S/SNSC files, lot 63 D 351, NSC 146 Series

No. 321
Memorandum by the Secretary of Defense (Wilson) to the Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (Cutler)1

top secret

Subject:

  • Paragraph 10, NSC 146/2, “U.S. Objectives and Courses of Action with Respect to Formosa and the Chinese Nationalist Government”.

I am attaching for your information a copy of the comments of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on the above subject.

I have also forwarded to you a memorandum in regard to our NSC policy with respect to Formosa.

I am not in full agreement with the recommendations of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in regard to their views as outlined in the attached memorandum and will be prepared to discuss this matter at the NSC meeting on Wednesday, October 6th.

In view of the nature of the agenda for the NSC meeting on October 6th, I recommend that the Secretaries of the military departments and the Joint Chiefs of Staff be invited to attend this meeting.

C. E. Wilson

[Attachment 1]

Memorandum by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the Secretary of Defense (Wilson)

top secret

Subject:

  • Paragraph 10, NSC 146/2, “U.S. Objectives and Courses of Action with Respect to Formosa and the Chinese Nationalist Government”
1.
This memorandum is in response to a memorandum by the Assistant Secretary of Defense (ISA), dated 28 September 1954,2 subject as above, which informed the Joint Chiefs of Staff that the President, for the time being, has suspended that portion of paragraph 10, NSC 146/2, which provides that the United States should “encourage and assist the Chinese Nationalist Government …3 to [Page 685] raid Chinese Communist territory and commerce.” The memorandum requested the views of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as to (a) the advisability of making this suspension permanent and (b) the general desirability of lessening the chances of Chinese Nationalist actions provoking increased hostilities with the Chinese Communists.
2.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff are of the opinion that the question of whether the foregoing suspension is to be made permanent should be decided in the light of the over-all policy which the United States elects to adopt toward Communist China. The statement of policy contained in subparagraph 1 c, Section I, of NSC 5429/2 (Communist China), which is quoted below, awaits further consideration in light of review by the Secretary of State and report to the NSC, which report has yet to be made:

“1. Reduce the power of Communist China in Asia even at the risk of, but without deliberately provoking, war:

  • “a.…
  • “b.…
  • “c. Maintaining political and economic pressures against Communist China, including the existing embargo and the support for Chinese Nationalist harassing actions.”

The course of action set forth in paragraph 10 of NSC 146/2 (in effect since 6 November 1953) is consistent with the foregoing United States policy, which while tentatively adopted on 20 [18] August 1954, still awaits review and report to [by] the Secretary of State. Further, the raiding of Chinese Communist territories and commerce provided for in NSC 146/2 represents about the only harassing action now open to and within the competence of the Chinese Nationalist forces.

3.
In terms of positive results, the raids on the Chinese mainland, and the threats of such raids, are factors which have contributed substantially to the buildup of a system of defenses along the Fukien and Chekiang coasts and to the immobilization of troops in significant strength in manning those positions. The raids have provided valuable combat training and experience for the Chinese Nationalist forces involved, and have been the source of intelligence regarding Chinese Communist activities, strength, and dispositions.
4.
Raiding of Communist shipping bound for Communist China ports has, from the standpoint of the Chinese Nationalists, more than justified the efforts and resources expended. The confiscation of valuable cargoes has deprived the Chinese Communists of badly needed commodities and equipment. Of greater importance, however, has been the impact upon the pattern of seaborne traffic to the Chinese Communist ports. Since early 1953, shipping has from time [Page 686] to time been diverted from ports of destination to Whampoa (Canton) for discharge, and weeks have elapsed before North China port calls were resumed. Since June 1954, no merchant ships loaded from Communist ports in Europe have delivered any cargo to Communist China ports north of Canton. The port of Whampoa has become so congested as to result in turn-around delays of from 25 to 30 days and it has been necessary to resort to use of junks, lighters, and other forms of floating storage, in order to avoid greater turn-around delays and demurrage costs. The problem for Communist China has been complicated further by the necessity of relying to a greater extent upon shipments by rail north from Canton and from the USSR, thus placing additional burdens on an already overtaxed rail system.
5.
The scope and tempo of the foregoing raids are subject to the guidance and control of the United States. As indicated in paragraph 13 of NSC 146/2, the Chinese Nationalist Government is committed to refrain from any such operations which are considered by the United States as inimical to the best interests of the United States.
6.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff are of the opinion that a categorical answer to the question of whether it is desirable to lessen “the chances of Chinese Nationalist actions provoking increased hostilities” would not be meaningful. The answer must be related to the course the United States intends to follow in dealing with the problem of Communist China. The application of a positive policy, such as has obtained until now, inherently involves certain risks, including the risk of increased hostilities. These risks can and have been minimized by the judicious exercise of the United States prerogative of guiding and controlling the scope and tempo of Chinese Nationalist offensive operations. If, on the other hand, the United States were now to decide that these risks are unacceptable and that a more conservative approach should be adopted, its new position should be reflected in a general revision of United States policy in the Far East rather than in isolated action to impose permanent restrictions upon certain operations of the Chinese Nationalists which would tend to undermine their will and capability of resisting further Chinese Communist aggression.
7.
In the light of all of the foregoing, the Joint Chiefs of Staff recommend against the permanent suspension of the policy set forth in paragraph 10 of NSC 146/2 with respect to United States [Page 687] encouragement and assistance to the Chinese Nationalist Government to raid Chinese Communist territory and commerce.
For the Joint Chiefs of Staff:
Arthur Radford

Chairman
Joint Chiefs of Staff

[Attachment 2]

Memorandum by the Secretary of Defense (Wilson) to the Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (Cutler)

top secret
1.
Our present NSC policy in regard to Formosa, in particular paragraph 10 of NSC 146/2, seems to me to be out of date. Our position could be defended while the Korean War was going on and perhaps as long as the war in Indo-China continued, but does not seem to me to be sound now and is likely to actually lead to a war with China. These policies should be reviewed and brought up to date.
2.
The off-shore islands and our confused policy regarding them (at least confused in some people’s minds) have real possibilites of precipitating a war with China.
3.

I understand the present position in regard to Formosa and the Pescadores has developed through the following sequence of events:

December 1, 1943—Roosevelt, Churchill, and Chiang went on record at Cairo as favoring the return of Manchuria, Formosa, and the Pescadores to the Republic of China.4

July 1945—Reaffirmation of the above at Potsdam.5

October 25, 1945—National Government took over Administration of Formosa after 50 years of Japanese occupation.

December 10, 1949—President Chiang set up his government in Taipei after the defeat of the Nationalists on the mainland.6

[Page 688]

January 5, 1950—President Truman ordered neutralization of Formosa.7

September 1951—Japanese Peace Treaty signed, formalizing the Cairo and Potsdam declarations with respect to Formosa.8

February 1953—President Eisenhower deneutralized Formosa and guaranteed protection by 7th Fleet.9 (It is my understanding that this last decision also affected the degree to which U.S. military assistance material to the Chinese nationalists could be used in defense of the off-shore islands.)10

While these points may overly simplify the matter and there may be a considerable legal and technical position in regard to Formosa and the Pescadores which is distinctly different from the off-shore islands, I think the thing should be very carefully looked over from this angle. Consideration might be given to putting Formosa and the Pescadores under the mandate of the United Nations or setting them up as an independent, autonomous State.

4.
If the course of action proposed by the Secretary of State and listed in NSC record of action #1224, sub-paragraph b,11 does not work out or introduces unacceptable complications, then some other plan must be worked out, giving thorough consideration to Items 1, 2 and 3 of this memorandum in order to implement paragraph 9 of NSC 146/2.
C.E. Wilson
  1. Circulated to the National Security Council with a covering memorandum of Oct. 5 from Lay.
  2. Not printed, but see Cutler’s memorandum to Dulles, Document 303.
  3. Ellipses in this document are in the source text.
  4. For text of communiqué agreed upon by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, and Prime Minister Winston Churchill at the Cairo Conference and released to the press on Dec. 1, 1943 (Cairo Declaration), see Foreign Relations, The Conferences at Cairo and Tehran, 1943, p. 448.
  5. The text of the proclamation issued on July 26, 1945, at Potsdam by President Truman, President Chiang, and Prime Minister Churchill, which reaffirmed the terms of the Cairo Declaration, is in Foreign Relations, The Conference of Berlin (The Potsdam Conference), 1945, vol. ii, p. 1474.
  6. The Nationalist Government began functioning in Taipei on Dec. 9, 1949; for related documentation, see Foreign Relations, 1949, volumes viii and ix.
  7. Reference is to President Truman’s statement of June 27, 1950 cited in footnote 3, Document 20. Truman’s statement of Jan. 5, 1950, declared that the United States would not pursue a course of action which would lead to involvement in the Chinese civil conflict; for text, see Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Harry S. Truman, 1950, pp. 11–12.
  8. In the Japanese Peace Treaty, Japan renounced all claim to Formosa and the Pescadores, but the treaty, unlike the Cairo Declaration, did not indicate the further disposition of those territories.
  9. See the extract from the President’s message to Congress, Document 75.
  10. The available documentation on this subject is contradictory. See telegram 813 to Taipei, Document 24; telegram 546 to Taipei, Document 79; and the exchanges of telegrams between Washington and Taipei in July 1953, Documents 122127 passim.
  11. See footnote 9, Document 293.