126. Memorandum From Secretary of State Rusk to President Johnson1
Washington,
April 24,
1966.
SUBJECT
- Basic Choices in Viet-Nam
At your direction, an informal working group chaired by Mr. Ball has analyzed our basic choices in
Viet-Nam and has prepared the enclosed report.
Three principal choices are discussed.
- (A)
- To continue roughly along present lines;
- (B)
- To continue along present lines but possibly reducing the rate of
entry of United States troops and stimulating contact between the
Saigon Government and the Viet Cong, and
- (C)
- To cut our losses.
I should point out that option C is based upon the possible emergence of
a factual situation outlined in the statement on the basic assumption. I
do not believe that we are faced with that factual situation and neither
Secretary McNamara nor I
recommend option C.
I do believe that we should discuss with Lodge upon his return the possibility of probing
individuals or groups in the Viet Cong in an effort
[Page 361]
to create divisions among them. Such
efforts have been attempted in the past but have not produced results.
Otherwise, my recommendation would be that we stay on option A.
We see some advantage in broadening the international base for what may
be difficult decisions lying ahead. I believe we should consider a
Ministerial meeting of those having combat troops in Korea soon after
the Philippine Senate concludes action on the Philippine contribution.
Such a meeting would include South Viet-Nam, Korea, Australia, New
Zealand, the Philippines and the United States. The purpose of such a
meeting would be to make four points clear:
- (1)
- The reaffirmation of the commitment to fend off
aggression;
- (2)
- The continued interest in moving the problem from the
battlefield to the conference table;
- (3)
- A clear signal to the South Vietnamese that
we expect them to show maximum solidarity in resisting the
Viet Cong, and
- (4)
- To stimulate and emphasize once again the non-military
programs.
We can discuss these matters further at our meeting on Monday.2
Attachment3
Washington,
April 25,
1966.
BASIC CHOICES IN VIET-NAM
Assessment of the
Situation
The political crisis in South Viet-Nam has avoided outright disaster
up to this point, but the temporary equilibrium appears to be uneasy
and the crisis has meant a setback to the essential non-military
programs. The Embassyʼs cable of April 16, Saigon 4033,4
is a highly competent summary
[Page 362]
of the present situation and of the more
immediate problems we face.
Most basically, the mere fact that such crisis could come as close as
it already has (and may again) to disastrous civil strife and chaos
or could raise, as it also has, the spectre of a governmentʼs coming
to power which would ask us to leave forces us to look hard at our
basic position and policy in South Viet-Nam. We must now recognize
that three contingencies of the utmost gravity are, in some degree,
more likely than our previous planning has recognized:
- 1.
- There may be a state of chaos and total
paralysis. This is what was threatened if the
GVN had moved forcibly
in Da Nang. It might still come about if the political
Buddhists push in an extreme fashion, which in turn would
probably trigger counteraction by Catholic and other groups.
Even without continued extreme “Buddhist” pressures (i.e.,
Tri Quang), the
vehement elements in the Vietnamese armed forces—the
so-called baby Turks—could attempt a military coup against a
continuing situation of moderate political unrest and
confusion. In short, the situation is still precarious, and
there is a chance of some action that would produce chaos
and total paralysis at some time in the next several
months.
- 2.
-
There could emerge a government that
would seek to end the war on almost any terms and
that would ask us to leave, with such broadly based
support that we would virtually have to accept or
take what seems to most of us the practically
impossible alternative of continuing the struggle on
our own. This nightmare appeared quite vivid in
the early April activity of the struggle movement in Hue
and Da Nang. Subsequently, the anti-American element
appeared to die down, partly in response to the sobering
effect of the withdrawal of our people from Da Nang. Our
present assessment here (which we should check out with
the Embassy) is that even a Buddhist (i.e., Tri Quang dominated)
government would probably acknowledge the need for
continued US cooperation and support. We believe this is
Tri Quangʼs
personal position; but even if it is not, the center of
gravity of the broader groups whose support he would
need to hold (if not obtain) true power does not now
advocate ending the war or asking us to leave. However,
the inevitable continued frictions of a major US
presence, the continued moderate political unrest and
confusion which must be expected in any event, and the
possibility that there may be specific military or other
setbacks and reverses—all these mean that the nightmare
cannot now be excluded to the degree that we would have
done six weeks ago.
The members of the working group generally believe that
the chances of the first contingency are not high but
cannot be disregarded (i.e., perhaps 10–15%), and that
the chances of the second contingency are less. Mr.
Ball would
place the chances of the first contingency substantially
higher than the percentage indicated. All members of the
[Page 363]
group
agree that if either of these contingencies should
materialize, we would have virtually no choice but to
start withdrawing, and that in these circumstances we
would have little bargaining leverage in connection with
our presence or withdrawal.
- 3.
- The government continues weak and
ineffective, especially in its prosecution of the
non-military programs that are crucial to eventual
success. The present crisis has somewhat weakened
the already inadequate cohesion and drive of the GVN in carrying out these
programs. While the III and IV Corps areas have been only
slightly affected, there has been a real setback in I Corps.
Even if the Directory government stays in power it will take
some time to get the machinery in I Corps properly cranked
up again. If the present Directory government should be
replaced the dislocation could last longer. In any event the
accelerated timetable for elections will almost necessarily
mean a continued state of moderate political unrest and
confusion. Thus, even in the absence of the first and second
contingencies described above, we face a high probability
that the GVN will be less
effective than we had hoped for many months to come,
particularly in programs that depend heavily on central
government leadership, such as the taking of essential
measures to meet inflation. And we face a significant
chance, perhaps 50 percent, that this state of weakness will
persist for a longer time even if the political process is
carried on without disruption. A countervailing
possibility—that the political process will produce greater
maturity, a more broadly based government and wider popular
appeal—does exist, and we should do all we can to further
it. But it is unlikely that this countervailing trend could
begin to take major effect within the next six
months.
Basic Policy Alternatives
Faced with these prospects, we have tried in this exercise to assess
three possible lines of action:
- Option A: To continue roughly along
present lines, in the hope that the setback is
temporary.
- Option B: To continue roughly along
present lines, perhaps with a decrease in the rate of entry
of US troops, but moving more actively to stimulate contact
between the Saigon government and elements in the Viet Cong.
Such contact could either begin with a public call for
negotiations by the GVN or
with covert tentative feelers. After the rough outlines of
the VC position had been
determined, the US would then decide on whether to press the
GVN to continue
negotiations or to support the GVN in its reluctance to accept difficult
terms.
- Option C: To decide now that the
chances of bringing about an independent and non-Communist
South Viet-Nam have shrunk to the point where, on an
over-all basis, the US effort is no longer warranted. This
would mean setting the stage where, at the proper moment,
steps can be taken that would probably lead to a
disengagement and withdrawal.
[Page 364]
The specific elements of Option A, Option B, and Option C have now
been spelled out in supporting papers attached to this paper.5
It should be noted that in varying degrees all Options include
indicating more clearly than in the past that our continued support
is contingent upon adequate unity and effectiveness on the part of
the Vietnamese.
Broader Factors
In approaching a decision on which line of action to follow, the
framework for decision plainly includes broader elements that would
have been present in the situation with or without the political
difficulties that have now produced an increased likelihood of the
conditions described earlier in this paper. These broader elements
cut, as they always have, in deeply contradictory directions.
Nonetheless, it may assist to have at least a checklist of them as
follows:
- 1.
- Within the US popular and
Congressional support for the conflict had been at adequate
levels prior to the recent difficulties. This support has
certainly been shaken, how much we cannot yet tell. The
contingencies of “chaos” and “being asked to leave” would
certainly reduce domestic support to the unacceptable level.
Moreover, the contingency of continued GVN weakness and moderate
political unrest is itself bound to cut down support. As we
look a year or two ahead, with a military program that would
require major further budget costs—with all their
implications for taxes and domestic programs—and with steady
or probably rising casualties, the war could well become an
albatross around the Administrationʼs neck, at least equal
to what Korea was for President Truman in 1952. It does not
seem likely that the American people will wish to quit under
pressure, as the French did, but the scars of a war
conducted in an atmosphere of growing malaise and backbiting
could be very serious indeed.
- 2.
- Among our key allies—notably
Britain and Japan—the present general level of acceptance
could degenerate into a predominantly critical attitude that
could seriously affect our ability to work with these
countries in wider projects.
- 3.
- vis-à-vis the Soviet Union, we
would face a continuation of the present inhibiting effect
of Viet-Nam on any move toward agreements in the disarmament
area and in other fields. However, this consequence probably
attaches to any continuation of the war, and is not
materially affected by the internal contingencies that may
make the war much harder to handle.
- 4.
- vis-à-vis Hanoi and Peiping the
continuing political difficulties will almost certainly
prevent any moderating influences from becoming
[Page 365]
effective in
Hanoi. However, this is inherent in the over-all assessment
that these political difficulties make an ultimate
reasonably good outcome less likely. As to Communist China,
the continuation of the war is the essential fact, and we
could not in any event have anticipated any significant
change in Communist Chinese attitudes in the next few years.
As to the question of Chinese representation in the UN, it is hard to see that
continuing the war under more difficult circumstances would
have an impact, one way or the other, that would materially
differ from the consequences of continuing the war in the
circumstances we had hoped were developing. If we were to
end the war on some basis, or withdraw, there might well be
an immediate rush to admit Communist China to the UN.
- 5.
- vis-à-vis the threatened nations of
Asia, we must ask ourselves whether failure in
Viet-Nam because of clearly visible political difficulties
not under our control would be any less serious than failure
without this factor. The question comes down, as it always
has, to whether there is any tenable line of defense in
Southeast Asia if Viet-Nam falls. Here we must recognize
that the anti-Communist regime in Indonesia has been a
tremendous “break” for us, both in removing the possibility
of a Communist pincer movement, which appeared almost
certain a year ago, and in opening up the possibility that
over a period of some years Indonesia may become a
constructive force. But for the next year or two any chance
of holding the rest of Southeast Asia hinges on the same
factors assessed a year ago, whether Thailand and Laos in
the first instance and Malaysia, Singapore, and Burma close
behind, would—in the face of a US failure for any reason in
Viet-Nam—have any significant remaining will to resist the
Chinese Communist pressures that would probably then be
applied. Taking the case of Thailand as the next key point,
it must be our present conclusion that—even if sophisticated
leaders understood the Vietnamese political weaknesses and
our inability to control them—to the mass of the Thai people
the failure would remain a US failure and a proof that
Communism from the north was the decisive force in the area.
Faced with this reaction, we must still conclude that
Thailand simply could not be held in these circumstances,
and that the rest of Southeast Asia would probably follow in
due course. In other words, the strategic stakes in
Southeast Asia are fundamentally unchanged by the political
nature of the causes for failure in Viet-Nam. The same is
almost certainly true of the shockwaves that would arise
against other free nations—Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and the
Philippines—in the wider area of East Asia. Perhaps these
shockwaves can be countered, but they would not be mitigated
by the fact that the failure arose from internal political
causes rather than any US major error or omission.