SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1$67 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5,1967 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ics Vietnam: Communists Resume Guerrilla Tact EDITOR'S NOTE: How has the increase in American firepower and troop strength affected the stance of the Communist enemy in Viet- nam? What does the enemy strate- gy seem to be? Peter Arnett, AP correspondent who won the Pulit- zer Prize for, his dispatches from Vietnam, produced this analysis aft- er visiting key areas of the coun- try and talking to senior officials. By PETER ARNETT SAIGON (k?) - Overwhelming firepower and endless allied in- fantry campaigning have forced the Vietnamese Communists into a hitter reappraisal of war strategy. They cannot expect another Dien Bien Phu, the successful battle that clinched victory against the French in 1954. The Communist "war of move- ment" that evolved from the guer- rilla actions of the early 1960's has been stopped short by massed allied forces. U.S. military strategists and war analysts see that as the recent pattern. But simply, the Communists are hurting and are seeking ways to ease the pain. But they are far from giving up the fight, Gen. William C. Westmoreland and his field commanders acknowledge. The Communist cure appears to be a return, in part, to the suc- cessful days of guerrilla warfare. The Communist hierarchy de- parted from the guerrilla phase in mid-1965 when it was decided to slug it out toe to toe with the new- ly arriving American troops. To build up their battalions and regiments, the Communists bled hamlet a n d village guerrilla groups. The war erupted into vi- cious fighting. American dead rose to as many as 240 in one week during the Ia Drang Valley battles of November 1965. North Vietnamese regiments! streamed from Laos and Cambo- dia, and through the demilitarized zone. The bloody battles of 1966 left more than 5,000 American dead, but the Communist momen- tum was stopped. The war now has taken on a seemingly bland appearance. The last major battles were fought during Operation Attleboro in Communist War Zone C northwest of Saigon in November. What are the Communist tactics now? "They're digging in," asserts Maj. Gen. William E. DePuy of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division, as relentless an antagonist as any commander in the country. DePuy believes his division has driven the enemy main-force regi- ments out of their enclaves around Binh Duong Province north ofl Saigon, once the hammerhead ofI the Communist push against Sai- gon. Hiding in the jungled foothills of Lam Dong and Quang Duc provinces, DePuy says, their units "are digging in for their survival, digging in below the seven-foot mark. They know that unless they dig deep we can get them with B52s." DePuy believes the Communists face major problems with their guerrillas. This is supported by re- ports in North Vietnamese news- papers. By bleeding guerrilla units in 1966 to stock up the main-force battalions the Viet Cong risked losing control of the third of Viet- nam's population they are credited with controlling. As it was, fleeing refugees and the forcible resettle- ment of population from the Iron Triangle, Zone C, and the moun- tain valleys of Binh Duong Prov- ince drained the Communists of a million possible supporters in ing main forces into hidden re- 1966. doubts and jungle sanctuaries. The more vigorously the allied They argue that the hidden bat- units push, the fewer people the talions and regiments will be free Communists will have to recruit as to move out and strike when they guerrillas. feel they have the advantage, and DePuy claims that the Commun- then melt back into their hideouts ists planned to recruit - --a guerrilla warfare on a huge fssplne torcut 6,000 guer- scale rillas in his operational region in The attrition forced by the guer- 1966 and got only 600. A similar rillas would be sufficient to keep situation exists in other areas the main allied forces occupied, where U.S. forces are deploye they argue.j .yd There are some truths in those To retain control over the pop- arguments. Although there havej ulation, the Communists may be been no major battles so far in forced to break down some of 1967, U.S. combat losses have been their main-force battalions into much higher than a year ago. In guerrilla groups and infiltrate January last year, 173 U.S. troops them back into hamlets and vil- were killed, in January this year lages. DePuy sees this -as a re- 465. Thousands of American troops versal of Communist strategy, and could die in Vietnam in 1967 even potentially disastrous for them. without major battles. Other analysts, however, see There seems little doubt enemy realistic Communist thinking be- morale has been badly shaken by hind the current strategy of mov- firepower. One million rounds of allied artillery are hammering at enemy positions each month, plus tremendous air raids, mortarings and offshore bombardments from U.S. 7th Fleet destroyers. The Communists possibly see guerrilla warfare, fought at the hamlet level, as the best way to avoid this avalanche. What does Westmoreland intend to do about the enemy military posture? "More of the same," the U.S. commander says. He wants more American troops spread over more of the countryside, with increasing firepower. Westmoreland argued that with more troops he can force the enemy into mountain redoubts and across the borders into Cambodia and Laos, bottle them up permanently, and go about the job of cleaning up the guerrillas. Although guerrillas in allied- occupied regions are on the run, the Mekong River delta is still flooded with them. Only a few battalions of Ameri- cans are so far in the delta. The Vietnamese high command would like to see two divisions of Ameri- cans there. Routing the guerrilla infrastruc- ture will pose difficult problems but the allied command is not overly worried about the prospect. The actions of the enemy in recent weeks, the documents cap- tured and the propaganda stream- ing from Hanoi to the Communist soldiers in South Vietnam indicate that the Communists believe the attempt to defeat Americans in battle has failed. This is reassuring to the allied commanders. The problems now are to .seek out the enemy, keep him on the run and suffer as few casualties as possible in doing it. Report Hanoi Demands IN PEKING: Liu Humiliated by Red Guards To Demonstrate Mao's Power C omplete Halt to Boll See No Repl tTo John son Statement U.S. Advisor Says Peace Probes Now At 'Delicate Phase' By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (M) - A hig government source reported yes. terday Hanoi is sticking to de- mands for a permanent halt i North Vietnam bombings 'despite President Johnson's offer to "g more than halfway" to end the war. This source said so far there had been no indications in subse- quent delicate diplomatic prob- ings of any Communist response to Johnson's Thursday news con- ference statement that the United States recognizes both sides wil have to make "certain conces- sions" to get peace. He did not foreclose, however the possibility that secret talks kmay yet bring some kind of re- sponse that could be pursued to- ward an ultimate break in Hanoi's interansigence. Meanwhile, an Indian news agency said Saturday night North Vietnam is "understood to have broadly indicated to India through the latter's mission in Hanoi that if the United States were to un- conditionally stop the bombing of North Vietnam some response would follow." It commented: "There is a feel- ing of disappointment in respon- sible quarters here that the U.S. administration has not reacted to the North Vietnamese gesture." Presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow also spoke yesterday of "an extremely interesting and delicate phase" of diplomatic peace probes in the wake of John- son's latest statement. Rostow added it is not clear to him whether this effort to deter- mine whether Hanoi is seriously interested in peace talks "might turn out to be a negotiating pro- cess." But like the other source Ros- tow said nothing has happened yet to warrant belief that Hanoi is making a serious effort to start negotiations. Administration officials believe that North Vietnam is hurting sorely from the air attacks and from military defeats in South Vietnam. Although they have no evidence yet to support it, they predict the turmoil in Communist China soon may affect Hanoi's supply line. In the face of these conditions, they say that in third-party con- versations up to now the Hanoi regime has given no sign it is backing away from its position that there must be an uncondi- tional and permanent end to the bombing before it will even con- sider going to the negotiation table. This is a rather recent stiff- ening of the line for the North Vietnamese took in August 1965 when they spoke only of a suspen- sion of the bombing. Neither have they given any hints thus far of making what Johnson called "a really serious effort" toward negotiations by offering anything in return for a TOKYO (A) - Mao Tse-tung's Red Guards have submitted Presi- dent Liu Shao-chi and his wife to humiliation in Peking, forcing him to recite from the book of Mao's thoughts while standing on a table in a government park. The de- velopment, as reported by Peking D oubt alks 'all posters, suggested Mao held the upper hand, at least in the capital. To Aid W ar At the same time, Chinese Com- munist news media reported Mao met a visiting Albanian delegation.: etlen}puresumably in Peking. A Yugoslav- Selem e dispatch said photographs of Mao showed him looking well. Kosygin oDics Whereabouts a Mystery K i To Discuss The exact whereabouts of both East-West Relations Mao and Liu had been a mystery On Trade in London to the outside world for months. Liu had been reported to have MOSCOW (P)-Some diplomats set up anti-Mao headquarters at Shihkiachwang, about 190 miles here view prospects for any Viet-I south of Peking. There had been nam breakthrough as dim during other reports that he was under Premier Alexei N. Kosygin's visit virtual house arrest in Peking. to Britain tomorrow, despite some The wall posters and the reports} London optimism. on the Albanian functions in- Thd lomts h igdicated both Mao and Liu may be These diplomats have higher in the capital now. hopes that Kosygin's visit will de- ineaalynow. velop further East-West trade, cJapan ese anystssaid the ac velo futhe Eat-Wst rad, !count of the humiliation of Liu European detente and progress on make it appear that his days are disarmament questions. numbered as China's president, a But they paint a rather gloomy post Mao is seeking to regain after picture of the prospects for any losing it in 1958. spectacular breakthrough toward Firmly Entrenched a Vietnam peace. But this would not necessarily Soviet Preoccupation mean the end of the anti-Mao Part of the reason is the current movement across the nation, for Soviet preoccupation with rela- many of Liu's proponents are be- tions with Communist China and lieved still firmly entrenched. The Peking correspondent for West Germany, which could pre- the Yugoslav news agency Tan- jug said the fact that Mao turned out for the Albanians indicated his leading role in Chinese events was indisputable. y In another development, For- eign Minister Chen Yi was report- ed by the official New China News Agency in a Peking dispatch to have told a Ceylonese reception in Peking that the power struggle now under way was a safeguard against war with the United States. 'U.S. Imperialism' The agency quoted him as say- ing: "Vietnam is at present the focal point of the struggle against U.S. imperialism." Mao's supporters claimed mean- while, that they had seized con- trol of Taiyuan, capital of Shansi Province, and that a revolutionary committee had been set up Jan. 28. Earlier, Radio Peking indicated reported seizures by Maoist groups in Shanghai and Taiyuan were shaky. Pro-Mao propaganda out- lets repeated urgent calls to form a "great alliance" and warned of the possibility of a great split in the movement if the Mao camp didn't get rid of its erroneous at- titude and dissension. Liu supporters, on the other hand, were reported holding out and waging resistance in several provincial areas. Kremlin Threatens Chinese For Harassing of Diplomats MOSCOW ()-Asserting Soviet patience was wearing thin, the Kremlin fired off its second pro- test in a week to Communist China yesterday, demanding a halt to demonstrations and harassment of diplomats at the Soviet Em- bassy in Peking. It threatened to take steps to safeguard Soviet cit- izens and interests in China. Diplomats in Moscow speculated the Kremlin might be preparing some kind of new move since Peking had ignored previous pro- tests over the past nine days of anti-Soviet demonstrations in the Chinese capital. The diplomats said the Soviet Union might recall WHILE NO HEADWAY on the diplomatic front has been made known, the Viet with fierce fighting on the ground and in the air. -Associated Press nam war continues r Bombing Raids North of Hanves 0l SAIGON, South Vietnam (P)- U.S. B52 jets blasted three times' yesterday at enemy holdings in the Quang Ngai sector, on the coast 320 miles northeast of Sai- gon, after Communist troops had inflicted heavy casualties on an 11-man Marine patrol south- of Quang Ngai. The. quick blows by the eight- engine Stratofortresses came as briefing officers disclosed fresh American fighter-bomber strikes north of Hanoi and Haiphong. These were executed through in- tense flak Friday after two weeks of bad weather that limited raids largely to North Vietnam's sea front and southern panhandle. While short, scattered engage- ments marked ground fighting, smoke poured up from explosions and fires, believed touched off by Viet Cong saboteurs, at the U.S. Army's sprawling Long Binh munitions depot, 14 miles north of Saigon. Spokesmen said two Amer- icans had been injured. Destroy Quarters The U.S. Command also re- ported that a Viet Cong demoli- tion charge, set off in the night, had destroyed the quarters of an American military police company at Phan Rang, on the coast 170 miles east of Saigon. Of 22 MPs in the barracks at the time, it said, 9 were wounded. Saigon briefing officers said the rainy season weather improved enough in spots over North Viet- nam Friday to let pilots pick their way to four important targets. Four flights of U.S. Air Force Thunderchiefs - totaling a dozen or more planes - hit the Thai Nguyen railroad yard, 35 miles north of Hanoi, and inflicted heavy damage. Twenty boxcars were destroyed. Tracks were ripped up inside the yard and both ends were blocked. Four other F105 flights rained 750-pounds bombs on railroad traks and antiaircraft sites near Saturday that North Vietnam's armed forces shot down four planes, two of the unmanned reconnaissance type, and captured "a number of American" pilots. There was no confirmation in Saigon. Though grund fighting in South Vietnam was limited, field reports told of action in which nearly 100 of the enemy were killed. U.S. Marines repo reans 27, Sor South Viet: quarters repo ever, in one antrarramptc )rted 29, South uth Vietnamese nam's military h 'rted a setback,1 of the govern T Qidi thro elude new Soviet initiatives on Vietnam at this time. Riotous week-long Chinese dem- onstrations at the Soviet Embassy in Peking, and Chinese charges of Ko- alleged police beatings of Chinese 34- students and diplomats here ap- head- pear to be moving the two coun- how- tries toward a break in relations. ment At the same time East European mili India Faces Starvation Despite Food from U.S. its diplomats and close down the embassy temporarily. At the same time the Foreign Ministry announced that 200 wives and children of Soviet of- ficials and teachers of the Soviet school in Peking were being sum- moned home. Forty of them re- turned to Moscow yesterday. Continue Demonstrations A Tass, Soviet news agency dis- patch from Peking said pro-Mao Tse-Tung Red Guards continued their demonstrations outside the Soviet Embassy. The Soviet protest was sent off against a background of official feuding in Moscow between the Chinese Embassy and the Soviet Foreign Ministry. The crucial part of the protest said : "The government of the People's Republic of China bears the entire responsibility for possible con- sequences of the actions of lawless- ness against the Soviet Embassy and the citizens of the U.S.S.R. on the territory of the People's Republic of China." Urgent Measures The note demanded that the Chinese "take the most urgent measures to insuree the complete safety of Soviet Embassy officials' and their families" and insisted on strict punishment of Chinese responsible for the demonstrations. It called the continuous dem- onstrations "unprecedented in the history of diplomatic relations." Zamyatin said, the Soviet Union "will do everything possible to normalize and develop relations with China." engagements. is aa nree mi-n tia platoons suffered heavy casu- alties in an attack by the Viet Cong at a point in the Mekong River delta 108 miles southwest of Saigon. World News Roundup By The Associated Press ! VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI was reported yesterday to have asked older cardinals working at the Vatican to resign their posts so he could modernize the Curia. The Pope was said to have sug- gested that all cardinals over 75 consider quitting their Curia posts to make way for younger pre- lates. But he was reported to have encountered stiff resistance to his announced intention to re- form the Curia in line with rec- ommendations of the Vatican Ecumenical Council and make it more international. WASHINGTON -- Proposed ad- ditional federal standards to con- trol air pollution from new motor vehicles were announced last night by Secretary of Welfare John W. Gardner. The new standards are aimed at evaporation fumes from fuel tanks and carburetors. They would apply to all new gasoline-powered auto- mobiles and light trucks sold in this country beginning with the model year 1969. WASHINGTON - President Johnson will send Congress a special message tomorrow asking for a new "safe streets and crime control law." The White House announced yesterday the President's plans to submit the document, promised in his State of the Union address. Some of the major items which Johnson has said will be encom- passed in the proposed law are: -Contributions meeting 60 per cent of the cost of introducing the latest pplice equipment ,and tech- niques. -Federal payment of 50 per cent of the cost of building crime laboratories and police academies. Johnson also will ask for "strict controls on the sale of firearms," and new antidelinquency pro- grams. foreign ministers are due to meet [n East Berlin tomorrow to dis- cuss relations between the East bloc and West Germany. Anxious for Settlement The Soviet Union is described as anxious for a Vietnam peace settlement but unwilling to rush Hanoi to the conference 'table. Hanoi is reported apprehensive about losing ground at new peace talks. Some diplomats here express the belief the Russians want to avoid the risk of pushing Hanoi to the conference table and later accepting blame for possible Hanoi disappointments. The Soviet Union has stated re- peatedly it would not call for a new Geneva conference on Viet- nam unless Hanoi asked for one. They have given this reply to the British when asked to call such a conference. Britain and the So- viet Union are cocharimen of the conference. British spokesmen have voiced optimism on Vietnam peace pros- pects before meetings between leading British and Soviet officials. NEW DELHI tP')-Indian offi- cials have breathed a sigh of re- lief at President Johnson's an- nouncement of continued food aid, but at the same time an unrelent- ing drought is heightening the danger of eventual starvation and deaths. No sign of relief has appeared, and India's winter is beginning to give way to what will be scorching dry days ahead, without any of the usual winter rains. Reports from some hard-hit areas say that if rain does not fall in the next two weeks there will be no chance of sowing the sum- mer crop, the country's major one. Drought last fall ruined the lesser winter crop. The Bihar Relief Committee re- ported yesterday that people in some hill regions of that drought- stricken state are living on roots and grass. A report in Saturday's Times of India from Patna, Bihar's capital, said wells have begun drying up in about 24,000 villages of south Bi- har, which cover a population of 12 million people. The report said the water table is "fast receding" and government relief crews are attempting to dig deeper wells as rapidly as possible. Light army drilling rigs have been placed at the state's disposal. The United Nations and many foreign church relief organizations have rushed drilling rigs, food dis- tribution units, clothing and other aids to Bihar. A Roman Catholic relief worker coming to New Delhi from Bihar- said the incidence of death in Bihar was increasing but it was difficult to say starvation deaths were occurring. He said at this point there is a fine line between hungry people dying of disease, with its weakened bodies, and actual starvation. THE VALENTINE THAT WILL LAST FOREVER .. Give her a monogrammed CIRCLE PIN U'! i1 Michigan Union and Michigan League ann ounce OPEN PETITIONING 11 I 11 I II U- - -- - - - ___ mA ___ - . U U U ~ 4' 11