Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 2, 1971 GRAVEL RELEASE Hanoi resistance detailed , WASHINGTON (M) - The Pen- tagon papers lift the lid on how North Vietnam survived the fury of American bombing through 1965, the year the United States fully entered the war. Copies of the top secret docu- ments released by Sen. Mike Gravel, (D-Alaska) disclosed that after American intervention in force that year, the expectation among some Washington policy makers was that a patient old revolutionary like Ho Chi Minh might defer his dream of taking over South Vietnam until another day, after the American blast was spent. Instead, the documents said, Hanoi remained as defiant as ever, its leaders seemingly re- solved to endure the worst until the Americans were heaten. Explaining what went wrong, the Pentagon analysis concluded: The terrain in Vietnam did not lend itself to effective deploy- ment of modern weapons. There were no obvious industrial tar- gets to hit. There were few siz- able confrontations of power, and thus few opportunities for forces of each side to slug it out. Instead, in many ways it was a fight against guerrilla phantoms, with the troops of North Vietnam linking up with the Viet Cong in- surgents of the South, while all the time intrigue, maneuver, in- ternecine rivalries weakened the Saigon government. As if that were not enough, said the documents, political factors tied one of President Johnson's hands behind his back. To lash out too hard against the North would he to risk a world war for which the President-disre- garding Secretary of State Dean Rusk's advice - was not pre- pared. To campaign too softly would, in the words of then as- sistant secretary of Defense, John McNaughton, be to produce "an escalating stalemate" that would bog down American forces indefinitely. Examining the effects of the American bombing attack on North Vietnam, the Pentagon writers offered the following ex- planation, based on U.S. intelli- gence reports and on observa- tions of witnesses: "In the North the regime bat- tened down and prepared to ride out the. storm. With Soviet and Chinese help, it greatly strength- ened its air defenses, multiplying the number of anti-aircraft guns and radars, expanding the num- her of jet fighter airfields and the jet fighter force, and introduc- ing an extensive SAM (surface-to- air-missile) system. "Economic development plans were laid aside. Imports were in- creased to offset production losses. Bombed facilities were in most cases simply abandoned. The large and vulnerable bar- racks and storage depots were re- placed hy dispersed and conceal- ed ones. "Several hundred thousand workers were mobilized to keep the transportation system in op- eration. Knocked - out bridges were replaced by fords, ferries or alternate structures. And meth- ods were adopted to protect them from attack. Traffic shifted to night time, poor weather and camouflage. Shuttling and trans- See HANOI, Page 10 4 D. DANIEL ELLSBERG, who says he leaked Pentagon secrets to the New York Times, talks to newsmen in Cambridge yester- day. Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Alaska) claims to have received secret documents from Ellsberg. U.S. bucked Diem COUP SAVE 25% Buy USED TEXTBOOKS AT State St. at North U. Y Ilm/RR IFEM up, HEIV P GP' (Contiuea sfromP age2) Diem made their first contact with an American representative to discuss their plans to oust the president, the study disclosed. The documents reported- "The generals wanted a clear indica-_ tion of where the U.S. stoodI." The U.S. answer, the Pentagon study said, concluded that "Nhu's continuation in a power position within the regime was intoler- able" and it added: "We must face the possibility that Diem himself cannot be preserved." The message was to have been passed to the generals while Diem himself was to be told IN. must go. But Lodge informed only the general, reasoning that to con-- front Diem with an ultimatum might "tip off the palace to the coup plans. He made clear to the generals on Aug. 27 "that keep- ing Diem was entirely up to them." Back in Washington, meantime, Kennedy and some of his advis- ers began having second thoughts about a sudden switch of horses. They need not have worried. The plot proved premature. Within a few days it fizzled. Subsequently a month-long re- appraisal began focusing on a search for alternatives to Diem. Military and Central Intelli- gence Agency men were for Diem - the diplomats in Saigon and the State Department and of- ficials in the White House were generally against him. Ultimately it was agreed to try BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS BOWLING FOOSBALL UNION a third line: pressing Diem to fire Nhu and to ease up on his harsh rule. But in the process of discus- sion several participants - not- ably then Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy - came up with a new argument tending to favor an or- derly U.S. disengagement from the Vietnam war. The Pentagon report put it thus: "If the war could not be with Diem, and if his removal would lead to political chaos also jeopardized the war effort, then the war was probably un- winnable. If that were the e- the argument went, then the U.S. should really be facing a more basic decision on either an orderly disengagement from F irretrievable situation or a ma- jor escalation . . . including the use of U.S. combat troops. "These prophetic m i n o r i t y voices were, however, raising an unpleasant prospect that the administration was unprepared to face at that time. In hindsight, however, it is clear that this was one of the times in the his- tory of our Vietnam involvement when we were making fundamen- tal choices." During October Lodge shunned all contact with the regime. He suspended some aid. This was taken by the Vietnamese gen- erals as a signal to proceed with1 a coup, the document said. The Vietnamese generals ad- vised the U.S. mission in Saigon they were preparing to strike against Diem. Lodge was order- ed by Washington not to encour- age the coup but yet to maintain contact with the plotters and to monitor their plans. Hy Oct. 2') Lodge had concluded Diem was unlikely to respond to his at- tempts at persuasion - and the U.S. therefore "s h o u 1 d not thwart the coup forces." It was while American authiori- ties in Saigon were debating the wisdom of this decision with Washington that the generals struck, culminating "a slimmer and fall of complex political ac- tivity." 603 E. 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