nese inaction to date. It is more plausible to interpret events as indicating that Hanoi has not invited Red Chinese troops into Its country. And for good reason. Hanoi well remembers the last time Chinese hordes invaded Vietnam and how It took more than a thousand years to free itself. Hanoi wants no repetition of that event. But United States present policies may be driving Hanoi into the waiting arms of Peiping. If our war efforts are esca- lated and North Vietnam is laid bare, then Hanoi may be forced to call for aid from both Red China and Communist Russia. Once Red Chinese troops occupy North Vietnam, how many thou- sands of years will it take before they leave? It will be difficult to drive them out. Our policies are also driving Peiping and Moscow closer whereas their deep split was a cause for rejoicing in the free world. Our policies are likewise estranging us from our allies and strengthening Imperialist communism. How are our policies in southeast Asia strengthening imperialist communism? Because if we had adhered to the Geneva agreement and would adhere to it now, and announced our purpose to hold the elections promised in the Ge- neva agreement which we supported, a united Vietnam would Inevitably firmly resist a takeover by the Chinese. This would be a complete accord with its past history. The Vietnamese want to be independ- ent. They objected to the presence of the French. They object to the presence of the United States. They would op- pose the presence of the Chinese. What would emerge in all probability judged by past history, both long time and recent, would be a Titoist form of government independent of Peiping. To secure that type of independence from Moscow, the United States has in- vested $2 billion in foreign aid in Tito's Yugoslavia. We could have pursued the same pol- icy in southeast Asia, although in conse- quence of our aggressiveness there and now bombings of North Vietnam and our repeated declarations for an inde- pendent South Vietnam, this policy would now be more difficult to achieve than it would have been a year ago. But It is still possible. In this policy we would have Russian support. But if we escalate the war still further, go still farther north, continue to bait the Government of China, the Chinese may move in with ground troops i;zto both North and South Vietnam. And once they occupy Vietnam it would be infinitely more difficult to get them cut. It has been extremely difficult and as yet impossible to get Joseph Stalin's troops and tanks and their successors out of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland and Czechoslovakia. But we managed to assist Tito in proclaiming and main- taining a considerable degree of inde- pendence from Moscow. We are pleased with the result and consider the $2 billion dollars it cost the American taxpayers as a sound investment. His government is Communist, but it is a communism independent of imperial control which Joseph Stalin sought to impose. It is not a communism which is exported for the purpose of dominating other nations. Similarly, if we had pursued or could now pursue a corresponding policy in southeast Asia, a reunited Vietnam choosing its own government would in all likelihood maintain its independence from the Peiping rule of Mao Tse-timg and Chou En-lai. Unfortunately our present policy is likely to nullify that desirable solution. Actually, our policy is leading to .he very Chinese imperialist expansion which we declare it is our purpose to obviate, I repeat my previous suggestions. We should: Stop the bombings in North Vietnam, at least for a limited period of time, so that negotiations can get underway without North Vietnam being dragger: to the conference table with a pistol at its head. Press for an immediate cease-fire in South Vietnam with international super- vision. Offer to go to the negotiating table with all the parties involved, including the Vietcong, the real opposition to the South Vietnamese Government which the United States supports. It has been said that all wars end at the negotiating table, so why not this one? I fear that this statement may no longer be true. The thermonucl,mr capabilities of the major nations of he world mean that the next-the last world war-could end not in negotia- tions but in total destruction of the peo- ples of the world, leaving no one to negotiate. Is it not time for the President to take another firm, hard look at the policies he has been advised to pursue? It is not too late-yet-for reason and realism to prevail. Mr. President, I yield the floor. VOTING RIGHTS ACT OF 1965 The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 1564) to enforce the 13th Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 April 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL,.RECORD = ,SENATE 86,67 amendment of the Constitution of the has moved a considerable distance since but also because it is untrue. Yet at this United States. it opened on the floor of the Senate on very moment the image of the int?ellec- AMENDMENT,rro. 117 the 17th of February. It is with some teal world is a one-sided image. It sug- Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I send to reluctance that I take issue with my dis- gests that the students and their pro- the desk an amendment to amendment tinguished friend, the Senator from fessors and intellectuals are all No. 82 of the Senator from Delaware Alaska [Mr. GRuENING], who has just automatically pacifists or troublemakers, [Mr. WILLIAMS], and ask that it be preceded me, but he and I have had whose loyalty to their country may be stated, rather strong differences on this ques- open to question. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The tion for some time. Let me add that we. . In the interest of objectivity, as we amendment to the amendment will be have likewise enjoyed the additional seek to judge the academic world of our stated for the information of the Senate. pleasure of exchanging those differences, time, particularly on the issue of Viet- The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. On page 1, not only in debate on the floor of the nam, it is necessary that we bear in line 10, of the amendment numbered 82, Senate, but also in debate on some of the mind how such distortion could emerge change the period to a colon and add this campuses of the universities across this in the first place. additional sentence: "Provided, however, great land of ours. At the outset we ought to recognize That this provision shall be applicable It is that kind of debate which, it that if the campuses were to rally only to elections held for the selection of seems to me, is in the tradition of free around a policy that was already in- presidential electors, Members of the inquiry and open discussion in the test of yoked, if the campuses were to accept United States Senate, and Members of conflicting positions in the public forum. what already is a fact, it would be less the United States House of Representa- This helps to firm up the wisdom of pol- newsworthy and it would not attract tives." icy positions. attention from off the campus, and Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, let me Because of the debates which have therefore the protester against the exist- state briefly the reason why I offer my taken place in the past 3 months, we can ing situation has the advantage in head- amendment to the pending amendment now point to a higher level of both dis- lines. of the Senator from Delaware. cussion and debate, but now more often Second, campuses generally and un- I am in favor of amendment No. 82. on the right questions for the right rea- derstandably draw hangers-on, those However, in my opinion amendment No. sons instead of the wrong reasons, and who are professional protesters, even 82 in its present form is unconstitutional with not quite so much misinformation though not officially members of the in- because it is not restricted to Federal as characterized the opening discussions. tellectual community. These hangers- elections. By the term "Federal elec- This is all to the good. The country on should not be confused with bona tions", I mean elections in which presi- as a whole has become much more close- fide academics. dential electors and Members of the U.S. ly attuned to the tough issues which Third, major segments of the aca- Senate and Members of the U.S. House need to be resolved in southeast ' Asia. demic world have contributed through of Representatives are chosen. Much of the helpful delineation and con- their intellectual resources to the warp The only effect of my amendment sideration which plague our great coun- and woof of the present American policy would be to confine the application of try has come from high places in the ad- in Vietnam. The President himself is a amendment No. 82 to Federal elections ministration, led by the President him- former teacher. The Secretary of State and thereby make it constitutional under: self, aided and abetted by Secretary of was a professor of political science and the interpretation placed on the 15th State Rusk and Secretary of Defense Mc- a Rhodes scholar. The Secretary of amendment by the Supreme Court of the Namara, as well as some of the Presi- Defense is a distinguished scholar PBK. United States in a number of cases. dent's closest personal advisers. Like- McGeorge Bundy, a key adviser to the Mr. WILLIAMS of Delaware. Mr. wise, articulate voices in the Senate have President on defense matters, was dean President, I concur in the statement just continued to contribute to the discus- of arts and science at Yale. And Walt made by the Senator from North Caro- sion, and thus have contributed to the Rostow, chairman of the policy planning lina [Mr. ERVIN]. I find his amendment shaping of policy positions. staff shaping these questions, was a pro- -to my amendment to be perfectly accept- Not the least of the forces which have fessor of economic history at MIT and ,able. In fact, I believe that it would contributed to enlightened debate have a Rhodes scholar. make my amendment stronger, which is been the voices that have come from the In other ways, through position papers, the objective we are trying to achieve. nongovernmental level, from town meet- field studies, public debates, and com- Since the yeas and nays have been ings, community seminars, and perhaps munity dialogs, other voices from the ordered on the amendment I ask unani- most of all from the campuses of our classroom have helped to shape and to mous consent that I be allowed to modi- great educational institutions, both large raise the level of understanding of the fy my amendment to accept the provi- and small, central issues in the Far East. On my sion of the amendment offered by the The knowledge of the academic world own campus at the University of Wyo- Senator from North Carolina. in these matters has taken on new thing my former colleagues in the de- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there dimensions during this time of crisis. partment of history have taken the lead objection? The Chair hears none, and it Perhaps more so than at any time since in this regard. is so ordered. the 1930's, the college campuses have it is unfortunate in the light of this The question is on agreeing to the come forward to participate in a con- that only one side of the academic face is amendment offered by the senator troversy with debate of high caliber and coming through-that which protests a from Delaware [Mr. WILLIAMS], num- considerable magnitude. strong policy in Indochina. One of the bered 82 as amended by the amendment As a former academic, I am delighted regrettable consequences is to give to the of the Senator from North Carolina [Mr. to see this manifestation of deep con- general public the wrong image of the ERVIN]. The Chair will put the question. tern about an issue of such vital inter- intellectual in America-wrong only be- Mr. McGEE. Mr. President, I suggest national and national significance. cause it portrays him as being one sided the absence of a quorum. Having said that, however, there is one and with a closed mind. It is not that The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk aspect about it that remains disturbing students and professors should not pro- will call the roll. to many of us. This is the seeming im- test, for whatever else, protest should The legislative clerk proceeded to call pression, which has come to us at least ever remain a hallmark of academia. the roll. through the media of communication, Exploration of the unrealistic as well as Mr. McGEE.. 'Mr. President, I ask that the campuses of the land are almost the realistic, of the frowzy as well as the unanimous consent that the order for totally in the grasp of those who oppose fundamental, should always be a way of the quorum call be rescinded. the President's Position-in Vietnam that life on the campus. The right to think The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without they are engaging in a monolog rather otherwise or be otherwise should remain abT cion, it is PRESIDING OFF. than a dialog. We are being led to a cherished tradition in the halls of ivy. so ordered believe that the teach-ins, the picketing On a question of the magnitude of activity, the marchings, and, the public American policy in Vietnam, it is im- AMERIbAN POLICY IN VIETNAM AND student demonstrations all reflect a portant that the public image of the DEBATE IN THE UNITED STATES cross section of the campus life today. position of American intellectuals on it It is unfortunate that this impression be brought back into balance. For all Mr. McGEE. Mr. President, a great has gotten abroad in the land-unfor- too long in our country's history aca- national debate on our policy in Vietnam tunate because it is not only unrealistic, demics were suspect, particularly in the Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003/10114: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5. 8668 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE April 29, 1965 public arena of politics. Among others, meant coordination of movement and a defend themselves, would find it easier the Soviet Union frightened some of our concentration of targets, and thus a to go along and cooperate, and perhaps countrymen into the realization that per- greater effectiveness or a greater threat spare the lives of the young ones or them- haps there was a proper place for in- of their capability to disrupt and destroy selves, than to be mowed down by well- tellect in a modern state. In any event, in the south. armed groups of terrorists from the ranks the Intellectual has acquired a higher Third, we now have abundant evi- of the guerrillas. status and public respect today never dence to suggest that even major regu- On the other hand, terrorists have before enjoyed-at least in this century. lar army units from Hanoi are now every advantage In some respects. In Thus, the campus is on the spot, and the operating across the border in the south. order to win, all that they have to do is urgency of getting -through a balanced There has begun wholesale importation to hit and run. All they have to do is o profile becomes even greater. of supplies and armaments from outside strike terror, not to deliver a program, So I appeal to the currently silent seg- Vietnam, which are then smuggled into and then fade away under cover of jun- ment of our campuses who support the the south on behalf of the guerrillas. We gle or night, to strike again at some President or who may agree with funda- have learned that In recent battles the other place. mental tenets implicit in a firm posture Vietcong has been armed with small arms I reject, thus, the equation of the vil- in Asia to declare themselves now in a of which more than 90 percent came lagers cooperating with the terrorists public way. Let the professors speak from outside the area-notably arms with the opposition to the United States out; let the students petition. It is time from China, from Czechoslovakia. Al- and our presence in Vietnam. to stand up and be counted. most 100 percent, of the larger weapons Another question that comes from the For several weeks, I have been meet- were of Chinese manufacture. colleges suggests that, as a practical Ing with groups of students and pro- Until 6 months or so ago, the guerrilla question, we are losing the war in Viet- fessors on the question of Vietnam. operations were largely endemic in their nam, anyway, and, therefore, we- should Their questions, their newspaper ads, nature. Very often they were cannibals not continue an effort to do better and their picket signs generally center from the standpoint of arms, either con- there; that we should get out while we around half a dozen ideas. It has been verting arms that they captured or us- can, and perhaps get out as gracefully my experience that the, ideas often are ing arms that they had discovered in as we can. noble but that the facts which led them caches left over from the Japanese That point of view, too, is nonsense, as to those ideas were often irrelevant. occupation or the war with the French. I see it. The war in Vietnam has been While ferment on the campus is to the But that has now changed; and this going on for 10 years. At the very begin- good, we can ill afford campus mono- change is the point towhich we ought to ning it was said that the war could rot logs premised upon fermented facts, lend emphasis as we seek to respond to last for more than 6 months. That kind namely, facts that are old and out of the academics who still call into ques- of warfare has almost become a way of date. How well I remember my own tion policies in Vietnam on the basis of life because of practices and policies de- of days. It Is with no thought outmoded and outdated fact. signed to unsettle and terrorize tdat of disparagement at all that I recall that Another question that is commonly have plagued the Government in South Professor MCGEE had a lot more solu- raised in the campus discussions is as fol- Vietnam. This is not to make any apol- tions to the problems of the world than lows: Why do we remain in a land that ogles for the little game of "who Is the does Senator MCGEE. wants no part of our presence there, president in South Vietnam" from time That may suggest, in capsule form, where a large segment of the population to time, for that in itself is another sub- why President Truman, who may have is openly trying to throw us out, and is ject. But it is to say that the war is not held a different position until he became strongly supporting the position of the lost and need not be lost in South President, why President Eisenhower or guerrillas or the Vietcong? Vietnam. President Johnson, too, came to about That item, I submit, is nonsensical on A noted correspondent for the Paris the same answers on this question. It is its face. In the first place, how do we weekly, L'Express, Georges Chaffard, the difference between sheer speculation measure the attitudes of the rural peas- has filed a series of dispatches which in- or posing theoretical postulates, and hav- ant population in South Vietnam? How dicates that there has been a serious ing to accept responsibility for taking a do we determine the state of mind of the shifting a significant one, in Vietnam. given policy position now on any given people in the hills, and the mountain That statement comes from a source issue of the day. country north of Saigon? which, in general, has been sharply crit- Let us examine some of the questions Mr. Gallup has not been over there. ical not only of the American position and some of the answers to the ques- There is no known standard of measure there. but of the Saigon Government tions which appear most frequently and ment that would stand up to the test of there as well. These articles report in- most commonly in the student bodies validity. But one of the students sug- creasing cases of battle fatigue amcng with whom I have met, and many of the gested to me on one occasion. "When- the North Vietnamese and among guer- professors whom I know so well. These ever the guerrillas come into a village, rilla groups, whose ranks are no longer questions take into account the kinds of the first thing they do is to get coopera- marching in a single step, as once was uncertainties that still prevail in many tion from the local villagers." the case. It should be pointed out, as sincere and expert academic minds. Mr. President, students have often sug- Joseph Alsop has mentioned In one of his At the same time the answers take into gested to me that the best evidence of columns, that Georges Chaffard is no account the radical changes in the status the fact that Americans are not wanted friend of our present position there, but quo that have occurred in the last 6 to in Vietnam is disclosed in the fact that is merely recording a significant shift as 8 months. villagers themselves often aid the Viet- he sees it on the spot. The correspond- Perhaps one question that is put most cong by giving them rice, where possible, ent does not predict, I hasten to add, an often, or most frequently, is this: Why by helping them repair weapons, and 'immediate end to the struggle. He has do we interfere in what is largely a simple even by supplying them with manpower. not pronounced that, therefore, in the civil war between two factions in South This cannot be denied as a fact, but in wake of some depressing developments, Vietnam? - my judgment it is a fact that very often there is suddenly to be a victory. W aat Of course, the answer to that question stems from terrorism of the most extreme he is saying is that there has been a lies in the developments which have oc- sort. I suggest that most villagers, measurable shift, and it is the kind of curred in recent months. In that inter- wherever the village, confronted by the shift that represents a basis for realistic val of time the government in Hanoi has shooting in cold blood of their tribal judgment of the present policy that our intensified its training of skilled guer- leaders or of decimation of their ranks Government has been pursuing in villa forces, recruited in North Vietnam., by firing squads or by other atrocities Vietnam, and they have likewise stepped up their practiced upon selected leaders of their Further, we now increasingly read in infiltration of the territory south of the community, would more readily surren- the press, reports of new cracks in the 17th parallel. der to a guerrilla occupation, however facade of intransigence, at Hanoi; Also, in recent months Hanoi has small, than to try to resist them, only to cracks that suggest that the North Viet- begun to give direct radio signals-- suffer the same fate themselves. namese themselves have become badly orders, if you will-to most of the units The real point is that most of those split due to the new pressures that have operating in South Vietnam. This has people, being without adequate means to been imposed upon them. Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003/10/14 : CIA-RDP67B00446R00030015001.7-5 -April 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 8669 --w . - ? ucuca u.uacu C,tLUbJ liluab U1 bne improved morale in South Vietnam, in- the basis of taking a straw vote around globe but in Vietnam we have a soft spot eluding the fact that 7,000 young men the nations of the world, at that time we that the Communists seek to exploit for volunteered for military service in the will be In deep trouble. This is not to the extension of their domination. South last month alone. A few months suggest that we should ignore them. We The nations of southeast Asia have ago, the reports would likely have been must weigh and assess world opinion, na- adopted the concept of wait and see over that the same number of men, had tional opinion, and the opinion of our this struggle. For it is evident that the dodged the draft. colleagues, at all times. These are fac- future course of these nations will be de- I would note that the picture is not tors which we need to fit into the total termined by our success or failure in all bright, and one would not find it scale of values which will guide us in stopping this pattern of conquest. Al- wise to be overenthusiastic in the cir- our judgments. It does not mean that ready we see the revival of Communist cumstances. There are those who still they should become a determining fac- activity in Thailand, the Philippines, In- consider the conflict incapable of suc- tor. donesia, Laos, and Cambodia. The pic cessful resolution, and they offer evi- Those who are the most powerful in ture is clear: what can succeed in South dence to support their concept. But I this world are rarely the most loved. Vietnam can succeed in these nations, insist that there has been a sufficient Need I remind the Senate of the tradi- too-and this applies for both sides in shift in the general complexion of affairs tional role in history of the British na- equal measure. in South Vietnam today to sustain an tion for so many centuries, which in National independence is a concept for attitude of guarded, cautious optimism, some respects became probably the most which peoples have died over the cen- and a spirit of determination to con- hated country In the world. We know turies. I am convinced that the inde- tinue the President's policy of a careful that was true up and down the east coast pendence of these nations from direct and planned use of force in North Viet- of the United States for a long time. external control, no matter what is the nam. Especially was it true in Chicago during nature or form of their government, best We have also heard much of the idea the 1920's, when the Mayor of Chicago serves the interests of these nations and that China represents the wave. of the ran his political campaigns based upon of world peace. future in southeast Asia, that its power vilification of the King of England. This The policy of planned escalation of this Will inevitably dominate the entire area. should remind us that with great power conflict is the subject which began I would agree that China will certainly goes great responsibility and a great deal here in the Senate on February 17. That be of increasing influence in that area of unpopularity in the world. policy now is being carefully applied by in future years, but that is a totally dif- We can never conduct our policies on the Johnson administration. These are ferent concept than actual domination the basis of trying to be loved by every- what I consider to be the goals of this of smaller, weaker nations. On this one or trying to be the good guy. We policy: point I subscribe to what President must do what the times require, for the First, we seek to set the stage for ne- Johnson said at Johns Hopkins that simple reason that this is a world made gotiations between the parties involved "there is no end to that argument until up mostly of anarchy, and no one has in this dispute. We mean to convince all of the nations of Asia are swallowed agreed upon what rules we are to play as those who thought we were summer up.., a result. There are others who are will- soldiers that we will honor our commit- Some of the comment from those who ing to be the bad guys, to take advantage ments in South Vietnam regardless of protest our involvement in Vietnam casts of the inhibitions of civilization, of cul- the discomfort, regardless of the size of us in the role of blood-thirsty warmong- ture, of decent people, in order to exploit the effort. I believe this fact is now be- ers, unmoved by the slaughter of inno- their inclinations not to act. coming apparent to Hanoi and I believe cents, the deaths of women and children, We dare not surrender to the tempta- this fact is now becoming apparent and and completely unaware of the issues tion on the other side to exploit our re- I believe the chances for meaningful ne- causing their deaths. spect for human life, our respect for the gotiations are improving. On Tuesday I had printed in the REC- high level of civilization, and our abhor- All of us readily admit, unless it be the ORD an editorial from the Washington rence of war. One of the great calcula- most rabid militarist on the loose-and I Post entitled "Anguish of Power." That tions in the East has been the convic- trust there are none of those except In editorial pointed. out that the responsi- tion that although the United States is retirement-that there is no milltary no- bilities of world leadership, which can- a great power, that because of its highly lution to southeast Asia. We will not not be ignored, present us with alterna- civilized inhibitions it would not be will- solve the southeast Asia problem with tives, all of which will result in blood- ing to use its power. They are gambling bullets, guns, and troops. We must reach shed and human suffering. It noted: on our unwillingness to use it. the kind of stage at which it will be pos- Each of our decisions to use force or to It is not sufficient to suggest that be- sible to sit down realistically and try to fall to use force is filled with potential pain cause we have some new answers to old find some substitute for war there. and injury for millions. This is othe ne can questions that we have sufficient justifi- But in February we were in no position that goes with great power. cation for our role in Vietnam. We must to negotiate. The other side was not liver us from it. , ask ourselves-regardless of the success disposed to negotiate. Why should they? The last question from the academic of our role-what business do we have in They were convinced that they were go- world which I will discuss here today- Vietnam at all. I submit that there are ing to get everything free. They would although there are many others-is the several reasons why to forfeit our pres- get all that they desired without sitting charge that we are all but alone in the ence in this troubled area would be to down with anyone. If they would only nations of the free world in our policy forfeit our leadership of the free world. wait it out, the Americans would soon go in Vietnam, that we are earning uni- In the recent history of mankind the home. versal condemnation and further tar- only force which has been able to keep Thus, likewise, we had to acquire a nishing whatever good image is left us international relationships on a peace- position which would lead them to un- around the globe. ful plane has been that of balance of derstand that we were there to stay, and Let me say, that we must win our own power. The Pax Britannica is a demon- that their only chance to realize some respect first. We start with ourselves, to stration of how this concept, if pursued kind of settlement better than the drains acquire what we regard as the best edu- skillfully, can eliminate international on their resources that war was making cated guesses, and we realize what our conflicts on a global scale. And I would is to talk. obligation is to mankind and to the world point out that though international con- So these, then, were the purposes of of which w;~ arc a part. We have to. live flicts once could be resolved upon the planned escalation. with our conscience, We have to do what battlefields of Europe, this is no longer Now, nearly 3 months later, it is pos- we believe In our best judgment Is right the case. sible to assess our Government's program because it is right, not because we are It makes a real difference to southeast with the advantage of hindsight. In trying to win a popularity poll with some Asia where the line representing the bal- spite of the attacks made by the critics of the governments of the globe. ance of power Is drawn. This line is of the President, in spite of the assaults Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 8670 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE April 29, 1965 on the part of those who thought that it would be suicide and that we ought to get out, it is now possible to note measurable progress through the policy of planned escalation. Second, we seek to lessen the chances of accidental war. To those who believe that our policy is just the reverse, I would suggest that accidental wars are created by those who misread the inten- tions of their adversaries. A policy of uncertain response to aggression encour- ages that aggression and further aggres- sion. At a certain point our alternatives would be exhausted and we would be at war. When the Communists understand our intentions, I believe the chances for accidental war will be materially les- sened. We shall never be free of the threat of war, but we can reduce the risk as much as possible. A third goal of this policy is the seal- ing off of the problem of South Vietnam. As George A. Carver, Jr., pointed out in an excellent article in the April issue of Foreign Affairs, there is a power strug- gle In South Vietnam, but neither of the two sides are connected with the Viet- cong. The infiltration of men and arms from the North was stepped up in Feb- ruary in an, attempt to solve all prob- lems from the outside. The South Viet- namese should be given the chance to work out their own future and a closed border will help them dolt. No one sug- gests that democracy as we know it can be installed there, but that is no reason to deny the South Vietnamese the right .to plot their own future free from out- side domination. With these goals in mind, I firmly believe that we are making definite prog- ress in this conflict. A cross section of press accounts indicates the morale is increasing in the South. The increase in military volunteers has already been referred to. More and more weapons are being captured by the South Viet- namese Army. The ranks of the guer- rilla forces are being thinned by the fail- ureto replace casualties and the increas- ing number of deserters. More and more of these south Vietnamese trained in the North for guerrilla warfare re- turn to their homes and families im- mediately upon being infiltrated south- ward. In many places they have shifted from offense to defense. Further stresses and strains are visible in the Moscow-Peiping Axis. Name call- ing between the two is increasing and some physical conflict has appeared in Chinese 'student attacks upon Soviet Embassies and reversed incidents in Moscow. In Hanoi there are increasing reports of a split in the ranks of policymakers. Young officers are contesting the strat- egy of the old revolutionaries_ Doubts about the wisdom of present policies are increasing. The announcement this morning that a battalion of Australian infantrymen are being sent to South Vietnam is wel- come news which indicates that our allies have confidence in our ability to carry out our program and that we do not stand alone in this troublesome endeavor. Finally, the President's speech in Bal- timore, following as it did in the wake of American escalation and in the wake of a dispatch of increased troop personnel from the United States to Vietnam, came as a gesture of strength and of a sincere desire for peace, rather than being sub- ject, instead, to being considered a des- perate porposal by a nation that was on the ropes in southeast Asia. That speech could not have been made in February tvith any dignity. That speech could not have received any kind of credence anywhere around the world 2 months before. But because of the acceleration that was planned in North Vietnam, it was possible to show to the rest of the world again the true face of America; namely, that we have no designs on any- one else's government, that we covet no other country's territory, and that our goal is peace wherever we can obtain it and in whatever proportions it can be achieved. We have shown to the world that we are willing to put our men, our money, our policy, and our hearts where our words have been. That is an im- portant step forward. None of these facts suggest that we shall be at the negotiating table next month, but they are signs that our policy Is having the effect we wish it to have and that it should be continued. The responsibilities we have accepted in Vietnam are ugly and unpleasant, filled with suffering, death, and disloca- tion. But we have accepted them in the hope that in the final tally mankind will have benefited, that as a result of what we do here this year and next some peoples will have a chance to seek and find independence and self-determina- tion that otherwise would have been de- nied them. Our policies, as a product of human endeavor, may not be perfect. They should be debated, discussed, analyzed, and criticized by those in our colleges and universities and by the man on the street. But it is my hope that these de- bates and discussions will be conducted with an objective view of the facts and in the context of honorable differences among honorable men. We have the choice of helping to steer the course of history or of muddying the waters with fruitless and irrational posturing. I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD following my re- -marks a series of columns and articles. First, an article from the Evening Star of April 27 on the war; second, an edi- torial from the Washington Post, issue of April 28, on the war; next, a column by William S. White that was published in the Washington Post on April 28 on the same question; still another by Roscoe Drummond, from the same issue of the Post; likewise, an editorial entitled "Two-Pronged Attack on Vietcong," published in Life magazine of April 30; and a reprint from Life magazine of April 30 of material that appeared in a French weekly, L'Express, to which I ,referred earlier in my remarks as re- printed in Life magazine. There being no objection, the articles and editorial were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Washington (D.C.) Evening Star, Apr. 27, 19651 "MCNAMARA'S WAR" Secretary McNamara said he decided to hold his televised press conference on he war in Vietnam at the request of the report- ers who cover the Pentagon. Undoubtedly there was a factual basis for this. Our guess is, however, that the Defense Secretary also wanted to let the people see how things have been going in which his critics call "McNa- mara's war." They have been going rather well. Shice the much-condemned bombing of North Vietnam got underway in February some 14 highway and railroad bridges have been knocked out. In addition, there has been substantial damage to military installations, radar stations, supply depots, truck convoys, and the like. Mr. McNamara says that this has not halted the movement of arms, supplies, .and men from the north to South Vietnam. It may not even have substantially slowed down this traffic. The essential point to been in mind, however, is that we can keep up the bombings day after day after day. And to an appreciable extent, we can also interdict any similar movement along the sea routes. The critics say that the bombings will never bring the Communists to the confer- ence table and that, instead, they will me:'ely stiffen the resistance of Ho Chi Minh. We do not believe it. It is perfectly clear that American power in the air and in the China Sea cannot. be successfully challenged. And as long as we control the air and the sea it is absurd to think there will be any massive introduction of Red Chinese or Russian troops into the combat area. They couldn't be supplied if they could get there. Meanwhile, it is also clear that the United States and the South Vietnamese Air Force can continue to chop away at every target of consequence in. North Vietnam. It may take a long time, but these targets surely are doomed if Hanoi hangs on. So what thoughts must be running through the mind of Ho Chi Minh? Accord- ing to Mr. McNamara, some 89,000 Vietcong troops have been killed in the past 41/,. years. The Communist sources of manpower in the south are drying up, and it is becoming in- creasingly necessary to send in reinforce- ments from the north. Ho Chi Minh is nobody's fool. As he sees the turn which the war is taking as he notes the absence of important aid from Peiping and Moscow, and as he surveys the mounting ruin in his own. country, there must be times when he is a deeply discouraged man. [From the Washington (D.C.) Post, Apr 28, 1965] VIETNAM POLICY: CONSENSUS OF EXTREMES (By Roscoe Drummond) There is every reason to believe President Johnson will widen and hold a decisive con- sensus in support of a strong policy in Viet- nam. He has one special asset. He is occup ling his usual stance at the center. His policy is wedded to neither extreme. He rests: on two pillars--clear determination to defend as long as the aggression continues; clear willingness to talk whenever Hanoi will start talking. His senatorial, newspaper, and professional critics can offer no acceptable alternative. They are prepared to accept Chinese Com- munist domination of all southeast Asia. This is an alternative the American people will not accept without trying to do some- thing about it. The President has the backing of many Democrats (his offer of unconditional dis- cussions won the approval of the ADA) and most Republicans. Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release. 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 April 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE .:: - $671. Despite the honest, emotional student statistics and intelligence. But our reports right with the Communist Invaders? An- pickets and the college teach-ins, this should not be so phrased as to suggest that other Democratic Senator, RUSSELL LONG, of leaves Mr. Johnson in a strategic position, there is no indigenous revolutionary force in Louisiana, goes to the heart of it. And here is the evidence South Vietnam. The country must not be For, he says truthfully, "modern-day ap- The. Gallup poll finds that 29 percent of misled in the belief that this is wholly a peasers and isolationists" are leading the the country would like to see the United case. of external aggression any more than- it Communists to suppose "that we will sur- States withdraw completely from Vietnam, should allow itself to be misled by critics and render all Asia to them if they will just keep stop the fighting whatever the effects, and enemies into the belief that we deal only up the pressure. So long as our adversaries start negotiations whatever the outcome. It with a civil war. It is both. If the infiltra- suspect that this may be the case, they are also finds that 31 percent of the country tion from the North could be stopped, the going to pay an increasingly greater price to favors stepping up military activity and go- internal struggle might be manageable, but test our will." Ing the full distance of declaring war. it would not necessarily end at once. It Criticism of any foreign policy is, of course, The President embraces neither extreme, would still be difficult. both right and useful, so long as critics do He does not propose to withdraw or even Americans must resist the temptation to not distort the demonstrable facts of history cease defending. But he will start talking believe that the recent improvements in the beyond reason and beyond belief. But no de- even while defending. He does not seek a military situation forecast any quick or easy cent dialog can be conducted with Senators solution by military means alone, but he solution. Our firmness and resolution will who use hysterical venom in place of rea- will use military means until Hanoi is will- be the more believable if we make it plain son and shameful attacks upon devoted pub- ing to use the conference table. that we know how troublesome and lic men-from the privileged sanctuary of Where does this, leave Mr. Johnson with dangerous a trial we face, and that we never- the Senate floor-in place of logic and per- respect to a public consensus? To obtain theless are determined to fulfill our com- suasion. further ward thevidencen of t the situation public's attitudes s to- mitments. Our professions of peace will be Nor can such a dialog be held with Stu- handling the more believable if we do not conceal our dents who openly threaten to resist the com- nam, Dr. Gallup put this question to people anxiety to bring to an end this struggle and mon obligation of military service "unless we in the same survey cited above: "Do you the sacrifices it entails. get out of Vietnam," even while they think the United States is handling affairs It is to be hoped that the President's plain applauding motion picture propaganda op n- in Vietnam as well as could be expected, or speaking will be understood. ly made by the Communists in Vietnam. do you think we are handling affairs there badly?" This is nothing less than sedition; and from [From the Washington (D.C.) Post, men whose very status as students gives The result was that. by a ratio of more Apr. 28, 19 g than 2 to 1 the American people approve of SCREECHING SPLINTER: ] ARTICULATE POLICY them right now a deferment from the draft the Government's handling of the situation. SUPPORT while better young men are carrying rifles If there is any threat to the President's ex- panding in n Vietnam. panding and holding this consensus on Viet- (By William S. White) Why don't we hear more from the college nom, it would only come, I think, from any The frightening outlines of what could be- students who do not go along with this sick sign of weakening in his policy. come an American tragedy without example and ugly thing? Where are the college pro- pro- Republican support is crucial to the can be seen in the feverish attacks of Ameri- fessors who respect history and who do not Johnson consensus. The President knows it. can citizens on the integrity of their own believe .in dishonoring the honorable com- But the President knows that any sign of Government's course in resisting Communist mitments of this counrty? It is past time appeasement, intended or accidental, Re- aggression in Vietnam. for every American to do his duty, so as publican support would vanish like a rocket A small but screechingly articulate Demo- not to allow these noisy and fatally foolish into outer politics. As they did to Presi- cratic splinter in the Senate is day by day fringe groups to lead the Communists into dent Truman .over Korea, the Republicans inviting the North Vietnamese and Chinese some mortal underestimate of the real can never call this "Johnson's war:," but Communists to believe these monstrously strength and the real resolve of the vast, they could fight and possibly win election if dangerous falsehoods: sensible majority of the American people. it ever turned into "Johnson's appease- That the United States does not really ment." mean it when it says we will not allow the [From Life magazine, Apr. 30, 1965] Communist invaders a free run over South Two-PRONGED ATTACK ON VIETCONG [From the Washington (D.C.) Post, Apr. 28, Vietnam on the way to eventual conquest of It is quite possible for the forces of law and 1966]. all southeast Asia, order to win a war against Communist- VIETNAM POLICY That the Communists may safely persist in backed guerrillas. This has just been proved President Johnson's press conference state- their attacks in the supposition that Presi- in the Congo, where the Tshombe govern- ments, added to those of Secretary McNamara dent Johnson's policy-which was also the ment's mercenary-led army has swept the earlier this week, make the American policy policy of the Republican President Dwight 'Simba rebels out of the crucial northeast. about as clear as it can be made with words. Eisenhower and the Democratic President "The water has dried up in the Congo," said The policy enunciated at Baltimore stands. John Kennedy-is opposed by a great and one Leopoldville observer, referring to Mao It is, as the President described it, a policy of possibly even a decisive part of the American Tse-tung's famous textbook for guerrillas, "firmness with moderation." political community. which tells them to move among the villagers The two press conferences have put at rest That any number of Communist refusals like fish. the alarms about nuclear weapons---if there to open honorable negotiations-that is, ne- The war in Vietnam is much vaster and ever was any justification for them. And that gotiations preconditioned by a halt in Com- more complicated than the Simba action, but is a good thing. The situation is alarming munist assaults upon South Vietnam-will without conjuring up risks that noth- not stop the critics from ceaselessly demand- cis also a guerrilla war in which the Viet- enough In that the United States cease its own tong still move not like bases fish. ts military ob- ing but sheer folly could persuade this Gov- g ernment to take in the Vietnam war, bombing; anyhow, and regardless of con- bombers er are not the baseand eesour tinued Communist aggression, but t the e have villages been anctrice fields clobbering where the north Nuclear weapons would be about as useful in hmost of Vietnam as French 75s in a fly-swatting And what is to all accounts a small but the 15 million South Vietnamese try to live campaign. It is to be hoped that this will screechingly articulate minority of college and work. It is a political as well as a milf- end this scare, students and professors is contributing its tary war and "will be won or lost here in the The President reemphasized that the bit. It is suggesting-and the Communist provinces," as Joseph Grainger, the civilian American purpose is a "peaceful settlement." foreign press is lapping it up-that the real AID man recently killed by the Vietcong, It is to be~hoped that this strong reaffirma- intellectuals and true friends of "peace" in wrote his mother. Like hundreds of other tion. has not been overlooked by Hanoi, this Nation are in total revolt against our U.S. civilians trying to improve the lot of the Peiping, and Moscow. The crisis in South cause in Vietnam. Vietnamese, he was fighting the political war. Vietnam is one that admits of a peaceful solu- Thus when the monumentally patient It is that war in which Ho Chi Minh still tion. The United States has no purpose there Secretary of State Dean Rusk at last speaks thinks he has the advantage and which our inconsistent with the legitimate aims of out plainly against all the bitter nonsense, bombers alone cannot win. North Vietnam or irreconcilable with the in- all the blind rejection of the demonstrated There Is nevertheless mounting evidence dependence of South Vietnam. The Presi- facts of history about Communist aggression, that the air raids in North Vietnam and the dent has pointed this out again in terms that what befalls him? Why, such a Senator as general firming up of the U.S. military com- can only be construed as an invitation to WAYNE MORSE, of Oregon, calls for the head mitment have had a marked effect on the peace-if peace is desired. not only of Dean Rusk but also of Secretary decisive political equation in Vietnam. Our The strong emphasis that the United States of Defense Robert McNamara. increased pressure has slowed the flow of sup- now is giving to the role of North Vietnam, To MORSE, our action in Vietnam, in which plies from Hanoi, boosted the morale of the evident in the President's press conference, we are carrying out the solemn pledges of Saigon government and armed forces, and in- the McNamara press conference, and in other three American Presidents, is "immoral and creased the willingness of Vietnamese peas- public statements, makes the fact of North godless." He rages at the word appeasement. ants to volunteer much needed information. Vietnam's aggression a first premise of our But what else, in fact, is it when men in The military and political wars interact on position. The indicated scale of infiltration public. positions persistently find so much each other. It is therefore idle to criticize may be in conformity with the available that is wrong with us and so much that is the "official theory of the war," which in- Approved For Release 2003/10/14 CIA-RDP67B00446R00030015'001.7-5 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE April 29, 1965' 8672 cludes bombing, on the ground that the war phisticated detecting devices which allow was in North Vietnam several months ago. can't be won by airplanes. them to pinpoint far in advance the truck In the course of lengthy discussion, the President Johnson Is right to pursue his convoys which sometimes try to come down Hanoi leaders explained the substance of "official theory" until its full results: are the Ho Chi Minh trail. their objectives for South Vietnam: to ob- proved. He is right to ignore the untimely The sea route is both shorter and more ef- tain the withdrawal of American troops (but suggestion of Senator FUIBRIGHT for suspend- ficient. But the 7th Fleet's program to pro- under conditions that would not cause the ing the air strikes. Be :is right to intensify vide small boats will be accelerated and but- United States to lose face) ; to reestablish the U.B. support of the Vietnamese Army, to ex- tressed by the addition of small craft of a traditional exchanges between the two zones tend the sea patrols and to pursue other type similar to minesweepers. (the North needs South Vietnamese rice forms of action recommended by McNamara A decrease in the flow of aid when the urgently). and Taylor after their meeting in Honolulu Vietcong needs it most, and the psycholog- So far as negotiations are concerned, last week. ical repercussions of the American strikes North Vietnam is more than willing to join ,We even sympathize with the Impulse, in the north, will place the Vietcong in a in any peace talks which would give it a though not the method, of Johnson's im- difficult position in the weeks to come. This chance for the diplomatic homecoming" patient handling of Indian Prime Minister is not to say that those hardened fighters dreamed of since 1954, and to appear at such Shastri and other unhelpful critics of our are ready to yield. They continue to voice talks as the prime Vietnamese spokesman. policy in Vietnam. Johnson himself adopted confidence in the validity of their reasoning Ironically, the American bombings have in- the proposal of 17 neutralist nations meeting and to bet that Americans will not escalate creased the desire for negotiations (to spare at Belgrade for unconditional discussions the war beyond the fatal point. Moreover, the North from systematic destruction of its toward a cease-fire and peace. Since Moscow, some statements dropped by people in the economic network), at the same time mak- Peiping and Hanoi have all spurned that pro- Vietcong suggest that after all It is now up Ing the desire harder to articulate without posal, the diplomatic ball is not in'Johnson's to the North to "sweat" appearing to give in to the "imperialist court. He is right to pursue the tough side Since the first American air strike in Aug- gangsters." of his well balanced policy. He could report ust 1964 after the Gulf of Tonkin incident, There have been a number of recent popu- a fortnight ago that "news from the battle- the Government and the military leaders of lar revolts in Namdinh North Vietnam. front is improving;" he can legitimately hope North Vietnam have begun to prepare a new They were put down quickly, but they to report better diplomatic news before too resistance on their own. Food and ammu- showed that tightened police controls the long. nition stocks have been replenished in the the increased prve ons imposed by The political war in the villages, mean- higher regions, in fortresses held at one time shadow of war have been poorly received. while, needs beefing up along with the mili- against the French. Military training for An interruption of aid from Hanoi to the tary war. Johnson has promised "a massive peasant and workers' militias has been in.- Vietcong could only eallato living b rg none new effort to improve the lives of the people tensified. An evacuation plan for the fac- Even Vietcong gue of southeast Asia" and appointed Eugene tortes and their personnel has been de- extremely difficult conditions in their hide- Black to work out details with the U.N. He veloped. Since the Donghoi bombings in outs, where they strut around in front of has just sent ruralelectrification experts to February, Part of Hanoi's civilian popula- any foreign visitors, hope for peace. But the Saigon. More effort along the same lines need tion has been sent to the provinces, starting guerrillas make harsher demands than ?.heir not await a cease-fire. The villagers -need with the women and children-80,000 per- allies in Hanoi. They are afraid of being more protection against Vietcong terrorism sons had left Hanoi by the beginning of duped by diplomatic maneuverings and are and they also need more tangible expecta- March. The ministries are prepared to evac- tired of playing the game of North Vietnam tions against Vietcong promises. Apathy as uate en masse the capital archives and gov- as well as that of the pro-American m_ddle well as fear compose the water in which the ernment staff. ss of Vietcong swim. The principal danger for North Vietnam Finally, the National Liberation. Front As in the Congo, it can be dried up. is not an invasion of American troops. But feels it can win the war with its own forces aze the factories around and doesn't need to accept a doubtful i craft if A i r r can a mer From Life magazine, Apr. 30, 10651 Hanoi, destroy the port of Haiphong, deacti- Compromise- flatten under My most interesting contact on this point vats the coal mines of Hongay , IS THE VIETCONG SUCH A SVRE WINNER AFTER their bombs the famous steel complex of has been a vice chairman of the NLF, H?.iynh with the Peace Movement before llyw, v sever _ the three rail- fought -The following is excerpted from a indusstry~-w_ and,fi vnar four-part series in the liberal French weekly ways which link Hanoi to Haiphong and to joining the Vietcong. I7Bxpress. It is by the respected French cor- Red China (Langson and Yunnan), than the "Doesn't the increasingly serious nature of respondent Georges Chaffard and is the first country is paralyzed-18 million North Viet- American intervention bother you?" I asked assessment from behind enemy lines of the namese reduced to a subsistence economy, him. "We are convinced that the Americans effect of toughened U.S. policy on the Viet- isolated from the rest of the world. In that won't go beyond certain limits," he replied, tong and North Vietnam.) case, we would be done for," admitted a "That's why Hanoi hasn't retaliated by send- The American Air Force's show of strength, Hanoi official. ing troops south." the encampment of marines in central Viet- To avoid such a collapse, the Republic of "We're ready to fight for 10 years, 20 years nam, the use of new weapons, China's and North Vietnam needs antiaircraft weapons or more," assures one NLF proclamation is- Russia's relatively passive attitude have and planes capable of matching the Ameri- sued March 22. But at the same time, the tended to arrest pacifist trends which had can armada. It needs to rebuild its chain regular battalions and one section of the ad- begun to be rampant; in Saigon. In thecapi- of radar stations methodically destroyed by ministrative personnel of South Vietnam tal, one is no longer so sure the Vietcong American bombers. It does not need volun- were retreating to the mountains north of will be the real winners; American determi- teers, Chinese or otherwise. It would have Saigon, leaving behind them farewell mes- nstion makes one think. in short, a turn no use for them as long as it is not faced sages strongly reminiscent of 1954, (:pito- in public opinion has begun. - with the threat of land invasion. The pres- mized in the slogan: "Provisional withdrawal In the military domain, the influx of Muni- ence of Chinese is, furthermore, unwanted to return another day." tions and the new Marine units will force because of the political debt that would be Wasn't this the admission of defeat in the Vietcong command to attempt a few de- felt around North Vietnam. South Vietnam? Certainly they hoped that cisive operations before the weight of the But who will provide Vietcong Gen: Vo by regrouping the major portion of their reg- formidable American machine burdens them Nguyen Giap with the modern weapons he ular troops in a less accessible place, they much longer. It would be no surprise, there- needs? China? It does not even have any could establish impenetrable citadels which fore, if an offensive were launched shortly by of its own. Russia? The Russians would would be assets in negotiations. regular battalions against the Da Nang base, intervene in the Vietnamese trouble only I often questioned my contacts In the NLF no matter what the cost. reluctantly. Privately, the Russians explain on aid extended by the North. The answer However, such an increase in effort by the that aSoviet-United States war would be a was never a flat denial. It was more an in- Vietcong will coincide with an appreciable de- horrible thing and could not be accepted ex- direct admission that betrayed the inade- crease in the flow of aid by land and sea from cept for a stake more important than Viet- quacy of this aid: If you think it is easy the north. The heavy arms-16B cannons, nam. -Let the leaders of Hanoi begin by to deliver men and cannons through the antiaircraft weapons, 81-millimeter mor- helping themselves, and Moscow will give aid. Laotion trails. * * *" one said to me, tars-requiredtoto attack American troops In this connection, one Soviet official Guerrillas in the southern areas sometimes head on and neutralize their air support cracked: "When a man is losing his pants, have the impression of being left to their are scarce. There Is no other choice than to would you want someone to give him a belt? own resources. The situation is certainly chance supplies from the north. But only Let him pull up his pants first." different in central Vietnam and in the limited activity is possible on the Infiltration But one thing is certain: if the war were mountain regions, near the Laotian infiltra- routes along the Laotian border: first, be- to spread to North Vietnam and the United tion routes. cause the American bombing raids occur al- States were to climb the last steps of an Up to the last few months, mostly South most daily; then, because the north-south escalating war, Hanoi would not yield. Vietnamese in the Vietcong were sent to the trip lasts from weeks personnel is decimated North Vietnam's regular army would no south. These men had retreated to the from malaria and dysentery; finally, because longer hesitate to join hands openly with north after 1954 and volunteered to return the American-South Vietnamese Special the resistance fi -hters in the South. to their native provinces. But now Tonkin Forces operating along the border have so- The French Communist Party delegation (native northern) groups are taking part in Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 April 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE th@ convoys-first' because the veterans of 19504 have grown older and are not always capable of undertaking long treks through the underbrush; secondly, because once they arrive in the, i south, their first thought is to see their t.. lie.. Some do not rejoin their Progressively, as the war has escalated, the Vietcong administration itself has been forced to levy taxes-first in produce, then in money=and to draft soldiers. Taxes and the draft are, in normal times, considered.by any peasant in the world to be a necessary evil. But when you have believed, in a mo- ment of enthusiasm', that the new leaders are going to doaway with one or the other and when, on top of it all, still another authority, Saigon, continues to get its cut and, recruit its soldiers, you can understand the sort of pained resignation in the faces of the peas- ants.- Certainly the arguments of the Viet- cong are glib, letting everyone think any- thing bad that happens is the fault of the American aggressors. But the buildup evi- dent in the air attacks and the all too obvious' destructive powers of napalm and gas have thrown the country people into a state of mind close to rebellion. Now it isn't just the withdrawal of the Americans that they want. They want peace; no matter what the' terms are, and no matter who the leaders are. Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, will the Senator from Wyoming yield? Mr. McGEE. I am glad to yield to the Senator from Ohio. Mr. LAUSCHE. Frequently when I hear discussions urging our withdrawal, the thought comes to me: To what area shall we withdraw? How far must we retreat to become freed of this threat to the security of the nations of the free world? I have in mind that during the French Indochina War, the Geneva Pact was made. By that pact, it was determined that certain lands would be given to the Communists, certain southern parts would be assigned to, the nations of the free world, and that that would bring tranquillity to that area. , But we have found that that did not bring peace. The Communists were not content with the creation of a dividing line. We had trouble in Laos, which was, of course, a part of French Indochina. In 1962 we made a pact declaring that Laos would be neutral. Many of us contended that a coalition government in Laos would not work. But the Government . of the United States and the govern- ments of other nations made an agree- ment to create a three-headed govern- ment, with a neutral in the middle, a Communist on the left, and a Conserva- tive on the right.,, That was 3 years ago. The nations of the West pulled out their men. France did. The United States did. The Communists did not. If our position in South Vietnam is dan- gerous, it is partly as a consequence of what happened in Laos in 1962. My question is: Where do we run to? Will we have quiet and tranquillity if we pull out? that will happen in Thai- land? What will happen in Malaysia? What will be likely to happen in Taiwan? How far away must we go to appease the Communists? Has the Senator from Wyoming given any thought to, that? Mr. McGEE. I thank the, Senator from Ohio , for his ,?discerning , question. He himself is an expert on this subject, being a member of the Committee on Foreign Relations.. He has given deep study and thought to the problem. We ought to have learned the hard way in history that the appetite of an aggressor is not satisfied by giving him a little; by giving him somebody else's food supply or somebody else's territory. We tried that with Mr. Hitler, We tried it in Austria. We tried it in Czechoslo- vakia, We tried it in Poland, hoping to succeed, but the only result was to intensify the hunger and ambition of a dictator. There are those who seek to answer this 'question-by saying that we still have our great power-our Navy and our Air Force, and that we should pull out and get off the mainland. But by pulling off the mainland of Asia we forfeit one of the great prizes in modern power structure; namely, southeast Asia to mainland China We could have pulled out of Western Europe in 1945, at the end of. World War II. We alone had the atom bomb, and we could have defended ourselves in a very narrow way by maintaining our own defenses and leaving Europe to de- fend itself. But Europe is a great ally. She is a great source of strength. Eu- rope wanted to know if we would pull out or whether we would stay and help her to become independent; to help re- sist the encroachment of the Soviet Un- ion upon the West. Berlin answered that question. We answered with no uncertainty. The same kind of question is argued today. We would not have the same power if we made our enemy more power- ful by retreat. Our relative strength would be diminished. Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield further? Mr. McGEE, I yield. Mr. LAUSCHE. I have been a mem- ber of the Committee on Foreign Rela- tions for 8 years. I have heard the ad- vice of Secretaries of State, Secretaries of Defense, members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and, indirectly, the advice of the Presidents who have held office since 1956. I have also heard the advice of President Truman. The record will show that every Presi- dent, beginning with Truman and con- tinuing tinning through Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson; every Secretary of State, every Secretary of Defense, and every member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has taken the uniform position that the secu- rity of our country is wrapped up in keeping southeast Asia in the hands of people and governments that are friendly to the West. Time and again, I have asked the ques- tion, If we should pull out of southeast Asia, what would happen? The answer has been that a vacuum would be cre- ated; that the Communists would step in; and that the first line of defense of the United States, instead of being 10,000 miles away,-would be moved to the shores of California, or even, I sup- pose, to the shores of Hawaii. . The Senator from. Wyoming touched on a subject that we have forgotten, that is, the history of what occurred in the days of Hitler, in 1933, when World War I had been concluded and. the Versailles Treaty and other treaties were made. Two important provisions were included in those treaties. One was that Ger- many was not to have a military force; second, that the Rhineland was to be a neutral, nonmilitarized area. That pact was kept until Hitler came into power. In 1933, in violation of the pact, Hitler began to conscript German youth. France and England protested: "You are violating the treaty." But that was as far 'as they went. Hitler built up his 500,000 men into stormtroops and then moved into the Rhineland. That was in 1935, as I recall. The United States protested the action in the Rhine- land. We said: "You are violating the treaty." But that was all that was done. Hitler's maw was not appeased. He wanted Austria, so Chamberlain went to Austria with his umbrella. It is a pitiful and shameful episode to read how that great man trembled in the presence of Hitler. But he laid down the rule and surrendered Austria. The world thought that that would satisfy Hitler. But no; he then asked for the Sudetenland from Czechoslo- vakia. The same story was repeated. Hitler got Sudetenland and then said, "That is not enough. I now want Czechoslovakia." Mussolini went into Ethiopia. He took Albania, a nearby country. Then Hitler said, "I want the corridor to Poland up to Danzig." He de- manded it. It was not given to him im- mediately. Then, France and England said, "We cannot stand it any longer. We must fight." They decided to defend them- selves at the time that was most danger- ous, and at a time that insured that the loss of life would be tremendous com- pared to what it would have been if they had stopped him from militarizing the Rhineland, and developing his military forces. What the property damage was and what the loss of life was through that program of appeasement can never be told. All we know is that the lands of the earth contain the bodies of the men who died in the millions because freemen did not have the will to say, "You can- not continue to violate your pacts." I commend the Senator from Wyoming for his statement. We all want peace. It would be calloused and wrong to think that there is anyone within our country, especially those with high responsibility, who does not want to insure that our youth shall be free from the ravages of war. I am definitely of the conviction that we can never surrender enough to sat- isfy the 'Communists. Satisfaction will come to them only when their flag is on our dome and we are the slaves of the dictators. Those who argue retreat and withdrawal have no conception of what the eventual price might be. I am not one who would say to the men who fought in World War I, World War II, and Korea, "Your valor has been for- gotten." I am not one who would say to the families of soldiers who were killed, "We care not for those who died." We Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 2674 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE April 29, 1963 owe something to those who died and to the families of those who died. President Johnson does not want this involvement. He has noChrought It upon us.' It is the Communists who have cre- ated this situation. The situation will grow worse if we-show any,sign or indi- cation that we do not have faith in our country. I thank the Senator. Mr. McGEE. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Ohio for his contribu- tion. I suggest to him that he should have been a professor of history In view of his recitation of the" history of the thirties, which years produced Hitler and Mussolini. It Is a history that ought not to be repeated now for any citizens of the world. It is sometimes said that history re- ,peats itself. But It was the great his- torian, Arnold Toynbee who reminded us that history repeats itself only when men make the same mistakes again. It is no great disaster to make a mistake some- times. But it can be a disaster if one makes the same mistake again. We have the story of the thirties as has been so ably related by the Senator from Ohio, to guide us now. There are those who raise the question, "What is the connection between the western and the eastern world? Their philosophy, standards, and priorities are different in the East." I say to those who raise those Auestions that there is one common de- nominator. That Is the Integrity, In- dependence, and knowledge that an ag- gressor cannot be stopped by feeding him Someone else's possessions. An aggressor must be stopped by our willingness to ilsk the use of force, if necessary, in or- der to withstand his continued pressure to move into new areas. That is the issue in the East right now. I am not one who believes that our fron- tiers would be pushed to Hawaii, San Francisco, New York, or Boston. I be- lieve that we would still have Okinawa as a bastion of our defense there. We 'would still have some support at Taiwan. -We would have the advantage of our Navy and air bases. However, the real point is that the moment a critical area ,fs given to the other side In southeast Asia, at that time we diminish our rela- tive power in, the world. This part of southeast Asia has been a key goal of major powers throughout the history of our time. Japan started World War II In an effort to get southeast Asia, as I have said on another occasion. England fought a war to get it. So did the Dutch. So did the Germans. So did the Portuguese. The hard fact is that it makes a difference who has southeast Asia, as to what kind of balance exists -in the world. in my judgment, China, already with more people than it can feed and with its few resources to get its economy mov- ing, is not a power which should be -permitted to walk freely into this part of the world. In southePt Asia are great reposi- tories of rice, tin, oil,, bauxite, and rub- ber. This, indeed is a prize in the hard technique of power politics around the world. Why handit over to th other side when, by the tide of history, we have placed upon us the responsibility of try- ing to make the world a-little better, a more peaceful and stable place in which to live? Mr.LAUSCHE. Mr. President, with respect to pulling out of southeast Asia, I do not feel that if we pull out of South Vietnam and wait to see what will hap- pen, there will be an Immediate pushing back of the line. However, If we pull out of South Vietnam, where will the next trouble spot be? The next trouble spot will be in that area. There is no question about it. In my judgment, the next trouble spot will be In Thailand, and there will be in- creased trouble in Malahia. They will try to cause riots and demonstrations-- some nonviolent and others violent-in Taiwan and Korea. There will be no end to It. Many peo- ple are duped into the belief that we should pull out of South Vietnam or all will be over. It will not be over. There is not a chance in the world that It will be over. It is the old domino game. Knock one country over and the others fail successively. I commend the Senator from Wyo- ming for his very fine presentation here and for the answers which he has given to the many people who are wondering why we should be present in southeast Asia. No one wants to be there. I wish we could pull out. However, we cannot. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Presi- dent, will the Senator yield? Mr. McGEE. I yield. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. If we are to buy the argument that because this nation borders on China, it Is in China's sphere of influence and we must get out -and let China take over, would not the same argument apply to every other country there, starting with Japan, Tai- wan, the Philippines, the Malay states, Burma, Pakistan, and Iran? Would not that argument in effect mean we should back out and let them take over 900 million people? Mr. McGEE. That is correct; and when they take over the 900 million peo- ple, will they stop there? Perhaps we should have a "General Motors" for the world, and let it be operated that way. That is what the meaning of it Is. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. I did not hear the beginning of the Senator's speech, but is it not also correct that the Vietnamese are really doing the fight- ing? I saw a headline in one of our newspapers a day or so ago stating that one American was killed. When I read further in the story, I learned that there had been a battle between the Viet- namese and the Vietcong, and that the Vietnamese had killed 400 Vietcong. The headlines stated that one American had been killed. Is it not true that the South Viet- namese have killed about 89,000 of the Vietcong and the. 'North Viet- namese? The South Vietnamese have paid a lesser price. They have paid about one-third of that price in lives. Is it not correct to remind persons who say we should leave there-and turn our tails and run and leave the 19 million people who are there that we are paying -only a small price? The real fighting is being done by the South Vietnamese, whom we are trying to help to mains ain their Independence. When there is talk about an American being killed, about 200 or 300 of the Vietcong are being killed every day. Mr. McGEE. I thank the Senator for his contribution. We hear a great cry to the effect that American blood Is being spilled and Americans are being invol,red. -There is no alternative. If we pull out, there will be greater bloodshed. The question is, What should we do in a world in which we seek independence and peace; and are we right in paying the price required? Not quite a year ago I was measuring the volume of mail that came into the office. That very month we had lost seven men In Vietnam. There was a basketful of mail protesting it as un- necessary. Within a month we were conducting a "play" war in Arizona, and .In that activity a dozen to 15 men were killed. I did not receive a single letter of protest against that. It seems to me we ought to get our "ducks in line," we ought to put our pri- orities in order. We must expect to pay a price, and remember that peace is not going to be handed over to us merely because we are "good guys." We must pay a price to achieve law and order. The alternative is to give up and go on the other side. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Pi esi- dent, will the Senator yield further'? Mr. McGEE. I yield. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Some people do not seem to realize that it is a danger- ous world we are living In, and it always has been. I was born at the end of World War I. There were some inter- vening years when people thought there would never be another great war, but we have found that as long as we have -to struggle with those who want to ake over the whole world, as long as there is communism, they are not going to change their spots or their minds. They want to take over the whole world. So it is going to be a dangerous world. Even without that factor, it would be a danger- ous world. We must accept the fact that it is better to accept the burden of fi;;ht- ing every attack on freedom. In that way we shall live longer and be happier than we would otherwise be. There is no place else for us to go. We have found out that the world is round, and that we are on the same planet together. Tnose who want to back away from Vietnam will find that we will have to stop them somewhere. We must confront them in Vietnam and all over the world; and it is going to be that way in our lifetime. We had better hope it will be that way, because the alternative would be to be under the domination of Communist 'China or Communist Russia. Referring to the taking of a popularity poll, I recall so well, during the fighting in South Korea, when we were helping them to maintain their independence at a heavy cost in American lives, that I happened to be in Libya, inspecting a military Installation. I asked their De- fense Minister about the reaction of his people to what the United States was Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 Approved For Release 2003110/14 CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 April 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE doing in South Korea, because it seemed to me that a small nation such as Libya would applaud America's efforts to help a small country defend itself against ag- gression. His first reaction was: "It is far away." In other words, his country really did not care much, one way or the other. I imagine that would be the first reac- tion we would get in Mali, Uganda, Ghana, or any one of the distant African nations, if we were to ask them what they thought about U.S. efforts to help South Vietnam defend itself. Whether they knew anything about the situation at all-which they probably do not- their probable reaction would be that it was none of their concern. This is un- derstandable, because such countries have never had to carry such a burden, have never had to face such a problem. I am quite sure they are not particularly excited about our involvement there, Someone was asking me how much concern the people of Louisiana have re- garding this issue. To tell the truth, I am sure that the people of Louisiana are much more concerned about voting rights than they are about the war in Vietnam. Mr. McGEE.. I can understand that. Mr. LONG of Louisiana. They are very much more concerned about voting rights and civil rights matters. They discuss that subject a great deal more than they discuss the situation in Viet- nam. The Senator from Wyoming has well pointed out that if we. are to take a poll to find out what someone in the Near East thinks about it,, or what someone 2,000 miles away thinks about it, we will not get an informed opinion anyway, be- cause those people do not have the re- sponsibility to try to contain com- munism. Mr. McGEE. If I might suggest a parallel, what might be true in New Or- leans was probably also true in Chey- enne, Wyo., let us say in 1935, concern- ing the aggressions of Hitler in Western Europe. At that time, his depredations seemed a long way away. Our country had emerged from a rather short history with some fortunate experiences. Whenever war had broken out in Europe, there were two sides, of course, and we enjoyed the luxury of 3,000 miles of ocean between us and the combatants, We, had the luxury of looking at the two sides and picking one, whenever one of those wars began-even though we may have had a stake in the war at some stage. We had the further luxury of being able to delay a decision while someone else held the frontline. During the First World War, France held the line, Eng- land held the line, as did the Belgians and the Dutch. That gave us time to dawdle and delay until we made up our minds. Times have changed. For the first,time in our history, the United States is now one of two sides engaged in a war in the world. We have no choice. Strangely, for the first time in history, we find ourselves on the frontline of the world with no one to hold the line for us until we make up our minds. 8675 The burden rests upon us. We must honorable peace at this time in South do the job. This is not an obligation. Vietnam. This is our responsibility. This is the Mr. McGEE. Peace is not achieved by context in which we must view the re- decree. Peace is achieved when all the quirements imposed upon us in regard to forces of power are available to produce the relative position of the forces at stake agreement upon some stabilizing settle- in southeast Asia. ment. Therefore, a good bit more is Mr. HARRIS. Mr. President, will the required than what we could strike in Senator yield? the way of sheer power. Peace is not Mr. McGEE. I am glad to yield to the achieved with power; power merely af- Senator from Oklahoma. fords an opportunity to achieve peace. Mr. HARRIS. I compliment the Sen- Mr. ERVIN. Is it not true that the ator from Wyoming upon the scholarly United States is without power to put and careful way in which he has treated an end to the hostilities at the present a most difficult subject. I associate my- moment, except by way of appeasement self with his remarks. or surrender? Several times on the floor of the Sen- Mr. McGEE. I suppose we could make ate, and most recently yesterday, I made a decisive change there if we were wan- two points which I think the Senator tonly to use our great airpower and ob- from Wyoming has again brought to literate Hanoi and some of the other mind. First, as the Vice President of cities in North Vietnam, to start with. the United States used to say when he Fortunately, we have been much more was a Member of the Senate, "There is restrained. Our goal is not to destroy no such thing as instant peace; there Is- people; our goal is not to obliterate the only instant annihilation." capital of another land. Our goal is to Those who advocate either less activity try to deliver a message that the aggres- on our part or more activity on our part sors can understand when it is presented in southeast Asia, with the hope that to them in black and white. Although some immediate and dramatic solution they may not understand it on paper, of the problem can take place, hope in they are understanding it in action. vain, because, as in human affairs, in In my judgment, the President has international affairs much perseverance been highly restrained in his applica- and patience are required to achieve a tion of escalation in the north because, lasting peace. again, we have selected the escalation. The other point that I think is im- It is planned escalation to meet a specific perative is one which I also made yes- target, at a specific time, for a specific terday; that is that he who takes risks purppse. There has not been wanton now in order to secure a just and lasting warfare with the destruction of people. peace is no less a peacemaker than he Mr. ERVIN. Is it not true that the .who asks for peace immediately with- escalation has been deliberately planned out the assurance that it can later be in the hope that it might enable us to defended, or can be enforced even at negotiate from strength and thus bring much greater price. an end to hostilities in that part of the I commend the Senator from Wyoming world? for, his astute observation of the situa- Mr. McGEE. Indeed, it is. There is tion in Vietnam, including the hopeful an old truism in the realm of diplomacy signs we now see, especially in Australia's among the great powers, a truism that increased effort in that area. We recog- we. need to understand fully: that a na- nize that what is happening is not merely tion cannot win at the conference table a small conflict involving the people of what it is not willing to risk on the North and South Vietnam; it involves, battlefield. That is a truism that is as indeed, the peace and security not only old as politics itself. It is still true. of southeast Asia, but of the whole world. Mr. ERVIN. Is it not true that the The Senator from Wyoming has made government which sits in Hanoi is the this point very well. only government that could put an im- Mr. McGEE. I thank the junior Sen- mediate end to hostilities at this mo- ator from Oklahoma for his comments. ment? Although he is very new in these Halls, Mr. McGEE. Hanoi could take the he has quickly won a place for himself step right now that could terminate hos- as a true specialist and scholar on ques- tilities there in the almost immediate fu- tions involving the national interest. His ture. It is within their power to do so. contributions are always constructive Mr. ERVIN. There is an old adage to and helpful as we seek to discuss the the effect that even the most righteous alternatives that confront us. man cannot live in peace unless his Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, will the wicked neighbor is willing to have him Senator from Wyoming yield? do so. Is it not true that the war in Mr. McGEE. I yield to the Senator South Vietnam exists because the gov- from North Carolina. ernment of Hanoi is encouraging what Mr. ERVIN. I commend the Senator is called infiltration, but is really an in- from Wyoming upon a most eloquent and vasion of South Vietnam by the Viet- lucid exposition of the situation in south- cong? east Asia. I should like to ask him sev- Mr. McGEE. I think it is true, because eral questions. the policies emanate from Hanoi; and it Does the United States have the power is true because it is to the obvious ad- at this time to make an honorable peace vantage of Peiping to maintain uncer- in South Vietnam? tainty, pressure, and difficulty in North Mr. McGEE. Does the United States Vietnam. have the power? Mr. ERVIN. Does not the Senator Mr. ERVIN. The power to make an from Wyoming agree with the Senator Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 8676 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE April 29, 191$5 from North Carolina, that the Secretary South Vietnam is one kettle of fish and ing the right to object, I have in mind of State has made it clear on a number whatever endemic civil :strife there Is the possibility of moving to amend the of occasions that the only thing that is within South Vietnam is another. Williams amendment. A Member of 1 he necessary to put an end to the unfortu- These situations should not be con- Senate could easily hold the floor from natehostilities now is to have the North fused. There is a much larger question now until 4:30 p.m. and prevent i,ny Vietnamese cease their penetration of that would have to be resolved over a other amendment. Can the majority South Vietnam? much longer period of time. It would leader tell us what provision he would Mr. McGEE. It seems to me that even be a mistake to have these problems like to make with respect to allowing the in elementary language or at the ele- mixed up around the same conference amended, amendment debated tors prha Senators mentary level, the most elementary per- table. if f need be, so that rights teS? son could understand that. The lan- Mr. PELL. Mr. President, I very may have guage has been clear and unadulterated. much hope that the Senator is correct Mr. MANSFIELD. As soon as the dis- Mr. ERVIN. Is it not true that it is and that the two problems can be kept tinguished Senator from Wyoming ccm- an impossibility for the United States separate. pletes his speech, which I am sure will to achieve peace by negotiation unless Mr. McGEE. The effort in the gen- not be too much longer, any Senator who someone else is willing to negotiate? eral escalation is a genuine effort to try wishes to take the floor to offer an Mr. McGEE. It takes two to nego- to separate them. In a measure, it is amendment to the Williams amendment tiate. succeeding. will be free to do so. We are trying to Mr. ERVIN. Has not President John- The first real measure of actual sepa- take this action as an accommodation on made it as clear as the noonday sun ration would be the realization and will- to Senators on both sides, that the United States stands willing to ingness of the Vietminh to stop the Mr. JAVITS. Would the majority enter into negotiations with a view to predatory activities across the lines. leader agree-and I do not wish to inter- bringing about peace in Vietnam with That would lead us to the question, if fere with his proposal-that when any anyone who is willing to negotiate and we were to have such a conference, amendment to the amendment might be who has the power to accomplish that "What could we talk about?" We have offered, a half hour be allowed for de- purpose? a self-enforcing kind of arrangement bate to each side, and if that results Mr. McGEE. I would qualify my that can be made right now. "We will in extending the time beyond 4:30 p.m., answer by saying that it is as clear as stop bombing the north if you stop in- the time should thereby be extended the noonday sun in Wyoming, where the filtrating into the south." That is the until such time as the amendments to sun shines all day ; I am not certain easiest kind of agreement to keep. We the amendment are disposed of within about the noonday sun in this area. can measure their violation if the other that time limitation? Mr. ERVIN. Has not the President side does not keep the agreement. Thus, Mr. MANSFIELD. I would prefer to iterated and reiterated that the United there is an obvious beginning. withdraw the unanimous-consent re- States stands willing to enter into nego- Second, such a discussion could lead quest and let nature take its course. tiations with anyone who can offer any to agreement upon a delineating line sep- Mr. President, I withdraw my request. prospects ofputtin?; an end to hostilities arating North Vietnam from South Viet- In southeast Asia? nam. THE U.S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Mr. McGEE. Indeed, he has. All The outcome of such an agreement, to SUPPORTS S A STUDY OF " HE the world is watching because everyone have two Vietnams, is not the most de- SUPPORTS SYSTEM .understands the disposition of the Pres- sirable situation in that part of the .dent to sit down with anybody, at any- world, any more than two Koreas, two Mr. PELL. Mr. President, yesterday, 'time, anywhere, to discuss a settlement Chinas, two Germanys, or two Berlins. April 28, the delegates to the 53d annual of the problem in South Vietnam. However, this would provide a start. It meeting of the national chamber, U.S. Mr. ERVIN. I thank the Senator for would be a place at which to begin. It Chamber of Commerce, voted unani- yielding. I again express to him my would make it possible to arrive at some mously in support of a study of the fe>asi- conimendation upon an eloquent, lucid sort of modified cease-fire, some small bility of adopting the metric system in speech. degree of arrangement which would win this country. Mr. PELL. Mr. President, will the time. There would be less violent things I am delighted that such a nationally Senator from Wyoming yield? done, and thus, through the use of time, prominent organization occupying a Mr. McGEE. I yield to the Senator we would erode some of the harsher of leadership role in our country and rep- -from Rhode Island. emotions that now cloud the atmosphere resenting businessmen the length and (At this point, Mr. HAuRis assumed the In that part of the world. breadth of our land, support, this idea chair.) To that extent, I think that it is help- and the efforts that Congressman GEORGE Mr. PEe President President, I do not ful. P. MILLER and I have been making in believe the President made it clear that urging such a study. he would be willing to conduct convey- VOTING RIGHTS ACT OF 1965 The chamber's declaration noted cations with the Communists actually that- who the Vietcong. There are those The Senate resumed the consideration Most of the world embraces the metric; sys- tem think that, for the conversations to of the bill (S. 1564) to enforce the 15th tam of measurement. Adoption of the sys- be productive, all sidles and factions amendment of the Constitution of the tem in the United States is worthy of study, would have to participate. United States. on the theory that adherence to the system Mr. McGEE. Mr. President, I believe During the delivery of Mr. McGEE's might assist fulfillment of our internalional that statement is correct. The Presi- speech, responsibilities and our goal for increasing dent has not inade it clear that he would Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will sales of U.S. goods abroad. Because of the talk with the Vieb ong. However, there the Senator yield? problems of conversion, however, actual is very good reason for not agreeing to Mr. McGEE. Mr. President, I am glad adoption of the system should not be consid- such conversations. The factor that is to yield to the distinguished majority ered until there has been a comprehensive .so upsetting and unbalancing is the force leader with the understanding that I study of the feasibility of adopting the sys- shall not lose my right to the floor, and tam generally, or in specific fields? in the that is being generated"from I'_ano: United states. Such a study should de- The President has made it clear that that his remarks will appear elsewhere in termine clearly the costs and economic ad- he would not talk with the North and the RECORD. vantages and disadvantages of conversion. South Vietnamese Governments about The PRESIDING OFFICER. With- The chamber encourages the conduct of such what kind of government would be in out objection, it is so ordered. The Sen- a study by the U.S. Department of Com- Saigon, but would talk about what may ator from Montana in recognized. merce. happen between South Vietnam and Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I Mr. President, my bill S. 774 would North Vietnam. ask unanimous consent that there be a accomplish exactly what the chamber What the President has expressed in vote on the Williams amendment at 4:30 supports in its declaration. I am hopeful ,his colhments, it would seems, to me, is o'clock this afternoon. . that other equally prominent groups will sat the conflict between Hanoi and Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, reserv- now lend their support to such a study, Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 pril 29, Y965Approved Fer NGq R%pe SSI8NAL/RECORD DP P ~44D6ZR000300150017-5U 1 A2043 We should protect this bastion of personal valley last year I took you by the headquar- U.S. Censorship Policy in Viet Assailed privacy right down to the last ditch,. tees? of.. the. Confederate Air. Force at When members of the National Association Mercedes. of Letter Carriers must cooperate in operat- This organization is nonprofit in character EXTEi`lSION OF' 1 1VIARKS. hag a mail cover, they feel sullied and be- and is composed of former World War II pi of smirched by what they have to do. They are lots. Their only purpose is the preservation so imbued with the philosophy that a per- and exhibition of World War II aircraft. HON. WILLIAM G BRAY sonal letter is sacrosanct, that it goes against In connection with the Selma, Ala., civil of INDIANA their conscience, and every instinct they rights march, the national press recently IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES have. They do not like to do it. reported that certain leaflets were. dropped 'I don't blame them one bit. In cases in- by an aircraft on the civil rights marchers. Thursday, April 29,1M' volving the national security, there is some These leaflets, apparently threatening eco- justification for this practice. There is nomic reprisals against the marchers, were Mr. BRAY. Mr. Speaker, there is also some justification when the safety of signed "Confederate Air Force." growing concern over the effects the ad- the mails is involved. But the practice The local members of the Confederate Air ministration's censorship policies re- should be restricted to those two categories- Force have issued various statements, and garding news from Vietnam will have. Arid should be restricted as much as pos- I enclose a clipping explaining their position. This could create a very severe problem stble' within those two categories. This is They would greatly appreciate it if it were in conduct of foreign affairs, as nothing a"practice that should be used most sparing- possible for you to insert into the denial of iS- can so quickly weaken the resolve of a ly and most cautiously, because it endangers CONGRES- SIONAL RECORD a. copy of their denial of m- country as lack of confidence in the ac= one of the most precious principles in our Placation in the Alabama incident. democratic way of life. With best personal regards, I remain, tions its government is taking. "Confederate Air Force" Proiests Un- authorized Use of Its Name EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. RALPH , YARBOROUGH OF TftAS IN T11t Sk TA ,E OF THE UNITE= STATES Thursday, April 29, 1965 Mr. YARBQROT. cif .. Mr,. 1 re:sidexlt, Mercedes, Tex., is' the headquarters of an organization called "the Confederate Air Force," which is composed, of former World War II pilots who dedicate them- selves to the preservation and exhibition >f World War II aircraft. Last year, f was fortunate to visit the leadquarters of this group, and I was rery Impressed by its. dedication, to its )urpose and the pride it has in its oxga- zization. These men own some very ,are World War II aircraft, and fly them it their own expense, at air shows over he Nation. ,It is not surprising that the "Confed- -rate Air Force," of Mercedes, Tex., was listurbed, by the unauthorized use of its lame by airplanes which dropped leaf- ets on, civil-rights marchers in Ala- lama; and the group has registered a )rotest against such misrepresentation, So that the denial of any connection letween this action and the "Confed- ;rate Air Force" may be given wide dis- ;ribution, I ask unanimous consent that % letter which I received about. this mat- ter, along with a telegram sent to me, and an article published in the March 23, 1965, issue of the Valley Morning Star, of Harlingen, Tex., be printed in the Appendix of the RECORD, There being no objection, the letter, telegram, and article, were ordered to be printed in,the R,gCORD, as follows: CARTER, STIERNBERG, SKAGGS & KOPPEL, Harlingen, Tex., April 5, 1965. Senator RALPH YARBOROUGH, Senate Office Building, Wgsh,,ton, D.C.p~.,., `DEAR SEr1ATC1;$ i.+.shDORQUGH: member that on one of your Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R00030011-50017-5 JAM SxACS, grow out of a lack of information on just Senator RALPH YAReOROUGH :. v -.,, ". v?a - w,v - L. ia'`iis ,The, :Confederate fir, Force emphatically in southeast Asia. denies any connection with the dropping of The following column by David Law- leaflets today in Selma: or any place else, for rence, which appeared in the New York that..matter. .We would like to locate the Herald Tribune on April 27, 1965, points pilot or get the aircraft numbers of the out the fact that there is a clear distinc- plane used, and we will fi e chares_.aainst tion to be made between withholding the pilot for falsely representing himself as military information that could benefit a member of the CAF. We haye_,put.orie our enemies, and a policy of censorship purpose, and that is the preservation and enshrinement of World War II aircraft and that seems to seek to stifle press cover- the .pilots that flew them and.helped keep age on all aspects of the Vietnam situa- this Nation free. We are a patriotic organi- tion. nation; we are nonpolitical in nature and U.S. CENSORSHIP POLICY IN VIET ASSAILED have no affiliation whatsoever with any of the,white sltpremist groups. We do not have (By David Lawrence) a single member in the Alabama, Georgia, WASHINGTON: Editors at their annual Mississippi area, nor do we have any aircraft meetings in New York and Washington in closer than 1,500 miles_ from Selma. The recent days have been discussing the policy Confederate Air Force deeply regrets its im- of the Johnson administration in dealing plication in this issue. with the news emanating from the battle Col. BOB KENNY, areas in Vietnam. Public Information Officer, Confeder- What seems to have aroused most of the Star, Mar. 23, 19651 agrees that, when American lives are being DENY "RAID"-CONFEDERATE AIR FORCE risked in a war, the press should cooperate ANGERED BY UNAUTHORIZED USE OF NAME in withholding any information which might possibly get to the enemy and impair the MERCEDES.-Angry denials flew from Rebel effectiveness of this country's military oper- Field, headquarters of the Confederate Air ations. Force, Monday, after it was reported a Con- Both in World War I and in World War II federate Air Force plane "bombed" civil there prevailed what was called a "voluntary rights marchers in Alabama with white su- censorship," and the press effectively with- premacist leaflets, held military information that could possibly "We're attempting to get the license num- benefit the enemy. The press was fully ac- ber and name of the pilot, who is liable for quainted with the dangers of letting the suit for misprepresentation," Col. Bill Adams, Rousseau, Minn., newspaper publisher and a eluding other side the departure o of f anything about plans, to CAP public information officer, said. planes or ships to "A stigma destinations. could be attached to the CAF. There would be no difficult We don't desire any publicity of this sort." y at all today Col. Lloyd Nolen, of Mercedes, pointed out if the administration here were to allow emphatically the valley-based organization these matters to be handled solely by the "is a patriotic group of volunteers dedicated military, so that only information relating to establishing a permanent flying museum to troop movements or air and naval oper- of World War II fighter aircraft." ations would be temporarily suppressed. Nolen said the CAF name is copyrighted. What seems to have stirred up the nontro- "We've got our attorneys checking into versy is that the administration has put in it," Nolen added, the hands of a propaganda-agency officer the Adams noted members specifically are for- task of acting virtually as a censor. bidden to use CAP planes in political or busi- Not only is he permitted to withhold in- ness activity, formation about certain diplomatic activities He said the CAF has no members in the but he also seems to be able to prevent the Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia area and also newspapermen from covering the Vietnam has no light planes such as 'Ths war in the places where they ought to be used in dropping the leaflets. permitted to go. . "All of our planes are fighter planes of In the major wars of history, our military World War II," he said. "Someone has authorities have always provided facilities for taken it upon himself to misrepresent the war oorrespondents. These newsmen spend f!AiP ? _ Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017~~~ 196~~ A2044 CONGRESSIONAL. RECORD =-`APPENDIX but do not send out dispatches which could lution Control Administration, to provide possibly transmit any' important informa grants for research and development, to in tion to our adversaries. crease grants for construction of municipal The assigning of a member of the staff sewage treatment works, to authorize the of the U.S. Information Service-established establishment of standards of water quality by Congress as a propaganda organization- to deal with the press at Saigon and to with- hold military information is not in line with historical precedent or custom. It is not surprising, therefore, that newspaper editors have severely criticized such a procedure. Secrecy is of the utmost importance, but it should be confined entirely to military matters. The press should be free to make its own comments whenever it wishes, pro- vi~led it does not disclose military plans. But even the news of military operations should not be permanently suppressed. ` There comes a time, after the event, when it is proper for a disclosure'to be made so that the American people will know what has really happened. The timing of such an announcement might well be within the dis- cretion of the military authorities, but to hold it back indefinitely contradicts basic American practice in, dealing with the press during a war. It has been argued by some of the news- paper editors that they cannot comment effectively an military operations if they are not permitted to get the facts of what ac- tually is happening. Thus, sometimes equip- inent will be unsatisfactory and certain types of'guns or planes will have been used which are not suited for the. operations in Which they are employed. All this is-soinething which can better be examined, perhaps, by committees of Congress, though critical ar- ticles written on the spot in war areas often point up the necessity for such investigations. Perhaps the whole controversy would not have reached the climax that it has in re- cent weeks if there had,not been a prelude; namely, an era of so-called managed news at the Pentagon. This has left an unfortunate blemish on the record. For when the only news :given out is designed to accomplish a political purpose, confidence on the part of the public 14 the accuracy of what is printed Is bound to wane. Fundamentally, there is no sound reason f or , suppressing the news of military opera- tions altogether. The only issue is when such announcements should be permitted. Also, criticism of military operations should be carefully weighed by newspapermen, lest they disclose data which the enemy should not be allowed to get. There have been sharp comments from Government officials concerning the dis- patches' written by correspondents inViet- nam who have been merely exercising- their right to express opinions on the diplomatic aspedts' bf the war. There has been, to be +ilr`e,;a'lot of news from. various countries on the delicate subject of peace negotiations, and this, in some instances, the administra- tion would' probably have preferred to see handled with more caution. But the right of the press to discuss nonmilitary news is inherent in a system such as has long pre- vailed in America during war and peace. Quality Act of 1965 SPEECH oi' to aid in preventing, controlling, and abating pollution of interstate wateri4, and for other purposes. Mr. SWEENEY. Mr. Chairman, we come this afternon to the close of a de- bate which has certainly been a distinct compliment to this House. This bill has received the unanimous' support on both sides of the Committee on Public Works, and is a piece of legislation which re- flects with great credit upon the Com- mittee on Public Works and its distin- guished chairman. However, Mr. Chair- man, this is a piece of legislation that re- flects with great credit upon the distin- guished gentleman from ' Minnesota, JOHN BLATNIE, the father and the fore- most exponent of clean water in America. Mr. Chairman, I am pleased, coming from the State of Ohio, to add my sup- port to these needed amendments to this program and to note with pride the splendid spirit of bipartisan unity that made theal}4endments to the original S. 4 bill possible- Mr. Chairman, we have shown by amendment and by the remarks here during the debate this afternoon that there seems to be agreement that the Federal Government in its attack upon water pollution must proceed coopera- tively, with State and local governments and with the vast American industry as well as in cooperation with every agency throughout the land interested in win- ning ultimately the fight for clear water. This bill is void of any accusatory tone and is, indeed, a constructive, in- telligent approach which has already brought a response from State govern- ments. Now at the moment of the adop- tion of this bill I am proud to announce to the House that there is in the Great Lakes region, about to be reconvened a five-State regional conference of State Governors to join with the Federal Gov- ernment in streamlining America's pro- gram for clean water. I am proud to participate in this debate and to support this bill. Inventors Sign Away Patent Rights Before They Invent EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. GEORGE E. BROWN, JR. OF CALIFORNIA , IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, April 29, 1965 Mr. BROWN of California. Mr. Speaker, in relation to H.R. 5918, a bill which I have introduced that would make it unlawful for an employer to require a patent assignment from a prospective employee as a condition' of employment, I would like to call the attention of my colleagues to an article in the Los Angeles Times of April 13, 1965. This article, written by Mr. Richard L. Vanderveld, takes an objective look at the situation today's employed inventor finds himself in. With unanimous consent, I am insert- ing the text of the article at this point in the Record: INVENTOR GRUMBLES GROW OVER SIGNIN+; .AWAY OF THEIR RIGHTS (By Richard L. Vanderveid) Scientists and engineers are beginning tD raise voices against gun-to-the-head renun- ciation of patent rights. Senator RUSSELL B. LONG, Democrat, of Louisiana, is pressing for greater Government control of inventions conceived under Gov- ernment-funded programs. Industry argues all will lose if its creative energies are repressed. These are the main sides to a question-- who should get the fruits of invention-- that is exciting warm debate in the councis of labor, industry, and Government. As matters stand, industry is in the drivers seat. Although patents are issued only to ind?.- viduals, it's reckoned that about two-thirc_s of all patents these days windup as corpo- rate property through contractual assigr.- ment of rights by employees. Also, the Defense Department, the bigger;t bankroller of research programs, has followed a policy of letting private firms in its hire take title to inventions and requiring on y a royalty-free, nonexclusive license for the Government. Some other Federal agencies, including the National Aeronautics and Space Administra- tion, have not been so liberal toward industry on the patent question. The result has be( n confusion and some agitation for a unified policy. A number of the country's leading legal minds in the patent area gathered recently at Lake Arrowhead and plunged into trends and issues affecting the employed inventor. Gerald D. O'Brien, head of the NASA patent section, sounded the keynote of the confer- ence with this observation. "The current trend toward the acquisition by the Federal Government of exclusive rights in inventions made under Govera- ment-sponsored research and development contracts tends to diminish markedly tie traditional incentives which serve as stimuli to the employed inventor." Other speakers, expressing much the saris idea, may have felt obliged to please their hosts, but the barking was too loud and ar- ticulate to be wholly devoid of bite. The conference was sponsored by the Coun- cil of Engineers and Scientists Organiza- tions-West under the auspices of the UCLA Institute of Industrial Relations. The coun- cil represents five independent unions of engineers, scientists, and technicians in southern California. This group is supporting legislation which would make it illegal to have employees sign agreements relinquishing rights to inventions as a condition of employment. This is viewed as an extreme position-subject to compromise. The sponsor of the bill, Representative GEORGE E. BROWN, JR., Democrat, of Califor- nia, was present at the Arrowhead conferene. He said it stood little or no chance unless its beneficiaries got behind it. COMPANY TAKES RISK Industry insists contractual assignment of patent rights is justified. Its reasoning is that when a company hires a man to do in- ventive tasks and gives him the tools it's taking all the risks and the man is only doing what he's been paid to do when he invents something. Any compensation beyond salary for an invention in this situation is strictly out of the goodness of industry's discretionary ('ex gratia" in legal parlance) heart, it's ex- plained. Industry also claims technical types by and large don't aspire for wealth anyway, that they're more than happy to be left alone ON. ROBERT E. SWEENEY OF OHIO IN-THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Wednesday, April 28, 1965 The House in Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union had under consideration the bill. (S. 4) to amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as amegded, to establish the Federal Water Pol- Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 April 29, 1965 Approved FGQ~ e~ Q311L0/1R4~ fRA4RDP67PBENDIX 00300150017-5 A great French diplomat and higtorian, Andr6 Frangois-Poncet, wrote recently, in -,Tye Figaro of_ March 11: "No one will be able to convince us that it is a good bargain for France to exchange American friendship for Soviet or Chinese friendship." By the same token, no one will convince Americans that anything which undermines what M. Frangois-Poncet called "the sacred tradition of the age-old bonds between France and the United States" can be less than a disaster for, both countries. We stand at a crossroads of history where we dare not, if we still cherish human free- dom as our principal value, allow consider- ations of short-term profits and prides to take precedence over the age-old imperatives of our common cause. Every American schoolboy knows a wise statement made by Benjamin Franklin, an unflinching friend of France, as the Found- ing Fathers gathered in Philadelphia to sign the immortal Declaration of Freedom. "We must all hang together," he said, "or assured- ly we shall all hang separately." That warning is as relevant for the free' world peoples today as it was for the 13 American colonies in 1776. Our freedom is indivisible, and only the shortsighted or the frivolous would knowingly take part in its division. What Americans call "isolationism" has become an anachronism in the shrunken, in- terdependent world of our times. Let us be clear on the fact that it is no less anachron- istic for France than for the United States. The View From Abroad Regarding the Employee Inventor EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. GEORGE E. BROWN, JR. OF CALIFORNIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, April 29, 1965 Mr. BROWN of California. Mr. Speaker, during the recent symposium held on April 8, 1965, celebrating the 175th anniversary of the U.S. patent sys- tem, some of the most pertinent remarks dealing with the problem of the employed inventor and his legal relations with his employer were made by Dr. Fredrik Neumeyer. Dr. Neumeyer, who is a citizen of Swe- den, is one of the leading patent scholars in Europe, and has been making a special study of the employee-inventor's status for a-number of years. Formerly the head of the patent de- partment of the Swedish State Telephone & Telegraph Administration, he has writ- ten on the subject in various European and international periodicals, and lec- tured on it in. several European countries. In 1962 the Subcommittee on Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights of the Sen- ate Committee on the Judiciary pub- lished a study prepared by Dr. Neumeyer in the form 4f a committee print entitled "The Law of Employed Inventors in Europe." In view of this extensive background, I am sure, that my colleagues will find Dr. Neumeyer's remarks at the sympo- sium related to the employed inventor to be most illuminating. Dr. Neumeyer is currently spending 1 year in the Depart- merit of Economics, Princeton University, as a visiting fellow. He is now working on a study concerning the legal and prac- tical situation of employed inventors in the United States. The text of his speech on April 8 is as follows: _ I was asked to say some words about the view from abroad regarding the employee- inventor. I have to start out with some very short remarks as to the general situa- tion in this country which always will have an impact on all of us in the Western World. Every reader of a newspaper in this coun- try knows what gigantic amounts of money are now spent by Government, industry, and universities, to keep scientific research going. We hardly react when we read that the Presi- dent estimates Federal expenditures for the coming year at more than $15 billion (of which $6.9 billion will be spent on space projects). Industry-financed research and development was already in 1961, up to $4.6 billion (with more than $870 million spent in chemical and electrical industry each). If we have a look upon who is going to carry out this work and to create all these new weapons, machines, vehicles, products, and systems for new power, more speed, bet- ter food or medicines, we see that the Fed- eral Government (in 1962) employed totally more than 144,000 scientific and technical personnel, of which more than 50,000 were so-called R. & D. personnel. Private indus- try occupied at the same time totally more than 850,000 scientists and engineers, of which more than 303,000 were R. & D. sci ,entists and engineers. When we learn that by far the largest share of research performance in industrial firms is devoted to projects "advancing new sci- entific knowledge with specific commercial objectives" and to the translation of re- search findings into actual products and processes, we understand readily that there must be a steady stream of engineering in- novation, often in the form of inventions which can be protected by patents. Now, it is just as obvious that the vast majority of all these creative persons are employees of some kind. They work either for a Government agency, for an industrial corporation, or for a university as employer. The mutual relations between the employer and the inventing employees are not regu- lated by Federal statutory law in this coun- try (except for certain specific rules regard- ing Government employees) and there exists an almost unlimited freedom of contract in the field (limited only by the Statute of Frauds or eventually by the antitrust laws). In spite of the fact that the research ac- tivities in which inventions can be created do not have the same size in Europe as they have in the United States, European coun- tries have laid down considerable efforts to regulate the legal relations between em- ployers and employees making inventions. These efforts go in certain countries back to times before the turn of the century and the basic problems have been observed since the early days of industrialization. More than a dozen countries had promulgated legal provisions regarding rights and obliga- tions of employed inventors. I would say that we have five different main systems which have been used to solve these prob- lems in Europe. I The first and historically the earliest sys- tem was the insertion of provisions concern- ing employee inventors into patent law. This solution was adopted by Austria, Finland, the Netherlands, Italy, Canada, and Japan (in chronological order). A similar form of reg- ulation was adopted by the Soviet Union and other Eastern European countries through the enactment of laws regulating inventive activities based, of course, on the socialist economic system. Laws following the general principles of the Soviet concept of labor and of the place of inventive ac- A2047 tivity in planned industrial production were issued in Yugoslavia in 1948, in Bulgaria, Rumania, and the German Democratic Re- public in 1951, in Poland in 1951-52, in Hungary in 1953, and in Czechoslovakia in 1957. . II The second type of system was that adopted in Switzerland, where provisions concerning employee inventors were in- serted into the law concerning contracts and the employer-employee relationship, the so- called law of obligations. III The third method consists in passing a special law devoted exclusively to the rights and obligations of employee inventors and their employers, and the legal problems aris- ing from these relations. The first modern law of this type was is- sued by Sweden in 1949, followed by Den- mark in 1955 and the Federal Republic of Germany in 1957. In the course of the uni- fication of law which is being carried out in the Nordic countries special enactments re- garding employee inventors, based on the Swedish and Danish models, are being pre- pared in Finland and Norway. Iv The fourth type of legal solution relies mainly on precedents established by courts and by official boards specially instituted to give guidance in the matter. This method, which is exemplified by the United Kingdom and the United States, must naturally be based on individual cases of legal conflict, either between two private parties or between a private party and the Government. Hence it cannot cover the whole field consistently and comprehensively, since the rules origi- nating from these decisions depend neces- sarily an a number of accidental circum- stances. From a detailed study of common law and judge-made law it is, however, possible to distinguish certain basic prin- ciples applicable to employee inventors, in the United States, akin to the principles operating in other countries. V - Finally there are some countries where the relations between employee inventors and their employers are regulated by collective agreement, in some cases alongside one or other of the four methods outlined above, but more typically in countries where there is at present no specific legislation on the subject (e.g., in France). Collective agree- ments are, as a rule, concluded only for a limited period and may vary from one in- dustry to another. The oldest regulation by patent law (of the classical type) was in Austria. The Austriail Patents Act of June 11, 1897, con- tained the following provision: "Workmen, salaried employees and civil servants are considered to be the authors of inventions made by them in service unless otherwise stipulated by agreement or by service rules. Any provision in contracts or service rules by which a person employed by an enterprise, or a civil servant, is de- prived of the reasonable benefit of an inven- tion made by him in service is without legal effect." The Swiss legislator has brought the prob- lems of inventions made in the course of employment under the law of contracts, which in turn is part of the Swiss federal commercial law. In 1911 the first Federal Law of Obligations, which had been promul- gated in 1881, was basically revised and reis- sued as Book V of the Swiss Civil Code. In title X of this book we find a section 343 regulating inventions made by employed per- sons. This section provides as follows: "Inventions made by an employee in the course of his work belong to the employer if inventive activity is comprised in the service duties of the employee or, where this Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-.RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 A2048 Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX April 29, 19611 President Truman laid down the guidelines for containing Communist encroachment is all parts of the world, the United States an3 the free world have followed this no-retreat policy successfully. Mr. Johnson, in reiterating this policy, has made it clear that in peace or war, the U.S. position in southeast Asia will remain firm. is not the case, if the employer has expressly retained a right to them. "In the later case the. employee is entitled to reasonable special compensation if the invention is of considerable economic value. "When assessing this compensation regard must be had to the assistance given by the employer and to the use made of his prop- erty.,, This single provision within the frame- work of a very extensive law leaves a number EXTNSION OF REMARKS OF H4 ROBERT ROBERT L. LEGGETT OF CALIFORNIA 'IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, April 29, 1965 of problems untouched; some of these may Mr. LEGGETT. Mr. Speaker, most be solved by the general law, which in Switz- military experts agree that with the cur- erland may mean the individual laws of 22 rent international balance of power be- different cantons, t Union and the United i th S e ov tween e No statute concerning employees' inven- States, that a nuclear war could now only however, Great Britain was among the first European countries to establish the modern factory system in which the question of employees' inventions arises and to enact a law for the protection of inventions, the earliest judicial decisions regarding the origin, ownership, and use of inventions pro- duced by employee inventors and their com- pensation date from the beginning of the 19th century. Disputes had to be brought before - the courts for decision according to common law and the principles of equity. Many of the early questions in this field were answered according to the rules governing relations between "master and servant" and conditions of labor contracts (express or im- plied) as deduced from the judieial decisions of many centuries' standing. An early British court problem (182b, 1834) concerned, for instance, the authorship of an invention where it had to be decided whether or not the servant was merely carrying out the instructions of his master, being no more than a tool for putting his master's idea into the tangible form which is the subject of a patent. Another basic ques- tion analyzed and decided by the courts was: Who is a servant? A skilled chemist, al- though his employment involved manual la- bor, was held not to be a servant. A con- tractor, being a person who has entered into a contract -to execute certain specific work, is subject to the orders of his employer only to the extent that the terms of his contract so provide. He Is not under the control of his employer. Within this short program I can only add that practically any existing European law or court in this field, as a rule, considers seven questions as basic ones: 1. To which group of employed individuals (what category) does an employee belong? 2. What type of intellectual work has been produced by employees? 2. `Has title or part of the title to inven- tions been acquired by the employer? 4. Which principles of compensation for such inventions have been used? 5. Which category of employee-inventions does apply? 6. Is it stipulated 11Ow controversies and differences of opinion in this field are to be settled? 7. What rules apply to inventions made by employed inventors after their employ- ment has finished? With these remarks I may just have opened Asia. He made it clear that the United the view through a small window, a view States, under no circumstances, would with- known more or less to experts in.American draw from that area-only if a peace settle- corporations and Government agencies with ment with built-in guarantees can be wide international connections and interests. reached. There is more to study and think about for. The President and the rest of the Nation people interested in an increased output of are wary of warfare, but the Nation generally employee inventions and better labor rela- is convinced that retreat in the face of Com- tions everywhere. munist incursion can be fatal. Since former An American Basketball at Moscow University EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. JOHN S. MONAGAN OF CONNECTICUT IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, April 29, 1965 Mr. MONAGAN. Mr. Speaker, I w.s interested to read a United Press Inter- national report today from Indianapolis, Ind., that the U.S. All Stars defeated the Soviet Union Nationals by a score of '"8 to 73 in a basketball game that attractE d nearly,14,000 fans. It was also note- worthy that last night's victory gave the American team a 4-to-1 edge In the five games played with the touring Russians. I call this to the attention of my col- leagues because of a pleasant experient:e which developed from a meeting I h ,,d with an American student at the Uni- versity of Moscow when I was in Russia last November on a study mission with the Europe Subcommittee of the Com- mittee on Foreign Affairs. I enjoyed a pleasant conversation at the Prague Restaurant in Moscow with Mr. Edward Milton Ifft, of 239 Alameda Road, Butler, Pa., a member of the Uri- versity of Moscow basketball team who informed me that the pleasure of his as- sociation with the university team was alloyed by the fact that the team played with a basketball produced in Red Chir a. Upon my return to the United State:. I related this experience to Mr. John B. Colt, export manager of A. G. Spaldi:-ig & Bros., Inc., Chicopee, Mass., w no agreed with me that it is not fit and proper for an American to be playing t he American game of basketball with equip- ment produced in China and he there- after forwarded as a gift a "Made in America" basketball to Mr. Lift: This week I have received from Mr. lift a very interesting letter which gives evidence that this basketball is being worked into a game of goodwill which could, ultimately, lead to possible (x- elusion of Red Chinese-made balls from the basketball courts of Moscow. I: pre- sume that in the current series of Ex- hibition games here between Russian and American teams American-made equip- ment is used exclusively.and I suggest that Russian coaches should be a n- couraged to advocate greater use of American equipment in practice sessions. Given a choice I would prefer to p7 ay ball with the Russians than with the Chinese under American rules and with Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 start by mistake or miscalculation. There perhaps is another way. If the Soviet Union commits itself indelibly to the North Vietnamese; and if North Vietnam Is committed to the Vietcong; and if the United States remains com- mitted to the people of South Vietnam, it could happen that a second nuclear war could be precipitated, not by the great powers, the United States and the Soviets, but by minor political segments in southeast Asia who are too inculcated with the stubborn mandarin personality to envision the results of this action ex- tending beyond the Gulf of Tonkin. My hometown paper, the Vallejo Times Herald, recently editorialized on this matter as follows, and pointed up the need for the U.S.S.R. and the United States to negotiate on their own terms forthwith. PRESIDENT MAKES SENSE President Johnson's speech to the world this week on the Vietnam situation reflects good sense. In effect, the Chief Executive was summing up what lie considers the goals of the United States and the free world in that section of the globe. He also recog- nized the inescapable fact that the free world is destined to coexist with the Communist world or neither will exist, The far-reaching suggestion by the Presi- dent that the Soviet Union join with the United States in helping to develop this backward region of southeast Asia is a bold step. From a coexistence viewpoint, he is asking the other major power in the world to assist in insuring the freedom and devel- opment of southeast Asia and at the same time he has widened the breach between the Russians and the Chinese. His failure to specifically include Red China in his pro- posals indicates that he believes the Chinese are not yet ready to sit down and talk as a mature, sensible nation. These Chinese activity in Korea, their vilification of the United States and their growing criticism of the Soviet Union makes them a suspect participant in any peace talks. President Johnson demonstrated the de- termination of the United States to carry on the war against the Communists if peace talks could not bring about a settlement in that area. He cited the U.S. position that the maintenance of Vietnam as a free and Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 1 29, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX A2057 Percentage increases of food supply needed during 1958-80 to meet anticipated requirements This morning Captain Dean was laid in various regions of the world to rest at his alma mater-the U.S. Mili- - Total - - Per capita increase of Percentage increase of food supply, Rate of Recent Regions of protected l ti food supply 1958-80 annual annual popu a on growth, to provide a minimal required to meet present increase needed, rate of increase 1958-80 satisfactory food require- 1958-80 in food present diet ments and supply population growth Underdeveloped countries---------------- 56 33 107 3 4 2 7 Latin America ---------------------------- 85 5 94 . 3 1 . 2 5 Far East --------------------------------- 55 41 86 . 2 9 . 3 0 Near East-------------------------------- Africa 82 17 90 . 3.0 . 3.1 __________________________ Developed countries______________________ W ld 36 28 28 -------------- 55 `28 2.0 1.2 1.3 3.6 or (average)-------------------------- 48 14 69 2.4 2.9 POPULATION BILL FILED. BY REPRESENTATIVE TODD Third District Congressman PAUL TODD, JR., Democrat, Kalamazoo, has introduced a bill to focus attention on the population explo- sion problem. His bill calls for Assistant Sec- retaries in the Departments of State and of Health, Education, and Welfare to coordinate Federal research and information dissemina- tion efforts. The bill also authorizes Presi- dent Johnson to call a White House Confer- ence on Population Problems. Now in the hands of the Government Oper- ations Committee, TODD'S bill is drawing sup- port from some Michigan Republicans, nota- bly National Committeeman John B. Martin, and praise for his courage from Representa- tives ELFORD A._ CEDERBERG, of Bay City, and JAMES HARVEY, of Saginaw. Warsaw Ghetto Uprising: A Commemoration EXTENSION OF REMARKS HON. JOSEPH G. MINISH OF NEW JERSEY IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Mr. MINISH. Mr. Speaker, April and May this year mark the 22d anniversary of a great and tragic event. It was dur- ing this period in 1943, from April 19 to the end of May, that a few thousand Jewish survivors of the Warsaw ghetto staged a desperate last-ditch resistance to the Nazi campaign of extermination and for a brief time and against over- whelming odds demonstrated a type of courage and heroism that the world has not very often seen. When the Nazis and Russians moved into Poland at the opening of World War II, Poland was divided for another time. Forthwith the Nazis rounded up the Jew- ish population and forced many of them into the Warsaw ghetto, swelling its num- bers to about 450,000. In the summer of 1942 the Germans began their campaign to exterminate the Jews. And during July and August of that year they sys- tematically removed the Jews from the ghetto, placed them in prisons, and even- tually destroyed them in their crema- toriums, As the numbers of the imprisoned Jews dwindled, the survivors were determined to stage a last-ditch resistance against the Nazis. Open resistance began in January 1943, but on April 19, the eve of the Jewish Passover, the Nazis attacked en masse and in desperate fury, and with tanks, artillery, and troops, they set out to destroy the ghetto completely. For a month the battle raged and even in the summer token resistance could still be detected, but the ghetto was reduced to rubble by the end of May and most of its inhabitants either killed or shipped off to concentration camps. It is well for us to commemorate the anniversary of the Warsaw ghetto up- rising; for here is a tragic demonstration of man's courage in the face of a fearful and overpowering enemy. But more im- portant, Mr. Speaker, such commemora- tions can serve as a continuing reminder to us all of the extremes to which man can go when his soul has become filled with racial prejudice and racial hatred. In recognition of this fact, the Essex County Warsaw Ghetto Commemoration Committee has arranged a memorable commemoration for Sunday evening, May 2, at the Weequahic High School Auditorium in Newark, N.J. The event is being sponsored by 55 Jewish and non- Jewish organizations and will be attended by 2,000 persons, including State and local officials and representatives of reli- gious groups. Among-the distinguished speakers will be Dr. Joachim Prinz, pres- ident of the American Jewish Congress; Mr. I. Goldberg, director of the New Jer- sey Service Bureau for Jewish Educa- tion; and Mr. Kenneth Gibson, cochair- man of the Business and Industrial Co- ordinating Council. Three local choral groups will participate. There will be a dramatic presentation of "The Witness" followed by a candlelighting and memo- rial service. As we mourn this tragedy, may we be inspired to a greater dedication to our Judeo-Christian ethic. Our Continuing Struggle in Vietnam V HON. RICHARD L. OTTINGER OF NEW YORK IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, April 29, 1965 Mr. OTTINGER. Mr. Speaker, today it was my sad duty to write a letter of condolence to the widow of one of my constituents killed recently in Vietnam- Capt. Kenneth L. Dean, Jr., U.S. Army. tary Academy at West Point. He was killed on April 20 as a result of gunshot wounds while accompanying a Vietna- mese Army unit engaged in a fight with the Vietcong. When he attempted to move a Vietnamese soldier, he was hit by hostile small arms fire. At the time of his death, he was a first lieutenant and was recently posthumously pro- moted to the rank of captain. His widow, Mrs. Sheila Dean of Dobbs Ferry, has received two Government citations- one from the President and an Army Honorary Service Award. Captain Dean died defending freedom and honoring our commitments to free nations to protect them from the spread of world communism. While his death is a deep loss to all of us, his widow and other Americans can find some comfort in knowing that he did not die in vain. His life, and those of other American servicemen killed in Vietnam, were given to afford the people of Vietnam the op- portunity to once again become free from intimidation and harassment by the forces of aggression. He died so that one day the Vietnamese will be able to decide their own future. His tragic death could have been pre- vented if the Vietcong and the Chinese Communists had accepted President Johnson's offer to achieve peace in that strife-torn area through unconditional negotiations. The gauntlet has been tossed and for the moment it appears that world communism will accept nothing less than the total destruction and control of their smaller and peace- ful neighbors. The President, in his speech at Johns Hopkins University earlier this month, placed the responsibility for the quest for peace squarely upon the Commu- nists. Their failure to respond clearly indicates their desire for continued hos- tilities. These forces . have been accu- rately identified as the perpetrators of continued bloodshed in Vietnam and their unwillingness to discuss this mat- ter at a bargaining table demonstrates their continuing desire to establish a totalitarian empire in southeast Asia. There is so much which can be done in this area to assist all peoples to gain a healthier, better educated and more prosperous and peaceful life. As I stated in this distinguished body earlier this month, this war certainly grows as much as anything from the frustrations of hunger and deprivation. The re- sponsibilities of all nations in southeast Asia, and most particularly in Vietnam, are to build rather than destroy, to edu- cate rather than subvert, to heal rather than wound, to cultivate rather than plow under. The quest for peace is the goal for which we are all fighting. Mr. Speaker, let us never forget the sacrifice of Captain Dean and the other gallant Americans who have shed their blood in this quest for peace. All Americans, and all the peoples of the free world, should stand in honor to Captain Dean and his comrades and pay tribute to their enduring contribution to world peace through the giving of their lives. Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 ,-Approv or Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5 A-2058 , / ed CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX April 29, 196.9 The United States Stands Firm in Vietnam They can have peace if they want it; of appeasement, intended or accidental, Re- or continued war and punishment if they in- publican support would vanish like a rocket XT1'.SION OT' REMARKS slat on them before they are persuaded into outer politics. As they did to President that they have nothing to gain by their pres- Truman over Korea, the Republicans can L+' or ent course of aggression. never call this "Johnson's war." but they could fight and possibly win election if it HON. ABRAHAM J. MUL l ER FIRM POLICY BACKED-PRE9mENT MAINTAIN- ever turned into "Johnson's appeasement." or NEW TORIt XNG HIS CONCENSUS ON VISIT The President is determined that it won't. IN ME HOUSE OP REPRESENTATIVES (By Roscoe Drummond) Thursday, April 29, 1965 WASHINGTON -There is every reason to be- lieve President Johnson will widen and hold Law Day, Mr. MV'LTER. Mr. Speaker, all of a decisive consensus in support of a strong us can be proud of our President in his policy in Vietnam. determination to protect the peot le of He has one special asset. He is occupy- EXTENSION OF REMARKS South Vietnam until the aggressors agree ing his usual stance at the center. His policy of to sit down at the peace table. is wedded to neither extreme. He rests on two pillars: clear determination to defend HON. JAMES C. CORMAN We cannot and must not allow the as long as the aggression 'continues; clear North Vietnamese Government to con- willingness to talk whenever Hanoi will start OF CALIFORNIA quer her neighbors because of our failure talking. IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES to defend their right of self-determina- There are other factors which contribute Thursday, April 29, 1965 tion. Abandonment of our policy in to the President's support: Vietnam would be submission to the will The Gallup poll shows that the minority Mr. CORMAN. Mr. Speaker, o it and whim of the Chinese Communists which wants Mr. Johnson to step up the war American history has been marked by a everywhere. more than balances out the minority which valiant struggle for equal justice under wants him to quit. law and the preservation of individual Those who demand our withdrawal in His senatorial, newspaper, and professional liberty and dignity: the face of aggression recognize this critics can offer no acceptable alternative. fact in their refusal or inability to offer They are' prepared to accept Chinese Com- Recent events throughout the world an alternative to our present policy. munist domination of all southeast Asia. and within our own borders make it The following editorial from the New This is an alternative the American people clear that this struggle is far from over- York Herald Tribune of April 28, 1965, will not accept without trying to do some- that our commitment to the concept of supports the position of our Government thing about it. individual liberty and freedom under law The President has the backing of many is constantly being challenged. In what is truly a war that we do not Democrats in Congress (his offer of un- want, together with an article by the conditional discussions" won the approval The American legal profession, of distinguished columnist, Roscoe Drum- of the ADA) and most Republicans. His which I am proud to be a part, Is mak- mend, of the same date demonstrating Republican support runs the whole gamut ing an outstanding effort to give citizens the support the President has with regard from Barry Goldwater to the GOP leadership a deeper awareness of this continuing to our policy in Vietnam. in Congress, including Senator EvEaETT challenge and to alert us to our responsi- The articles foIlow.: DIRK5EN and Representative GERALD FORD. bilities as free, law-abiding people. Despite the honest, emotional student One means of doing this, is the annual TIIE PRESIDENT'S REPLY pickets and the college teach-ins, this leaves President Johnson set out yesterday to Mr. Johnson in a strategic position. And observance of Law Day, U.S.A. on May answer the vociferous critics, both at home here is the evidence: 1. The theme of this year's observance, and abroad,, of his policy on Vietnam, and The Gallup poll finds that 29 percent of "Uphold the Law-A Citizen's First also the Communist aggressors, who seem the country would like to see the United Duty," is designed to direct public at- not yet to believe he means what he says. States withdraw completely from Vietnam, tention to the rights and duties of citi- He did so clearly and convincingly. stop the fighting whatever the effects, and zenship. He upheld his decision to bomb North start negotiations whatever the outcome. As Americans, we enjoy wide freedoms, Vietnam by explaining that his previous It also finds that 31 percent of the country policy of restraint was :misconstrued as weak- favors stepping up military activity, and guaranteed by law, which distirigu.sh fleas and therefore served to encourage the going the full distance of declaring war. our society from a totalitarian system. Communists in their attacks. He replied The President embraces neither extreme. But with. these rights and freedoms go to criticism of the bombings by pointing out Be does not propose to withdraw or even individua'responsibility which all Ameri- that air attacks'were restricted to legitimate cease defending. But he will start talking cans must exercise. targets such as bridges and munition dumps, even while defending. He does not seek a thus to reduce the power of the Communists solution by military means alone, but he While we enjoy the right to equal pro- thus the north to take the land and the lives will use military means until Hanoi is will- tection of laws, equal justice in ",-he of those who are resisting them in the tag to use the conference table. courts, and the right to be free from arbi- south. Where does this leave Mr. Johnson with Crary search or arrest, we are bound to He recalled some of the lessons of his- respect to a public consensus? To obtain obey the laws which give us these rights eort'utag the lesson of Munich advance; , and where the retreat further evidence of the public's attitudes and to respect the rights of our :fellow t dPresidents e Truman lessons toward the handling of the situation in Viet- Americans. taughught by y Pr, Eisenhower, nam, Dr. Gallup put this question to the We are privileged to be able to choose and Kennedy, who stopped aggressions by people in the same, survey cited above: "Do standing firm. These evidently had a whe yothink the United States is handling our public officers in free elections, out as members of a democratic nation, we in the mind of President de Gaulle when n affairs in Vietnam as well as could be ex- he went before the television cameras almost petted, or do you think we are handling are charged with the responsibility of at the same time President Johnson did. affairs there badly?" voting in elections. The French leader declared himself against foreign intervention in the internal affairs The result was that by a ratio of more than We are indeed fortunate that we :.ive of another state, yet he refused to endorse 2 to 1 the Amercan people approve of the by a government of laws, where legis,la- the American effort to turn hack inter- Government's handling of the situation. As tion is subject to the -perfecting process ventionn. the air raids on the North have become more of judicial review. IC should now be doubly clear, following intense, public opinion has remained firm Mr. Johnson's speech at Baltimore, that the in its support because 2 months ago support The eighth annual observance of Law United States will not retreat; that it will for the President was at the same 2 to 1 Day, U.S.A. will focus national attention continue to hit the enemy both in the north ratio. on our rights and responsibilities as citi- and south, without recourse to nuclear arms; If there is any threat to the President's zens of the greatest Nation in the world- and that it will continue to fight until the expanding and holding this consensus on a Nation whose greatness stems from our Communists are convinced that armed attack Vietam, it would only come, I think, from dedication to rule of law. will not yield domination over others4 any sign of weakening in his policy. Onceconvinced of that, they may be ready Republican support is crucial to the John- The legal profession is to be commend- for a negotiated settlement. And when they son consensus. The President knows it. ed for its work in helping American:; to are, they will find the United States ready. This is why he has been so appreciative in understand more fully the value of our The President extended to any of their gov- private and on the telephone for what Sen- system of liberty under law. As we ob- ernments (as distinct from the rebel Viet- ator DIRxSEN has done in his behalf. He selves Law the Day, let et each eacht of of us our commit mit our- cong in South Vietnam) another invitation wishes that some Democrats were even half serve to come to the conference table at any time as helpful. and any place. But the President knows that at any sign bilities as beneficiaries of that liberty. Approved For Release 2003/10/14: CIA-RDP67B00446R000300150017-5