FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAV.IW Trlt FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1965 U A f~' PU ~~~'E, iL £.x& D AI'bljm is South Asian Conflict Rooted in Religious ni nosity By The Associated Press What set off the war between Pakistan and India? A cease-fire line drawn by the United Nations across fabled Kashmir has been a frontier of hate for 16 years. Pakistan has part of the Hi- malayan state, India the rest. The two countries' fear and distrust of each other must be, seen to be believed. A candid Pakistani official once told, a re- porter: "Ever since Pakistan came into being as a nation, its foreign policy has been built on fear of India. There is no other basis." Similar sentiments could be heard on the Indian side. Religious Conflict The immediate causes of conflict date back to events earlier this year; the real causes are rooted deep in history and religious con- flict. About three months ago, India took over three outposts across the cease-fire line. Pakistan pro-' tested. India said it took the posts only to protect a highway to the sector where Indian troops were on the alert against a Chinese menace. India withdrew when the United Nations assured it that the safety of the road would be se- cured. Tension rose again early in August when India reoccupied the posts. According to UN observers, Pakistan sent armed men in civil- ian garb across the line for armed action. Indian Charges India claimed the invaders totaled 5000, bent on sabotage, assassination and even the cap- ture of Kashmir's summer capital at Srinagar. Pakistan denied it all, said no armed units had crossed. It said the Kashmir trouble was a Moslem uprising against Indian rule, and some civilian volunteers had crossed over to assist the revolt. That was how the second Kash- mir war started. In effect, it was just a continuation of the first. The story goes back to the geo- graphy produced by partition of India when it got its indepen- dence. This created a Moslem' Pakistan with two components, East and West, separated by 1000 miles of Indian territory. It left in question the status of rich Kashmir, with its population of four million-three-quarters Mos- lem. The Hindu maharajah who ruled Kashmir at the time de- cided to accede to India. Communal Rioting Moslem-Hindu hatred already' was boiling. It had exploded in 1947 in bloody religious-communal rioting which cost a half million lives. Now the two were at war over Kashmir. The conflict con- tinued until New Year's Day, 1949,; when both agreed to observe a UN cease-fire line leaving two-thirds of the state in Indian hands. For 16 years the two sides in Kashmir, tucked against the bor- ders of Afghanistan and Tibet, glared at each other across the line, engaging in occasional brushes, charges and counter- charges. Then Red China complicated the picture. Its pressure on India's northern frontiers led to fighting in late 1962 in which the Indians took . a mauling. That fighting ended with a Chinese decision to cease fire and withdraw partially -but only partially. Chinese forces remained in the area. Precautionary Action This constant menace, India contended, moved her to take the precautionary measures in Kash- mir. The Chinese threat produced yet other complications. Both the United States and the Soviet Union, concerned with China's in- tentions toward India and South Asia in general, came to the Indians' assistance with military help to resist the Chinese Com- munists. Only Red China stands to gain from the undeclared war between India and Pakistan. Dismay at this prospect is as apparent in Moscow as it is in Washington. Chinese Support Peking swiftly espoused the Pakistani side of - the argument, as if alert to the promise of good fishing in the turbulent waters of the Asian subcontinent. Red China seems unlikely to plunge hastily into active involve- ment in hostilities. But it already makes its weight felt by applying fresh pressure on India. It ac- cuses India of provoking new in- cidents on the frontiers between them-scene of 1962 Chinese- Indian fighting-and demands Indian withdrawal from the areas. The new crisis presents some interesting possibilities. Since the United States and Britain are cut- ting off arms to both India and Pakistan, a prime source of new support for Pakistan might be China. As for India, much of its armament comes from the Soviet Union. With the Chinese actively de- nouncing the "Khrushchev re- visionists" in this new situation, the chances of further deteriora- tion in relations between the big Communist powers seem sharply increased. Painful Dilemmas Now both the Americans and Russians face painful dilemmas,. sharing common worries about Chinese intentions in the light of the war over Kashmir. Clearly the Russians are concerned with the use China might make of the situation. The United States and the Soviet Union, speaking in a rare show of unison, both want the war ended quickly. There could be many important results from an India-Pakistani war, depending on how long it continues unchecked. This one is different from the two nations' war of 1947. There was no Red China to be considered then. Apart from intensifying the world Communist feud, the war now could shred the facade of Asian-African unity, create con- fusion among the so-called non- aligned nations which India pro- fesses to inspire, and splinter that "third world." Poorly Equipped Both India and Pakistan are poorly equipped economically for a long war without outside help. Thus, Washington's freeze on mil- itary aid and an implicit threat in its review of economic aid could be an effective weapon to halt hostilities. Both are heavily dependent on U.S. aid, and U.S. weapons are being used by both sides. For all that, the fighting could continue for some time. Both In- dia- and Pakistan laid prestige on the line, and that is important in Asia. Both seem trapped into a position precluding retreat. Asia already has a full measure of peril in the Vietnamese war and the Indonesian threat to neighboring Malaysia. All this holds a potential for broadening and internationalizing armed con- flict. Thus China's attitude in the new outbreak is important. Diplomatic sources at the Unit- ed Nations picture Moscow as deeply worried over what China might do. The worry was reflect- ed in Moscow's quick adherence to a UN Security Council call for peace. Moscow long suspected Chinese ambitions in Asia. The Soviet buildup of India was un- Marxist. Even more so was Soviet assistance in strengthening Indian defenses against the Chinese mili- tary threat. Moscow's posture now, diamet- rically opposed to China's atti- tude, may destroy the last slim chance of healing the deep split in the world Communist camp. De Gaulle TI Withdrawal ireaten From S 1969 -1*1 Dominicans Arrest, Oust Army Head Rebel Leaders Force Removal of Wessin Despite His Power SANTO DOMINGO W) - Gen. Elias Wessin y Wessin was ar- rested last night and deported from the Dominican Republic. He was placed aboard a U.S. transport plane and flown to Puerto Rico. The government had wrestled all day with the problem of what * to do with Wessin y Wessin, whose ouster ashcommander of -the Arm- ed Forces Training Center had been demanded by the rebels as part of the peace settlement. The government had already of- fered the general any job he want- ed outside the country. But the man who led the 1963 coup which overthrew President Juan Bosch and who also led the resistance to the pro-Bosch revolt in April refused to go. Last night the top officers of the inter-American peace force here, Brazilian Gen. Hugo Pan- asco Alvim and U.S. Lt. Gen. Bruce PalmerJr., called on Wessin y Wessin at his home. The military leaders escorted Wessin y Wessin to the San Isi- dro air base, occupied by the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division, and put him aboard the plane. The provisional government of President Hector Garcia-Godoy wanted Wessin out of the way as the first step toward demilitariza- tion of the civilian population. Rebel leaders said they cannot undertake disarmament on their side until Wessin is removed. They have accused the general of geno- cide for allegedly ordering the city bombed during the height of the April fighting. Wessin denies it. Military sources, meanwhile, dis- counted speculation Wessin might attempt an armed standoff. Wessin said Wednesday two members of the U.S. Embassy staff offered hin $50,000 for his home and a position abroad if he would agree to leave the Domini- can Republic. He said his home was worth about half that. -Associa FRENCH PRESIDENT CHARLES DE GAULLE addressed newsmen and French officials at Palace yesterday at his semi-annual press conference. World News Roundup _jNATO' Emphasizes France's Sovereignty Leader Demands Abolition of United Military Command PARIS (M)-President Charles de Gaulle posed a threat yesterday to pull France out of the Atlantic alliance unless its integrated mili- tary command structure is abol- ished by 1969 atthe latest. He repeatedly emphasized the theme of national independence, and lashed out at the "subordi- nation" which he professed to find in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and in the European Common Market. The NATO integrated command, ted Press first established by Gen. Dwight Elysee D. Eisenhower, is an international defense headquarters in which of- ficers from various nations serve in mixed fashion without refer- ence to nationality. Since its in- ception, it has always been head- ed by an American-now Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer. i De Gaulle dislikes having French officers taking orders from for- 35 years. eigners, and is reported to feel tment is the integrated system makes an rganizing officer lose his sense of nation- tional re- ality. challenge Abolishing the integrated sys- tem would mean the end of any at the Allied-type headquarters and leave most fre- Western defense to a classic sys- 1 the new tem of national alliances such as Weaver. existed at the time of World War the first I. De Gaulle did not advance any ie is cur- alternative. using and If the other NATO members y which insist on retaining the integrated the new command system, de Gaulle clear- ly implied France would leave the organization. The others then of Negro would have, to move their main eir neigh- headquarters, now about 12 miles ercrowded west of Paris, to someplace like ed," took Brussels, Belgium. to schools His key statement on NATO districts. was: and chil- "At the expiration of the com- vate cars, mitments which we undertook in way from the past, that is, by 1969 at the king ad- latest, the subordination, described partment as integration, provided under enroll in NATO which puts our destiny into eir home the hands of foreigners, will end, lable. as far as we are concerned." U SPECIAL PURCHASE junior shirtwaist dresses },' t A GIFT FOR HER' CHARMS qWe4la BrhaCkeBell Mug Dancer SWe have thousands of new and different charms for you to choose for her. Come in and see for yourself . . .at IBAY S Arcade Jewelry Shop 16 NICKELS ARCADE 10.00 By The Associated Press SAIGON - United States Ma- rines wiped out a band of 38 Viet Cong in a fierce battle yesterday on the Batangan peninsula, a Marine spokesman reported. The Leathernecks reported 17 of the Viet Cong killed and 21 captured. Marine casualties were termed light. In the air war, American planes made their closest bombing pene- tration to Red China of the Viet Nam war, a U.S. military spokes- man said. Four F-105 Thunder- chiefs bombed and damaged a railroad bridge 17 miles south of the Red Chinese border. NEW ORLEANS-Unpredictable Hurricane Betsy made a dramatic midafternoon turn to the north- west yesterday, posing a threat to populous New Orleans and the Alabama and Mississippi Gulf coasts. The fierce storm, with winds as high as 140 miles per hour, had picked 'up speed in the Gulf of Mexico's warm waters after bat- tering the Bahamas and Florida's southern resort area earlier in the week. Betsy left four dead and at least $100 million in damage in south Florida. WASHINGTON-The Commit- tee for Economic Development, an influential private spokesman for U.S. business and industry, launched its own war against pov- erty yesterday. In a report two years in prepar- ation, the committee called for a vigorous, broad program of edu- cation and training designed to reduce the number of Americans whose income is far below the national average. It outlined a nine-point program touching on problems ranging from preschool education to the elimination of adult illiteracy. WASHINGTON-President Johnson signed a bill yesterday creating a new Cabinet post on urban affairs, but he left un- answered who will get the job. At a ceremony in the White House rose garden, the President said "we literally must build a second America" in .the next; Creation of that depar "the first step toward o our system for a more ra sponse to the pressing of urban life," he said. Among those present signing was the man r quently mentioned to fil Cabinet post, Robert C. If chosen, he would be Negro Cabinet member. : rently director of the Hoi Home Finance Agenc forms the nucleus of department. BOSTON-A groupc parents, who charged the borhood schools were ove and "de facto segregate their children yesterday 1 in predominantly white Six busloads of. parents dren, plus others in priv went to four schools av their home districts, ta vantage of a school de rule that children may schools away from the districts if space is avai ,, : ' :. } .' ;j. 11 ii An exceptional timely savings on campus-cued dark tone transitionals in solids, prints, and stripes. Choose from a large selection of sheath or full-skirt styles with roll or I -I