Every aware person, he [Nixon] believes, knows that the Vietnam war will soon be over.”

“How the President Sees His Second Term,” by Daniel P. Moynihan in
Life, September 1.

The US Air Force dropped a bomb of its own on Richard Nixon the night he was making his acceptance speech in Miami. A senior Air Force official spent that evening with some eight reporters who cover the Pentagon regularly. The comings and goings of Kissinger are a pantomime which creates the illusion that peace somehow may be imminent. But what this Air Force official told the reporters in the course of a long and cozy visit opens the possibility that the war may still be going on when the election campaign of 1976 gets underway.

This “backgrounder” and its implications have all too hastily been swept under the rug, in part because the New York Times—unlike the Washington Post and the Washington Star-News—buried the story.1 One participant in the meeting said the whole affair made him feel as if he were taking part in a sequel to the Pentagon Papers. The Air Force official’s revelations, and the clash with the Pentagon’s—and the Nixon Administration’s—party line on the war ought not to be forgotten. There is no reason why the Senate Foreign Relations Committee could not call Air Force, Pentagon, and CIA officials to get a fuller picture of the war’s prospects and costs. Could it be that the Air Force is restive because the cost of the war in planes and pilots far outweighs the results being achieved? What are the plane losses per sortie? How many more pilots have been lost this year? Does the Air Force find itself, as in the Korean war, swapping planes for trucks?

Michael Getler, a Washington Post man at the meeting, said the Air Force official told reporters that in spite of heavy damage from US bombing and a mine blockade of North Vietnamese ports since early May, Hanoi was still getting 25 percent or more of the previous flow of war matériel and that this was enough “to sustain Hanoi’s war effort for a long time to come, although at an uncertain level of fighting” (Washington Post, August 25). Orr Kelly, another of the Pentagon reporters at the backgrounder, wrote in the Washington Star-News August 24 that they were told, “The way things are going…the United States could still be bombing North Vietnam two or three years from now.” By then Agnew, too, will probably have a secret plan to end the war if elected.

Kelly wrote that while the Air Force official voiced the hope of an early settlement he thought it “unlikely that the bombing and mining can force a quick negotiated end to the war.” He said reporters were told “it would require unacceptable measures—such as bombing of the dikes or destruction of Hanoi and Haiphong—to cause any further reduction in the flow of supplies reaching North Vietnam or its front lines in the South.”

Apparently the Air Force is running out of meaningful military targets in the North. The official spoke of “a few” that remained unbombed, and mentioned two. These were thermal electric plants located in populated areas of Hanoi and Haiphong. “It is possible,” Kelly quoted the Air Force official as saying, “that these targets, which have remained off limits because of the possible danger to civilians, might be hit.” But it was not claimed that this would make a decisive difference.

The dimmed hope of victory in the Air Force backgrounder recalls McNamara’s astringent testimony on the inefficacy of the air war before the Senate Armed Services Committee in August, 1967. That was McNamara’s boldest and finest hour, and the beginning of the end for him in Johnson’s cabinet. McNamara in effect said the same thing as the Air Force official: The actual volume of supplies needed to carry on the war in South Vietnam was relatively so small, and the combat options open to the Viet Cong and the North in husbanding these supplies so varied and flexible, that enough could get through no matter how heavy the bombing.

The difference is that Nixon has since lifted many of the bombing restrictions imposed by Johnson, sharply increased the volume, and given the military the free hand it long coveted to mine North Vietnam’s harbors. For years we have been hearing that the war could be ended if Haiphong were blockaded. After almost four months of virtual blockade, this too seems to have failed. The mining and the bombing, like the Cambodian invasion and the Laotian “incursion” to cut the Ho Chi Minh trail, have failed to give Nixon the quick road to a military victory the Joint Chiefs of Staff promised. What does he try next if elected? Systematic bombing of the dikes? Nuclear weapons? There are few untried military options left.

Advertisement

The Air Force backgrounder supports the pessimistic forecasts in two recent stories out of Saigon. The first covered President Thieu’s speech on August 1 to a graduating class at the National Defense College in Saigon. He called for “the total destruction” of the “economic and war” potential of the North by relentless and continuous bombing, declaring that otherwise the communists would “revert to their half-guerrilla, half-conventional warfare and the war will go on in Indochina forever.”2

The other dispatch was Malcolm W. Browne’s in the New York Times August 15, “Saigon’s Commanders Say the War Can Last For Years.” Browne’s conversations with “many of Saigon’s military leaders” turned up views quite unlike those of the Nixon Administration’s official optimists. Browne cabled from Saigon that “South Vietnamese commanders foresee an indefinite military conflict with Hanoi that could last years or decades,” provided—and the qualification is even more revealing—that “American support of the war effort here is not radically reduced by Congress or the election to the Presidency of Senator McGovern.” Given continued United States aid these commanders “foresee a more or less permanent state of war in Vietnam” as “highly probable.” This is all the more probable since Nixon in his acceptance speech clearly hardened his terms. He insisted—as Johnson did—that national honor and the credibility of the Pax Americana depended on a political victory for the US in Saigon. If American honor requires the maintenance of the repressive and unrepresentative Thieu regime, then Nixon’s re-election would mean that we are stuck in this quagmire for a long time to come.

Even Laird, in moments when candor was unavoidable, has admitted that despite the bombing and the mining a military victory is not in the cards. There was such a moment when he was before the House Appropriations Committee last June to break the bad news that the $83.4 billion in “obligational authority” requested by the Pentagon for the fiscal year 1973 would have to be revised upward to cover the sharp increase in Vietnam war costs caused by the enemy offensive which began last March.

Cost estimates for the war during fiscal 1972 are a secret, but Congressional Quarterly, in a newly published survey, The Power of the Pentagon,3 says they were unofficially estimated at $7 billion before the new offensive began. Since then the ferocious response of US firepower from sea and air has “nearly doubled the cost of the war for the US on a month-by-month basis.” Robert C. Moot, the Pentagon comptroller, who accompanied Mr. Laird to the Appropriations Committee hearing, estimated that an additional $3.3 billion would be needed if the offensive continued through September and an additional $5 billion if it continued through December.

Plainly disturbed by these mounting costs, the Appropriations Committee chairman, George Mahon of Texas, turned to Laird and asked if the Vietnam war could “go on for four or five years now with varying degrees of intensity?” Laird, trapped into brevity for a change, replied, “Yes.” If the Democrats are wise, they will rescue this admission from the already forgotten record and make it reverberate in the campaign. There followed this equally intriguing bit of dialogue:

Mahon: When could we cease our Air Force and Navy support?

Laird: It can be tomorrow if the enemy accepts our peace proposal.

Mahon might well have expected a different answer. For months Laird has been explaining that the next phase in Vietnamization would be the phasing out of air support while the South Vietnamese themselves took over the bombing and strafing missions. Now Laird was admitting that we would have to go on providing air and naval support until the enemy accepted our terms at the negotiating table. The final burial of the hopes Laird once held out for bombing and Vietnamization was made clear and final when he added, “The only way this [i.e., the war] can be finally solved is the negotiating route.” In that answer Laird admitted the Pentagon had nothing else left up its sleeve. All the quick fixes and guaranteed military miracles have been tried.

Unfortunately Washington benefits by short memories. Anything that happened yesterday is not only not news—it’s history. So when Jerry Friedheim, the Pentagon’s official spokesman, hastily called a conference the morning after the Air Force backgrounder and told the Pentagon press corps the idea that the US might still be bombing North Vietnam two or three years from now was “pretty incredible,” no one reminded him that scarcely two months before his own boss, Laird, had told the House Appropriations Committee the war might still be going on four or five years from now. Friedheim said anyone who used figures like that “could not be familiar with the Vietnamization program.” Who could be more familiar with it than Laird?

Advertisement

Vietnamization, like pacification, is among the casualties of the current enemy offensive. The war had suddenly to be “Americanized” to save the Thieu regime. The record on the ground, where wars have to be won, is a landscape of failure. Despite large-scale US support from air and sea, nowhere can Thieu’s forces point to a victory. In five months his troops have been unable to lift the siege of Anloc. His two elite divisions of marines and paratroopers have been chewed up in two months of trying to retake the citadel in Quangtri. The Queson valley has fallen and endangered Danang.

With increasing frequency one reads of the roads being cut in the neighborhood of Saigon. A survey of civilian casualties (in the New York Times, August 27) turns up a startling figure. The heaviest civilian casualties—“more than a third of the national total”—have been suffered in the Mekong Delta. There a series of small-scale Viet Cong actions seems to have destroyed the “pacification” program in the very area that was once its showpiece. The war has been winding up, not down.

Something has gone wrong with Nixon’s “secret plan” to win and end the war. Who would have dreamed in 1968 that the war would still be going on in 1972? How many realize today that if Nixon wins, and continues to make Thieu’s future synonymous with national honor, the war may still be going on in 1976? Four more years of war may easily add up to another $40 billion in expenditure.

Nixon’s secret plan, his last card, was to buy the peace he wants in Moscow and Peking. Two indications have surfaced in recent days of what has been going on behind the scenes. One was in Washington where Secretary of State Rogers in an interview with the Knight Newspapers on August 20 incautiously suggested that one reason the Nixon Administration was hopeful of peace was that China and the Soviet Union now favor a negotiated settlement. This, he said, makes for “a wholly new situation.”4 The other was in a declaration from Hanoi that it was determined to resist pressure from either or both of its allies to give Nixon the settlement he wanted.

On August 17 the Hanoi daily Nhan Dan published an editorial warning Moscow and Peking against playing Nixon’s game. Nhan Dan said Nixon was trying to use “an equilibrium of forces among the big powers and the division of the socialist countries, especially the division of the main components of the socialist system [i.e., the conflict between the USSR and China] …as a shield to give US imperialism complete freedom of action in checking, by means of violence, the national liberation movement, first of all by hurling back the patriotic struggle of the nations on the Indo-chinese peninsula.” It said the victory of the national liberation movement should “serve as a serious warning to those who are departing from the great, all-conquering revolutionary thoughts of the time, and who are pitifully bogging down in the dark muddy road of compromise.” In a passage of evident anguish Nhan Dan asked:

Who is the chief enemy of the world revolution? Where lies revolution and where counterrevolution? These questions which were easy to answer in the past become today puzzling questions because of unhealthy tendencies.

What are these “unhealthy tendencies”? Nhan Dan clearly saw them in the rapprochement between the US on the one hand and the two big communist powers on the other. It said a policy of “genuine reconciliation among various countries” must be based on respect for the independence of all nations, large and small. But it added that “for the US imperialists, reconciliation is but a Machiavellian policy to materialize designs of aggression…by new methods.” Nhan Dan warned it communist allies against allowing “narrow, immediate interests” to “harm the revolutionary movements of various countries.” No other embattled small power I know of ever dared deliver so plainspoken a lecture to the great powers on whom it depends for its supplies.

Hanoi’s leverage, paradoxically enough, springs from the same source as Nixon’s. The split between Moscow and Peking which enables him deftly to play on their mutual rivalries also gives Hanoi a power it would not otherwise possess. The two communist superstates are engaged in a struggle for influence in Asia and in the Third World generally. Neither can shut off supplies to Hanoi without enormously increasing the influence and prestige of the other at the cost of its own in the eyes of the anti-imperialist and peace movements. There is a limit beyond which they cannot go in making an accommodation with Nixon. Neither can simply turn off the supply spigot for the Vietnam war.

Yet both Moscow and Peking now have a stake in Nixon’s re-election. They have met with Nixon and they understand each other. Should he lose, it would be much harder for the Democrats to deliver on trade and credit. We do not know what private understandings may have been reached, what price Nixon is prepared to pay if they help him to get peace on “honorable” terms in time for his election.

The Washington Post in an editorial on August 20, “The Wheat Sales to Russia,” called attention to the fact that current wheat sales to the Soviet Union involve large and growing subsidies by the US and will soon bring about an increase in the price of bread. It pointed out that since Nixon announced the grain agreement six weeks ago the price of wheat had risen from $1.50 to $1.85 a bushel while the export subsidy fixed by the Department of Agriculture had risen from less than five cents a bushel to thirty-eight cents.

The Post recalled that the other major wheat producer, Canada, “is selling wheat successfully on the international market at prices substantially higher than our subsidized world [export] price.” It said that subsidies of this kind could be defended in the case of sales to underdeveloped countries with shortages of both food and cash. “But the Soviet Union,” it concluded, “one of the world’s two main producers of gold, is hardly an appropriate applicant for welfare.” It asked why Moscow could not pay “the true market price.” Since the article was published the bakers have asked for an increase of one to three cents for a loaf of bread. We can imagine the outcry if the Democrats were in power and subsidizing wheat to Russia at the expense of higher bread prices at home.

It is time Congress and the public knew more about the real prospects in the war, about Nixon’s secret plan for ending it, and about the part this plays in current negotiations on trade and credit with Moscow. To hinge rapprochement on a sellout of Vietnam is to run the risk of a breakdown in a fragile détente. Four more years of Nixon may not only mean four more years of murderous war in Indochina but the possibility that the war may yet precipitate a new confrontation with either or both of the big communist powers.

“RIDICULOUS”

The President: I noted some report out of the Air Force to the effect that we probably would be bombing North Vietnam two or three years from now. That, of course, is quite ridiculous….

Q. Mr. President, if it is, as you say, “quite ridiculous”…then how about a year from now is it likely that bombing will no longer be necessary…?

The President: No…. I am not going to put any limitation on when the US activities in the air would stop.

—Nixon at Press Conference, August 29

This Issue

September 21, 1972