Pentagol (Editors note: The foloing t the econ- luding part of an analysis of the Pentagon papers by Bruce and Shelley Levine, mem- hers of International Socialists. Part oner appeared in The Dally on July 13 - 14 and was reprinted from Workers' Power, where this section will appear. It covers the documents released after the unsuccessful court action against the New York Times and Washington Post was completed.) By BRUCE and SHELLEY LEVINE IN JUNE AND JULY, the New York Times (and others) published a series of articles based on the Pentagon's secret, 47-volume study of the Vietnam war. The first of these articles covered the years of the Johnson administration. They showed in detail how Lyndon Johnson de- liberately escalated the war, specifically spurned negotiation attempts, firmly set his sights on all-out military victory-and lied through his teeth about it all. These articles brought on a storm of popular rage directed at Johnson, already a deeply un- popular figure. But in the midst of this uproar, the sec- ond group of Times Pentagon papers ar- ticles have been pretty much ignored. These deal with the origins of the war and the presidency of John F. Kennedy-and in many ways are much more eye-opening than the first. UNLIKE JOHNSON, after all, John Ken- nedy is still widely remembered as a kind of saint. He is thought of as a "true lib- eral" - warm - hearted, cool - headed, pledged to an international campaign of welfare and social reform. The calamities of the Johnson Administration, especially in Vietnam, are chalked up to LBJ's re- fusal to continue Kennedy's enlightened programs and methods. An entire army of publicists today labor diligently to maintain that public image for JFK, and liberal politicians feverishly promote the line of thinking which the Kennedy Legend produces: "Let's get back to the good old days of Kennedy-style lib- eralism!" The Pentagon papers must be giving these people ulcers. In brutal contrast to the rosy legend they have created, the papers reveal the true John F. Kennedy .. the man who: -decided that a victory over the NLF was crucial for the security of the U.S's international position; -"ordered the start," in the Times' words, "of a campaign of clandestine warfare against North Vietnam, to be conducted by South Vietnamese agents directed and trained by the Central In- telligence Agency and some American Special Forces troops." -"transformed," in the words of the Times, "the 'limited-risk gamble' of the Eisenhower Administration into a 'broad commitment' to prevent Communist domination of South Vietnam." -increased the number of U.S. troops in South Vietnam from a bare 700 to 16,000. -boosted the U.S. role in the planning, direction, and control of South Vietna- mese civilian and military operations from that of "adviser" to senior part- ner. -finally decided that Ngo Dinh Diem was unable to win the war against the NLF, and so gave the signal for the coup d'etat which removed and killed him. -failed, even after stepping up U.S. interventionin Vietnam, failed complete- ly to achieve what he set out to do. Re- ports the Times, "President Kennedy left President Johnson a Vietnamese legacy of crisis, of political instability, and of military deterioration at least as alarm- ing as the situation he had inherited from the Eisenhower Administration." Naturally, this was not the kind of sit- pa ers, part JFK's war er and fabric of the security structure of the region, where so many countries had based their policy on continued American involvement. The task at hand, Kennedy realized, was to work out a strategy to defeat the Viet- namese revolution and to head off others like it elsewhere in the third world. And in attempting to do so, Kennedy put "en- lightened liberalism" to the test. KENNEDY'S VIETNAM strategy was not to be based on the simple force of arms. As he had declared as early as 1954, "I am frankly of the opinion that no amount of military assistance in Indo- china can conquer . . . an 'enemy of the people' which has the sympathy and co- vert support of the people." What was needed, he decided, was a stra- tegy which could win for the U.S. and its puppet regimes - rather than for the guerrillas - the "sympathy and support of the people." To accomplish this, Kennedy and his advisers mapped out a three-pronged pro- gram of "counter-insurgency": (1) SOCIAL A N D ECONOMIC RE- FORMS. The first task was to give the South Vietnamese people a stake in the present order of things. Most importantly, in this connection, land reform would be instituted. South Vietnam's fertile land was monopolized by a tiny class of land- lords who soaked the peasant majority thoroughly through sky high rents and taxes. The peasants' land-hunger was a prime source of revolutionary unrest in the countryside. To calm that unrest, therefore, "counter-insurgency" planned to redistribute the land to the peasant tillers. (2) POLITICAL REFORMS. H a v i n g gained the loyalty of the people with eco- nomic-social reforms, the need for a po- lice state would disappear. Kennedy be- gan to exert pressure on Ngo Dinh Diem to liberalize his regime. "Allow free elec- tions, a freer press, freedom of speech, opposition political parties. Draw the peo- ple into establishment politics and they will turn away from the guerrilla army." (3) MILITARY REFORMS. Where it was necessary to use the force of arms- for example, to combat an already-exist- ing NLF - we would do so only in the cleverest fashion. For one thing, the job would be done by local troops, rather than GI's, who would be familiar to the Vietnamese people. For another thing, those troops would be carefully trained in the techniques of guerrilla warfare and in the need to respect the rights, lives, and property of the peasant population. To teach Saigon's army this lesson, Kennedy dispatched his "elite corps," the Special Forces, to Vietnam. By carrying out this three - pronged "counter-insurgency" program, Kennedy expected he would make American con- trol over Vietnam more secure than ever. The result? On all three fronts, the counter-insurgency campaign proved a complete and utter flop. THE HEART of this over-all failure lay in the failure of the planned "social re- forms." And the key failure in that de- partment was the collapse of land reform. Only the smallest fraction of the country's land had changed hands under the Diem regime-and even that small fraction rep- resented largely useless acreage. What lay behind so total a collapse of plans? Very simply, as Kennedy "insider" Arthur Schlesinger recalls, "the resist- ance of the large landholders and leading elements in the Saigon government". Now the landlords' attitude was under- standable. They were fighting the NLF, after all, precisely to protect their land monopoly, the source of their social pow- er. Small likelihood, therefore, that they would cheerfully hand it all over to the first regime to ask for it. But what about those "leading elements in the Saigon government"? What was the excuse for their obstructionism? That's what JFK and his advisors wanted to know. "If only Diem had supported land reform, if only he had enforced it, if only . . ." Such thinking was widespread in Washington. It led to portraying Diem an an individual as the prime reason for "counter-insurgency's" failure - and ul- timately to his removal. Tomorrow: Implications of the Vietnam failure s EISENHOWER, KENNEDY, JOHNSON (with CIA Director McCone and Defense Secretary McNamara) - they passed on power, and the war to prove it. uation which Kennedy, a liberal, hoped to create. What went wrong? The first thing to understand is just what John Kennedy did hope to do, spe- cifically. What did he see as his role? How did he plan to carry it out? Only after answering these questions will we be pre- pared to understand what went wrong with those plans. THE PRESIDENT of the United States is a tremendously powerful figure. But he also bears equally tremendous obligations. The most compelling of these is the re- sponsibility to defend the interests of American capitalism, the system over which he presides. And because that sys- tem extends its power over much of the rest of the world, the President's watch- dog duties are similarly international. Carrying out this watchdog role pre- sented John Kennedy with some very par- ticular problems. In the early 1960s, when he entered the White House, the peoples of the third world were embarking on the first in a series of struggles aimed at the worldwide power of American capitalism and at the local puppet governments which are on its payroll. The most visible of these struggles was the war in Vietnam. That, as the Pentagon papers make clear, is why Kennedy at- tached so much significance to the strug- gle in that country. Not because there was a great deal of U.S. money tied up in Vietnam. There wasn't. Not even because Vietnam occupies a particularly strategic position geographically It doesn't. JOHN KENNEDY jumped into Vietnam with both feet because he knew Vietnam was a test case. All over the third world, people were watching the Vietnam strug- gle, trying to gauge -how easy it would be to topple other puppet regimes and how far the U.S. would go to bail such a pup- pet regime out of trouble. In the same way, the puppet govern- ments themselves all over Asia (and Latin America and Africa, too) eyed the Vietnam case as a reflection of their own possible futures. So - as Kennedy's "guerrilla war- fare expert", Roger Hilsman, recalls while President Kennedy grumbled occasion- ally about the United States being "over- committed" in Vietnam and Southeast Asia, . . . he could not refuse to give more of the same kind of assistance with- out disrupting the whole balance of pow- 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. a V. Wednesday, July 28, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: ANITA CRONE