SUNDAY OCTOBER 16, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAir.P IrTTUVV. SUNDAY OCTOBER 16, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY DL f~' 'wxrn~.z' rA (UL.I1AU~LL N Br hnev Says U.S.' Fliers Set New Bomb Mission Rate Tass Reports Viets Learning in Russia To Operate MIGs 'TURNING POINT AHEAD': Johnson's Far Eastern Trip Timed Strategically for Asia By JOHN HIGHTOWER a monsoon offensive by the Corn- future developments in Viet Nan). A ssociated1 Press Special Correspondent munist forces had failed. Secretary How North Vietnamese leaders WASHINGTON - President of Defense Robert S. McNamara, will assess the election results is Johnson's trip to the Far East, be- returning Friday from strategy a wide-open question. But the ninn i uuurrwi i c s _w tAlk in S in Policy Blocks Accord Replies To Presidential Pe ace Plan Blames 'Aggression' For Weakening East- West Relationships MOSCOW ()-Leonid I. Brezh- nev agreed with President Johnson yesterday that he would like to see U.S.-Soviet relations improved but declared this was impossible so long as the United States pur- sues "aggressive war" in Viet Nam. In a speech during a Kremlin friendship meeting with Polish . leaders, the general secretary of the Soviet Communist party in ef- fect rejected an appeal by John- son in a New York speech Oct. 7 for an improvement in East-West relations. Brezhnev's speech was a direct answer to Johnson's speech to the National Conference of Editorial Writers in New York. Johnson's themes were keeping the Western alliance strong, increasing West- ern unity, and working for an end to the East-West division in Europe. "If the United States wants to develop mutually profitable rela- tions with the Soviet Union-and we would like this is principle- it is necessary to remove the main obstacle," Brezhnev said. 'Piratical Raids' "Stop the piratical raids on a Socialist state, the Democratic Re- public of North Viet Nam, and stop the aggressive war against the Vietnamese people; respect not in words but in deeds the independ- ence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of the other countries and people." The lack of a specific demand for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Viet Nam stirred spec- ulation among diplomats here. The Communist position, repeated in Hanoi as recently as Thursday, has been that withdrawal is one of the preconditions for any Vietnamese settlement. Diplomatic Opinion Some diplomats suggested there might be some slight shift in the Soviet attitude toward finding a way out of the Vietnamese im- passe. But they hestitated to draw firm conclusions. At one point in his speech Brezh- nev said that prospects had im- proved for a treaty to halt the spread of nuclear weapons, which would be signed by the United States and the Soviet Union among others. He added that the Soviet Union "will spare no effort to sign an agreement." SAION A)-oppng reordginning tomorrow, coincides with the beginning of what may prove of 173 missions set only Thursday, to be a period of critical impor- U.S. pilots flew a new high of 175 tance for the war in Viet Nam. against North Viet Nam Friday. The next six months, many in- They bombed and strafed a nissile formed officials believe, can well bring a turning point, with Com- site, railroad yards, bridges, barges munist leaders deciding either to and storage buildings. end or to expand the conflict. From Moscow came word th t Johnson plans to fly tomorrow North Vietnamese pilots and avia-i to Honolulu, where he will deliver the first of many speeches to be tion specialists, who have come given during his six-nation tour out on the short end in sporadic and his attendance at the Manila dogfights with Americans over the Conference on Viet Nam, Oct. 24- last 18 months, were training 27. within the Soviet Union. They ob- Emphasis on Peace viously hope to change the odds Throughout the trip, his main in which they have lost 23 Soviet- emphasis is expected to be on a designed MIG's while shooting search for peace. The Manila Con- down 5 U.S. planes. ference may produce a new, spe- The Soviet news agency Tass, cific bid aimed at North Viet Nam without saying how many were on and the Viet Cong. hand, reported they were be, ag Two other themes are expected taught by Soviet instructors to to stand out in Johnson's speeches. handle supersonic missile-carrying -Reaffirmation of his declared planes "at one of the Soviet policy of fighting the Vietnamese Union's best flying schools." war with a limited aim of securing Usthe independence of South Viet Reports Released Nam without destroying North At the same time, the U.S. com- Viet Nam. mand reported that, in all phases Regional Associations of the war, enemy gunners had -Looking to the long future of downed 748 American aircraft- Asia, his still-developing con- 403 planes and 3 helicopters in the cept of some new regional associa- north; 129 planes and 213 heli- tion of non-Communist nations copters in the south, throughout the Far East. B52 bombers staged three s';rikes From the line taken by officials against enemy targets, including here, it seems clear that Johnson another raid on Communist hold- and his advisors hope the Manila ings in the central sector of the conference plus the President's border demilitarized zone, and al- own exposition of U.S. policy dur- lied forces claimed further toll on ing his far-ranging tour will stim- Red manpower and fortifications ulate m a x i m u m international in other sectors. pressures on Hanoi to move toward Viet Strike negotiations. Basic to U.S. officials thinking The Viet Cong struck back with about the prospects in Viet Nam a raid on a Vietnamese military -as seen hopefully from Washing- dispensary in the central high- ton-is the fact that the Viet Cong lands 28 miles southwest of Quang and North Vietnamese forces in Ngai. A Vietnamese spokesman the south have suffered a long said they had killed four militia- sesothihary reere thig men and three civilians and blown series of military reverses this up 26 rooms of the medical facil- yeai. with mines. .. Opportune Time' itywihmns Johnson related this aspect of U.S. air cavalrymen and Korean the situation directlyto the Ma- and Vietnamese troops, who have nila meeting when he told a news killed or captured more than 2,000 conference Thursday that the sev- Viest Cong and North Vietnamese en-nation gathering of leaders on the Phu Cat sector of the cen- with troops in South Viet Nam tral coast since Oct. 2, reported would be held at an opportune 21 more dead and 49 prisoners time. from mopping up operations. He said it was significant that S Is in oalgon, reported more specifically that the Communist had failed in an effort to cut South Viet Nam in two. Political Aims That the Communists have giv- en up the hope of winning the conflict militarily is taken for granted in official quarters here, but authorities believe they still hope to win politically. Strategists in Hanoi, it is said, look for re- sults of the Nov. 8 U.S. congres- sional elections to demonstrate massive opposition to Johnson's Vietnamese war policy. This belief has led to the con- clusion among American policy makers that no new decisions can be expected from Hanoi until sometime after Nov. 8. This is an important element in Washing- ton's judgment in the timing of j onnson administrations view is that the war is not a clear-cut is- sue and that Hanoi will be able to find little support for its hope of a political reversal in this coun- try when the results are known. Lower Hopes Should this prove to be the case, Hanoi then would find itself with scant victory prospects on the political as well as the military front of the conflict and would seem to have three choices open: To move toward peace negotia- tions. To seek to expand the war with much greater help from the Soviet Union gnd Red China. Or to go on indefinitely with the struggle along present lines, de- spite mounting manpower losses in the south and widespread bomb damage in North Viet Nam. Analysis of Viet Conditions To Begin Philippine Parley -Associated Press SOVIET LEADER Leonid I. Brezhnev brushed aside President Johnson's recent call for better East- West relations yesterday at a friendship meeting with Polish representatives in the Kremlin. (See story on this page.) BOOST WAR COST: McNamara Battlefield Survey May'Result in Tax Increases MANILA (P)-The Americans and South Vietnamese are ex- pected to get the Manila summit conference started with a detailed and sweeping review of military, political and economic conditions in South Viet Nam. With preparations for the Oct. 24 seven-nation summit well un- der way, it was shaping up as a businesslike conference with a minimum of public display. President Johnson, who tomor- row begins the international swing that will bring him to Manila, has summoned top brass to join him for the conference. In addition to Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Defense secretary Robert S. Mc- Namara, he has ordered Ambassa- dor Henry Cabot Lodge from Sai- gon and the U.S. Pacific com- mander, Adm. Ulysses S. Grant Sharp, to join the delegation. The South Vietnamese ruling duo-Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu -have signified they also will bring the regime's top military, political and economic members. Although Rusk and several of the foreign ministers will arrive Oct. 21 before the conference, there will be no formal foreign ministers' meeting before the sum- mit. Instead; there will be a series of bilateral talks in the refurnish- ed Manila Hotel-once Gen. Dou- glas MacArthur's wartime head- quarters-where all delegations are staying. President Chung Biee Park of South Korea will fly in from South Viet Nam where he will be briefed by his own forces before the con- ference. Thailand's Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachorn will arrive in a special plane from Bangkok. WASHINGTON (IP) - The con-, clusions Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara drew from his just-ended trip to South Viet Nam will play a key role in a cru- cial administration domestic deci- sion - whether to ask Congress next year to raise taxes. There are indications the ad- ministration might be forced into that action. But there are some counteracting factors, too. Spending for the Viet Nam war is already running well ahead of estimates and is expected to in- crease. Bt t top administration sources emphasized yesterday that no de- cision on taxes had been reached because it was not yet known exactly how much money the war might cost or how much spending Congress might vote this year. Timing of the decision is also uncertain, one source said, but it will come before the January deadline for submission of the President's new budget to Con- gress. There has beer, speculation that President Johnson, if he decides a tax increase is needed-arid it's ness subcommittee, has said the ultimately his decision - will an- Pentagon would need a supple- nounce his intention in December mental appropriation of $12 billion to give the new Congress and to $17 billion early next year to Americans generally time to digest carry on the war.- the news. No Current Indications As of now, however, decisions on whether taxes will be raised, and, if so, what taxes and by how much, are still up in the air, a key source said. The most likely taxes to be af- fected by any administration deci- sion to increase the levies are in- come and corporation rates. Excise taxes could be fair game, but one government source said the ad- ministration has worked too hard to lower them and might not want to reverse the pattern. After the defense chief reported Friday to Johnson on his battle- field trip, the President told re- porters there was a littletclearer picture on the cost of the war. Johnson said he would be meetingj with Treasury and budget officials trying to estimate this cost for this quarter and for this fiscal year. Johnson said he would make the totals known as soon "as we get any approximation," but he could not say how soon that might be. Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss), chairman of the Senate prepared- At this point, these other fac- tors have emerged: -Military spending projected in the President's budget for the fis- cal year which began July 1 is al- ready obsolete. From July through September, the first three months of the new fiscal year, defense spending ran at an annual rate of $4.2 billion more than anticipated last January. -Present budget figures are based on the assumption the war will end by next June 30, the end of the current fiscal year, barring a major break, this now seems un- likely. If the war goes beyond that point, additional supplies and equipment must be ordered, and this means more spending. -Tax collections are running much heavier than expected, but by how much officials won't say. -Congress has approved in some cases more money than Johnson requested. -The administration is trying to cut spending by $3 billion this year as an antiinflation measure. A conservative guess, however, would be in the neighborhood of $5 billion on an annual basis. A Series of Six Seminars on "THE NEW' LEFT" F Mi First Meeting: Tuesday, October 18, 7:00 P.M. What? TWO KOSHER CORNED BEEF SANDWICHES with soda, pickles, etc. Where? HILLEL SUPPER CLUB every Sunday at 5:30 p.m. call 663-4129 for reservotions $1 at GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Regular Meeting Time to be set by the Group Seminars will consist of discussions based upon selected readings. All participants will read "The New Radi- cals" by Paul Jacobs and Saul Landau (Vintage Pap- erback). If you would like to participate, buy the book ("The New Radicals") and come to the first meeting. World News Roundup 1429 Hill Street All Are Welcome i Im By The Associated Press *l UNITED NATIONS - Secre- tary-General U Thant said yes- terday he would tell the United States that it must safeguard the representatives and the, missions of other U.N. members in New York. -Thant made that promise to three ambassadors that handed him a protest from the 62-nation Asian-African group to Friday's invasion of the Syrian mission by some young American Zionists. A U.N. spokesman later said that Thant had asked for a meeting on the subject tomorrow with Am- bassador Arthur J. Goldberg, head of the U.S. mission, who alreday had apologized for the incident and signed charges against the intruders. WASHINGTON-A new Cabinet department to oversee the nation's land and air transportation came into existence yesterday with President Johnson's signature. He expressed hope that Congress will reconsider its decision to omit water transportation from the + sweeping unification of federal agencies. But he gave no indication who might get the secretary job or when. There had been some specula- tion that he might name the new Cabinet member at the same time he signed the bill at a White House ceremony. HUELVA, Spain-Spain entered the space age yesterday, launching a 90-pound weather rocket which transmitted data from altitudes of a 20 to 50 miles before plunging into the Atlantic 25 miles from launching site near here. the * * * VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI will visit Canada 'next year to see the Montreal World's Fair, Expo '67, a Vatican informant said yes- outside Italy since becoming Pope terday. It would be his fourth trip outside Italy since becoming Pope in 1963. There washno immediateindi- cation that he would extend the visit to take in the United States which he visited a year ago. The Vatican source said the dates of the visit had not been fixed but that the Vatican already had begun advance planning, such as gathering information on pos- sible flight arrangements. 17 PETITIONING for the Board of will be held on Oct. 19 fronm 7:30-11:30 Sign up now for interview at 2538 SAB ........~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~~~E r...,. .r.: :. tm :.:v:.....:.'t:vprr .....4 ..' ......r.......... ........ ....... ........ .. .. .. .......... .. ..... ........... .........:.:::: ::n .v ::::: ~.v .:..v .- 't.v +:: .t : ....... .. {R e g i s t r a t i on...... ......t...............r.r ..t .....f or.........v..t.....1...T.I ..... .f.:"4 }}f- ... .. ... ...... .r . . .. ... .h . ...t r .. . ... ... .. . . .. ... . .. . ... ..f ... . : .... ... . . ... ... ... .... . r .. t.. ... .. . r. ... ... ... v: ?-."}} :{:;;. li:$ ' . . .. 's".. . .. .. ... .... ... .. . r ., ... . .. ... . .. .. . . r .. .... ... t. ... . .. ... .. .. ... ... ... ... :r .,. . . .. ..fr,:}Y . ... 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