SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1966 THE MiCHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Military Plans New Moves If Viet WASHINGTON OP)-Even while President Johnson's administra- tion continues casting about for a way to bring Hanoi into Viet Nam peace negotiations, its mili- tary branch must have aready alternative plans for use if the effort fails. ' It is standard procedure for any government in any war., At the end of World War II, the United States had plans com- pleted and huge land-sea-air force poised for invasion of Japan if Tokyo did not surrender. The plan, "Operation Cornet," never was needed but it was ready. This is not to say there is any plan for the =invasion of North Viet Nam. It is to show only that alternate plans always are made, patterned to fit shifting military situations or changes in broad na- tional policy. The options prepared by the strategy makers for application in Viet Nam obviously would range from modest to maximum. As the weeks of lull in the bombing and peace efforts have worn on, speculation on what President Johnson might elect to do has ranged widely. . Some thought a clue was to be found in the testimony given by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara to senators on his re- quest for another $12.7 billion. Attention was caught by two points in McNamara's statement, as released to newsmen. These were a request for money to pro- cure huge tonnages of ammuni- tion for a "massive application of firepower" in Viet Nam; for funds to continue extension of the sys- tem of harbors, warehouses, bar- racks and other troop support and facilities. Each points toward a much bigger war within Viet Nam. McNamara made no public ref- erence to where, when or how attacks on targets in North Viet Nam might be resumed. While the McNamara statement may have been grounds for be- lieving that heavier ground action, with accompanying heavier air operations to support the action, might be the course Johnson would choose, there was nothing substantive to rule out the pos- sibility of sending the bombers back over North Viet Nam. What Johnson has in mind about the future course of the war is one of the best kept secrets in this capital. There are reasons to believe that no more than half a dozen men in the whole Pentagon have been given any clue-and that these do not include operational commanders who draft alternate plans. The machinery for resumption of bombing, and for heavier bomb- ing if ordered, remains assembled and ready for use. Air Force bombers, currently concentrating on Viet Cong tar- gets in South Viet Nam, can fly North again on almost a moment's notice. In his State of the Union ad- dress to Congress on Jan. 12, Johnson said he couldn't give the lawmakers a blueprint for the course of conflict because "we cannot know what the future may require." But he assured Congress that American fighting men must have "every gun, every dollar and every decision-whatever the cost and whatever the challenge." In early December, before the diplomatic drive for peace nego- tiations was started, Johnson had talked about "other hard steps" which would be needed if the Communists continued to reject proposals for unconditional peace negotiations. Even without any major escala- tion by either side, the proportions of the war promise to expand steadily and inexorably. Man- power and supplies continue to come into South Viet Nam from the North. The U.S. currently has more than 191,000 men in Viet Nam and may have more than 400,000 in another six months. These, however, are not new "hard steps" or going ahead with plans "whatever the challenge." There are, of course, proposals to bomb North Viet Nam more intensively, particularly the capi- tal, Hanoi, and port areas of Haiphong: The U.S. has said it does not want to overthrow the govern- ment of North Viet Nam, but merely to stop it from imposing its system on South Viet Nam. Intensified bombing, in addition to somewhat symbolic strikes at the capital itself, would be design- ed to destroy the war-making economy of North Viet Nam. More electric power plants would be bombed to cripple munitions fac- tories. Haiphong harbor could be a tar- get and the approaches to the harbor closed off by mines or actual blockade by ships and air- craft. But that might lead to Peace attacks, intentional or uninten- tional, on Soviet ships bringing supplies and equipment to the Hanoi government. If there is any hope that the Soviet Union might have influence in coaxing Hanoi toward suspension of hostilities, bombs on Soviet ships might blast this hope as well as the ships. An even more delicate decision' would have to be made if direct attacks on Viet Cong sanctuaries and supply lines in Laos and Cam-, bodia were to be made. Over the so-called Ho Chi Minh trail, actually a number of some-; what parallel routes, flow sub- stantial supplies and reinforce- ments and replacements for Com- munist units in South Viet- Nam. The trail loops out of west North Viet Nam, winds southward to Laos and enters Red-held areas1 of South Viet Nam. Canbodia is an even more per- plexing problem. Despite official disclaimers by the Cambodian government, it is being used by the Reds as a sanctuary. This was demonstrated dra- matically last week. U.S. troops had moved into the area west of Pleiku in heavy force. The 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Di- vision aimed at surrounding and capturing or destroying some of the thousands of guerrillas who had held the region for years. The division drove forward, de- stroying the Viet Cong camps and other installations. But there were no Viet Cong, only signs that they had left hurriedly across the bor- der into Cambodia. Forward elements of the division drove to within one hundred feet of the river boundary - and stopped there. Fails Viet Nam Truce Attack America Peace Drive Spurned by Communists Rusk Sees Intensified Viet Cong Fighting In Coming Week 1k WASHINGTON A') - Secretary of State Dean Rusk reported yes- terday that the Communists have spurned the month-old United States peace offensive so far. He predicted the Viet Cong would step up their fighting in Viet Nam -next week. "I regret that I cannot report to you any positive and encourag- ing response to the hopes of man- kind," Rusk told his first news conference since the U4. diplo- matic campaign and halt in the bombing of North Viet Nam began 29 days ago. "There is every sign that the other side is going to intensify its activity after the Tet period," he said. The Tet is the lunar new year holiday in Viet Nam, sup- posed to be observed by acease- fire which ends Sunday. Door Still Open Rusk sidestepped questions about when President Johnson might renew air strikes on the North, and he reaffirmed John- son's statement that "the door of space must be kept wide open." But in striking his most pes- simistic note since the launching of the U.S. peace effort, the sec- retary of state seemed to: -Warn Hanoi that the string is running out on Washington's current peace drive, and the bombing of the North could be resumed soon if Hanoi refuses to make a peaceful response. --Serve notice to those who ad- vocated a bombing lull-allies, neutrals and Communists-that North Viet Nam's rejection of U.S. peace overtures means Washing- ton is getting Teady to make new, probably tough, decisions. -Indicate that within the circle of top U.S. strategists, Rusk favors a hard-lines reactipn to Hanoi's re- buff of peace bids. What To Do Next Johnson's advisers are known to be divided over -what to do next. Johnson is said not to have made a decision yet about resum- ing the bombing, and to have set no deadlines. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara said yesterday the bombing pause which began Dec. 24 has given the Communist North a chance to rebuild bombed-out bridges, roads and communication lines. SBut this is a "small cost to pay" for the advantage of showing Hanoi and others "our desire for peace and desire for negotiations," McNamara told newsmen during an intermission in his second day of testimony to Senate commit- tees in behalf of another $12.7 billion for Viet Nam war funds this year. Response to Peace Missions Rusk recounted the peace- mission travels to foreign capitals by roving Ambassador W. Averell Harriman, himself and others since Christmas. "There has been an overwhelm- ingly favorable response to these efforts-except from those who could in fact sit down and make peace," he said. I -A DISCUSS TRUCE DETAI Pakistan's Army commander Gen. Mohammed Musa with his Indian counterpart Gen. J. N. Chaudhauri Delhi airport. Musa arrived yesterday to work out d peace pact signed at Tashkent early last week. JAPANESE REPORT: Soviets Refuse Press Viet Tall Broken,, a Troo ps _. 'ommunists Accused of A 49 Violations t North VietnameseC Use Halt in Fightingf For Repair Worka ' 3 SAIGON (/)-Bursts of gunfireo yesterday chipped at the fragile lunar new year truce and swelledt combat casualties on both sides in a war that threatens to burst witht renewed fury after the truce endst Sunday The United States military com-t vand accused the Communists off 49 violations through the first half of the Tet holiday cease-fire. U.S. Defense Secretary RobertI S. McNamara said suspension ofI the bombing has given North Viets Nam a chance to rebuild bombed- out bridges, roads and communi- ssocIated Press cation lines. Snipersr [ Viet Cong snipers killed two U.S. Marine sergeants in brushes withi a Leatherneck platoon of 45 ment left, meets on security patrol seven milesi at the New south of Da Nang, a strategic etails of the airbase 380 miles northeast of Sai-i gon. The Marines captured a wounded guerrilla. South Korean marines stemmed the biggest Communist operation., They turned back a band of aboutc 400 that closed in menacingly on a platoon posted to guard rice- T o lands below Tuy Hoa, on the cen- tral coast 240 miles northeast of Saigon. Hand-to-Hand Combat A Korean military spokesman said the platoon and the rein- forcements it summoned beat off , in fact, like the attack and killed 46 of the ni Viet Nam' guerrillas in a two-hour fight, at pe? times hand to hand. He reported in denouncing Korean casualties moderate. viewed by the The spokesman implied the Ko- n of this So- reans shot first in this cse. He said the platoon withheld its fire n by Gromyko until the Viet Cong came within plea for peace 30 yards, then opened up to pro- uoted by Tass, tect its position. no mention of Guerrilla Fire e Soviet Union A patrol of the U.S. 101st Air- borneDivision had drawn guerrilla g to the Soviet fire Thursday night three miles government of northwest of Tuy Hoa. Armed heli- iat the conflict copters sped to the aid of the s counter not patrol. A spokesman said the para- s of the coun- troopers claimed they killed three also the cause Viet Cong. No American casualties a whole and were reported. for the coun- Briefing officers told of Viet he conflict-to Cong attacks involving elements of s soon as pos- all the allies - Australian, New to a peaceful Zealand, Korean, American and South Vietnamese. Spain Bars Gibralter Based Planes Dispute with Britain Threatens Future Of NATO Base MADRID ()-Spain projected its dispute with Britain over pos- session of Gibraltar into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization yes- terday. The Foreign Ministry notified the envoys of all NATO nations that because of "the risks and consequences to Spain of using Gibraltar as a NATO base" their planes will no longer be able to fly over Spanish soil to or from The Rock on Spain's southern doorstep. Spain is not a member of NATO. In London, British officials said this was another move to get Spanish sovereignty over Gibral- tar. They said it is no more likely to persuade Britain to negotiate than previous restrictions imposed by the Spanish on travel to Spain from Gibraltar. Foreign Minister Fernando Ma- ria Castiella told Parliament: "Gi- braltar cannot be regarded as a base of NATO, and let that be said with all the 'consequences this declaration implies." Said a responsible Spanish source: "The fact is that Spain is not disposed to tolerate any longer the risks or consequences of a base included in an international mili- tary organization to which Spain itself does not belong." He insisted the move was not intended to force Spain's admis- sion into NATO, adding: "Our country has never solicited admis- sion nor do we desire it. We so stated with all clarity and in an official form during a recent visit to Madrid of the U.S. secretary of state, Dean Rusk." Another official source contrast- ed Britain's use of Gibraltar as a NATO base with Spain's defense pact with the U.S. "As an example, a U.S. bomber with nuclear armaments aboard fell on Spanish soil near Almeria earlier this week. This is a risk which Spain accepted freely in return for various benefits when it signed a bilateraldefense pact with the U.S. But in case of Gi- braltar we have all the risks an none of the benefits," he said. "This decision was not directec against any of the member nation of NATO, and they have been ad- vised that Spain desires that th most friendly bilateral relation be maintained with them; no] against the NATO'organization it self, which is considered by Spair a most valuable 'contribution t Western defense. "This measure was imposed b the necessity that Spain faced o defending itself against the risk and consequences resulting fron the confrontation of two militar organizations - NATO and th Warsaw Pact-to which it does no belong. WASHINGTON (I)-Plans to put the world's first global opera- tional satellite system into service next month were disclosed yes- terday. Two Tiros Operational Satel- lites-TOS-twin spacecraft with unprecedented weather-reporting capabilities, will be launched from Cape Kennedy, Fla., three weeks apart. One will provide local stations around the world with daily cloud cover pictures of their particular areas, and the other will perform daily global cloud picture cover- age. Together they will provide a complete pattern of storm de- velopment, cloud masses, ice flows, snow cover and other vital weather data on a scale pointed out by, but never possible for, the 10 Tiros experimental and developmental satellites launched to date. Abraham Schnapf, Tiros-TOS project manager for Radio Corp. of America Astros-Electronics Di- vision, Princeton, N. J., told a reporter the launchings will be a major milestone in United States space accomplishments and will satisfy a U.S. commitment to the United Nations world meteorologi- cal organization. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration confirmed that the first Tiros operational system, TOS 1, is to be launched from Cape Kennedy Feb. 2. The NASA spokesman who con- firmed these dates said that as of NEW TIROS VERSION: World Wide Satellite System To Begin Service Next Month Jan. 1, the agency has removed the security classification on launch dates on all satellites of its space sciences and applications office except for the Voyager and Lunar Orbiter spacecraft. It was learned also that after TOS 1 and TOS 2 get into orbit they probably, will be known as ESSA 1 and ESSA 2. This identi- fies them with the Commerce De- partment's Evironmental Science Services Administration. The satellites are designed for an operating lifetime of six World News Roundup By The Associated Press MOSCOW-The Soviet govern- ment reported Newcomb Mott, an American serving a Soviet prison sentence, committed suicide by cutting his throat, the United States Embassy said early this morning. Mott was convicted in Novem- ber of illegally crossing the bor- der from Norway into the Soviet Union while travelling as a tour- ist last September. ROME-Premier Aldo Moro re- signed yesterday, barely 12 hours after snipers in his own Christian Democrat party defeated him in Parliament. * *a BONN-A young West German scientist, blackmailed into spying for the Communists, blew the whistle on a Soviet espionage ring, a government spokesman said yes- terday. Disclosure that the ring, made up of five Russians, had been broken up was made Thursday. But the government will not pro- ceed against the Russians because they stole no state secrets. What few secrets they, apparently got were from private industry. * * * ALMERIA, Spain-Spanish phy- sicians doing physical checkups on persons engaged in recover- ing wreckage of a U.S. nuclear bomber said yesterday they had found slight traces of radioactivity among several Spanish Civil Guards policemen. months each, but the Tiros space- craft have done much better than that and have achieved opera- tional lifetimes averaging more than' a year each. Four Tiros satellites-Nos. 7, 8, 9 and 10- are still providing weather pic- Lures regularly. The Tiros-ESSA programs are to be followed by more advanced satellites that use a variety of sensing equipment to gain much more complete weather informa- tion than mere pictures can pro- vide. MOSCOW (A)-The Soviet Un- ion refused yesterday to try to bring North Viet Nam to a nego- tiating table with the United States. The foreign minister of Japan, Etsusaburo Shiina, asked Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin to use his influence in. Hanoi to get ne- gotiations started. But the reply was that "the So- viet Union is not directly involv- ed and therefore is not going to be a mediator," Shiina told a news conference. No Agreement "We could not reach any com- mon opinion, Shiina . said of his talks with Kosygin and Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. The Soviet refusal to become publicly involved in Viet Nam peacemaking efforts has continued for many months. The last sim- ilar effort to break through the refusal; by British Foreign Min- ister Michael Stewart on a visit here in early December, met with a similarly stony response. Diplomatic observers here have seen two probable reasons for this Soviet attitude. Influence? One is that Moscow might sim- ply lack enough influence in Ha- noi to get results. The second probabletSoviet rea- son is vulnerability to Chinese propaganda attacks. Peking has accused Moscow of trying to arrange a peace in Viet Nam which would sell out the Communist cause there to the U.S. as part of a deal for Soviet- American control of the world. Some diplomatic observers be- lieve the harsh Soviet denuncia- tions of U.S. policy in Viet Nain are at least partly designed to offset such attacks and that the Soviet Union would to see a settlement it Peace Ho Soviet reticence the bombing lull is diplomats as a sig viet desire for peace At a dinner giver Shiina made a last in Viet Nam. As qi however, he made a direct role for th in negotiations. He said, accordin news agency: "The Japan recognizes th in Viet Nam run, only to the interest tries concerned, but of world peace as finds it necessary tries-parties to t] start negotiations a sible with a view settlement. -I 6I rr I $/ -7 I, 4. Mai the Darn bOpReforeI Re~tDecembert1 Enclosed find $6.00 (Check or Money Order payable to the SMichigcinension) for one 1966 MICHIGANENSIAN. We cannot Sbill you later. A receipt wil be sent when your order comes m., ' .t NAMF WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION & RETENTION EASE PRESSURE - SAVE TIME - IMPROVE CONCENTRATION You can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method You'll learn to comprehend at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual mate- rial as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-in your required reading and in the additional reading you want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READ- ING method. Thus the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading. An afternoon class and an evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY adjacent to the U. of M. campus, beginning on February 15. Be our guest at a 30-minute public DEMONSTRATION of the ACCELERATED READ- I --* ii