59. Memorandum From Edward K. Hamilton of the National Security Council Staff to the President’s Special Assistants (Rostow and Califano) and the President’s Deputy Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Bator)1

Attached, as promised, are my thoughts on new steps in foreign aid—from program substance to Agency management. I hope they are of use to you.

If the President is to get a real shot at such proposals as these, it is clear that he—or you in his name—will have to put real pressure on Bill Gaud to look at them seriously and thoroughly. My notion of proper tactics is as follows:

1.
Rostow and Califano discuss new proposals with the President at the Ranch this weekend.
2.
President asks Bill Gaud to come to Texas for brief visit (or sees him in Washington if his return is imminent. This would be a good idea in any event).
3.
President (a) gently outlines his Congressional problems, (b) impresses on Gaud the necessity of immediate steps to establish close [Page 168] and continuing contact with new and old members of Congress, and (c) asks Gaud for a rapid staffing out of as many ideas as have appealed to him in principle.

I suggest this procedure because I think Gaud is entitled to give the President his case for the status quo, and because I do not think he will seriously consider major innovations without direct guidance from the top. I may, as often happens, be wrong.

EH

Attachment2

FOR

Francis M. Bator

Walt W. Rostow

Joseph A. Califano

SUBJECT

  • Initiatives in Foreign Aid

Let me begin with my own basic convictions on the state of the aid program:

1.
With some notable exceptions, AID consists of people two cuts above the average civil servant, but three cuts below what is required to cope with the development problem—the most complicated single problem we face.
2.
With all its faults, AID has managed to put together the conceptual and administrative basis of an effective program. No radical change in concept or organization is worth its probable costs. (We should keep firmly in mind the side effects of the 1961 reorganization—the Agency did virtually nothing for a year, and nothing well for three. The 1961 shakeup was worthwhile because there was a new and superior philosophy to install. That is not the situation now.)
3.
No substantive or organizational changes in the program will revolutionize its public image. Except for a few bright young people in the House, the Congress is largely ignorant of what is being done and what has been accomplished. This is doubly true of the electorate. Best [Page 169] approaches to the image problem are: (1) a much fuller flow of information on present operations, (2) closer and much more personal care and feeding of key Congressmen and Senators, and (3) a high-powered attempt to marshal the bread and butter lobbies in favor of the bill. (The first is within present Agency capacities; the second would be best served by a short session between Gaud and the President; the third we have recommended to the President elsewhere. Thus, I shan’t dwell on these items here.) If we do not do these things, no amount of organizational or program change will have much effect. If we do, I would bet that the current thrusts are fundamentally salable.
4.
The need for more money in FY 1968 is real.3 This is no cry of wolf. A stable AID budget will stagnate the program—and cut the leverage it provides—in our major client countries. Despite the Congressional problem, this has to be the year to ease off the downward-sloping plateau we have occupied for several years.
5.
There are, in my judgment, some options which could be put before the President as initiatives which would give promise of major improvements in the Agency and the program while putting an indelible Johnson stamp on both in ways which would help on the Hill.

My suggestions follow. Gaud has seen none of them. At first blush, it is very likely that his healthy skepticism will produce a negative reaction. Thus, they will be considered seriously only if suggested from above. My advice on the tactics of presentation are on the route slip covering this memorandum.4

Regionalism

We will have an important string to this bow in the economic integration drive at the Latin American Summit. In addition, we might:

I.
Propose an African Development Bank Act. The Bank is in the early stages of formation. It has $250 million in subscriptions—entirely from [Page 170] Africans—a Board of Directors, a site, and the beginnings of a staff. It is precisely the kind of spontaneous regional initiative we want. The Africans have not asked for a subscription from the United States, but it would be a useful and welcome gesture if we were to offer a modest contribution to a special soft-loan fund for projects in health, education, and agriculture. It would also be cheap—say appropriations of $10–20 million each year for 3–5 years beginning in FY 1969. If we could get a public champion of the Eugene Black caliber—David Rockefeller might be willing—we might manage another love feast of the kind connected with the Asian Bank. Moreover, the hard fact is that unless we do get involved with the African Bank, its prospects are meager. It would take some careful diplomacy beforehand, but with George Woods’ help it should not be impossible to work out an arrangement in which we can make a contribution without threatening the Bank’s independence. This would also put us in a position to hit the Europeans for matching funds.
II.
Announce a major effort to assure Safe Conduct for Development in Africa. The arms race in Africa is growing, ridiculous from a great-power security standpoint, very dangerous to fragile African politics and a waste of scarce African resources. We know this; we have a number of indications that the Soviets agree; and African leaders from Nyerere to Bourguiba to Selassie have indicated they agree in principle. The guts of our initiative would be an unconditional offer to stop sales of sophisticated arms to African countries if the Soviets, the French, and others will agree. We could also announce that our economic aid policies in Africa will be very sensitive to the amounts of local resources being wasted in large military establishments. We would encourage the Africans to band together to develop means of controlling arms traffic and to establish regulations on size and equipment of standing armies. We might offer to consider helping to finance the administrative costs of such regional or subregional organizations. We could urge the OAU to take leadership—giving that semi-moribund group a new lease on life. Meanwhile, we should try to work out with the Soviets the specific rules each of us would follow, with or without a formal agreement. (The Soviets have already made one informal feeler on this score.) If we were able to work something out, it would be (1) a major arms control triumph in the tradition of the Test Ban Treaty and the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and (2) a model for the rest of the developing world. Again, it would take a good deal of diplomatic work beforehand. But it is very much worth a try.
III.
Propose a study of South Asian economic cooperation. In large part, the major development problems of the day—political, economic, and public relations—boil down to visible progress in India and Pakistan, particularly joint progress. It is just possible that we could, after careful diplomatic preparation in which the President’s name were mentioned, convince the Indians and the Paks to join in a study of possible constructive [Page 171] steps on the economic front, beginning with the lowering of tariff barriers. Since food is the overwhelming immediate problem for both countries and most of their trade with each other is agricultural, we might be able to peg our suggestion to their common war on hunger. We might even use broad hints of the value of such movement in connection with our Food for Freedom programs to both countries. The proposal might also be appropriate for presentation to the Second UN Conference on Trade and Development in the Spring—where we will be hard-pressed for other constructive suggestions. (This should not be done before the Indian elections in February.)

Self Help

I firmly believe that the major problem here is publicizing the current facts. We do insist on self help. We do cut off aid where it doesn’t happen (e.g., Brazil, Colombia, India). We are the principal cause of major advances in economic policy (e.g., India, Pakistan, Colombia, etc.). But few people know it. The job is to structure the system so that they have more chances to find out—and to testify to what they learn:

I.
Establish by law a National Committee on Overseas Self-Help. This group should consist of 12–15 prominent people, perhaps two each selected by the Foreign Relations and Foreign Affairs Committees, the Business Council, the AFL/CIO, the American Association of Universities, and the Council on Foreign Relations. It should be chaired by the AID Administrator. Its function should be to review and advise the Secretary of State and the President concerning our proposed program in each of the nine countries which, together, receive 85% of our aid. The Committee reports should be classified, but fully available to interested members of Congress. In addition, it should make an annual unclassified report to the Congress. It should receive as much publicity as possible. The selecting organizations should be leaned on to produce people who have the time to do a serious job. With luck, the Committee could become a considerable help on the Hill, as well as a fount of public information and confidence. There is a case that its existence would restrict the flexibility of the President and the Secretary in the conduct of foreign affairs, but that restriction is minor compared to the alternative—a major reduction in the resources available for the principal instrument of that foreign policy in the developing world.
II.
Make an informal offer to provide full briefings on EVERY proposed program loan to the appropriate regional subcommittee of the Foreign Affairs and Foreign Relations Committees. These people should be told that their permission will not be asked, but that their views will be solicited and carefully reported to the President. Of course, we must make it clear that we often have to move quickly and cannot allow this step unduly to delay the process.
III.
Make it known informally that the President has passed the word that every AID project loan must be matched by equal contributions to the cost of that project from the recipient. This is not a great change from the present practice. But we have not succeeded in getting it through to the Congress that this is present practice. Thus, we can make some points by putting it this way. We can also offer to give any doubter chapter and verse in the countries in which he is interested.

Multilateralism

Our largest initiative in this area will be the Korry Report push in Africa,5 where the World Bank will get increasingly involved as we bow out of bilateral aid to 25 countries (except for a small ambassador’s self-help fund). This is discussed in the Task Force report. In addition, we might consider the following:

I.
Propose a legal requirement that no less than 85% of AID’s money must be used in a multilateral framework—where “multilateral” means any grouping of donors from an ad hoc consortium to a formal organization such as the Bank. Again, this is no great change in the present situation, but it will dramatize a little-known fact.
II.
Make a real push for transformation of the unused European Monetary Fund into a source of financing for private ventures (fertilizer plants, etc.) in the War on Hunger. This is a $350 million pot of money (into which only the U.S. has actually paid its share—$123 million) originally designed to tide European countries over short-term monetary problems, but now almost totally unused. This proposal is approved in the State Department. It was briefly mentioned in Paris recently by Eugene Rostow, but was buried in the press. It won’t be easily negotiable—the other countries will need new appropriations. But it is the only sizeable source of critical foreign exchange for the War on Hunger which does not involve the political costs of a new appropriation. The key to success will be escalating the issue—at least initially—from the Finance/Foreign Ministers to heads of government.

Private Enterprise

Convene a White House Conference on Private Enterprise and Overseas Development. The accent should be a search for imaginative answers to the two questions critical to a new Government understanding of the precise factors which influence private behavior in this realm:

1.
What public policy would induce significant amounts of new U.S. private investment to flow to each region of the less-developed world?
2.
What incentives would be required to induce private U.S. managerial talent to get involved with publicly-financed projects abroad?

It is possible that this would yield nothing but the same old Watson Committee brand of cardboard prose.6 If so, we have lost nothing and gained a useful gesture. But—particularly if some operating-level people can be roped in—it might yield some real breakthrough in an area where our best efforts have produced nothing of much consequence.

Management

I.
Announce a three-year program to turn AID into a team of crack development specialists. At a minimum, it should include:
1.
A Peace Corps-type entrance examination system which, among other things, would insure that each entrant knows enough elementary economics to pass a Freshman final exam—or agrees to begin the requisite course immediately.
2.
A training program to insure that every professional employee overseas has a working knowledge of the local language when he arrives.
3.
Special incentives to continue with part-time graduate work leading to advanced degrees, particularly in economics. We might shoot for a 25% increase in the number of employees with advanced degrees by the end of the period.
4.
Working agreements with a wide variety of corporations and universities through which a steady stream of people with special skills serve temporary tours with AID with the understanding that such experience will be counted as a plus in the promotional scales in their home institutions.
5.
Encouragement of regional specialties.
6.
Elevation of the Directors of the AID Missions in the nine largest recipient countries to the rank of Deputy Ambassador.
7.
A personal review and out-placing of low-quality staff as ruthless as can be managed short of complete severance of relations with the employee unions. As a token of good faith, we might promise a 10% cut in non-Viet Nam employment in fiscal ’68. (This should be possible as a result of the new aid policy in Africa.)

Congress should be given a definite schedule for these moves and progress reports at least annually. The AID recruiting drive should get as much publicity as possible, particularly at the universities. In particular, the Secretary of State should be asked to lend his personal and institutional prestige to the campaign for applicants.

II.
Set up a small general staff to the Administrator—with systems analysis capacity—headed by a new Special Assistant. AID has two kinds of problems [Page 174] made to order for an energetic, fast-moving group of “whiz-kid” analysts of the type McNamara has used to such advantage: (1) standard bureaucratic sprawl and constipation, and (2) a great gap between the number of problems susceptible to systematic quantitative analysis and the number where it is used. (ADP is a virtual stranger to AID, though it should be applicable to everything from development plan analysis to keeping track of procurement benefits to Congressmen.) Such a group would probably earn its keep in terms of pure economy and efficiency—identifying duplication, excess paper work, and inferior staffing. Such people are also often useful in keeping the Administrator well armed for trips to the Hill, developing vivid and imaginative methods of presenting the Agency story. (Indeed, their first task might be the redesign of the AID Congressional presentation.) But their real task would be to provide the Administrator with a needling, trouble-shooting, innovating, internal intelligence-collecting, supervisory tool he does not now have and badly needs. I can think of no better cure for the aid of stodgy lassitude that now pervades many parts of the Agency.
III.

Merge the State and AID African bureaus on the model of the Linc Gordon operation for Latin America. This could be announced as the next step in the “speak with one voice” philosophy which underlay the Latin America move. In my view, the Latin America experiment has worked well and is worth trying elsewhere. The time is opportune—the AID Assistant Administrator for Africa is leaving next month and a replacement has not been recruited. The African bureaus in both State and AID are far and away the weakest units in their respective agencies; a merger might provide enough good people to start rebuilding. It would be difficult to avoid making Joe Palmer the head of the combined operation—not a very exciting choice for a brave new era. But a good deputy on the AID side could probably get the job started. (Gaud would oppose this, as would all opponents of eventual AID-State amalgamation. I think that issue was largely foreclosed with the Latin America merger.)

If the President decides to do some new things—or perhaps even if he doesn’t—he should give thought to a personal presentation of the Foreign Aid message this year. If he proposes enough change, it could be as historic an occasion as the Marshall speech in Harvard Yard. It certainly would be the most auspicious possible start for the new bill. Obviously, the President must weigh his priorities—and I am aware that there are many other claimants. Nevertheless, I believe the bleak prospects now facing the program make an appearance before a joint session to lay out his own vision and plans in the proper ballpark [sic]. In my judgment, it would be a net plus, in the Congress, in the international arena, and in terms of its effect on our Viet Nam posture.

EH
  1. Source: Johnson Library, National Security File, Subject File, Foreign Aid, Box 16. Secret; Sensitive.
  2. Secret.
  3. For FY67 the administration had requested $2.5 billion for economic assistance and Congress appropriated $2.1 billion (see Documents 55 and 57). As the administration looked to the economic assistance program for FY68, the President, in a 3:26 p.m. telephone conversation with Senator John Pastore on December 27, discussed the strategy to obtain the administration’s needs in the budget that would be sent to Congress in January 1967. In view of the outcome for FY67 the President wondered if he should request $2.8 billion in the hopes of getting the $2.5 he felt was absolutely essential. The President and the Senator went back and forth on this matter and the bottom line of Pastore’s recommendation was to request what the administration felt was absolutely essential and than go all out to defend and obtain that level. Joseph Califano, William Gaud, and Charles Schultze were with the President during this exchange with Pastore, and Gaud and Schultze joined the discussion. Gaud explained he had actually spent $2.5 for FY 67 because of carry-over funds from the Indo-Pakistan war. Pastore advised that the administration should request $2.5 billion and defend that amount as what was spent wisely this year and is absolutely essential for the coming year. (Johnson Library, Recordings and Transcripts, Recording of a Telephone Conversation, Tape 6612.10, PNO 4)
  4. Not found.
  5. The Korry Report was written by Edward M. Korry, Ambassador to Ethiopia. Documentation is scheduled for publication in Foreign Relations, 1964–1968, volume XXIV.
  6. Not further identified.