Friday, May 11, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine Nixon to keep bombing Cambodia Raids to get high priority until cease-fire approvedLe E 4 By STEWART HENSLEY WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi- dent Richard Nixon has mode clear that he is determined to continue the Cambodian bomb- ing until the communist forces agree to the cease-fire offered by the Lon Nol government. His determination was under- scored last Monday by Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson in an appearance before the Sen- ate Appropriations Committee. Richardson said the President as- signs such a high priority to the U.S. air attacks that he will continue them whether or not A News Analysis Congress authorizes the transfer of funds for this purpose. NIXON WILL reduce U.S. mili- tary operations in Europe and elsewhere during the next two months if he is forced to do so to cover the expense of the Cam- bodian operation, according to Richardson. The question raised here with increasing frequency is why the President is willing to defy Con- gress and risk further alienation of public opinion in behalf of a government to which the United States has no commitment. SECRETARY OF STATE Wil- liam Rogers last week provided the Senate Foreign Relations Committee with what he claimed was the legal justification f o r the Cambodian bombing. His ar- gument boiled down to the asser- tion that the bombing was implic- itly permitted by the Vietnam cease fire agreement so long as the communists continue to re- fuse to sign a separate cease- fire in Cambodia. However, neither Rogers nor Richardson, satisfied the Senate committees that there was any real purpose in continuing a i r assaults in an efort to preserve a shaky regime in Phnom Penh whose army showed no mclina- tion to fight. THE BASIC REASON for the continued air attacks, as in- dicated privately by a number of officials, was they were the only way in which the Nixon r hi R $2.00 8:30 FRI.-SAT. SIRE RECORD'S ROSALIE SORRELS Administration could show its military teeth' in Soitheast Asia as part of an orchestrated effort to get snfimi to ahide more faithfully hy the terms of the cease-fire in Swrith Vietnam. The other elements of this pres- sure campaign against Ilsnoi in- clude the cessation of U.S. mine- sweeping operations in Ilaiphong and other North Vietnamese ,parts, the breaking off of Paris discussions with Ianoi on U.S. economic rehabilitation aid and a resumption of American aerial reconnaissance over the North. IN ADDITION, the Nixon ad- ministration apparently clings to the hope that the Phnom Penh government, weak and inefficient as it may be, can be preserved as a military entity to inject one non-communist element into the discussions which ultimately must be held with the Cambodian communists concerning future ad- ministration of the country. Still, foreign diplomatic observ- ers see little prospect for any- thing but a communist regime in Phnom Penh sooner or later be- cause of the very narrow base of the Lon Nol government. A GUN TOTING CAMI Phnom Penh recently. AN soldier carries tropical fruit drinks in wooden tubes while on alert near "best damn cowgirl singer you ever heard." --Mich. Duily 111 FUI l TE 1WIAH(S