463. Memorandum From Robert W. Komer of the National Security Council Staff to the President’s Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Bundy)1

Mac—

FYI, there’s a big flap over proposed Tanzania-Zambia railroad, designed to give Zambia an alternate outlet to sea for its copper if S. Rhodesia goes sour. The IB turned down this $400 million boondoggle as economically infeasible and AID feels the same way.

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But now Kaunda of Zambia sent word to Harriman and Williams at Addis Conference that Chou En-lai (due in Tanzania 3 June) was going to offer to build it. Kaunda pled for a Western pre-emptive offer, and all our Africanists sent in a fervent plea to keep Chicoms out of heart of Africa.

Rusk and Ball thought this nonsense and signed [so did] LBJ on Tuesday. But Averell and AF are unwilling to take “no” for an answer, and former is in London trying to get UK excited. So we’ll probably have a second round on this one. I’m staying loose for now, but doubt that one Chicom railroad means curtains for us in southern Africa.2

RWK
  1. Source: Johnson Library, National Security File, Name File, Komer Memos, Vol. I. Secret.
  2. A notation in Bundy’s handwriting in the margin of the source text reads: “OK—keep an eye on it.”