MEMO TO DICK KENNEDY FROM PETER RODMAN

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LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8
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RIFLIM
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K
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39
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January 11, 2017
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January 8, 2010
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3
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Publication Date: 
October 3, 1970
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MEMO
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No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON MEMORANDUM FOR DICK KENNEDY FROM: Peter Rodman IT_ October Attached is the public record on Cienfuegos. USG Statements Tab A: Tab B: Tab C: Press Comment Tab D: Tab E: Tab F: Tab G: Tab H: THIS DOCUMENT MAY CONTAIN congressional equity It includes: HAK Chicago Backgrounder, September 16 Friedheim Announcement, September 25 (notes) HAK Trip Backgrounder, September 25 C. L. Sulzberger, September 25 R. D. Heinl, September 28 Tad Szulc, September 30 Orr Kelly, September 30 (two versions) Chalmers Roberts,. October 1 Congressional Comment Tab I: Tab J: Tab K: Tab L: Tab M: Goldwater and Mansfield, September 26 Fulbright on Issues & Answers, September 27 Mendel Rivers, September 28 Dante Fascell, September 30 Frank Church, October 1 ON-FILE NSC RELEASE INSTRUCTIONS APPLY No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 EXCERPT FROM KISSINGER BACKGROUNDER, CHICAGO, SEPT, 16, 1970 ? MR. TODD: BillTodd, Rockford Star. Dr. Rissinger, speaking of off shore islands, and closer to home, I saw a report recently that the Soviet Union seems to be sneaking into Cuba. Is there anything to that'report, and if so, how serious does the administration view it? 1DR. KISSINGEi71.3 The Soviet Union of course, is very heavily established in Cuba as it is. It spends about $1 million a day there, just to keep the island's economy going. that the reports are probably referring to, the r6ports that you mention is the visit of the fleet units of the Soviet Union. That in itself is not inconsistent with any under- standing we have, certainly not against the 1G:tter. If they Start operating strategic forces out of Cuba, say Polaris type S-115- marines :and use that as a depot, that would be a matter we w6-uld very carefully. What the Soviet Union has to decide is this: Really, the principles that Joe Sisco advanced for a Middle East settlement apply to .tis. too. As you look around the world, both sides, simply by the logic of events, have innumerable opportunities to take small gains and to harass the other, or they can ask themselves what is required for a more permanent settlement? In which case, they have to forgo some tactical advantages for the sake of an agreeable atmosphere. For example, if we put the polaris submarine into the Blacl Sea, we have every right to do it. There are many newspapers who would say that is a prow4cative. thing to do. 'Why operate so close to the Soviet border? X am not saying everyone would hold that view. If one 1 ...signi-ficantly---eizanges the deployment oft:Mr:1S strategic fois-T-tHat is something the other side is bound to notice. Therefore, both sides have to decide whether they want to restrain measures which they have a legal right to take, in the interest of some longer term settlements, or whether they want to press every advantage they have a legal right to take. ? We are watching these events in Cuba and it isn't yet clea: what, exactly, the Soviet Union is doing there. The fleet is rotating in and out, and we are watching events very carefully. No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 . No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: 'LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 ?- [11-fr, Friedheinliznade these general points in response to press queries at la :30 p.m.,-Triday, September 2.5, 1970. ? (This is not a verbatim transcript, and must not bused as direct quotes, The paper is prepared from notes which contain the sense of the answers only.) ? We have bad several queries during _recent days and today cduccrning what the Soviets are doing in Cienfuegos. Al45o, if their activities had anything to do with submarines. ?7-1,Ve?know-that'Soviet Ships aii-cl'zilfcraft.haVe made severat visits to Cienfuegos in the past few months. There have been three Soviet Fleet vtsis to?Cuba.in the last,year -- July/August 1969, May/June 1970, -and this month. We are keeping a close Watch on the current Soviet activities. They are under close Surveillance. you know, in Mr. Henkin's speech last M 8oviet Union is demonstrating an appare-nt intention to for sustained surface and submarine operations in t1-1 our shores. 4 onclay he said that 'the achieve a capability Caribbean, close-by We have Eicen, the printed reports that the SoViets are conducting activities in Cienfuegos in association with a subnlarine base. There are some new naval fa.cilities in the Cienfuegos area within the past several months. Some, of the Soviet support ships have visited there. There are ao subrvarines there at the px.esept time. . We do not know exactly what the facilities avo intenaed to be n or whether they are intended to be bases. We are not suz:e that they are building a submarine Support facility, Wo fly 1.172. flights and still do. . The ?LIST ? we have talked about in recent w.eeks carried three barges ? whiChNvere offloaded,- possibly at Havana, and towed, as you know,. to Cirifueaos. We listed for you ..ycsterday the ships in .Cienfuegos,' . ? . We are following very closely these developments, butNve can't. ? sure yet what they are intended to be. No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 ATTRIBUTABLE?TO WHITE NOUSE SPOKESMAN, DIRECT QUOTATIONS NOT PERMITTED FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE BACKGROUND BRIEFING .(Soviet Presence in Cuba) AT THE WHITE HOUSE WITH DR. HENRY A. KISSINGER, ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT FOR NATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS 3:20 P.M. EDP FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 1970 Q To what extent --'combining that with the missile violations, the general build-up in the Mediterranean by the Soviets and this announcement today that possibly they are building a submarine base in Cuba are we fearful generally at this time of Russian military activity increasing around the globe and, if so, is the President's trip at all related to these Russian actions? DR. KISSINGER: No, the President's trip was basically planned before these actions occurred. It was planned after the cease fire and these violations began to be obvious, but before they became acute. The reasons for the Presidential trip I have essentially indicated. - As for the events that you have mentioned, they are, of course, matters which we have to look at with concern. With respect to the Soviet naval activity in the Caribbean, we are, of course, watching the development of Soviet naval activity and of possible construction there. We are watching it very closely. The Soviet Union car be under no doubt .thataweawouldaviewatI5eae7:S7teSITgliMent of a strategic baspain the Caribbean withathe utmest periousnesa. would like perhaps to call attention to a press conference statement that President Kenaedv made on November 20, 1962, in which he said the following: "As for our part, if all offensive weapons are . removed from Cuba and kept out of the Hemisphere in the future, under adequate verification and safeguards, and if Cuba is not used for the export of aggressive Communist purposes, there will be? peace in the Caribbean.", ? The operative part, of course, is here: "If all offensive weapons are removed from Cuba and kept out of the Hemisphere in the futureu This, of course, rehains the policy of this Government. MORE No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 ? 7....r.???????!" No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 2 - O Does that imply that a submarine with missiles aboard would be carrying offensive weapons and therefore --- DR. KISSINGER: I don't want to go any further than what I have said, And I have related it to the reports to which my attention was called about the possible construction of a naval base. All I want to point out it that we, are watching it and we want to see for what type of weapons it would be suitable, and similar matters. I have stated our general view with respect to it While the activity is now in an early stage. ? Do I understand that there is some doubt ? that this base could accommodate Polaris Submarines? DR. KISSINGER:. I will go no further than what I have said. Obviously, a Polaris typesubmarine is an _ _ _ _ _ offensive weapon. _ Q Dr. Kissinger, do you agree with the thesis that now the Russians are achieving parity in the military force with the United States around the world and also in the Mediterranean, that this will lead to peace? DR. KISSINGER: We have trouble enough worrying about our side of the military equation. Our concern, our belief, our policy is to maintain a military establishment on the basis of the doctrine of sufficiency, and we believe that in the field of strategic weapons this is adequate to achieve the security and foreign policy objectives of the United States. We do hone and we have made it clear to the Soviet.. Union in many exchanges, and we have done so in the SALT negotiations, we do hone that the two superpowers recognise their special responsibility for maintaining the peace, and also the need to recognize that both sides must be willing to subordinate possible tactical advantages for benefit of the greater interest of humanity in peace. This is why some of the events to which the preceding question alluded require us to study Soviet actions with particular concern.. 4 4 # # # # Q Dr. Kissinger, with the possible establishment of Soviet submarine bases in Cuba, isn't this a bad time to be taking a foreign trip? DR. KISSINGER: Let's be careful about what has been said. ye_are_watching the events in Cuba. We _are not at this moment in a position to say exactly what they mean. i;I:e7will'continue to observe them and at the right moment we will take the action that seems indicated. We are in excellent commueication.thing very rapid and dramatic _ is likely to occur, and we are going to be in very close touch with the situation. END ### No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-R 7:11M No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 NEW. YORK TIKES 25 SEPTE?IBER 1970 Ugly Clouds in the South By C. L. SULZBERGER UNITED NATIONS, New York?As if the United States were not suffi- ciently beset by problems in South- west and Southeast Asia, it is about to enter a new time of troubles in Latin America. Already two points of possible and probable danger are dis- cernible. The possible danger could come in that old familiar crisis area. Cuba. where reports that a Soviet submarine base is under construction are being quietly investigated. It must be stressed that there is not yet any confirmation of these reports. Initial information suggests, how- ever, that a naval installation is being built atCiaLifu_tw on the southern coast, and that it is designed to serv- ice "?" class submarines. Moscow's eqtavalent of tile American Polaris- launching vessels: In a sense, if proven, this would be the equivalent of installing land-based missiles as Russia attempted in 1962, then touching off a dramatic confron- tation. However, there is a quintessen- tial difference. Were the U.S.S.R, to contemplate surprise attack against the U.S.A.. its submarines could fire their missiles from the open seas. A Cuban base would therefore not materially change the prevailing situation. But any new facility designed to improve offen- sive Soviet striking power, would not (if confirmed) be well-regarded. The probable danger, although not military, could ultimately prove far more important. The great likelihood is that Senator Allende. a Marxist- socialist, will be formally chosen Chile's President by Congress on Oc- tober 24. FOREIGN AFFAIRS Dr. Allende may well lie low, stress his moderation and international re- spectability, and only perhaps proceed with more drastic aspects of a revo- lutionary program once his govern-, rnent is firmly established. Yet there are signs that such logic may not prevail and that the Chilean Communist party, which dominates the Union Popular ,(a front that sup- ports Allende) is already using tough intimidation tactics against its oppo- sition. The immediate objective of this tac- tic appears to be an effort to gain control of Chile's principal news- papers, television and radio stations prior to the electoral session of Congress. Anti-Communist journalists and commentators have been threat- ened with physical violence if they do not yield, and communications work- ers' groups are demanding "popular" control of mass media. Many editors feel openly harrassed. The UnionS Popular (composed of Com- munists, Socialists and Radicals but primarily guided by the first) demands direction of facilities and wants its own members to be promoted to top positions. Some organizations have already begun to cede to these pressures. The program director of one television channel, still officially under govern- ment supervision, has received so many personal threats that he has decided to leave the country and plans have already been made for Union Popular to take over. Chile's largest afternoon paper will _ soon be sold for a modest down pay- ment to a group believed to be repre- senting the popular front. Last week the owner told his staff he had been warned that the paper would be taken over by a workers' cooperative if it did not switch its support to Dr. Al- lende. Both he and the owners of El Mer- curio, the leading conservative daily, have been menaced. El Mercurio, strongly opposed to Union Popular, belongs to a very wealthy family with widespread investments and which has long been engaged in a feud with Dr. Allende. The paper's staff indicates a fear it will be taken over by a coopera- tive dominated by Communists and even more extreme Popular Action groups. The , role of the press in South .American ideological turnovers is seen as crucial by a hemisphere which remembers PerOn's seizure of the prin- cipal Argentinian newspapers as a major move to consolidate his power. What now happens to Chile's freedom of expression will be a striking indi- cation of Dr. Allende's ultimate inten- tions. There is slight doubt that a strongly anti-U.S, regime is about to take over in Chile and it could Well be tempted to employ totalitarian methods to achieve its aims. The consequences, as reflected in neighboring countries like Bolivia and Peru, are unpredictable. But what can be predicted is an era of growing difficulty in relations be- tween Washington and some of its southern neighbors, If a legally in- stalled hostile regime in Chile were even inferentially backed up by any kind of Soviet military installation in Cuba, the entire effort to arrange a global detente between Washington and Moscow could be jeopardized. No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 DETROIT NEWS ? r -7'73 fri 71 17 " ?147 Fel Li 28 SEPTZ1141.t. 1970 (2 OCTOBER) 11 I ;-'-?\ , (.-.7-, i (71 (7--='?::\ E , ; t,- ..., , )! I i Li ?__.,? ? ? t ? , ; -.., (---,, fr3 1:-.1 ,. , , _-_, v,, .. ?1 r? , , -7'7';:Ntl, r p ,, , 1 , , _ ...., t?? _,;__.1 .., , _... :.:. ,.. i, Ly 0L. et. D. HE1NL JR. :aces Military Analyst WASHINGTON?Russian establishment of a nuclear submarine base at Cienfuegos on the south coast of Cuba confronts the United States with the 'gravest Communist challenge since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. In terms of U.S. vital interests the sem ritv of continental United States, the security and inviolability of the Western Hemisphere, the essentiality of unthreatened lines of com- munication through the Caribbean ? the pres- ence of an unfriendly naval base (especially for missile submarines) in Cuba represents a more frontally dangerous and brutal Russian provocation than Nikita Khurshchev's installa- tion there of medium-range ballistic missiles in 1962. This naked thrust of Russian seapower anti- nuclear missile power into what has been an American .lake comes against the backdrop of two other truculent and conspicuous exercises of Soviet military muscle at American expense during the last two months: Russian deployment in August of SAM-2 and SAM-3 surface-to-air missiles into the Suez cease-fire zone (after having lied to the. United States in the bargain) is one. ? The other, of course, was the unleashing of Syria's 300 Russian-made T-54 and T-55 tanks into an attack on Jordan, our nearest Arab In direct implications for the security of the United States, neither of the foregoing (nor Russia's brutalization of Czechoslovakia, for that matter) approaches the Cienfuegos sub- marine base by several orders of magnitude. The Russians only three months ago opened a now "Y ankae "-c I ass missile-submarine station off Greenland. ("Yankee" is the desig- nation for Russia's Polaris-type submarine which they are now building at the rate of one a month. We have not built a Polaris stabrriar- ine since 1966.) ? When their Cuban base is complete and oper- ational, the Soviets will have still another Yankee missile submarine station, this one in tke Caribbean underbelly, able not only to reach targets throughout our South, Southwest real Midwest, but, also the Panama. Canal and ? 0 0 a t c (.1 11 L-_:?:-;,i 1. k?s:,-.! Li ' ,..; reD tij ee) , Li Qaeaeli 111 leee'Llii 0 te--ae 0 ft71 t';':;21 l':' r (--...;=, 7 : c = , 1 ti----\,---, r..- - ,s-.4 (7-24 much of South and Central America. Incidentally, neclear missiles fired against the United States from a Caribbean launching area would of course outflank our multibillion dollar landlocked anti-ballistic missile (ABM) offenses sitting in Montana and Dakota wheat- fields, and again raise the question some- what more urgently now ?as to why we do not immediately put part of our ABM defense at sea in the Navy's mobile SABIVIIS system that the Pentagon has stifled for several years. 13ut the threat of Russian submarines in Cienfuegos is by no means limited to that ? posed by Yankee-class boats, deadly as they are. The Caribbean is our principal highway for transportation of South American strategic raw materials to the United States, which is no longer the plentifully endowed mountain of natural resources. and raw materials it was even 30 years ago. The Caribbean also is the Atlantic approach to the Panama Canal and tho route that tankers muet traverse to move Venezuelan oil to the United States and Europe. ? Those old enough to remember World War II will never fotget the fiery carnival of blazing tankers and torpedoed 'merchantmen that a relatively few German submarines were able to produce in the Caribbean and its Atlantic gateway, the Windward Passage between Cuba and Hispaniola. With no Western IferniSphere base (such as the Russians are now building at Cienfuegos), German submarines in 1242 sank 285 American "merchant ships in the Windward Passage alone. ? The submarine threat to our Caribbean Om- municetions was so great between 1242 and 1945 that the U.S. Navy had to convoy more ships through the Windward ssage than through any other sea area except the approaches to New York. Because of the sickness of our democratic Society at war with itself, our New Left, peace-at-any-price Senate, our war-weariness end nee-isolationalistre we may except that the direness of the Cienfuegos development will be minimized and at first even denied, as with the Suez missile cheating and lies by the Russians. For public consumption, Pentagon spokes- men are saying ? "we are not sure" what is developing at Cienfuegos. Others ore saying, well, there aren't any of the Yankee sub-mar- ines there ? yet. Still others, apologetic, are already laying out the fallback line: How an we blame the Russians for this while we have Polaris submarine bases in Scotland (Holy Loch) and Spain (Rota)? One short answer to the latter question is that Holy Loch and Rota are a thousand miles from metropolitan Russia while Cienfuegos is 150 miles from the United States. The pretense that our intelligence and recon- naissance machinery isn't "sure" what it happening at Cienfuegete is misleading rubbish. It can be stated on high authority that the Joint Chiefe of Staff have a disturbingly clear picture of what the Russians are' up to and are deeply concerned as to what, if anything, we can do about it. Once and for all, as we ought to have learned from 1962 if nothing else, the only thing the Russians respect is power.. Rine Cuban missile crisis, wehad, depend- ing on how one recognized it, strategic missile superiority of anywhere from 5-1 to 10-1 over Russia. ? Today, due to Robert S. lekNamara's hide- ous misjudgment of the 1960's, the Soviets have more ICBM's than we have. At the time of Cuba in 1952, we had a fighting Navy in its prime and Russia had virtually no Navy at all. Today the new, tough Russian fleet cruises the Gulf of Mexico thumbing its nose at our over- age, rust-bucket fleet with no surface-to-sur- face missiles at all, the World War If submar- ines such as Russia junked a decade ago. To expel Russian missiles from Cuba in 1962, President Kennedy had to go to a general mobilization and point every one of our nuclear weapons down Klirushchey's throat. In 1970, since it appears we have neither the heart nor any longer the strength to do what Kennedy did, the country may have to recon- cile itself to living with Russian submarines tied their nuclear miscues targeted at our cities from a base en what we once called an Aatcricen lake. No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08 : LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 NEW YORK TIME:3 30 SEPTEMBER 70 ID6 WARNING ON CUBA PUZZLES U S. AIDES White House Data in Report on Base Termed Old By TAD AZULC SPeclal to The New 'fort Tlattli WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 ? ? American officials said today that the United States had only dubious and dated infor- mation to indicate that the Soviet Union might be planning to build ?a strategic submarine base in Cuba. ?For this reason, these officials, who include members of the intelligence community, said they were at a loss to explain why the White House chose last week to warn Moscow against the establishment of such a base. Officials and diplomats have suggested the possiblity that the White house acted for broader policy motivations in- cluding the Middle East crises, or that an alleged Soviet threat in Cuba was being used to signal dangers that might de- velop if Dr. Salvador Allende, a Marxist, became Chile's Pres- ident In November as ex- pected. The whole question of the reported Soviet _ plans _ for . a ? naval base is delicate because in. the Administration are in- hibited from commenting on ? background briefings ?by the ? White House. ? ? Source of Embarrassment The practice of background ? briefings, by officials who can- not be publicly identified, has often turned into a source of embarrassment to the State De- ' eiartment. :While Latin-American diplo- mats wondered why the United States chose to create at ? this time what appeared to be an artificial crisis- in ? the Carib- bean. American officials ac- knowledged that the ? uncon- firmed reports of construction of a Soviet base in the Cuban ? port of Cienfuegos had been ? available since early this year. . The officials said that little, if any, new information had been obtained in recent months that would account for the warning on Friday that "the Soviet Union can he under no doubt that we would view the establishment of a strategic base in the Caribbean with the utmost seriousness." Hearings Are Recalled ? It was recalled that virtually all the information on the re- ported Cuban base had been presented to the House Sub- committee on Inter-American Affairs during hearings be- tween July 8 and Aug. 3. The possibility that the So- viet Union might seek to build a base was raised in the closed- door hearings by Adm. E. P. Holmes, commander in chief of ? the Atlantic Fleet, and by G. Warren Nutter, Assistant Secretary of Defense for In- ternational Security Affairs. . Mr. Nutter's remark that the establishment of a Soviet base ? "cannot be discounted as long as Castro's hostility to the United States persists" was ? partly deleted from the trans- cript for security reasons. But no witness reported actual evi- dence of base construction. Officials said there was still to evidence of suspicious con- struction activities, despite flights by surveillance planes. However, reports from refu- gees from Cuba indicated that a section of Cienfuegos Harbor had been closed to visitors, ex- cept Soviet personnel. ? In what may be a related effort, the Cuban press agency ? Prensa Latina reported Sept. 17 that an eight-lane highway from Havana to Cienfuegos, a sec- tion of the new southern coast superhighway, was being built under the supervision of a So- ? viet _engineer. Officials commented the nor- 'mat automotive traffic in Cuba did not seem to justify an eight- lane highway, unless it was in- tended for military use. These were the possible ex- planations offered for the White ? House respense to these re- ports: Olko,r0 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 /-S-1 A t- ) .Cte; tly C Excerpt from NYT ticker tape article on Cuba naval construction. These were the possible explanations offered for the White House response to these reports: The White House may have wished to relate, for the benefit of American public opinion, the dangers inherent in Communist Cuba with the dangers in Chile if Allende is confirmed by the Chilean Congress as President. It may have wished to impress upon Moscow the U, S. determination to discourage further Soviet naval activities. Soviet war ships have been increasingly active in the Mediterranea. the Indian Ocean and the Caribbean. Officials said the public warning had not been followed up by any diplomatic communications to Moscow. They said also that no meeting had been held on the subject in the State Department. The Administration may have wished to emphasize the dangers of a Soviet naval buildup to persuade Congress to authorize addi tional defense funds. The House Inter-American. Affairs SubComrnittee plans to hold a closed hearing tomorrow with Defense intelligence officials to ascertain what information is available.. on the reported base construction. No Obiection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 WAS ilINGTO1 STAR S ? o o e r! r;??; U Li Lit.,..,05L-J By ORR KELLY Star Staff Writer The White House issued its ;tern warning to the ;.zoefiet Un- .on about establishing a strateg- ic base in Cuba because equip- ment associated with C12, Rus- sian Yankee class nuclear mis- sile submarine was being in- stalled at Cienfuegos, on the south shore of Cuba, according to informed sources. Pictures taken Toy high flying U2 airplanes reportedly show the Russians installing a more elaborate shore-based station than that used in support of the American Polaris' submarines. Almost all the support for Po- laris submarines at such sta- tions as Holy Loch, Scotland, is provided by a floating drydock and a special submarine tender equipped with cranes to lift mis- siles out of the submarine and set them back down in special holders in the tender. Same Setup in Cuba The evidence now available here reportedly shows a shore Station loein; set up at Cienfue- gos to provide the same kind of support for the Yankee class submarines. Because the Russians main- bin submarines on station off the American Atlantic Coast and could support them from float- klg submarine tenders, the ap- parent intention to establish a permanent shore installation seems to U.S. officials to be more provocative, especially since it comes in the midst of the strategic arms limitations talks. Public statements by U.S. offi- deli indicate that work on a Yankee class submarine base 30 September 1970 P3 s El r ? 0 began?or at least was discos- : ered?quite recently, since the arms talks recessd in midsum- mer. ? The establishment of a sub- marine base in the Western Hempisphere, either with a shore station or supported by a tender, has certain advantages. ? A base in Cuba will permit the Russians to keep more sub- marines on station or to get by ? with fewer boats and to operate them more easily close to U.S. shores. In this sense, the estab- ? lishment of a base may be a ? simple matter of economy. ? A base close to the continental United States may also require ? the American Navy to spend ? more money and use more man- power to keep track of the poten- ? tially hostile submarines. Such a base could permit the Soviet submarine force to get into position quickly for a sur- prise attack on the United ? States. Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, 0-S.C., . chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said in a ? speech Monday that, "We must take every diplomatic, and, if necessary, military step to ce- ? cise this cancer from the body of ? the Western Hemisphere." The diplomatic effort appar- ently had begun Friday when a ? White House official told report- ers the United States views the establishment of a strategic base "with the utmost serious- . ness." There is no indication so far, ? however, that the administration is considering the use of any- thing as drastic as military ac- tion against the base. No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 1 WASAINGTON STAR 30 SEPT 1970 (10CT 1970) P-3 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 eaa n N. '? r ? r I p 6.1 ,ann ? By [nail KELLY ? . Star Staff Writer ? Equipment specifically aaso- .clated with the new Yankee class Soviet nuclear missile sub- marine is being installed at Cienfuegos on the south shore of. ? Cuba, ? according to ? . informed sources. ?? This specific information, which goes . well beyond the !guarded references to .possible construction made by. the Penta- ti Z-Z) tL. a 1/4", ;.; i; . J than that used in support of the American Polaris submarines. gen and White House. on Friday, led to the stern weaning by the ? White House to the Soviet Union that the installation of a strateg- ic base in this hemisphere would . be viewed' with the utmost seri- ousness by the United States. The Yankee class submarine, 'which is very similar to. the American Polaris, is designed to deliver nuclear-tipped missiles ?and is ? . considered a strategic weapon, like an intercontinental ballistic missile, rather than a ? tactical weapon, such as an at- tack submarine. 'Pictures taken lay high flying 112 airplanes reportedly allow the Russians installing a more. elaborate shore-based station ? Almost all the support for Po- submatines at such sta- ,tions as Holy Loch, Scotlard, is ;provided by a floating drydock land a spealal subirarhie. tender '? ;equzpped with cranes to lift mis- siles out of tile submarine and "set them back down in spacial holders in the tender. ? Same Setup in Cuba ? The evidence now availaele here reporlocily shows a shore station being set up at Cienfue- gos to provide the same .kind of support for the Yankee class submarines. Because the Russians main- lain submarines on statien off the American Atlantic Coast and could ? Support them from float- ing submarine tenders, the ap- parent intention to establish. a permanent 'shore installation seems to U.S.. officials to be more productive. ? The firm informatient hat led . to the White House 'warning ap- parently became available only during the last two treel:?s. of September since the recess of the strategic art-M limitations 4 talks ?and more than a ?montn and a half after the conclusion of hearings on Cuba and tha Card- bean by the House subcommit- tee on inter-American affairs. aalaailleant Development' ? On Sept. 2, Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird told newsmen a Soviet task force of five vessels was moving toward the Carri bean. Without saying why, Laird described the .movement of the task fore? as "significant devel- opment." ? ? ? ? On Sept.. 14, Pentagon press spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim mentioned for the first time pub- licly that three barges were being towed toward .Cienfuegos by two of the Soviet vessels. Two days later, a high-ranking Nixon adaniaistratiort. official, speaking to a group of editors in Chicago, mentioned the Soviet fleet visits and made a careful. distinction ? between them and, the operation of. Polaris-type submarines out of the Cuban de, pat. The United States, he said, would ? study that. very carefully. .Paaning Overlooked ? Although the significance. of his words was Overlooked when the transcript of the briefing aas made public, it is now ob- aous that the start of construe- at Cienfuegos was what he had in mind. The establislment of a sub- marine base in the Western Hernpisphere, either with a shore station or supported by tender, has certain advantages. A base in Cuba will permit the Russians to. keep more sub- marines on station or to get by with fewer boats and to operate them more easily close to U.S. ishores. In this sense, the estab- lishment of a base may be a .simple matter of economy. i A base close to the continental United States may also require the American Navy to spend more money and use more man- power to keep track of the poten- tially hostile submarines. Such a base could permit the Soviet submarine force to get into position quickly for a sur- prise attack on the United States. Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., chairman of the Home Armed Services Committee, said in a speech Monday that, "We must take every diplomatic, and, if necessary, military step to ex- cise this cancer from the body of the Western Hemisphere." The diplomatic effort appar- ently had begun Friday when a White House official told report- ers the United States views the establishment of a strategic base "with the utmost serious- ness." No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 WAS14'...o 1",1 r , r4 ? ???-'S ? , ? f ? Ey Chalmers M. Roberts z.f.! VJter Almost lcst in the Liddle .East ? crisns was last Friday's ?seeming enc-lay wood:oo a tough American y.'arning to the Soviet Union about the possbie construction by the Russians of a .strategic base in Cuba. - Yet the Cuban affair does bear a 'close relationship 10 ?the Middle East, specifically to :Moscow's role there, and to such .other Soviet-Amen- tan ? points of ? interest as Berlin and The strateoic arms . limitation talks (SALT). . The ? timing involved in what was said last Friday is .of . more than passing hi- terest. Hints of the possibil- iLy that the Soviets planned to ? build a ?naval base at Cienfuegos on ?Cuba's south .shore first appeared in print as far back as several weeks. The. Economist of London, for instance, Ilan such 'a re- port in its Sept. 19 issue. . pentagon reporters began asking for information. ? A column Friday morning in the ? New York .Times by C. L. Sulzberger, stating that reports of ..a base under con- stractian were being investi- gated, added to the pres- sure. The Pentagon then told newsmen that three So- viet ships had moved three heavy barges and other? . etluipment into Cienfuegos harbor in ?- the past few weeks. This', said spokesman Jerry W. Fricdheim, "makes feel that they. may .be seeking. sustained .eapabili- ties in the area." lie added that the Pentagon was "not sure that they are building a ? submarine p.?,rt. facility." Such statainents, on top of Pentagon reports of Soviet ileot activities ? of tate in the :Atlantic . and Caribbean ?areas, wottld be enough to worry military ? hawks in Washington hut hardly. enough to . 4o more than bolster .Navy ..claims . for more Money from Congress. Yet at 3:20 that Friday aft- ? eamoon, during the course of - a* briefing in the White st-Zooro.,,_eri Presi- - lent Nixon's theiv-4104k= ing ?European trip, the Cuban base Issue was drasti- cally escalated. it s'nould be said here that up . to that hour no get:ex:11 alarm bells had beeo rung within the Nixon administra- tion, ocoording to several specialists ? whose 'duty is to follow. such matters. Indeed, the ?Eureau of .InterAracri- can ?Affairs still claims it knows nothing ebout .Cien- fucoos .since that is the re' t:;?nonsibility of officials. ban- UGTUaai. 1970 P-,15 ' 7 ? t? . o? diing Soviet affairs. 1%-: when the, While House Loiofor, may not be nomcd hut who this time vo,ot allowed to be directly quoteci a atici emphasis, Was asked abli,ut the reports, he had in hand a statement made by President Kennedy at the close. of the 1062 Cuban missile crisis. As has been reported, the White House ? official, as he may be desinnatcd, stated that. "the. Soviet Union can be under no doubt that we would ? view the establish- ment of a strategic base in the Caribbean with the tit- Most seriousness." ? He tailed attention to the ? Kennedy ? statement that there would be peace in the Caribbean "if all offensive weapons are. removed from Cuba and kept . out of the hemisphere in the future." ? That, he added, of course remains the policy of this government. He avoided an- swering questions as to what? was going on at Cienfuegos ? but he did ? say that "ob- viously, a Polaris-type sob- marine is an offensive weapon." The Soviets are cbuilding a. fleet of such subs. Finally, when pressed, the White House spokesman said: "Let's be careful . about what has been said. We are watching the events in Cuba. We are not at this mo- ment in a position to say' ex- actly what they mean. We will . continue to observe ? them and . at the right mo- ment we will take the action that seems indicated." That latter phrase, cou- pled with the "utmost sari- ouzLess" reference earlier, constituted a startling esca- lation of verbiage. It amounted to an American threat to forcibly prevent the use "Of Cienfuegos as a 'Soviet base for missile sub- marines, a threat of 3 an- tore not uttered by. Wash- ington to Moscow since the ? Cuban crisis eight years ago, . ...retrospact,' there are ? ? tv,a3.1inc:s.of explanation now heard in Washington. One. is political. The White HOUSC appears ? to 1,1:aya. -taica,r tbc :Keating, it is said. This is a . reference to the ? former Re- publican senator from New York, now the U.S. ambassa- dor to India, who in P.3t32 an- noyed and eiviharrad the ? Kennedy administration with repeated statetnents - that the. Soviet Union' was emplacing missiles in Cuba, ?loog before .ProoLlent confirmed that act. Of course, 1.952? like lf;10, was a congressional.election.year.. The other -explanation is 711! 1 rra .e71 . ? . ? rt ? "7", .eln'?:177 * ? 1' more stibstantive and a clue to it can be. found in other remarks by that same White House spokesman last ? Fri- day afternoon. . ? He said in response to a question: "We do hope and we have made it clear to the Soviet Union in mahy ex- changes, and we have done so in the SALT. negotiat ions, we do .hope that the two su-: perpowees 'recognize, their special responsibility for tactical advantages for the benefit of the ? greater inter- est of humanity in peace." In short, Cienfuegos could be a case of Moscow press- ing . Washington for tactical advantage in the arms race. The spokesman did not say ?so but he might well have added; just as they have done in ? cheating on the standstill cease-fire in Egypt. On Sept. 16 in Chicago the same spokesman ? had . ex- pressed puzzlement .at that cheating and raised -? the question of ? whether it meant the Soviet Union was moving generally to a hard- line policy all across the. board. Thus as of now the gen- eral conclusion in Washing- ton is that the surprising es- calation of White House lan- guage over what is going on at Cienfuegos was less a function. .of that particular item than a rellaction of. a growing .administration con- cern over Soviet policy in general; ?? As to Cienfuegos itself, military experts ? generally scoff at a comparison to the Cuban ? crisis of 10G2. For one thing no 'missiles are being land-based. Submarine use of that .port would ease Soviet crew and otherprob- lems and probably permit more ships to remain on sta- tion in the Atlantic. But it also would . aid U.S. Navy tracking of such.submarines,? possibly a point of balancing. value. ? Soviet 1h:ion:Scorn; At Reports on Cuba Ily .7:77,rry Trimborn Soviet Union today scoffed at repolts it may he build- ing a submarine base in Cuba, calling them a Nixon administration propaganda ploy to secure votes in the ? November election: ? The oWciat Communist Party newspaper Pravda de- clared that such reports were part of an effort to "treacherously fan the mill- --kJ\ci C 721 0 fi L..)`\u/ tary psychosis (in the . United Stotcs) with the ?aid of hastily concocted invert. tions." It was, said Pravda, a new "otto lotion- propaganda campaion mounted by the administration to cover the bankruptcy of its own poli- c:es ? by raising "another racket of another 'Soviet threat'." in Cuba, .the Mid- dle East and elsewhere. The comments were the first Soviet public reaction to last week's reports from Washington of intelligence. "indications" that a base capable of housing nuclear missile ? submarines was being built at Cienfuegos en the southern coast of Cuba. Pravda did not mention specifically t h e ? reported submarine ? base 'construc- tion. It referred only to re- ported Soviet "military moo ement" in Cuba and elsewhere. But there we slit- tie doubt that it had the re- ported base in mind_ "It is Clear," said Pravda, . that the racket about. preparations in Cuba 'sup- ? madly threatening the United States' security has is e e a ro.i.scd for perfectly , definite -purposef" ? These purposes, said: th newspaper, ore aimed at cre- ating "a favcrable al.mos- ? p:aere. Zor the eleet!o7is to Congress and the United. StateS Presialenfs visit us Eta rora.e." ? The Soviet pr-ss has %cell attacking Mr.Nimeies jeum- rey .as atr..fer-rPa ? den-A.:instratl,aa of ArNa:ican noilitany aught `17.12. Pm'. cia .1.71.ieit this to what . a nxsti. tort to "c...-aa!ie 'an atmi-57- phare of r,tiitary among -crriloary !,..z.naJizans and ? exerting political pres- sure upon the capitals . of ? some other capitalistic coun- tries." . Pravda ? viewed .this effort as an attempt to rerive."the had old -4he? cold. , . . y reviving. old .ttlittAftiet antagonisms, the Nixon ad- ministration hopes to gother votes among the natioo's "si- lent majority, that is, from the right wing section of the electorate," Pravda said, adding:. ? ? There .are also other . sons--"the fortheoraina; vot- ing for military apl)rei!ria- lions in Congress which pro- ceed most successfully with the fair wind of the cold . war." No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-12-4-3-8 (CJ3P) -.SAIGTON-7.SEN.??3ARRY...M.LAI-IL_J:21-,I0 TODAY HE. ,..INDS EVIDENCE. OF H Sr7RI3US R'ISSIAN "BID .FOR WORLD DOrTNATION7 IN THE. WHITE HGUSE'S DISCIaSURE THAT., THE .$OVIETS.XAY?sE.BUILDING.A .STRATEGIC SUBMARINE ? ??iASE IN CJA.. . ? ?? ? Dt:.?...CCERN.VAS ALSO .EXPRESSED SENATE. DEnCRATIC LEADER MIKE Fli:TSFI'EpiOF'KONTANA., ? . ? . . ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? .? ? "1.-":A VIE1!j IT .WITH ALARM,".. MANSFIELD TOLD AN INTERVIEWER._ ? ."11' RAISES ?THE. MDST :SERIOUS QUESTIONS,' HE SAID, IN LICHT OF PRESIDET ti.OHN F. .KENNEDY'S .STATEMENT AFTER THE 1362 CUBAN 'MISSILE. 'CRISIS THAT OFFENSIVE .VEAPONS MST SE KEPT OUT. OF THE WESTERN . ?HEISPAERE TO ASSURE "PEACE IN THE CARIBBEAN!" ? ? ? ? ? -3OLDWATER SOUGHT TO. ATTACH ELAME TO SENS. J. WILLIAMFUORIGHT,? DARK., AN) GEORGE S. CGOVERN, AND OTHER LEADERS OF THE ANTIIJAR MOVEMENT FOR THE RUSSIANS'. "BOLDNESS."' ? ???. 'I ',3ELIEVE?THE LEADERS .IN .THE. KREMLIN .HAVE?BEEN .LISTENING ? SERIOUSLY TO THE FULBRIGHTS AND THE. MCGOVERNS AND THE PEACENIKS . ? AND .THE ADVOCATES 'OF UNILATERAL DISARMAMENT IN THE JJNITED STATES AND??? HAVE?DECIDED.?THAT NOW IS THE TIME TO 'FIND.?OUT?JUST HOW STRONG IS OUR. DEDICATION TO FREEDOM AND. OUR DETERMINATION?JO-DEFEND THE? .ARINNA. RZPUBLICAN SAID. . ? REHADOED'IN?A STATEMENT ISSUED BY HIS OFFICE:. . 'THEHCONSTRUCTIO1 .OF ?A ?STRATEGIC SUBMARINE BASE?IN.CUBA WOULD-BE IN?????KEEPINGHWITH CURRENT RUSSIAN MOVES AIMED AT SHIFTING. THE.. WORLD ? BALANCE OF POWER .AWAY. FRO THE. UNITED STATES. . ? ? ? 'THESE NOVESI?COUPLED.WITA SOVIET MILITARY.ACTIVITY"IN THE 'MIDDLE EAST AND RUSSIAN-SUPPORTED MILITARY ACTIVITY IN INDOCHINA; ALL ? SjPPORT.THE C3NCLUSI3W.THAT- THE SOVIET UNION IS?NOW ENGAGED. IN ITS BOLDEST BID FOR WORLD. 'DOMINATION SINCE THE CUBAN ?MISSILE CRISIS.. OF ? I62." ? ? ? ..???? . ? ? ? MANSFIELD. SAP) 'HE WAS AWAITING.. FURTHER INFORMATION FROM THE WHITE ??? HOUSE BEYOND FRIDAY'S STATEMENT BY AN ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL WHO... ASKED THATHIS. IDENTITY NOT BE REVEALED. ? . ? . ? .?. ? THE OFFICIAL.. TOLD REPORTERS OF INTELLIGENCE REPORTS INDICATING .TT THE -SOVIETS MIGHT BE BUILDING A BASE FOR....MISSILE7-CARRYING SUMARINES?ON CUBA.:! SOUTH COAST. . . iYiANSFIELD" NOTED THAT INTERNATIONAL LAW GIVES THE. .SOVIETS THE RIGHT TO DEPLOY THEIR. ?SUBMARINES ANYWHERE ON THE HIGH _SEAS BUT HE? SAID? CONSTRUCTION., OF A.:CUBAN .BASE FOR -THEM WOULD.. 'ADD A' SERIOUS . OG;-2j3ION" TO AMERICAN DEFENSE PROBLEMS... 9,72S--Jj1229PED No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 ? !LITJ...,!1)TiY, FULLIP. Mit. SCZTJ; .,SQ:nz?,_Lor u 11) 17 cy. < sEToR c..t) ? " h e r '211! t ? j?__i? f'??? 1A).1.k2:., ?I . t e+ e 01.;o1.1,_n r!) No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 No Objection to Declassification in Full 2010/01/08: LOC-HAK-122-4-3-8 ? L-. i-,,i,?In;,.: -,.,..- -;e- -?':7-1.L(21. '..11-:;- ,...-5 Ts-...:a.1.....cLi;?.:-!-,-, ve.ry e.f.