SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREN SATURDAY, APRIL 9,1966 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY ow Rhodesia Revolution Questions White Rule SALISBURY, Rhodesia (W) - Rhodesia's bloodless revolution raises an issue much broader than the question of "one man, one vote." It concerns the future of the white man in the most developed, most dynamic part of the conti- nent. This area includes Rhodesia, South Africa and Portugal's terri- tories of Mozambique and Angola -all ruled by white minorities. It is nearly five months since Prime Minister Ian Smith threw off Britain's silken yoke and pro- i laimed Rhodesia an independent nation. Britain clamped almost complete trade sanctions and an oil embargo on Rhodesia. Many other nations joined in the sanc- tions under British pressure. Not a single nation has recog- nized the Smith government. But Smith is more firmly in power than before the declaration of in- dependence. In essence, Britain has demand- ed that the Smith government guarantee unimpeded progress by Rhodesia's four million blacks to- ward the goal of a black govern- ment in Rhodesia. Smith has pledged to the 225,- 000 white Rhodesians that there wll be no African nationalist gov- ernment in his lifetime. South Africa has been provid- ing the gasoline and petroleum products with which Rhodesia is beating the oil embargo. Oil stor- age tanks are being built in Beira, Mozambique, so Rhodesia's pipeline to the coast will be reac- tivated. If no tankers break through the embargo, which Britain is polic- ing with planes and ships, South Africa will seek to meet Rho- desia's requirements. South Afri- ca also can supply many other products imported by Rhodesia be- fore independence. Shock to Economy There is no question that Rho- desia's economy has taken an enormous shock from the sanc- tions. Almost everybody here ex- pects the situation to grow much worse before the corner is turn- ed. But they expect also to turn the corner. One professional man who op- poses the Smith government sug- gests that the first sign of a crack would be depreciation of the currency-possibly in another six months. But it is in the interest of South Africa and Portugal to see that the Rhodesian currency remains sound. Whatever damage sanctions do to Rhodesia's comparatively so- phisticated economy, Smith and his followers contend it could be no worse than the havoc that they say an immature and unprepared black government would create. Wilson under Fire Prime Minister Harold Wilson has been under heavy pressure from African members of the Brit- ish Commonwealth to crush the Smith government quickly and violently if necessary. With sanc- tions failing, he will face several alternatives if his party wins Thursday's election in Britain. He can recognize the de facto government in Rhodesia and talk with Smith. He can use force, a costly and not very promising mil- itary operation which, if success- ful, would transfer Smith's racial Nevertheless, South African pol- problem to Britain's shoulder. iticians are saying that South Af- He can let the problem go to the rica's frontier has moved north United Nations where mandatory from the Limpopo River to the sanctions against Rhodesia might Zambezi. be voted. This could force South Portgual already has 100,000 Africa and Portugal openly to troops in Mozambique and Angola Rhodesia's side in defiance of the to meet the threat of guerrillas United Nations. war directed from Tanzania. Rho-, It could also imperil Britain's desian police have seized Russian investment in South Africa. and Chinese arms and arrested . 1(hodesian Africans who have It is not a happy choice forRhesianedfinso a e Prime Minister Wilson.I been trained in Moscow and Pe- king. badly needs the Rhodesian rail- somewhat unreal here. In any way to haul copper to Portuguese case Rhodesians don't state their ports in Africa. It needs Kariba doubts for publication. It is a power for the copper mines. And crime to spread statements which it still has found no alternative might create "alarm and despond- source for the textiles, building ency." materials and other products it always has imported from Rho- Newspapers are censored. The Zovernment-controlled radio seems I Whites in Southern Africa do not take seriously the threats of: the Organization of African Unity to act again-t Rhodesia. The re- cent series of army coups in Af- rica and the instability of many other governments appear to rule: out any concerted action, even if the means for action were avail- able. Neighboring Zambia was held. back on what was advertised as the really crushing blow against Rhodesia - a complete cutoff of trade with her most natural trad- ing partner. Zambia still needs the 700,000 tons of Rhodesian coal it imports annually for copper processing. It desi.j Y 1a1i -tVa u1 1 U1 G aJ ia. to accentuate favorable news, no No Surface Changes matter how trivial. On the surface, life in Rhodesia Tobacco, kingpin of Rhodesia's has not changed. There are no top- economy, is coming into Salisbury pled statues here. A life-size paint- from the farms for auction. The ing of Queen Elizabeth hangs in auctions will be secret, with many the Rhodesian Parliament. The of the customary buyers absent supermarkets, the drive-ins, the and even the growers banned from night clubs flourish. Gasoline is the auction floors. rationed, but nobody complains The government has created a Rhodesian-South African "friend- corporation to take over future ship societies" are blooming. disposal any part of the crop The statements from far off not sold at auction. Nobody will London about the imminent fall of know how they are getting along the Smith government sound] with it. Officials Dismayed Civil WASHINGTON oP)-Behind its careful statements, the Johnson administration is in deep dismay over South Viet Nam's internal turmoil and the apparent U.S. inability to steer it to a construc- tive end. So far, Washington strategists said yesterday, the domestic tur- bulence has not cut deeply into the massive war effort against Communist guerrillas. But the military campaign is bound to be affected in time, and the civil un- rest is now entering its fifth week. Some important allies already are beginning to have doubts about sending in more help to a coun- try where an internal power strug- gle pervades the home front. For instance, South Korea is report- Unrest In ed having second thoughts about dispatching another 20,000, troops to South Viet Nam now. U.S. officials' answer to such doubts is that plans for the. mili- tary campaign are staying put and the political turmoil is going to work itself out-although these officials don't profess to know when. Nor are they willing to guess how long the political disor- ders can continue without having a 'major impact on the military effort. Public Opposition Of even greater concern to the administration would be a ground- swell in U.S. public opposition to sending GI's to fight and die for a distant people whose leaders seem snarled in politics-as-usual; including distinctly anti-Ameri- can overtones. The Communists have been as- serting right along that the Amer- ican public eventually will force a U.S. pullout. U.S. policymakers find them- selves boxed in by frustrating lim- its on their choices. On the one hand, the United States is 100 per cent committed to staying in South Viet Nam as long as needed to prevent a Com- munist takeover. On the other, it cannot step in to rule a friendly country as it could a defeated enemy such as Germany or Ja- pan after World War II. Thus the U.S. choice is limited to ways of pushing ahead in the war effort with whatever govern- mental machinery is available at Saigon; The very depth of the U.S. com- mitment is one of the factors al- Viet lowing the current political ma- neuvering by South Vietnamese factions, in the opinion of U.S. analysts. With the United States pledged to Viet Nam's defense with 230,000 troops there so far and the antiguerrilla drive going fairly well, the Vietnamese politi- cians are said to feel freer to pursue their own goals than if the Communists were about to take over. The U.S.-urged move by the mil- itary Ky regime toward a consti- tutional government, it is believed here, also has played a part in setting off the jockeying for po- sition by the rival Vietnamese groups. The State Department's state- ment Thursday that "the solution to political problems in Viet Nam is something for the Vietnamese Over Nam themselves to work out" represents a U.S. official desire rather than the practicalities of the immedi- ate situation. Like a declaration that the goal of U.S. foreign pol- icy is peace, such wording does not say much about what is go- ing on at the moment. It is an open secret that Am- bassador Henry Cabot Lodge and other U.S. representatives in Sai- gon have been working overtime trying to get the feuding politi- cians together on some govern- mental process that will have broad popular support and thus lay a solid foundation for the long fight against the Commu- nists. The United States at this stage is still behind Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's regime, embraced by President Johnson at Honolulu in February. U.S. planes flew his troops to Da Nang to face dissi- dents, and American military po- lice helped the government against demonstrators in the capital yes- terday. Yet one of the limitations on U.S. involvement in the internal strife is the boomerang effect Washington experts believe. Crit- ics of the Ky leadership already contend it is bought by the Unit- ed States, and each further ap- pearance of U.S. aid risks denun- ciation of "outside interference." Johnson's advisers figure that no matter what kind of constitution-k al or election procedure may be worked out, the backbone of real power in Saigon will remain for a long time to come with the mili- tary leaders. This is because the army has the real physical pow- er, has exercised it in the past, and a genuinely civilian assump- tion of control cannot develop in a country such as Viet Nam over- night. DISPLAY AMERICAN H-BOMB AN AMERICAN HYDROGEN BOMB was publically displayed for the first time yesterday aboard the USS Petral. The bomb was recovered yesterday after being lost in the Mediterranean since Jan- uary. Officials on the scene are, from left to right, Antonio Vellia, a Spanish atomic scientist, Span- ish Gen. Arturo Touzet, Rear Adm. William S. Guest, USN, and Maj. Delmar Wilson, USAF. 23RD SESSION: Soviet Communist Congress Produces No Major Changes Vietnamese Riots Dim Negotiation Hopes AP News Analysis A year ago, President Johnson made his Baltimore offer of un- conditional discussions for peace in Viet Nam. Almost simultaneously the Communists laid down their all-or-nothing terms. Develop- ments this week may have made the prospect of a negotiated peace more distant than ever. The Communists cannot see a prospect of producing against the Americans a military Dien Bien Phu such as the victory which ended French rule. But perhaps they now see a bright prospect for a political Dien Bien Phu. Rioting in South Viet Nam probably has done incalculable damage to whatever slim hopes there might have been for an ap- proach to the Communist North. These demonstrations, threaten- ing the military committee gov- ernment in Saigon, could persuade the Communist side that even with U.S. military progress against the Viet Cong, the Communists can win the war on the political front. The Communists over the past decade have infiltrated virtually every organization and element in South Viet Nam, so they undoubt- edly have influence among the mobs and the Buddhists who have inspired the demonstrations. The eruptions, in fact, recall the confident words of the Com- munists last year, just after Presi- dent Johnson spoke. It was then that Nguyen Huu Tho, chairman of the National Liberation Front which is the Viet Cong's political organization, announced that the war in the South was entering "a new phase, a decisive phase, the phase of the most difficult and acute struggle." This was quickly echoed in Hanoi and elaborated. "New conditions" were develop- ing, said the Hanoi press, and it was time to "cleverly associate the use of armed and political forces.,, There would be two forms of struggle-armed struggle by guer- rillas in the countryside and "poli- Saigon Hit by Anti-U.S. Rioting f tical urprisings by the city people." This would "attack the enemy's rear, shake and weaken him and prevent him from leading a calm life in a safe rear, prevent him from using his whole strength." To this, a North Vietnamese strategist, Maj. Gen. Hoang Van Thai, added in the journal Hoc Tap that an effort should be made in South Viet Nam to make the U.S. rear "permanently unstable politically." Directed Toward Young People The propaganda appeals were directed specifically to intellec- tuals, stueents and ±oung peoaple in general. It is the young people who have been pouring into the streets to riot. It would be surprising if this week's events did not have the effect of confirming the Com- munists in their political-military strategy and of stiffening their op- position to any concessions which might lead to a conference table. If there have been brief signs of weakening in the North in recent months, these are likely to vanish now. The Communists again are stonily inflexible behind the four-point stand laid down to the North's National Assembly a year ago. Communist Terms Those terms were withdrawal of all U.S. troops and material and an end to acts of war against the North; pending reunification, a ban on any alliance by either side with a foreign power; settlement in South Viet Nam "in accordance with the program" of the Libera- tion Front, which simply meant on Communist terms; and reunifica- tion without foreign interference. MOSCOW (P)-The 23rd con- gress of the Soviet Communist party ended yesterday and was described by a ranking diplomat in Moscow as "the dullest in Soviet history." The congress produced no rad- ical change in leadership or policy. The Politburo wound up with 11 members instead of the 12 who manned its predecessor, the ruling Presidium. One was a new member. Two old Bolsheviks were dropped in what appeared more retirement than demotion. The congress denounced the United States for its policy in Viet Nam, but some diplomatic sources in Moscow saw this as more face- saving than truculence. It may have been done, these sources said, to avoid forcing the 86 foreign Communist delegations present to face a showdown choice between Communist China and the Soviet Union. The congress began and ended with, the Moscow-Peking dispute apparently irreconcilable. Leonid I. Brezhnev went out of his way-as did other leaders-to avoid direct criticism of the Com-, munist Chinese. Peking had re- jected an invitation to the con- gress. No Details on Five-Year Plan The congress ended without shedding any light on details of the Soviet Union's new five-year (Continued from Page 1) American military police com- plicated the work of U.S. re- porters. The MP's said they were under orders from the U.S. Em- bassy to move all American news- men from the streets. In one case they drew pistols to keep news- men from scenes of violence. A high official at the embassy said the orders were issued at the request of Vietnamese authorities to keep Americans out of "cord- oned areas." He said the Vietna- mese wanted to keep people away from demonstrations and riots. It appeared American news me- dia alone were so restricted. Vietnamese security f o r c e s checked credentials and passed Vietnamese photographers in and out of the restricted areas. French correspondents and other foreign nations also were able to move about after satisfying U.S. mili- tary police that they were not Americans. A group of at least 1000 demon- strators, massing near the Bud- dhist Institute, handed around leaflets demanding the resignation of Ky and the withdrawal of American forces from Viet Nam. They launched another march toward the downtown sector, but security forces pushed them back. In the streets in front of the in- stitute they overturned a Vietna- mese civilian vehicle and set it afire. Da Nang and Hue remained cen- ters of northern unrest. Radio Da Nang, in the hands of an antigovernment committee, urged the people to withhold sup- port of any Vietnamese regime "influenced" by the United States. Issue Statement On the other hand a group of officers issued a statement say- ing Ky's government no longer has the people's support and will col- lapse, but they pledged to stand by the country's allies, "especially the United States," in the fight against the Communists. Two Skyraiders of the Vietna- mese air force, which is under Ky's command, buzzed Da Nang for three hours in the morning despite protests from the 1st Corps commander, Maj. Gen. Nguyen Can Chuan. U.S. Protests Delay on Rhodesia economic plan for 1966-70. The plan already is months behind schedule and is not expected to be published before most of the first year it covers is over. The two last old Bolsheviks, former Soviet Presidents Anastas I. Mikoyan, 70, and Nikolai V. Shvernik, 77, were retired as ex- pected from the ruling party Polit- buro. The only new member elect- ed to that body, Arvid Y. Pelshe, 67, built a career on secret police work before taking over as party chief of Soviet Latvia. The new Politburo was elected by the party's new Central Com- mittee at a separate meeting. The Central Committee itself was elected at the congress in secret session Thursday. It consists of 195 members, 20 more than the previous Central Committee, and 165 candidate or nonvoting mem- bers, an increase of 10. Drop Khrushchev The new Central Committee dropped Nikita S. Khrushchev from membership. Past economic failures were blamed during the congress largely on Khrushchev's flamboyant leadership. His suc- cessors described their approach to Soviet problems and the mood of the congress as "businesslike." Call for Unity Soviet leaders called for Com- munist unity behind Viet Nam and supported Communist unity meet- ings which Peking opposes. Some diplomats here believe the Rus- sians picked up points with for- eign delegations attending by pre- senting a face of sweet reason to China's continued criticism. UNITED NATIONS W)--The United States yesterday rapped the African president of the UN Se- curity Council for delay in calling an urgent council meeting on Rho- desia requested by Britain. But Ambassador Moussa Leo Keita of Mali, former headmaster, stood firm under considerable pressure and set the meeting for 10:30 a.m. today. Britain had ask- ed for a meeting a 4 p.m. Thurs- day, seeking authority to use force if necessary to prevent oil ship- ments from reaching the rebel- ruled Central African country. Keita, the council president for April, announced the meeting after a talk of more than an hour with Secretary-General U Thant. His decision came after a morn-, ing meeting of eight of the 15 council members, including U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg. All eight took part in an unprece- dented "sit-in" in the' council .chambers Thursday aimed at forc- ing Keita to call a meeting. They did not go into the council cham- ber itself yesterday, but conferred in rooms adjacent to the chamber. Britain asked for the meeting to consider a resolution which would give British forces authority to use force to prevent the Greek tanker Joanna V from unloading 18,000 tons of oil in Beria, Por- tuguese Mozambique, for pumping into landlocked Rhodesia. A U.S. statement released at the United Nations and in Washington described as unprecedented Keita's refusal to call the meeting Thurs- day. It said that under the rules' of procedure he does not have arbitrary or unfettered discretion in fixing the time for a meeting. The statement added that under the rules, the meeting cannot be "unduly delayed, or obstructed even by a majority of the mem- bers, much less by a mere minor- ity. Failure to comply with the procedures and established prac- tices of the Security Council will have serious implications for its effectiveness in this and future cases, and is a cause of great con- cern to our government." world News Roundup By The Associated Press CAPE KENNEDY-A star-gaz- ing satellite packing 10 telescopes rocketed into successful orbit yes- terday and scientists hope it will open a new era in astronomy. From its position high above the earth, the Orbiting Astromonical Observatory is to study secrets of the stars and perhaps uncover clues to the origin of the universe. The satellite was hurled sky- ward at 2:36 p.m. by an Atlas- Agena rocket. The Agena upper stage achieved a preliminary orbit of about 100 to 500 miles and, after coasting through space for 50 min- utes, restarted its engine to cir- cularize the orbit and kicked OAO free. SAN 'ANTONIO - President1 Johnson proposed yesterday an in- crease in Social Security benefits for all recipients and a new pro- gram to help pay for dental care for youngsters. Without specifying amounts or total costs, Johnson said he will ask the next congressional session to: "increase insurance benefits, across the board, for 21 million beneficiaries: the aged, the dis- abled, the widows and orphans - including an increase in the monthly minimum, the monthly maximum and total family bene- fits." vs CINEMA II presents SPECIAL EASTER /EEKEND SHOWING -- 6 I!' I, HITCHCOCK'S Psycho He said too that medicare not be just for people over "That's where we started." need 65- #'.i h I C !iI I l