SUNDAY, JANUARY :15, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TEE Viet Pacification Requires Peasant Coope 'ration Is EDITOR'S NOTE: In the dreary picture of pacification efforts In South Viet Nam, one bright spot is provided by the U.S. Marines. In this final article in a series on the pacification program, Associat- ed Press reporter Peter Arnett ex- amines this hopeful innovation and its limitations. By PETER ARNETT SAIGON (JP)-"The only way to pacify Vietnam is to put a U.S. Iarine squad in every hamlet and ieep it there." This comment was not made by a boasting Marine but by an ex- perienced U.S. AID official, Earl Young, after he saw pacification programs founder in three parts of Viet Nam. Young, a tall, lean bachelor from Dunkirk, Ind., has devoted the past 10 years to the anti- Communist' struggle, working in Vietnamese provinces and on the Viet Nam desk at the AID head- quarters in Washington. Currently he is deputy Aid di- Mao Faction Strikes Back At Enemies Shanghai Regained; Uncertainty Over President Li's Fate TOKYO (1P)-Japanese reports from the Chinese capital declared that supporters of President Liu Shao-chi fought back in the con- tinuing power struggle gripping Communist China. Peking Radio, however, said yesterday that forces loyal to Mao Tse-tung dealt new blows to their foes both in army and civilian life. Japanese correspondents for Ymirui, Sankei, and the Japanese Broadcasting Co. all filed reports from Peking saying President Liu was demanding a retraction of his alleged "self-criticism" given wide publication last month. They quoted the wall posters which were being used apparently by both factions as a major pro- paganda device. A Japanese reporter in Peking said that Red army troops storm- ed a hideout of pro-Liu army of- ficers in the western China city of Lanchow and captured scores of dissidents. The correspondent quoted a wall posters as saying the raid occurred last Tuesday in the Yellow River city 700 miles west of Peking. "Black Military Elements" The wall poster reporting the Lanchw raid identified the dis- sidents as "black military ele- ments" loyal to Gen. Liu Chih- chien, the No. 2 man in charge of ideology for the army. Peking radio has spoken pre- viously of a struggle involving a. small but influential group of anti-Mao military leaders, and among the latest purge victims was Gen. Liu. Yesterday Peking radio said the pro-Mao forces had gained the upper hand in Shanghai, where earlier in the month there were. reports of labor unrest and clashes. between workers and the Red Guards. . According to the broadcast, Marshall Yeh Chien-yang, a mem- ber of the Politburo, said the Mao forces had launched "an all-out total offense against bourgeois reactionaries" and that they have begun "to score a great victory." He concedede that a handful of "those within the party who are in authority and a small number of diehards" are offering resist- ance. Pro-Mao Alliance Peking radio also said that re- volutionaries in factories, agricul- tural areas, party organizations and schools have, "joined hands in forming a pro-Mao grand alli- ance." It quoted a correspondent of Wen Jui Pao, a Shanghai news- great proletarian cultural revo- lution that had swept every sec- paper, saying the alliance has generated "a red storm of the tion of the city." The braodcast added that the pro-Mai forces in the League of Communist Youths had seized a handful of revisionists described as taking cover in the league's City Committee, but did not say when. The correspondent of the Kyodo news service in Peking reported that pro-Mao Red Guards and workers seized the took control of Peking's central radio broad- casting station, thus giving Mao's supporters a vital outlet to broad- cast rallying calls. The report had some puzzling aspects, since there had been no indication in Peking broadcasts that the pro-Mao forces were not rector in the 1st Corps region and' is credited with being the opera- ting genius behind a unique or- ganization called the Joint Co- ordinating Council. This brings together in regular meetings those who determine the pacification destiny of the 1st corps-the U.S. Marine Corps, the Vietnamese military, and the civilian U.S. missions. With no fuss, Yankee ingenuity and a high batting average as far as action goes, the council at- tempts to solve the most pressing problems of pacification logistics. Young realizes that a U.S. Mar- ine squad in every Vietnamese hamlet would amount to virtual occupation. There are approxi- mately 12,000 hamlets in the country, so the Marine Corps would be hard pressed to man them even if the idea one day were accepted. But Young, and other American officials who have seen the ef- fectiveness of 50 Marine "guinea pig" squads operating in hamlets around the marine enclaves of Hue-Phu-Bai, Da Nang and Chu Lai, are beginning to feel that in the end, when and if all other efforts fail, the U.S. military might have to do the job. The 15-man Marine squads, comprising three fire teams, a squad leader, a deputy and a Navy medic, seclude themselves within a hamlet, ostensibly "advising" the platoon of popular force per- sonnel who normally guard a semi-pacified hamlet. The objective is to train the hamlet defenders, popular force soldier recruited from the hamlet, to do the job of security on their own. Poor security has been re- sponsible in large part for the death of previous pacification programs because all the attempts The idea caught on, partic- have long talks with the village' to train the popular forces have ularly in Chu Lai, the lonely Mar- friends. The local priest told S. failed. ine enclave carved out of the sand Sgt. Gerald Lyner of Atlanta, Ga.: In the past, hamlets protected wastes of southern Quang Tin pro- "You know that some of Your pop- by a company or a battalion of vince. There are now 11 teams in ular force people might be Viet .Chu Lai, 29 teams in the Da Nang Cong." Lyner replied, "We'll con- Vietnamese troops lapsed back in- area and 10 at Phu Bai. vert them." to the hands of the Viet Cong Permission has been given to A village elder told Sgt. C. P. when the troops left. increase the teams to 70, with Soape of Dallas, Tex.: "You are The Marines intend to leave more teams scheduled for 1967. like the French, the Japanese, the each hamlet, too, when they figure The Marines squads, usually Viet Cong. You say you will leave their training mission is com- commanded by a sergeant, find when the war is over. But you will pleted. But it is significant that villagers initially shy and afraid stay, I know." no marine squads have yet been to talk with them. But the longer Soape replied, "I'm going home pulled out of hamlets, and some the Marines remain in a village, when the job is done." have been there since August 1965. the friendlier the people become. Some of the Marine squads have The concept was developed by In one hamlet the children may been hit badly by superior Viet Lt. Col. Woodrow Taylor, a bat- run up to the marines with a cry, Cong forces, so there is a need to talion commander in the Phu Bai i English, "Viet Cong tax collec- kee them in fairly secure areas, region in 1965. He beefed up Viet- tor over there," or "Viet Cong will restricting their role. namese popular force platoons try to attack tonight." Sometimes But there can be no question around his base are with Marines the information has been accu- that where they operate they give and found that the Marines got rate, and the Marines round up hamlet security, with the side ef- along fine with the Vietnamese, the Viet Cong. fect of building up the popular and security improved. The young Marines sometimes forces in the hamlet. "Our biggest need is to build the popular soldiers up to our' level, and not let ourselves drift down to theirs in this very in- depentdent, casual hamlet en- vironment that we have," Lyner said. The U.S. 25th Division has in- dividual battalions operating out of district towns in the well-pop- ulated regions west and south of Saigon, providing umbrellas of security. One 25th Infantry Battalion has the job of pacifying the area around Rach Kien, a town 25 miles southeast of Saigon. The U.S. high command has given this project top priority, but for some reason there has been no coordi- nation between the military and civilian agencies. Consequently, there is little money to use in Rach Kien for re- building the town that has fallen into ruin since it was abandoned by the government 15 months ago. All the American units conduct "festivals" and "county fairs" in which suspected villages are sur- rounded and all the men inter- rogated while the women and children are entertained with brass bands, food and candy handouts, and medical treatment. "People smile and wave when we pass through these villages again," one officer explained. The lasting effect of these programs is doubtful, however. Most American units are still mainly involved in the search for and destruction of hardcore enemy units. But as more and more hardcore enemy are destroyed, American trops are expected to move into increasing pacification work, par- ticularly in the delta. Bonn, Paris Smooth Out Differences Kiesinger, De Gaulle j Predict Harmony D Isid Between Two NationsI in th PARIS (M)-West German Chan- cellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger ended pr his visit to France yesterday with wi the satisfaction of having patched m up relations with President Char- m les de Gaulle's government. m Both F r e n c h and German va spokesmen declared themselvesj pleased with the results of Kie- us singer's trip, and spoke of a new So era in French-German coopera- us tion. va On his return to Bonn last r night, Kiesinger told newsmen: ni "We have succeeded in reactivat- ing the French-German treaty of cooperation in the spirit in which it was signed." The treaty was signed in 1963 by Konrad Ade- nauer, then chancellor, and De Gaulle. -Associated Press A TYPICAL CROWD OF more than 100,000 supporters of Mao Tse-tung in Shanghai is represent- ed in this picture, according to the Chinese news agency which released it. The banners being waved by the crowd relates the purpose of the demonstration as the "destruction of the new counter-at- tack of the burr eis reactionarv line-" mt~n ,fl Wflt *~~a ~flO * ~ S~f~fl *A* "' )ECISIVTE IN HOUSE VOTES: Southern Democrats Envision Powerful Independent Bloc WASHINGTON (G) - Southern open the Republican - Southern formed on the status of bills- emocrats in the House are con- Democratic coalition that has long mainly President Johnson's do- lering formally organizing as an been a potent backstage factor in mestic program, decide what would dependent bloc that would hold the House legislative process. be in the best interest of the e balance of power on key votes. Envision Potent Force South and the tactics to achieve The Southerners see in the What the Southerners behind it, and negotiate directly with the esent alignment of the House, the move envision is an organiza- Republicans on occasion. th neither Republicans nor ad- tion patterned on the Democratic At this stage, the GOP attitude inistration Democrats holding a Study Group, through which lib- isn't fully known. Some Republi- ajority, a ripe opportunity to eral House Democrats seek to in- can House members probably ake their conservative views pre- fluence the leadership., would be reluctant to line up with il in the shaping of legislation. The potential membership of any formal conservative coalition. "Neither side can win without such an organization is about 50 ," says one of the principal of the 247 Democrats in the Party Caucuses uthern strategists. "It's up to House, enough to deny adminis- The approach has already been to make the most of this ad- tration forces a majority, or to used successfully this season on ntage." help the 186 Republicans make an informal basis. Last Monday The move, well into the plan- one. night, after the Democrats and ng stage, would bring into the It would keep the members in- Republicans had held party cau- _---- rcuses to prepare for the opening "~ ~of Congress Tuesday, the South- O.40MM i S u er Hea"erners held their own secret caucus. Working closely with some Re- Os sesinA merica n Drive publican leaders, they planned the OSJ istrategy that led to defeats for the Democratic leadership the SAIGON ()) - Sharp fighting 'ed putting 54 junks and barges next day on the seating of Adam ared up and down South Viet- out of action. Clayton Powell (D-NY) and the im yesterday and the big A South Vietnamese military adoption of House rules. merican drive in the "Iron Tri- spokesman said two battalions of The Southerners have played igle" pushed Communist losses Viet Cong-a force estimated at coalition politics with the GOP on yond 450 men. 400 men-overran a military post some issues for 30 years without There were no major engage- 325 miles northeast of Saigon and being formally organized. For ents reported but the U.S. and the defending platoon of 30 Pop- most of that time, they had the etnamese commands listed many ular Force militiamen pulled out. canny leadership of Rep. Howard nall clashes and these other The spokesman said the militia- W. Smith (D-Va). As chairman velopments: men dispersed and he had no re- of the Rules Committee and as a -Two U.S. planes went down port on casualties. At last report, master of parliamentary maneu- combat, one over North Viet- the post was still in Communist vers, Smith was a powerful force 3m and the other in the south, hands. ' by himself and 111. prestige among -A Norwegian motor ship and Elsewhere, however, South Viet- the Southerners was such that U.S. Navy minesweeping boat namese troops reported killing 38 most would go along at a nod lided in a river 30 miles south- Red troops in four small clashes. from him. st of Saigon and the Navy boat U.S. Marines operating in the Need for Organization nk with the loss of three of her northern provinces of South Viet-r ven-man crew. nam reported killing 74 of the But Smith is gone, defeated by -U.S. B52 heavy bombers struck enemy in a series of light skirm- a younger man after 36 years in a suspected concentration of ishes and with artillery barrages. Congress, and no single Southern- orth Vietnamese troops less than In Operation' Cedar Falls, the er remaining in the House can mile south of the demilitarized week-old drive to clear out the replace him. So the talk has now ne. jungles of the Iron Triangle 20 turned toward organization. -Bad weather continued to to 30 miles north of Saigon, U.S. If such an organization should amper U.S. air raids over the forces counted 286 Viet Cong dead emerge, the man most often men- ommunist north but pilots at- so far, 64 captured and an addi- tioned as its likely leader is Rep. cked coastal targets and report- tional 105 who surrendered. Joe D. Waggonner Jr. (D-La). wSI ltr gCl liC1Idy II. OPPOSITION TO TAX HIKE:- Congress Begins To. Johnson's Domestic] By JACK BELL! Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - The four- day old 90th Congress already is beginning to restrict President Johnson's political options in fields likely to have an impact on the 1968 elections. Although the President obvious- ly foresaw many of the difficulties that lie ahead, he is represented as somewhat surprised by the controversial reaction to his tax increases and Social Security pro- posals. Congress apparently is going to wait several months to gauge the progress of the economy before deciding whether to grant his re- quest for a 6 per cent surcharge on corporate and most individuals' income tax payments. This delay is not calculated to encourage the independent Fed- eral Reserve Board to hasten ac- tions which would ease the tight money situation. The board may be inclined to wait and see what Congress does before it makes loan money much easier to come by. Wrapped up in this is the course of the construction indus- try which has been pinched back by interest rates higher than those which have prevailed during any modern Democratic adminis- tration. The White House is more worried about this segment of the economy than any other at this point. Opposition Grows But there is some hard-core op- position to any tax increase. In the Senate, for example, it is op- posed by Chairman Russell B. Long (D-La) of the Senate Fi- nance Committee. He has vigorous support in this position from Sens. Vance Hartke (D-Ind), Herman. E. Halmadge (D-Ga), and John J. Williams (R-Del), all members of his com- mittee. Johnson evidently assumed that Congress would go along with his proposal for a 20 per cent increase in Social Security benefits. In the customary course of benefits, it would be safe to assume that a politically minded Congress would jump at the opportunity to vote more money for the elderly and the disabled. But the matter of financing these expanded benefits is thel subject of deep controversy with- in the committees which will handle the legislation. The Social Security payroll tax now is scaled to reach a maximum of around 11 per cent on employer and worker over the years. John- son's proposals -including a $70 monthly minimum payment to beneficiaries-could carry this be- yond 13 per cent, according to the best Capitol Hill estimates. ' Republicans advocating the $70 minimum-which Johnson has op- posed in the past-want to dip in- to general revenues to finance it. This is the position also of Sens. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) and Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass). Deficit Woes If even, a part of Social Security is thus financed, it would put pressure on Johnson's budget and possibly force the President into a considerably larger deficit than the $8.1 billion he forecast for the year beginning July 1. That deficit took into account the $4.5- billion tax increase he asked. Any threat of a higher deficit would be an automatic signal for even greater spending cuts than the White House now anticipates Continental Cooperation Though it was clear there were major limitations to this coopera- tion. France and Germany agreed - eto put their major differences R estrict aside and work in areas where R cprogress was possible. One of the differences is the role of the United States in Eu- Cl icie0s 1rope as seen from Bonn and Paris. The German view is that U.S. presence in Europe is necessary will be made by a Congress that for stability. De Gaulle has been is reading the November election working to diminish U.S. influence results as a mandate for economy. on the Continent in the name of These cuts could affect the a "European Europe." whole range of "Great Society" Plan of Action programs, pinching them down Spokesmen said De Gaulle and and possibly scuttling some of Kiesinger pigeonholed this dispute them. and agreed on the following The feeling at the beginning of points: the 90th Congress thus is that at -That France, on. the basis of the end of it next year Johnson its courtship of Eastern Europe, may have relatively few fresh do- would plead the cause of German mestic accomplishments to cite in reunification with the Soviet Un- his expected bid for a second elec- ion and Germany's Communist tive term. neighbors. fl na Ar an be Vi, sm de In na a co ea sa se at Nc a zo ha Cc ta World Neu By The Associated Press MOSCOW-A young American sentenced to three years in a Soviet labor camp, Buel Ray Wortham Jr., was released yester- day on 20,000 rubles-$22,222.22- bail pending an appeal to the Russian Federation S u p r e m e Court. A Leningrad court granted bail, the U.S. Embassy announced after its consular officer, Harlan G. Moen, had telephoned from Len- ingrad. Wortham was convicted last month of three counts of selling dollars illegally on the Leningrad black market and of stealing a statue from his Leningrad hotel. NAIROBI, Kenya - Fossilized remains of a pygmy-sized man who lived 20 million years ago have been discovered at diggings in two areas of Kenya, a promi- nent prehistorian said yesterday. Dr. Louis Leakey said the find it- is Roundup has reinforced the theory that the family of man was separated from its cousin, the ape, many millions of years earlier than previously was believed. Named the Kenyapitheous Afri- cans, the creature lived on meat and vegetable matter and showed many manlike characteristics not found in the ape. HAMBURG-Cowles Communi- cations Inc. will bring a legal ac- tion against the West German. magazine Der Stern over publica- tion of William Manchester's "The Death of a President" its editor- in-chief William Attwood said yesterday. He announced the decision in a statement after meeting Stern Editor Henri Nannen Friday night to try to persuade him to have certain portions of the German serialization cut. Nannen said after the meeting no cuts would be made. U U vw1 UNION-LEAGUE CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL '67 AND JOHN VARTON WOLGUMOT PRESENTS THE P.A.P. REPERTORY COMPANY in a reading of 'PATA PHYSICAL POETRY AUDITORIUM C ANGELL HALL JANUARY 18 and 19 8:00 P.M. FREE FIi III UNION-LEAGUE S420 Maynard Street Circulation 1-4 p.m., 764-0558 Circulation Complaints 9-11 a.m., 764-0558 C,4 "i 1)fiIf_1 n m 7AAAnA7 CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL PRES ENTS [L IATHBONE BASI IaII Ii i