Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 IV.A Evolution of the War (26 Vols.) U.S. MAP for Diem: The Eisenhower Commitments, 1954-1960(5 Vols.) 1. NATO and SEATO: A Comparison - ■ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - SENSITIV UNITED STATES - VIETNAM RELATIONS VIETNAM TASK FORCE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF TOP SECRET ■ SENSITIVE] */3 29 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 IV. A. 1 NATO AND SEATO: A COMPARISON &t 0295 Sec Def- Cont Nr. X-. Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV. A. 1. NATO AMD SMTP: A COMPARISON SUMMARY Because the SEATO Treaty has "been used by the Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson Administrations to justify U.S. policy, aid, and presence in Vietnam, and because many have questioned this justification, the treaty has become a center of controversy. The issue is whether by intent of the parties and by treaty terminology the U.S. was obligated to use force to help defend the territorial independence and integrity of South Vietnam. No one seriously challenges U.S. military and eco- nomic aid provisions under the SEATO Treaty; the thrust of the criticism is the use of U.S. ground combat forces. There are plentiful statements over time by the U.S. Government on the importance of SEATO. President Eisenhower stated: "We gave military and economic assistance to the Republic of Vietnam. We entered into a treaty -- the Southeast Asia Security Treaty -- which plainly warned that an armed . attack against this area would endanger our own peace and safety and that we would act accordingly." President Kennedy stated: "...The SEATO Pact. . .approved by the Senate with only, I think, two against it, under Article 4, stated that the United States recognized that aggression by means of armed attack against Vietnam would threaten our own peace a.nd security. So since that time the United States ha,s been assisting the government of Vietnam to maintain its independence. . .The attack on the government by communist forces, with assistance from the north, became of greater and greater concern to the Government of Vietnam and the Government of the United States." - Secretary Rusk, speaking for the Johnson Administration, made the strongest statement of all: "We have sent American forces to fight in the jungles. . .because South Viet~Nam has, under the language of the SEATO Treaty, been the victim of 'aggression by means of armed attack. 1 Those who challenge this rationale contend that unlike the NATO Treaty which specifically included the 'use of armed force 1 and unambiguously intended such action, the SEATO Treaty was not meant by its U.S. framers as an umbrella for American military intervention." This is the kind of issue that can readily be argued either way. It is obvious the language of the SEATO Treaty allows the signatories the choice of military means. And, a respectable argument can be made for the further step of obligation. For example, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Report on the treaty in 195^- stated: "The committee is not impervious to the risks which this treaty entails. It fully appreciates that acceptance of these additional obligations commits the United States to a cause of action over a vast expanse of the Pacific. Yet these risks 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive are consistent with our own highest interests. There are greater hazards in not advising a potential enemy of what he can expect of us, and in failing to disabuse him of assumptions which might lead to a miscalculation of our intentions." '■ To the contrary, a statement "before the Foreign Relations Com- mittee by Secretary Dulles himself can be cited to demonstrate more modest, less obligatory designs: - "I might say in this connection, departing somewhat from order of my presentation, that it is not the policy of the United States to attempt to deter attack in this area by building up a local force capable itself of defense against an all-out attack by the Chinese Communists if it should occur. We do not expect to duplicate in this area the pattern of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and its significant standing forces. That would require a diversion and commitment of strength which we do not think is either practical or desir- able or necessary from the standpoint of the United States. "We believe that our posture in that area should be one of having mobile striking power, and the ability to use that against the sources of aggression if it occurs. We believe that is more effective than if we tried to pin down American forces at the many points around the circumference of the Communist world in that area. "It may very well be that other countries of the area will want to dedicate particular forces for the protection of the area under this treaty. But we made clear at Manila that it was not the intention of the United States to build up a large local force including, for example, United States ground troops for that area, but that we rely upon the deterrent power of our mobile striking force." By looking into the words of the treaty in the light of its origins and the interests of the U.S. as perceived in 195^> an( i by comparing these with NATO language, origins, and development, it is possible to make a tentative judgment on the issue of obligation. Whereas it is clear that NATO was intended for deterrence against aggression and defense with U.S. forces should deterrence fail, SEATO seems to have been designed with a view only toward deterrence. Defense, especially with U.S. ground forces, was not seriously contemplated. There are three pieces of evidence in support of this contentious conclusion: (l) the stringent preconditions which the U.S. delegation to the Manila Conference to establish SEATO were instructed to insist upon; (2) the lack of institutional and force structure development in SEATO as compared to NATO; and (3) the fact that SEATO and NATO treaty terminology differ in respect to the use of force and other matters . ; I TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive r ri Unlike the guidance under which U.S. negotiators helped to frame NATO, U.S. representatives to the conference establishing SEATO were given four uncompromisable pre-conditions: (a) The U.S. would refuse to commit any U.S. forces unilaterally; (b) Were military action to be required, one or more of the European signatories would have to participate; " (c) The U.S. intended to contribute only sea and air power, expecting that other signatories would provide ground forces; (d) The U.S. would act only against communist aggression. These instructions not only clearly exempt the use of U.S. ground forces, but presuppose multilateral action before the U.S. would act in any capacity. With respect to the comparative development of SEATO and NATO, U.S. behavior also indicates great restraint and avoidance of commitment. NATO was formed in 19^9.? an( i within two years it was well institution- alized —» combined command forces in-being and a Standing Group for policy guidance. The UoS. consistently resisted the efforts of its SEATO partners for comparable institutions. Secretary Dulles, in fact, sought to discourage public identification of SEATO with NATO. Only in 1959 j did the U.S. accede to the formation of a modest SEATO secre- tariat. Moreover, SEATO had to wait until i960 before the U.S. would participate in the development of a series of SEATO contingency plans. Most important, no U.S. troops have ever been designated specifically for SEATO. Comparing the specific terminology of the operative sections of the SEATO and NATO treaties gives additional credence to the non- obligation argument. The key articles of both treaties are those calling for action against an enemy threat. Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty declares that the member nations "agree that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them all, " and that in that event each will take "forthwith. . .such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force...." The cor- relative phraseology in the Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty Article IV declares that "each Party recognizes that aggression by means of armed attack against any of the Parties, or against any state or territory which the Parties by unanimous agreement may hereafter desig- nate, would endanger its own peace and safety, and agrees that it will in that event act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional process." The SEATO wording is thus intentionally ambig- uous on the point of just what response would be made by the members in the event of an armed attack. Such an attack against one of the SEATO members would be viewed as a "common danger" rather than as an "attack 2A TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive on all." Where NATO prescribes action "forthwith/' SEATO requires only that the "common danger" be "met" in accordance with "constitutional processes." SEATO also forecloses action on the treaty of any threat- ened state without the consent of that state -~ a qualification designed to reassure members that their independence was not threatened by neo- colonialism or other domination in a SEATO guise. In some respects, however, the SEATO Pact is broader than its NATO counterparts. The nature of the threat is loosely defined in Article TV as "any fact or situation that might endanger the peace of the area" and provision is made to protect threatened member countries of the region. The area of applicability is left flexible. Moreover, Article II of the SEATO Treaty applies the pact against not only "armed attack" but also "subversive activities directed from without against /members/ territorial integrity and political stability." Also, unlike the North Atlantic Treaty, there is no clause in the SEATO Treaty implying a depen- dence on United Nations intervention to restore peace once the treaty were invoked. 2B TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive TABLE OF CONTENTS Paragraph Page 1. Genesis A-5 a. Truman Doctrine, I9V7 A- 5 b. Marshall Plan, I9V7 A-6 c. ERP and NATO, 19^8-19^9 A-7 d. The China Aid Program A-8 e. MDAP, 19U9 A-8 f . Precursor Pacts in Asia A-9 g. Indochina and United Action, 195^ A-10 h. Manila Conference, 195^ A-13 (1) Force Commitment (2) Ant i -Communism 2. The Treaties Compared A- 15 a. Introductory Articles Alike A-l6 b. The Key Articles A-16 c . Extent of Treaty Areas A-19 d. UN and Other Pacts A-19 e . Treaty Institutions A-19 f . Treaty Longevity A-20 g. The Appended U.S. "Understanding" A-20 h. The Vietnam-Laos -Cambodia Protocol A-21 A-3 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Paragraph 3 • Evolution of the Treaty Organization a. NATO Develops Rapidly b. SEATO Unstructured by U.S. Preference.. c. SEATO Contingency Planning (1) Laos Planning (2) Vietnam Planning (3) Thailand Planning (k) The Future Footnotes Appendix A - A Comparison of the Wording of the NATO and SEATO Treaties Appendix B - Organizational Charts Page A-23 A-23 A-23 A-27 A-32 A-37 A-k6 Ark TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 « . TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV, A. 1. NATO and. SEATO: A Comparison 1. Genesis *' a# Truman Doctrine , 19 ^-7 In 19^6, Winston Churchill perceived, a postwar threat in a wartime ally: [ "Nobody knows what Soviet Russia and. its communist interna- tional organization intends to d.o...what are the limits, if any, to their expansive and. proselytizing tactics. . .From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended, across the continent... T 1/ And. he also depicted, a counter: "Neither the sure prevention of war, nor the continuous rise of world, organization will be gained, without... a, special ( relationship between the British Commonwealth and Empire and. the United. States..." These insights were reinforced, in early 19^-7 by influential analyses of ! George Kennan and. others of Soviet motives and. capabilities, which pointed out that occasional and sporadic efforts to foil Soviet policy were severely disadvantaged,. These analysts held, that the West should seek to oppose Soviet expansionism by what the Foreign Affairs "X" article of January, 19^7 5 called "the adroit and vigilant application of counter-force." 2/ Such a strategy, it was held., would force the Soviet to reassess and. ad- just its policies, and. the U.S. could expect eventually the "break-up or the gradual mellowing of Soviet power." Out of these, and similar appreciations of Soviet intent emerged, the concept of a U.S. strategy of involvement. Theory was swiftly abetted, by event. The British notified the U.S. that it would, be unable to extend, its economic and military aid. ; to Greece and. Turkey beyond March, 19^7. The U.S., rather than accept the distinct possibility of a Soviet intrusion following British withdrawal, chose to take up the burden the British were laying down in the eastern Mediterranean. Congress authorized in May, 19^7 * some $1+00 million for direct aid. to those countries, acting upon the recommendation of President Truman in the March, 19^+7, message known since as the "Truman Doctrine": "i believe that it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed, minorities or by outside pressures. I believe we must a.ssist free peoples to work out their own destinies in their own way. . ." 3/ The President went on to underscore the U.S. determination to commit its resources to contain communism, clearly subordinating military aid to A- 5 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive v economic and. political means. Finally: "To insure the peaceful development of nations, free from coercion, the United States has taken a leading part in establish- ing the United Nations. The United Nations is designed to make possible freedom and independence for all its members. We shall not realize our objectives , however , unless we are willing to help free peoples to maintain their free institution and their national integrity against aggressive movements that seek to im- pose upon them totalitarian regimes." b. Marshall Plan, 19^7 The U.S. Secretary of State on June 5, 19^7> proposed the cooperative international economic aid subsequently entitled the European Recovery Program (ERP), but known widely as the Marshall Plan. ERP was at first explicitly designed to permit and even attract Soviet cooperation: "Our policy is directed not against any country or doctrine but a.gainst hunger, poverty, desparation and chaos. Its purpose should be the revival of a working economy in the world so as to permit the emergence of political and social conditions in which free institutions can exist." k/ But the Soviet rebuffed the Marshall Plan, turned Bloc propaganda against it as an adjunct of the Truman Doctrine, and by so doing, bifurcated. Europe Moreover, among three top-level U.S. committees examining ways of bringing U.S. resources to bear on European recovery, the Committee on Foreign Aid (Harriman Committee) found, that: "The interest of the United States in Europe ... cannot be measured, simply in economic terms. It is also strategic and political. We all know that we are faced, in the world, today with two conflicting ideologies. . .Our position in the world, has been based, for at least a century on the existence in Europe of a number of strong states committed, by tradition and. inclina- tion to the democratic concept..." 5/ The bipolar world, had begun to emerge. In January, 19^8, the British Foreign Secretary, following talks with the U.S. Secretary of State, pro- posed, an alliance among the U.K., France, and. the Benelux nations, refer- ring to "the conception of the unity of Europe and the preservation of Europe as the heart of western civilization." 6/ At the end. of February, 19^-8, western Europe was shocked by the fall of the Czechoslovakian govern- ment to a communist coup d. ! etat. In March, the British-proposed allianci was contracted, as the Brussels Pact, a fifty-year treaty of collective defense and. economic collaboration. U.S. approval was immediate; the President told. Congress that: "its significance goes far beyond, the actual terms of the agreement itself. It is a notable step in the direction of A-6 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive unity in Europe. . .This development deserves our full support. I am confident the United States will, by appropriate means , extend to the free nations the support which the situation requires. . . " jj c - ERP and NATO, 1948- 19^9 On 1 April, 1948, the Soviets initiated the blockade of Berlin. In late April, the President called a conference of his senior advisers to consider the Soviet threat, as well as the possibility of communist fomented uprisings in France and Italy. John Foster Dalles, then State Department consultant, later reported that the conferees agreed that: "...Only a decisive pronouncement by the United States would check the fear that was inspired by Moscow. . ./and that • the U.S. should/ proceed along the lines of a North Atlantic regional pact. . ." Dulles also stated that Senator Vandenberg: tT ...Felt that the Senate liked the idea of regional associa- tions and would be disposed to approve in principle a further developing of such associations for collective defense." 8/ In May, 1948, Senator Vandenberg introduced a, resolution adopted by the Senate on June 11, 1948, by a vote of 64 to 4, advising the Executive to undertake the : "...Progressive development of regional and other collec- tive arrangements for individual and collective self-defense in accordance with the purposes, principles, and provisions of the Charter /of the UT\[7, association of the United States, by constitutional process, with such regional and other collective arrangements as are based on continuous and effective self-help and mutual aid, and as affect its national security." 9/ The Department of State later explained to Congress that "the contents of this resolution. . .became our guide in the discussion and subsequent nego- tiations which led to the North Atlantic Pact." 10/ In June, 1948, Congress also passed the Economic Cooperation Act, establishing the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) to adminis- ter a program of foreign aid. The following month, armed with the Economic Cooperation Act and the Vandenberg Resolution, the U.S. opened exploratory talks on an alliance with the Brussels Pact members and Canada. Subse- quently, the talks were broadened to include twelve nations. On April 4, 19^-9? the Worth Atlantic Treaty was signed, and in late July ratified by the Senate. It entered into force August 24, 19^-9 • A-7 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive d. The China Aid . Program In the meantime > U.S. policy suffered a setback in Asia. A China Aid Program had been enacted by Congress in June, 19^8, in the same omnibus foreign assistance legislation which authorized ERP and ECA. The China Aid Program met almost immediate failure, for Mao's armies spread unchecked over -the China mainland., and. by late 19^-9> the position of the Nationalists there was untenable. This "failure" of U.S. aid -- it was termed, such by Congressional critics — no less than the urgent situation in Europe figured, in Congressional action on military assistance legisla- tion placed before it in 19^9* ll/ e. MDAP, 19^-9 In September 19^-9? the Soviets exploded, their first nuclear device* On October 6, 19^9^ Congress passed, the Mutual Defense Assistance Act, designed, as a comprehensive law, providing a Mutual Defense Assistance Program (MDAP) through which U.S. arms, military equipment and. training assistance might be provided for collective defense. In the first appro- priations under MDAP, NATO Countries received. ^6% of the total, and. Greece and. Turkey (not yet NATO members), 16$. 12/ But Korea and the Philippines received mod.est aid., and. the legislators clearly intended, the law to under- write subsequent appropriations for collective security in Asia. The open- ing paragraph of the law not only supported. NATO, but foreshadowed SEATO: "An Act to Promote the Foreign Policy and Provide for the Defense and General Welfare of the United. States by Furnishing Military Assistance to Foreign Nations, Approved. October 6, 19^9* "Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United. States of America in Congress assembled., That this Act may be cited as the 'Mutual Defense Assistance Act of 19^9- f "FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF POLICY "The Congress of the United States reaffirms the policy of the United. States to achieve international peace and security through the United Nations so that armed, force shall not be used, except in the common interest. The Congress hereby finds that the efforts of the United. States and. other countries to promote peace and. security in furtherance of the purposes of the Charter of the United. Nations require additional measures of support based upon the principle of continuous and effective self-help and. mutual aid. These measures include the furnishing of military assistance essential to enable the United. States and other nations dedicated to the purposes and principles of the United. Nations Charter to participate effectively in arrangements for individual and. collective self-defense in support of those purposes and. principles. In furnishing such military assistance, it remains A-8 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 r TOP SECRET - Sensitive the policy of the United. States to continue to exert maximum efforts to obtain agreements to provide the United. Nations with armed, forces as contemplated, in the Charter and. agreements to achieve universal control of weapons of mass destruction and. universal regulation and. reduction of armaments, including armed. e .. forces , under adequate safeguards to protect complying nations against violation and. evasion. "The Congress hereby expresses itself as favoring the cre- ation by the free countries and the free peoples of the Far East of a joint organization, consistent with the Charter of the United Nations, to establish a program of self-help and. mutual cooperation designed, to develop their economic and. social well- being, to safeguard basic rights and. liberties and to protect their security and. independence. The Congress recognizes that economic recovery is essen- tial to international peace and security and must be given clear . priority. The Congress also recognizes that the increased, con- fidence of free peoples in their ability to resist direct or indirect a.ggression and to maintain internal security will ad- vance such recovery and support political stability." 13/ f . Precursor Pacts in Asia With the Nationalist evacuation to Formosa in November, 19^9* an urgent situation developed, in Asia that in ways paralleled, the condi- tions that prompted, formation of NATO. The rise of Mao's Peoples Republic of China (PRC) seemed to project the monolithic power of Soviet communism to the eastern shores of Asia, menacing the relatively small nations along China's periphery like the Russians threatened. Western Europe. The Chi- nese parroted, the Kremlin's aggressive announcements, participated, in the assault on South Korea, and provided aid to Ho Chi Minh in Southeast Asia. U.S. counteraction was forthcoming. By 1951* i n an effort to bolster the defensive capabilities of the area, the U.S. had become a partner in five separate defense treaties in the region. Four bilateral arrangements linked, the U.S. with Japa.n, South Korea, Nationalist. China, and. the Philippines, forming an arc around, the periphery of Communist China. In addition, the ANZUS Treaty was signed, in 1951? a ^d. the Five-Power Staff Agency (composed, of Australia, New Zealand, France, UK, and. US) was formed in 1953 "to facilitate coordination on problems in Southeast Asia." In 195^* John Foster Dulles recalled that: "When I went out to the Pacific area in 1950 to begin the negotiations which resulted, in the Japanese Peace Treaty and. a series of security treaties, the original hope had. been that we could, have a fairly broad, collective security arrangement. As it happened, it was not possible to d.o at that time, and. we were content perforce with a series of treaties .. .But those treaties themselves indicated that we did. not regard, them as an end, but only as a beginning..." Ik/ A- 9 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • From 19^9 through 1953 the National Security Council maintained, the view that a broader regional defense pact or association should be initiated by the countries of the area. 15/ In the following 1950 exchange with Congressman Fulton, Secretary of State Acheson expressed Administration policy: "MR. -FULTON: May I read, to the Secretary from the second, paragraph of the Mutual Defense Assistance Act: 'The Congress hereby expresses itself as favoring the crea- tion by the free countries and free peoples of the Far East, of a joint organization consistent with the Charter of the United. Nations to establish a program of self-help and. mutual coopera- tion designed, to develop their economic and. social well-being, to safeguard, the basic rights and. liberties, and to protect their security and. independence . f "Now may I point out that is a bipartisan policy, because it was two Republicans and. two Democrats on this committee who put that amendment in. My question then is to the Secretary and to the State Department, why, when this was passed clear back in 19^-9 9 October 6, has not the State Department taken steps to put into effect the declared bipartisan foreign policy of the Congress? " "SECRETARY ACHESON: Mr. Fulton, I think it is important for you to really look at your own words. You said, that the Congress expresses itself as favoring the creation by the free countries and. free peoples of the Far East of certain things. Now the President stated he favors that. On all occasions he has stated, it and. I have stated, that that is the attitude of the Government of the United States. I should, think that the President and. I and the Congress are all agreed, that the very important word.s are that this organization should, be created by the free peoples of the Far East and. not created, by the United. Sta.tes. We are not calling these nations together and. you never asked us to call these nations together and. tell them they should, create something. 1 know that your knowledge of the Far East is sufficient to lead you to conclude that if we did. that it would, have exactly the opposite effect of the one which you wish to achieve. The President of the Philippines has been going forward to accomplish this. We have stated to him, and publicly, that we are most sympathetic to this activity on his part, but it is most important that it should.be a spontaneous Asian action." l£/ g. Indochina and United. Action, I95U In the spring of 195^j however, the deterioration of the French situation in Indochina caused a re-evaluation of U.S. policy on collective security in Asia and. precipitated, proposals by the U.S. to the French, 'the British and. several other countries to establish some A-10 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • t I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive kind, of Southeast Asian coalition. On 6 April 195*+, the NSC, asked to consider "appropriate action regarding Ind.ochina and the need, for U.S. military intervention/ 1 replied, that the best alternative was a regional grouping with maximum Asian participation, YjJ On 13 May, the NSC looked, to "avoid, the loss of Indochina and to resolve the colonial problem by the creation of a regional grouping." 18/ Crisis transformed, the U.S. position on a wide regional alliance from that of a potential joiner to that of an anxious organizer. | • When the U.S. position changed., the pendulum swung far, pro- [ ducing not only the general concept of "united, action," but also several specific plans for U.S. -allied, intervention in Indochina in a variety of circumstances. Secretary Dulles approached, the British and. French directly with a plan in which a ten-nation coalition would, confront communist ex- pansion in Southeast Asia. On 12-lU April, Dulles visited. London to get Eden's support for this plan, but was turned down. Eden thought it best to wait and. see what could, be accomplished, at the Geneva Conference, then in preparation. Dulles did get what he thought was Ed.en f s agreement to a plan for an ad hoc group of the same nations to meet and. discuss plans for collective action in case it became necessary, and. a public statement in favor of a broad. Asian alliance. Congressional reaction to the latter was immediate. The House Foreign Affairs Committee was at the time holding hearings, and. promptly issued, a statement endorsing the Dulles and. Eden action, and. citing the MDAP legislation. The following is from the Hearings: ' ■ i I . "MR. VORYS. Now, could. I read, a paragraph from the text of the recent statement issued, by Messrs. Dulles and. Eden... i " this paragraph was what caught my attention this morning. /Reading^/ 'Accordingly we are ready to take part with the other coun- ; tries principally concerned, in the examination of the possibility of establishing a collective d.efense within the framework of the charter of the United. Nations Organization, to assure the . peace, security, and. freedom of Southeast Asia, in the western Pacific.' ■ "I have changed our proposed, statement slightly. . 'The Committee on Foreign Affairs notes with approval the statement issued, in London on April 13, 195& ? "by "the Secretary of State and. the British Foreign Secretary which is in line with recommendations previously expressed, by the Committee and Con- gress in 19*1-9 • T "The second, paragraph reads as follows: 'This paragraph was drafted, by the Committee on Foreign Affairs and. incorporated, in the original Mutual Defense Assistance A-ll ' TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Act. A similar paragraph was incorporated, in the Mutual Security Act of 1953 by the Committee on Foreign Affairs and. passed, by the House of Representatives. This language was left out of the j • m act as finally passed, because the committee of conference regarded. 1 ' the existing paragraph of the Mutual Defense Assistance Act as giving ad.equ.ate expression of congressional policy. 1 " 19/ The U.S. moved, immediately to assemble the ad hoc group Dulles had. dis- cussed with Ed.en, inviting representatives of some 10 nations to meet in Washington on 20 April. Two days before the meeting was to take place , the British announced, they would, be unable to attend. They had not realized, they said., that the meeting would, take place so soon, and they had. not been given the opportunity to pass on the conferees. 20/ The meeting was held anyway, but became a general briefing of the twenty nations com- prising the allied side at the Geneva Conference. In the meantime, other coalition plans were in the making. An early concept, the first of many to be advanced., provided, a choice of two courses of action: "The U.S. is prepared, to join actively in two regional group- ings. The first such grouping will include nations ree,dy immedi- ately to intervene in Indochina provided, certain conditions are o met. The second such grouping should, be d.efined., with wid.er participation, to guarantee against communist aggression or sub- version of all Southeast Asia with the exception of Indochina so long as active fighting continues." 2l/ The first of these groupings was to contain the U.S., France, the Associated. States of Laos, Ca.mbod.ia, and. Vietnam, Thailand., and. the Philippines. The second, was to be composed, of "all countries who wish to join" including the Colombo Plan countries (Burma, Ceylon, India, Indonesia, Pakistan), Korea, and "perhaps" the Chinese Nationalists. The U.S. wished, to avoid a "white man's party" 22/ in the formation of any regional group, but the powers able to contribute substantial military support to the plans were not Asian. Neither coalition materialized before Geneva. The dramatic fall of Dien Bien Phu served, notice to the world, of French military impotence in Ind.ochina. When the participants of the Indochina fighting moved, to the conference table in April, 195^-* "the U.S., fresh from the bitter experience of Panmunjom, looked, on the upcoming dis- cussions apprehensively, fearing that the French tactical d.efeat presaged, strategic disaster. At one time or another during the Geneva Conference, the U.S. considered.: (l) merely urging the French to a greater effort, (2) assisting the French with material support in varying degrees, (3) intervening in conjunction with the British, (k) taking military action with all those prepared, to do so, and. (5) working out a long range South- east Asia allia,nce. None of these courses of action proved, practicable. Nonetheless, the outcome of the Geneva Conference did catalyze SEATO. Within the councils of the U.S. Government, the concession of half of Viet- nam to the communists was considered another retreat before communist expansion. A-12 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i ■ i . TOP SECRET - Sensitive Secretary of State Dulles publicly drew two lessons from Geneva: (l) that popular support was essential to combat communist subversion, and (2) collec- tive defense against aggression could, not be devised, after the aggression was in progress. 23/ He went on to assert that a collective security system in Southeast Asia could in the future check both outright aggression and subversion. The U.S. moved, promptly to convene an international con- ference at Manila in late summer , 195^-> to devise such a security system. h. Manila Conference, IS^k The outlook at Manila, however, tended, to be more retrospec- tive than futuristic. Vice Admiral A. C. Davis, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (ISA) and chief DOD representative in the U.S. delegation observed, in his report that: "...the Manila Conference convened following communist mili- tary achievements in Indochina and political and psychological successes at Geneva. Against this background, the effort of the .. . Manila Conference to construct a collective defense arrangement for Southeast Asia and the Southwest Pacific was directed in large measure to recovering from the psychological blow thus ad- ministered to the Free World. Much of what was said, at the Con- ference bore witness to the preeminence of psychological objec- tives in the thinking of the participating States. In a real sense, the Treaty that emerged, at Manila is a response to the Geneva Agreements." 2hJ The task facing the conferees was formidable compared, with that Atlantic planners had faced six years earlier. The Geneva reverse provided, a small basis for common action. NATO had been created, in a. relatively uncompli- cated, political situation, in an atmosphere of understanding and. common need, to meet an unambiguous threat. Moreover, the Worth Atlantic nations could, build, collective defense on an infrastructure of shared, culture, political ideals, and interdependent economies. Commitments of the member nations could be clarified to stipulate standing forces, command, structures, and. roles in planning. The nations at Manila, on the other hand, confronted, a complex of dilemmas. Anti-communism was no unifying force. Throughout the region, potential communist aggressors were likely to adopt causes of ant i- colonialism, anti-traditionalism, racism, religion, or irredentism. Moreover, the conferees represented disparate cultures in countries scat- tered, across the world.. Of the eight nations present, only two were Asian; several nations whose location made them logical candidates for an Asian coalition chose not to attend. The U.S. representatives at the Manila Conference in Septem- ber, 195^-5 arrived, with instructions to insist on a number of preconditions for U.S. military action in Southeast Asia. First, with its commitments in Europe, the U.S. would, refuse to act unilaterally in Asia; further, any such action would, have to involve not only Asian nations, but also major European partners. Moreover, the U.S. would, not be prepared, to com- mit ground, troops into combat in Asia; other nations would, do the ground A-13 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive fighting under a cover of U.S. sea and air power. In addition, the U.S. defined the communist threat as the only real danger in the area; the U.S. did. not want to be drawn into an alliance directed against any other sort of enemy, particularly desiring to avoid colonial conflicts. Hence, the U.S. sought to restrict the applicability of any U.S. commitment to a few specified nations especially vulnerable to communist aggression. Each of these two major U.S. qualifications — the proscriptions against land forces, and emphasis on anti- communism -- created its own dilemmas, solutions to which proved to be elusive. (l) Force Commitment The resource -- political as well as military -- the U.S. was prepared to commit to SEATO was bound to constitute its principal strength. But the U.S., with its NATO commitments already a sizeable bur- den, was not prepared to pay the price of a strong coalition. In no sense was the U.S. prepared to commit itself to SEATO as it had to MTO. (it is interesting that Dulles was so concerned with avoiding a public identi- i fication of SEATO with NATO that he tried to have the new treaty called "MANPAC," for "Manila Pact." 25/) Rather, the U.S. searched for ways in which other nations would, provide troops. But few nations in 195^ possessed the capability to field an army of significance within the SEATO region. ■ Vice Admiral Davis noted that: "The United States was faced in this issue, I believe, with the dilemma of attempting to attain two objectives that were not completely compatible; on the one hand there was a desire to place the communists on notice as clearly as possible that further aggression on the area would, meet with effective collective counter- action. Such unequivocal notification would tend to enhance the psychological effect of the Treaty on the Free World and. the de- terrent effect on the communists. Yet on the other hand, in spite of the greater psychological effect that a strongly worded Treaty might have, the attainment of this objective was necessarily limited by the extent to which the United. States, in its own interest, could undertake advance military commitments under the Treaty in restriction of its freedom of action." 26/ "While the U.S. continued, to call the prospective pact . "regional," a region existed, only in the sense that a certain geographical • area was considered to be threatened, by the expansion of communism. The membership solicited for the SEATO conference was worldwide; potential force contributors were overbalanced, on the European side; and. even within the region itself, several countries did not desire to become participants, and others were not invited. Determined not to become enmeshed in South- east Asia without help from Europe, the U.S. settled for a SEATO based on unspecified, forces from eight nations, five of which were ethnically European -- a position which apparently dismissed from consideration the disadvantages which would accrue to armies drawn from former metropole nations. A-lA- TOP SECRET - Sensitive z Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Several of the states at Manila were acutely disappointed. at the reluctance of the U.S. to place its military forces at the disposal of the pact; they were expecting a NATO-like commitment and they were sur- prised when it was not forthcoming. Admiral Davis reported that: "With respect to the military aspects of the Treaty, most of the participating States , notably the Philippines and Thailand, urged provisions that would explicitly commit the Treaty Parties to take military action in event of aggression in the Treaty area. The commitment of the United States to such action, of course, was the purpose of these urgings. Much was said about the de- sirability of the NATO as opposed to the allegedly weaker ANZUS formula. Most of the participating States argued that explicit commitments to take action were necessary if the Treaty was to - have the desired, deterrent effect on the communists." 27/ But the U.S. delegates maintained their opposition, arguing that the U.S. had to retain its freedom of action, and could, not accept a treaty commit- ment that was inconsistent with Constitutional requirements, and. therefore prejudicial to ratification of the treaty by the Senate. I (2) Ant i- Communism At the beginning of the Manila Conference, the U.S. served notice that it looked on the future SEATO agreement as an ant i- communist pact, and. that it would, react only against a communist threat. The U.S. . agreed, to "consult" with the other members to decide future action, if faced, with a non-communist threat. This, of course, had the effect of emphasizing once again the qualified, nature of the U.S. commitment: the strongest power in the pact reserved the right to opt out of contingencies. Other nations present at Manila saw many other threats to regional peace, some of which seemed. to them a good, deal more dangerous than communism ( e.g . Indonesian relations with Malaya, and. Indian relations with Pakistan). There was, as a result, some hesitance to look on the pact as a mutual band- ing together against all dangers. Few missed the irony of the U.S. being the chief advocate of the SEATO pact, and also its prime qualifier. 28/ 2. The Treaties Compared. Although Secretary of State Dulles wished to avoid comparisons of SEATO with NATO, such were inevitable. Similarities were in fact intended. by many of the Manila Conferees, and. emerged, in the wording of the treaties. All the delegations at Manila, the U.S. included, took pains with treaty terminology, calculating carefully the effect it would have on their own domestic politics, as well as on the communist countries. As Admiral Davis reported: "The Treaty is a document that speaks to many audiences; it supports self-determination of peoples, self-government and. independence in deference to Asian nationalism; it provides for economic and. technical cooperation as an inducement to present A-15 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Asian 'neutralist 1 countries to associate themselves with the Treaty; it permits the accession of other states, thus avoiding the charge that the Treaty members form an exclusive club with aggressive designs 'against 1 other States; . . .These elements of the Treaty attest to the importance the member States place on the effect o^ the document upon their respective publics. . .The success that the Treaty may have in enhancing the defense of the area will therefore have to be judged in light of the fact that it has psychological and economic as well as military objectives." 29/ a. Introductory Articles Alike The initial article of both treaties is the same, word for word.* The member nations promise not to use force in any manner incon- sistent with the principles of the United Nations. Article 2 of NATO conforms to Article III of SEATO: an undertaking to strengthen free insti- tutions and promote economic progress, and is identical except for speci- fic mention in SEATO of technical assistance and promotion of social well-being, wording which is not in the NATO version. The reversal of- the order of presentation of the second and third articles is interest- ing. In NATO, the article committing the members to strengthen free in- stitutions precedes the article on developing collective capacity to resist attack. The order is changed in SEATO, perhaps emphasizing defense over other considerations. Article 3 of NATO corresponds to Article II of SEATO: an expression of resolve to develop a collective capacity to resist armed attack. There is, however, a significant difference in the SEATO article with the addition of a clause applying the Treaty specifically to subversion. This clause, in combination with the provision of SEATO Article IV that the parties shall consult immediately on measures of com- mon defense if threatened by other than armed attack, places subversive aggression, in the form of externally fomented or supported insurgency, or coup d * etat , within the purview of the treaty. b. The Key Articles Central to analysis of the two treaties is comparison of the articles calling for action to meet an enemy threat. These are Articles k and 5 of the NATO Treaty, and Article IV of the SEATO Treaty. In general, the SEATO article has come under heavy criticism for lack of forcefulness. As presented below, the SEATO article has been transposed to parallel the two articles of NATO, but no words have been added or deleted. NATO Art, k & 5 The Parties will consult together whenever, in the opinion of any of them, the territorial integrity, SEATO Art. IV If, in the opinion of any of the parties, the inviolability or the integrity of the territory or ^Appendix A, Comparison of the Wording of the NATO and SEATO Treaties A-16 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive nato Art, k & 3 political independence or security of any of the Parties is threatened. The Parties agree that an armed, attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered, an attack against them all and. consequently they agree that if such an armed, attack occurs , each of them in exercise of the right of in- dividual or collective self- defense recognized., by Article 51 of the Charter of the United. Nations SEATO Art. IV the sovereignty or political in- dependence of any Party in the Treaty Area or of any other State or territory to shich the provi- sions of paragraph 1 of this Arti- cle from time to time apply is threatened, in any way other than by armed, attack or is affected, or threatened, by any fact or situation which might endanger the pea.ce of the area, the Parties shall con- sult immediately in order to agree on the measures which should, be taken for the common defense. • Each Party recognizes that aggres- sion by means of armed, attack against any of the Parties or against any state or territory which the Parties by unanimous agreement may hereafter designate In the Treaty area would, endanger its own peace and. safety and. agrees that it will in that event will assist the party or parties so attacked, by taking forthwith, individually and. in concert with the other parties such action as it d.eems neces- sary, including the use of armed force. to restore and. maintain the security of the North Atlantic Area. act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes A-17 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive I NATO Art, k 8c 3 any such armed attack and all mea- sures taken as a result thereof shall immediately be reported to the Security Council. Such measures shall be terminated when the Security Council has taken the measures necessary to restore and maintain international peace and security. SEATO Art . IV measures under this paragraph shall be immediately reported to the Security Council of the United Nations It is understood that no action on the territory of any state designated by unanimous agreement under paragraph 1 of this article or on any territory so desig- nated shall be taken except at the invitation or with the consent of the government concerned. As the American delegation at Manila noted, the SEATO Article IV was in line with the wording used in the U.S., Philippine, Korean, and ANZUS pacts. The issue of pre commitment to react to armed, attack was side-stepped: "Secretary Dulles pointed out during the conference that the wording of the North Atlantic Treaty, which speaks of an attack on one as an attack on all, nevertheless provides that the Parties will act in accordance with their constitutional processes. He persuaded, the Conference that the final agreed wording of Arti- cle IV would be better received by the Senate, should tend, to minimize d.ebate, and. would, facilitate ratification by the United States." 30/ The SEATO Treaty wording is thus intentionally ambiguous on the point of just what response would be made by the members in the event of an armed attack. Such an attack against one of the SEATO members would be viewed, as a "common danger" rather than as an "attack on all." Where the NATO Treaty notes that action taken "forthwith" might includ.e the "use of armed force," the SEATO Treaty states merely that "common danger" would, be "met" in accordance with "constitutional processes." SEATO also, makes the provision that no action shall be taken on the territory of any threatened state with- out the consent of that state, a qualification necessary to reassure small- country members that their independence was not threatened by neocolonialism or other domination, and. recognition of one of the most significant differ- ences in the environment of the two treaty organizations. In some respects, nevertheless, Article IV of the SEATO Treaty is broader than its NATO counterparts. The nature of the threat is loosely A-18 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive defined, as "any fact or situation that might endanger the peace of the area/' and provision is made to respond to threatened, countries that are non-members of the pact. In addition, there is no clause implying dependence on the Security Council of the UN to step in to "restore and. maintain international peace and security," as there is in the NATO Treaty. Yet, the main point evident is that both the wording of NATO and that of SEATO provid.e the basis for a strong defensive strategy or, indeed., would, admit of a weak one. There is enough room for interpretation under the SEATO Treaty for membersto devise all the defensive protection that NATO offers, and more. c. Extent of the Treaty Areas NATO Article 6 is the equivalent of SEATO Article VIII, dealing with definition of the treaty area. Both are broad, but the SEATO article is the more flexible of the two. In SEATO the area is limited, on the north at latitude 21 degrees, 30 minutes, thus eliminating Formosa, Hong Kong, Korea, and Japan. The rest of the area is defined only as "the general area of South-East Asia" and. "the general area of the South-West Pacific." The area, the treaty notes, can be modified at any time by unanimous agreement. The phrase that permitted inclusion of "the entire territories of the Asian parties" was noted by the U.S. delegation as having the advantage of bringing in West Pakistan "under the protection of the Treaty even though it is not in Southeast Asia." 31/ &. UN and Other Pacts Except for a change in two or three unimportant words, NATO 7 and 8 are summed, up and. repeated in SEATO VTj these articles declare that agreements between SEATO members and. the UN, or by members with other countries are not, nor will be, in conflict with SEATO responsibilities. o- e. Treaty Institutions NATO 9 and SEATO V establish a council for military and other planning. In the NATO Treaty this council is authorized to set up "sub- sidiary bodies," while in the SEATO Treaty such authorization is not given This was a disappointment to several of the delegations at the Manila Conference. The Australians came forward, with a request for a strong organization, but the U.S. delegation was able to persuad.e them to accept a modification of their proposal, substituting a concept of "consultation" "During the sessions of the Working Group it became evid.ent that some countries would, propose wording calling for the establish- ment of military machinery, possibly along NATO lines. Recalling the position of ^/the U.S. State/ Department that military partici- pation should be consultative along lines of the ANZUS arrangement rather than permanent and formal as in NATO, the Defense Representa- tive. . .proposed that consideration be given to the inclusion of the following wording after the first sentence of Article IV: , 'To this end the Parties to the Treaty will consult with regard A-19 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive to military planning as required by the situation in the area. T Shortly thereafter the Australian delegation proposed the follow- ing addition to Article V: T The Council shall set up such sub- sidiary machinery as may be necessary to achieve the military and other objectives of the Treaty. ' Since the Australian proposal involved an open ended commitment, this Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff opposed it and accepted the wording suggested by the Defense Representative. The Department of State agreed, and instructed the U.S. Delegation to support incorporation of this wording in Article IV." 32/ Secretary Dulles was able to bring about deletion of the references to periodic or regular consultation that had been introduced into the draft treaty. f . Treaty Longevity The final NATO articles (ll-lU) are administrative, covering ratification of the treaty, the length of time it is to remain in force, provisions for review of the articles, and archival responsibilities . These are paralleled in SEATO articles IX -XI. The NATO Treaty provides for withdrawal of its members after 19&9; members are to give a year's notice prior to such action „ The SEATO Treaty is to remain in force in- definitely, but members also may withdraw on one year's notice. g. The Appended U S. "Understanding" Throughout the discussions at Manila the U.S. insisted that the focus of the pact be on the prevention of further communist expansion in the treaty area. When the other nations would not acquiesce to a word- ing of the treaty to make anti-communism its specific objective, the U.S. requested that an "understanding" be appended to the treaty. This was a U.S. unilateral statement of intent — a qualifier upon the first paragraph of Article IV., in which the members agreedthat in the event of aggression they will "act to meet the common danger in accordance with constitutional processes." The U.S. in the understanding restricts the applicability of its agreement to act, stating that only communist aggression will be recog- nized as warranting immediate response. In the event of other kinds of aggression, the U.S. would consult with the other member nations Admiral Davis reported disagreement over this point at the conference: "All participating States except the United States supported exclusion of the word 'Communist T from the Treaty. The U.S. draft originally referred to 'Communist aggression' in the preamble and in Article IV. The chief reason advanced by the other signatories for the deletion was the desire of most of the Parties that the Treaty cover any kind of aggression in the area. Pakistan, for example, wished that the Treaty would apply to possible aggression by India. The United States position was that the United States could not properly say that any aggression in Southeast Asia would endanger its own peace and safety, and that it could accept the A- 20 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive obligations of Article IV only in respect to Communist aggression. For this reason, the United States attached an 'understanding' to the Treaty in this sense. All other participants accepted the Treaty with the U.S. 'understanding. ! " 33/ In the "understanding" the U.S. further complicated the matter by changing "aggression by means of armed attack" of Article IV to "aggression and armed attack" y in the same sentence, the understanding uses "aggression or armed attack" to refer to paragraph 2 of Article IV, which in fact is worded "threatened in any way other than by armed attack." The admixture of terms accentuates one of the major difficulties of the alliance: the governments of the SEATO treaty area were threatened by a complicated variety of destruc tive movements that might be called aggression against a member state. The appellation could be fitted in anywhere between "armed attack" and "fact or situation which might endanger the peace." The U.S. insistence on this point of "understanding" was probably superfluous. The latitude that the U.S. wanted already was built into the treaty, in Article IV. The emphatic nature of such an appendix to the treaty may have been calculated as a way to call the attention of the world to a powerful U.S. stand against further encroachments of communism. Such a call would have been consistent with the U.S. feeling of a necessity to re-establish a psychological posi- tion in the face of the "defeats" of Geneva. Nevertheless, the confirma- tion of U.S. single-mindedness that made a communist threat the only valid call for immediate response narrowed SEATO at its inception. ■ h. The Vietna.m-Laos -Cambodia Protocol . j * The final item of the SEATO Treaty is a "protocol," which states unanimous agreement among the members to include Cambodia, Laos, and "the free territory under the jurisdiction of the State of Vietnam" under the protection of Articles III and IV of the Treaty. In other words, these countries, without actually becoming members of the pact, would be entitled to "economic measures including technical assistance" and also to defense against any attack, overt or not, from without or within. The U.S. had wanted to include these countries in SEATO, but membership might have seemed legally a contravention of the Geneva Agreements. At Geneva, Laos had not signed any agreement prejudicial to such a pact, but the Laotian Government, on the final day of that conference, had made the following declaration: "The Royal Government of Laos will never join in any agree- ment with other states if this agreement includes the obligation for the Royal Government of Laos to participate in a military alliance not in conformity with the principles of the United Nations or with the principles of the ^Geneva/* Agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities..." 3V South Vietnam, on the other hand, was coextensive with one of the zones described in Article 19 of the armistice, which specifies: A-21 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive r "The two Parties shall ensure that the zones assigned to them do not adhere to any military alliance and are not used for the resumption of hostilities or to further an aggressive policy." 35> France — one of the "Parties" to the armistice — was thus not in a posi- tion to admit the GVN to SEATO. However, nothing in the Geneva Accords appeared to exclude 9,11 three countries from being extended protection under such a pact without member status. 36/ This was pointed out by the French delegation: "At French suggestion specific reference to Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam was removed from the text of the Treaty, but these States are covered by the provisions of the Treaty in a separate protocol. . .The French felt that this method of extending the application of the Treaty to the Associated States was less likely to be construed as a violation of the spirit of the Geneva Agreements." 37/ wrote : At the conclusion of' the Manila Conference, Admiral Davis "I believe the Manila Conference accomplished the objec- tive expected of it from the United States point of view. In my judgment our Defense representation in the U.S. Delegation succeeded in its efforts to insure that the Treaty is consistent in its military implications with the positions taken by the -Joint Chiefs of Staff and by this Department." 38/ The U.S. had, in effect, made a public statement of its intent to counter further communist moves in SEA, but left vague the specifics of its response The pact, as intended, was fundamentally "consultative." There was to be no unified command, no bases, and no contribution of forces to a standing group; the U.S. accepted these lacks, and stressed the psychological gains of merely bringing a treaty into existence, pointing out that SEATO opened the way to a stronger and more all- encompassing defense of Southeast Asia than had theretofore been possible. A- 22 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 * • J TOP SECRET - Sensitive 3. Evolution of the Treaty Organization a. NATO Develops Rapidly NATO rapidly acquired institutions.* The treaty entered into force in August , 19^9- By September, a Military Committee, a . Standing Group, and the Regional Planning Groups had been created. By November a Financial and Economic Board and a Military Production and Supply Board had been set up. By December agreement had been reached on a strategic concept for the integrated defense of the NATO area. A year later a centralized command and control structure was formulated, becoming operational as SHAPE on 2 April 1951; with headquarters in the old Hotel Astoria, in Paris. Spurred on by the events occurring in Korea, NATO was further simplified and streamlined in the Ottawa meeting of September 1951; where a Temporary Council Committee chaired by W. Averell Harriman was set up. This became a permanent council, in March, 1952, a month after the accession of Greece and Turkey to the pact. 39/ I n the wake of a major setback when the French Assembly refused to ratify the European Defense Community (EDC) proposal in August, 195^; the Paris Agreements were pushed through in October, providing for the accession of West Germany to NATO, and the establish- ment of a combined field command.** Early in 1956 the NATO Council appointed a Committee of Three Ministers (Mart in o of Italy, Lange of Norway, and Pearson of Canada) to study ways that further cooperation could be achieved within NATO. The report of this Committee was approved by the Council on 1^ December, 1956. Consultation within NATO was to become "an integral part of the making of national policy." ko/ The meeting of 16-19 December 1957 of the NATO Council included the heads of government, with Eisenhower and Macmillan participating. This meeting symbolized the significance which all the NATO countries attached to the pact -- and it was this sense of meaningfulness, commonality, and neces- sity, more than the terms of the North Atlantic Treaty, that accounted for the rapid organizational growth. b. SEATO Unstructured by U.S. Preference The Manila Conference eventuated in a pact termed the "Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty and Protocol Thereto, Septem- ber 8, 195^"; the treaty was ratified by the U.S. Senate by a vote of 82 to 1, and entered into force on February 19, 1955- *+l / The history of the development of SEATO thereafter is quite different from NAT0 T s, since the initial policy of the U.S. was to discourage, rather than to assist, the evolution of a permanent structure. SEATO military staff * Appendix B, Organizational Charts ** In the same month — October, 195^ ™ the Warsaw Pact came into being A-23 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i i I i . consultations were held frequently, but were attended by relatively low-ranking U.S. officers, carefully instructed on limits of their planning flexibility. At the SEATO conference in Bangkok in February 1955; "the U.S. position on military arrangements under the pact was to avoid discussion of permanent formal organization. A Defense Depart' ment memorandum on the U.S. stance again recommended that the ANZUS pact be used as a model: "The U.S. desires to make no commitments of U.S. forces for use under the Manila pact. (This view has not been con- veyed to the other powers . ) "With regard to military machinery for the coordination of measures to combat overt aggression, the U.S. is opposed to the establishment of formal military machinery or of a permanent SEATO staff. Instead, the U.S. supports the estab- lishment of military advisors, who would meet periodically, formulate their own rules of procedure and any necessary organizational arrangements, designate planning assistants to work on specified projects, and insure that military planning activities are coordinated with those designed to counter sub- versive activities. "While not explicitly so stated, the U.S. position is one of confining its activities and commitments to the scope of those made under the ANZUS Pact. Such apparent concessions to the other powers as have been made in the Working Group papers do not alter the fact that the U.S. is unwilling to commit any forces to the defense of Southeast Asia , opposes * . any military organizational arrangement which would require the integration of U.S. and allied war plans, and prefers to deal with its allies bilaterally rather than mult ilat era lly. " k2/ /inphasis added/ The U.S., although it refused to become deeply committed in advance to a military organization styled along NATO lines, was well aware of the necessity to be prepared to fight in the SEATO area. U.S. unilateral plans and preparations had been set in motion when, in January, 1955; the Secretary of Defense requested the JCS to provide "a concept of the possible application of U.S. military power in the implementation of Article IV of the Manila Pact" under two different assumptions: (l) prohibition of nuclear weapons; (2) permission to employ nuclear weapons. Requirements were established for: "l. Broad outline plans for U.S. action... to deter or counter overt aggression by Communist China or, where applicable, by Viet Minh, against each of the Southeast Asian nations which are parties to the Manila Pact or against the free areas of Indochina which might be covered by the Pact. ^Emphasis added/ A-2lf TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive "2. ...a statement as to the readiness capability of U.S. armed forces, in the next few years, to conduct operations in implementation of Article IV, 1, of the Manila Pact." k'j/ The U.S. forces vould constitute a "mobile reserve" ready for commit- ment to the treaty area, but the U.S. would enter no fixed agreement as to what those forces might be, or under what circumstances they would be used. Despite this unilateral planning, however, instructions for the delegates to the Bangkok conference indicated that planning for or creation of combined commands were not to be considered within the •scope of the SEATO Pact. Suppression of guerrillas was to be handled by "indigenous forces only" unless these proved incapable of coping with the problem. - At the 1955 Bangkok Conference the Australians and New Zealanders repeated their willingness to make troop commitments to a SEATO force, but the U.S. representatives, following instructions, evaded discussion of the subject, kk/ The pressures on the U.S. team were strong, and the members came away with the conviction that the major factor "to contend with" in future meetings was bound to be "...the obvious desire of the Asian nations to establish a NATO-type S'EATO organization with everything that it implies in the nature of force commitments." h^ / Later in 1955* U.S. planners once more were approached by counterparts of several other countries with the proposal that, as a step toward some kind of SEATO standing group, a small secretariat be set up to study methods of creating a "possible future organizational structure." The report of the U.S. representatives stated, "The establishment of such an ad hoc arrangement should not prejudice the eventual creation or evolution of a standing group. . .should the need become necessary because of inadequacies revealed by experience." kS/ The JCS commented: "The Joint Chiefs of Staff have no objection to the establishment of a small permanent secretariat, which would be an instrument of the Military Advisers and subordinate planning committees. However, the Joint Chiefs of Staff would not agree to the possible evolution of such a secre- tariat into an organization of a standing nature...." h'j/ This was the same point of view expressed by CINCPAC, who noted with apparent relief that: "The recognition of the requirement for a small permanent secretariat has definitely forestalled for the foreseeable future any determined insistence for either a permanent staff planners organization, a standing group, or a combined staff." hQ/ A-25 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive The U.S. members attending the SEATO Military Staff Planners Conference in Pearl Harbor in November , 1955 ? received basically the same instructions as had been given to earlier planners: • • (1) No acceptance of a permanent "standing group" staff organization. (2) No U.S. participation in the development of combined plans . (3) No commitment of U.S. forces. k$/ A demonstration by the U.S. 25th Infantry Division was considered quite impressive by the conference delegates , but did not assuage the appetite among other SEATO nations for strong, concrete U.S. force commitments. The chief U.S. delegate, Rear Admiral A. P. Storrs, recommended to his superiors that the U.S. add "substance" to SEATO by: (1) Accepting the concept of a permanent staff organization. (2) Accepting the concept of combined planning. (3) Maintaining a U.S. division in the Central Pacific. 50/ Storrs felt that these actions might satisfy the rest of the SEATO nations and quiet their demands for a permanent U.S. force commitment, but he focused on a fading issue. While some SEATO members, especially Australia and New Zealand, kept up an insistence on a stronger organiza- tion for the pact, others began to show less and less interest in SEATO per se. By the end of 1955, the U.S. realized that SEATO would fall apart unless something were done to provide a permanent structure. Admit- ting that the Asian countries were "losing faith" in SEATO, the State Department decided to reexamine the U.S. position pertaining to a perma- nent staff organization for the SEATO Council. 51/ A decision for a permanent body of staff planners was taken at a meeting of SEATO Mili- tary Advisers in Karachi in March, 1956. 52/ The advisers agreed on a staff organization headed by a chief of staff with flag rank. Bangkok was selected as the site for SEATO headquarters. At the ninth conference of SEATO Military Advisers, in February 1959> it was agreed that a series of outline plans for the "introduction of a SEATO force into threatened areas" would be prepared. 53, The plans would be based on the assumption that the initial requirement would be for one Irigade group or regimental conbat team with appropriate naval support. Discussion of a command structure to implement these plans was postponed to a later meeting, over the objections of the Pakistani delegate, who insisted that the time for action was "now": A-26 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 ■ TOP SECRET - Sensitive tu Until a command structure, even if only in skeleton form, for SEATO forces has been evolved, SEATO is not in a position, collectively, to operate instantaneously. . . .A study on command • structure should be started now." 5k/ At the following meeting, in September 1959; a SEATO command was estab- lished in embryo when the U.S. agreed to the reorganization of the' Military Planning Office into a configuration that could be assimilated by the planning staff of a permanent SEATO headquarters along the lines of SHAPE. 55/* By the twelfth SEATO Military Advisers Conference in Washington in May i960, Secretary of Defense Gates was able to make the public announcement that SEATO had advanced significantly in organ- ization and planning: "National forces of the Southeast Asia countries, backed by powerful mobile forces, contribute to the deterrent.... Coordinated SEATO military plans have been prepared and are capable of rapid execution to parry any likely Communist threat... SEATO exercises have progressed from simple observer type to. . . sophisticated maneuvers. ..." 56/ c. SEATO Contingency Planning During the winter of 1959~1960 a series of plans was pre- pared for contingencies throughout the SEATO area. By the spring of I96I these SEATO plans, numbered 1 through 6, came under consideration in the first "invoking" of the SEATO Treaty, when the Pathet Lao forces threatened to overrun Laos and invade Thailand. 57/ From the U.S. point of view, the SEATO plans were derivatives of U.S. unilateral plans for Southeast Asia covering "action up to and including action with Communist China." The then current U.S. master plan, PACOM Operations Plan 3^-59; served as the basis for U.S. contributions to the SEATO Plans. 58/ The U.S. led the way in preparation of a series of six contingency plans for the treaty area . By the fall of 1961 some of these plans had been approved and others were under discussion at Bangkok. 59/ Of these plans, at least three were concerned with the SEATO Protocol states of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. Plan $1 provided for the defense of Southeast Asia, including Pakistan, against attack by forces of Communist China and the DRV. The general concept was: (l) "To launch air and naval attacks; local forces to delay the enemy's advance as feasible while rapidly reinforcing. with external SEATO forces. TT (2) "To establish ground defenses in order to hold the enemy forward of vital areas in South Vietnam, Thailand and East Pakistan, and to build up forces behind them while con- ducting air and naval offensive against enemy forces, base areas, L0C T s and war-making capacity." *See Appendix B for present organization. A-27 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive (3) "After appropriate build-up, to launch a counter offen- sive, including a major amphibious assault on North Vietnam, to inflict a decisive defeat on enemy military forces and at the same time liberate occupied territory." 60/ Plan 5 provided U.S. troops to release the Royal Laotion forces for offensive operations and to assist them "to regain areas lost." The U.S. would also provide "additional military and logistic support." This was a fully developed and approved plan, for which "the Field Force Commander T s plan is complete." 6l/ Plan 6 provided for the defense of the protocol states against attack by forces of the DRV. The general concept was: (1) "To hold the enemy as far forward as possible and to provide defense in depth, securing main ports of entry and bases for build-up and deployment of forces for counter-offensive." (2) "To destroy the enemy's forces, L0C T s and capacity to wage war through an intensive interdiction program conducted by SEATO air and naval forces supported by such air and naval forces under national command as are made available." (3) "While maintaining the defense, forces for the counter- offensive phase will be assembled and built up. When appropriate, a general offensive to include a major amphibious assault against North Vietnam will be mounted to inflict a decisive defeat on the enemy military forces and to liberate the territory overrun by . the DRV." 62/ U.S. ground force commitment to the plans was a corps consisting of three infantry divisions plus a Marine Expeditionary Force of one division Air support was a tactical bomber squadron, two tactical fighter squad- rons, and a Marine air wing. Anticipated support of the plans by other SEATO countries is evident in available ground force troop lists for plans k and 6: 63/ A-28 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive TOTAL GROUND FORCES - \ Plan h (SEA.) Div RCT Bn 3 k 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 h 1 ll 6 2 15 8 k 1-1/3 Plan 6 (VN-L-C) Div RCT/BDE Bn 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 k 1 3 9 5 5. 12* 7* 5* NATION Thailand Pakistan United Kingdom Australia New Zealand France Philippines South Vietnam Total Non-U. S. CINCPAC Est. Rqmt Shortage (l) Laos Planning A modification of Plan #5 existed under the temporary title of "Plan 5-plus, " drafted by the JCS in September 196I as a pro- . posed contingency plan for intervention in Laos. In this concept, 25,400 troops would be sent into Laos. The force would consist of the following: 64/ Support and Reserves 11, 000 3, 300 3,500 4,700 200 . Country In Laos U.S. 5,500 Thailand ■ 11, 400 Commonwealth 4,400 (UK, Australia, KZ) Pakistan 1,400 Philippines GVN 2.700 These troops would augment the Royal Laos forces of 38,500 in the Regu- lar Army, 11,000 Meos, and 29,800 other defense forces. In this modifica tion of Plan 5, it was assumed that the Royal Laotian Government would appeal to SEAT0 for assistance. This would initiate an airlift of SEAT0 forces into key points along the Mekong River at Vientiane, Paksane, Thakkek, Savannakhet, and Pakse. These forces would support the Royal Laotian troops against communist forces in the areas of northern Laos bordering on Thailand and from all of the Laotian panhandle. At the same time, Thai forces would operate around Luang Prabang and GY^ troops would operate along the GVN- Laos border. * Includes a two division reserve held outside the theater of operations and two RCT-size airborne units held in SVN. A-29 TOP SECRET - Sensitive J' Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive (2) Vietnam Planning The JCS, in a memorandum to the Secretary of Defense on 5 October, 196lj noted that although recommendations had been for- warded on the subject of intervention in Southeast Asia, nothing had been done. "The time is past/' they stated, "when action short of inter- vention could reverse the rapidly worsening situation." The JCS con- sidered that "the execution of SEATO Plan 5j or a suitable variation • ' thereof" was the "military minimum commensurate with the situation." 66/ Defense replied on the same day, requesting JCS analysis of two concepts for SEATO intervention in Vietnam: "There appear to be two principal military possibilities. One would involve the use of SEATO forces at the greatest possible number of entry points along the whole of the South ; . Vietnamese border, probably excluding that part of the 17th parallel now held in force by the Vietnamese Army itself. An alternative possibility would be the use of SEATO forces to i cover solely the 17th parallel itself, which includes some major infiltration routes, and thus to free the Vietnamese forces now stationed there for engagement against the Viet Cong. Under either possibility, planning should envisage maximum possible use of the SEATO forces to establish effective communications in as wide an area of Viet-Nam as possible, and to serve as a means for introducing new techniques into the Vietnamese forces them- selves. The forces would, of course, be entitled to take all necessary action for their own security, but would not (unless the concept were later expanded) engage in offensive operations against the Viet Cong that were not strictly necessary to their own security. Your military recommendations for the refinement of these guidelines into more precise rules of engagement should be a part of your response." 67/ The JCS reply, on 9 October 1961, noted that the use of SEATO troops all along the border was "not. feasible" because the VC could bypass such forces or attack them piecemeal. Further, the concept of use of SEATO troops at the 17th parallel was "feasible. .. .but militarily unsound" because the area was not the VC main avenue of approach, and also because the move could easily be interpreted as aggression against the DRV. The JCS recommended, instead, that : "...the over-all objective could best be served by the implementation of SEATO Plan 5/6l or a variation thereof, now." 68/ If this action could not be taken, the JCS continued, then the U.S. could [ "provide a degree of assistance" to the GW and could "free certain South Vietnamese forces for offensive actions against the Viet Cong." No action was taken to implement the SEATO plan. A-30 ' TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive - (3) Thailand Planning In May 1962 when the Pathet Lao threat against Thailand became acute, a U S. battle group was dispatched on joint training exercises within the country. President Kennedy announced that more UcS. troops would be sent, and by 15 May a second contin- gent landed. On the same day, newspapers reported that the U S. was seeking SEATO help, and that W. Averell Harriman, then Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs, had "outlined the U.S. position in separate conferences with envoys of Australia, New Zeland, Pakistan, and the Philippines." 69/ Within two days, all the SEATO members except France had agreed to send help if necessary. The U.S. sent l+,000 troops into Thailand. Three other SEATO nations actually put forces (albeit token forces) into Thailand. The UK sent 10 Hunter jet-fighters, Australia sent a jet squadron, and New Zealand sent 100 parachute troops and three transport aircraft. The Philippines and Pakistan publicly noted that they were standing by to help. (k) The Future Discussions on the best method under SEATO to "meet the common danger" in Vietnam have not produced an overall agreement, and three of the eight SEATO nations — the UK, France, and Pakistan — have not responded to Vietnam's invitation to commit troops there. Of the five SEATO nations now fighting in Vietnam, the strength figures as of 17 October 1967 were: U.S. ^69,000 Australia 6,500 Thailand 2,500 Philippines 2,000 New Zealand Soo Total 4fcS0,400 70/ One non-member of SEATO, the Republic of Korea, was contributing ^-8,000 troops to the fighting as of that date, raising the Free World Forces total to 528,^00. France, in view of past policies, could not be expected to make a contribution; the amount of SEATO "unity" displayed by French participation would be offset by other obvious considerations. Pakistani assistance might be welcomed as a gesture of support for SEATO. But the major shortfall to date in SEATO has been the British decision that it is unable to participate militarily in Vietnam. With all its weaknesses, the majority of the SEATO pact nations have actually collaborated in regional defense in the Vietnam war. In fact, given the range of disparity among the members, it is a source of wonder that support of SEATO nations for Vietnam has been as strong as it has been. The conflict in Vietnam is a crucible for SEATO; the future of the alliance will be profoundly affected by the outcome of the war. A-31 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV. Ac 1. FOOTNOTES 1. Winston Churchill 9 "Alliance of English-Speaking People/ 1 Vital [ Speeches of the Day , Vol. 12 (March 15, 1946). Speech was delivered ! in Fulton, Missouri. . : 2. By "X," "The Sources of Soviet Conduct/ 1 Foreign Affairs , Vol. 25 (July, I9V7), 566-82. 3o U.S. Department of State Bulletin , Vol. l6 (March 23, 19^7) 3 536. 4. Ibid ., (June 15/19I+7), 1159-1160. 5° Committee of European Economic Cooperation, General Report , Vol. 1 (U.S. Department of State Publication 2930, 1947), 13. • • 6. Hansard, Parliamentary Debates, 446. H. C. DEB 5 S Col. 396-397 (January 22, 1948) . 7. U.S. Department of State Bulletin , Vol. 18 (March 28, 19^+8) , 4l9. 8. John Foster Dulles, War or Peace (1950), 95-96. (_ 9. Congressional Record , Vol. 9*4, Part VI, 80th Congress, 2d Session, 7791. 10. North Atlantic Treaty, Hearings Before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, 8lst Congress, 1st Session, Part I, 237. 11. Charles Wolf, Jr., Foreign Aid: Theory and Practice in Southern Asia (Princeton: Princeton University Press, i960) , 40-52. 12. Ibid ., 53~5 1 + 13- Documents on American Foreign Relations , 1949 3 626. 14. U.S. Congress, Hearings on Executive K , 83d Congress, 2d Session, Part I (November 11, 1954). 15. NSC 48/2, 30 Dec 19^9 (TOP SECRET) favors a regional association of non-Communist states in Southeast Asia, in which the U.S. "should not take an active part in early stages." NSC 48/3 ? 26 Apr 1951 (TOP SECRET) recommends that the U.S. "consider the desira.bil.ity of security arrangements with other countries of Asia, either on a bilateral or multilateral basis." A NSC progress report (5 Aug 1953) on NSC 124/2 states that the U.S. will continue to maintain the position that regional defense pacts should be initi- ated by countries in the region. Cf., also note 23, below. A-32 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 16. U.S. Congress, House, Hearings to Amend the ECA Act of 19^8 as Amended, 1950, Part I, 33-35- 17. Report of NSC 192d meeting, 6 Apr I95U (TOP SECRET), 3. 18. NSC 5^05-2, Bonesteel Memorandum, NSC Policy Board (TOP SECRET), May 13, 195^. 19. U.S. Congress, House, Hearings on East-West Trade Before the Sub - Committee on Foreign Economic Policy of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, 83d Congress, 2d Session (GPO, 195*0 , 292-293<> 20. Memorandum by Merchant (EUR) of conversation between Ambassadors Makin and Smith (u) , and between Makin and Dulles, 18 Apr 195^ (SECRET); Tel DULTE 3, 22 Apr 195^ from Paris (TOP SECRET). Re- ported in State Department Research Project 370, 21-22. 21. NSC 5^05-2, Bonesteel Memorandum, NSC Policy Board (TOP SECRET), . May 13, 195^. 22. Robert Cutler, in a White House Memorandum of May 7, 195U (TOP SECRET), calls the 5 -power Staff Agency a "white man's party," Cf., NSC File No. 5^05- 23. NSC 5^05-2, Policy Planning Board files, April, May, June (TOP SECRET), Paragraph 17 of NSC 5^05 (TOP SECRET) states: "Take measures to pro- mote the coordinated defense of Southeast Asia, recognizing that the initiative in regional defense measures must come from the governments of the area." ISA Memorandum, Wade to Bonesteel, 13 Apr 195U (TOP SECRET) comments on this paragraph: "in view of what we are now try- ing to do toward organizing a regional group^ the initiative is ob- viously with us." 2k. Memorandum to SecDef, "Report on the Manila Conference" (SECRET), ik Sep 195^> p. 1 (hereafter referred to as "Manila Report"). 25- John R. Beal, John Foster Dulles (New York: Harper, 1957) , 222; re- ported in Roscoe Robinson, SEATO: An Appraisal (University of Pittsburgh Marter T s Thesis, 196U) . Cf., also Hearings, 83d Congress, 2d Session, Part I, 195 1 4- . 26. Memorandum to SecDef, "Report on the Manila Conference" (SECRET), Ik Sep 195U, 3; A.S.B. Olver, SEATO: The Manila Treaty and Western Policy in Southeast Asia . (London: Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1956) , p. 12. _y 27. Manila Report (SECRET), 2. 28. . New York Times , September 8, 195^ A-33 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 29. Manila Report (SECRET), 1. 30. Ibid ,, 3. 31. Ibid . 3 k. 32. Ibid ., 3.-; TOSEC 25 (Sep 3, 5*0 33. Ibid ., k. 3U. Memorandum to SecDef from Herman Phleger, Subject: "Geneva Armistice Agreement Restrictions on Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam," dated July 27, 195I+ (SECRET). 35 • U.S. Congress, "Agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities in Vietnam, July 20, 195^-5" in Background Information Relating to Southeast Asia and Vietnam (Committee Print, 89th Congress, 2d Session), 43. 36. Phleger, op. cit ., (SECRET), 5- 37. Manila Report (SECRET), k. 38. Ibid., (SECRET), 5. 39. Lord Ismay, NATO: The First Five Years . (Utrecht: Bosch, 1952) passim . kO. NATO Information Service, The NATO Handbook . (Utrecht: Bosch, 1963) , 62 hi* U.S. Congress, Background Information Relating to Southeast Asia and Vietnam , op. cit ., 70-7^ • k2. DoD (ISA) Memorandum, Subject: "Analysis of Possible Implications of the Bangkok Conference," January 31, 1955 (TOP SECRET), File #71325 in NSC 5^05-2, 3. 1*3 • SecDef Memorandum for JCS, Subject: "Concept and Plans for the Imple- mentation, if Necessary, of Article IV, 1, of the Manila Pact," dated January 6, 1955 (TOP SECRET) . Memorandum, Subject: "Department of Defense Contribution to and Participation in the Bangkok Conference," dated March 29, 1955 (TOP SECRET) . 45. Ibid., (TOP SECRET) k6. JCS Memorandum CM-171-55, Subject: "Summary of Report of Military Staff Planners Conference. . .Baguio, Philippines, April-May 1955;" dated July 1, 195 5 9 (TOP SECRET). I47. Ibid. kh. A-3>+ TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive k8o JCS Memorandum > Subject: "Report of Military Staff Planners Confer- ence, Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty , Baguio, Philippines , April-May 1955/ T dated June 2, 1955 (Appendix "A") (TOP SECRET)'. - k$. Defense Memorandum, "U.S. Support of SEATO Military Activities," (TOP SECRET), 1., in NSC 5^05-3- 50. Ibid ., (TOP SECRET), 3- 51. Defense Memorandum to SecNav, Subject: "Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty (SEATO) Staff Organization," dated December 16, 1955 (SECRET). 52. CIECPAC Message to OSD, 222208Z March 1956, (TOP SECRET). 53 •• JCS Memorandum for SecDef, Subject: "Force Availabilities and Command Relations for the South East Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO)," dated March 23, 1959, (SECRET), 1. ' $k. Ibid ., (SECRET), 2. 55. JCS Memorandum for SecDef , Subject: "Proposal for Reorganization of the SEATO Military Planning Office," dated September 8, 1959, (SECRET), 1. 56. Appendix to the Congressional Record , AVi75 (i960). 57. State Departmant Memorandum of Conversation #8857, Subject: "Laos/' dated 29 April 1961 (TOP SECRET), covering meeting of SecState, SecDef, Atty Gen., JCS, and 8 others. 58. Memorandum for SecDef, dated October 5 5 19^1, "Alternative Plans for Southeast Asia," (TOP SECRET) 59. Memorandum for SecDef from Deputy Assistant SecDef, Subject: "Alterna- tive Plans for Southeast Asia," (TOP SECRET), dated 5 October 1961. The plans, numbered 1-6, are not available; data on the plans had been obtained from cross-checking commentaries on them, and is incom- plete. One plan ("5 plus"), an adoption of #5, is singled out as existing "only as a U.S. concept." Plan 5 has been "fully approved." Plans h and 6 are "being discussed this week at the SEATO MilAd Con- ference in Bangkok. - 60. Study for SecDef from Asst SecDef (ISA) recommending U.S. troop list for SEATO plans k and 6, dated 22 September 196l, (TOP SECRET) . 6l • Memorandum for SecDef, Subject: "Alternative Plans for Southeast Asia" (TOP SECRET), dated 5 October 1961. A-35 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ;, Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 62. ISA Study of 2 September 196l, cited in Note 60, (TOP SECRET). 63. Ibid ., (TOP SECRET). 6U. JCS Memorandum 66l-6l to SecDef, Subject: "Plan for Military Inter- vention in Laos," dated 20 September I96I, (TOP SECRET). 65. Ibid., (TOP SECRET) 66. JCS Memorandum 70k~6l to SecDef, Subject: "Planning for Southeast Asia," dated 5 October 1961, (TOP SECRET). 67. Memorandum from SecDef to JCS, Subject: "Planning for Southeast Asia," dated 5 October 1961, (SECRET). 68. JCS Memorandum 716-61 to SecDef, Subject: "Concept of Use of SEATO Forces in South Vietnam," dated 9 October 1961, (TOP SECRET). » 69. The New York Times , 15 May 1962. . 70. Figures from OASD/PA Vietnam Desk. A-36 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 APPENDIX A TOP SECRET - Sensitive A COMPARISON OF THE WORDING OF THE NATO AND SEATO TREATIES NOTES : 1. In this layout, sections of the SEATO Treaty are transposed for comparison with like sections of the NATO Treaty. No words have been omitted. 2. Significant passages pointing cut differences are underlined. 3. Comments are in brackets. NORTH ATLANTIC T REATY Washington, D .C . , T~April 19U9* SEATO TREATY The Parties to this Treaty reaffirm their faith in the purposes and prin- ciples of the Charter of the United Nations and their desire to live in peace with all peoples and all Gov- ernments. The Parties to this Treaty, Recognizing the sovereign equality of all. the Parties, They are determined to safeguard the freedom, common heritage and civiliza- tion of their peoples, founded on the" principles of democracy, individual liberty and the rule of law. They seek to promote stability and well-being in the North Atlantic area. They are resolved to unite their efforts for collective defense and for the preservation of peace and security. They therefore agree to this North Atlantic Treaty: * Effective 2k August 19U9 Reiterating their faith in the pur- poses and principles set forth in the Charter of the United Nations and their desire to live in peace with all peoples and all governments, Reaffirming that, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, they uphold the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples, and declaring that they will earnestly strive by every peaceful means to promote self-government and to secure the independence of all countries whose peoples desire it and are able to undertake its responsi- bilities, Desiring to strengthen the fabric of peace and freedom and to uphold the principles of democracy, individual liberty and the rule of law, and to promote the economic well-being and development of all peoples in the Treaty Area, A-37 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Intending to declare publicly and formally their sense of unity , so that any potential aggressor will appreciate that the Parties stand together in the area, and, Desiring further to co-ordinate their efforts for collective defense for the preservation of peace and security, Therefore agree as follows: ARTICLE 1 The Parties undertake, as set forth in the Charter of the United Nations, to settle any international dispute in which they may be involved by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security and justice are not endangered, and to refrain in their international rela- tions from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations. ARTICLE I The Parties undertake, as set forth in the Charter of the United Nations, to settle any international dispute in which they may be involved by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security and justice are not endangered, and to refrain in their international rela- tions from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations. ARTICLE 2 The Parties will contribute toward the further development of peaceful and friendly international relations by strengthening their free institutions, by bringing about a better under- standing of the principles upon which these institutions are founded, and by promoting conditions of stability and well-being. They will seek to eliminate conflict in their inter- national economic policies and will encourage economic collaboration, between any or all of them. ARTICLE III The Parties undertake to strengthen their free institutions and to co- operate with one another in the further development of economic measures, including technical assist- ance, designed both to promote economic progress and social well- being and to further the individual and collective efforts of governments toward these ends. /The SEATO Treaty places more stress on technical assistance and social well-being; reversal of the order of the second and third articles places emphasis on collective defense^ A-38 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ARTICLE 3 ARTICLE II In order more effectively to achieve the objectives of this Treaty 9 the Parties, separately and jointly, by means of continuous and effective self-help and mutual aid, "will main- tain and develop their individual and collective capacity to resist armed attack. ARTICLE k The Parties will consult together whenever, in the opinion of any of them, the territorial integrity, political independence or security of any of the Parties is threatened In order more effectively to achieve the objectives of this Treaty, the Parties, separately 'and jointly, by means of continuous and effective self-help and mutual aid will main- tain and develop their individual and collective capacity and to resist armed attack and to prevent and counter subversive activities directed from without against their territorial integrity and political stability. /The SEATO Treaty adds subversion as a contingency^/ ARTICLE IV 2. If, in the opinion of any of the Parties, the inviolability or the integrity of the territory or the sovereignty or political independ- ence of any Party in the Treaty Area or of any other State or territory to which the provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article from time to time apply is threatened in any way other than by armed attack or is affected or threatened by any fact or situa- tion which might endanger the peace of the area, the Parties shall con- sult immediately in order to agree on the measures which should be taken for the common defense. /The SEATO Treaty expands upon the word "threatened.^/ ARTICLE 5 The Parties agree that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them all, and consequently they agree that, if such an armed attack occurs, each 1. Each Party recognizes that aggres- sion by means of armed attack in the Treaty Area against any of the Parties or against any Stat e or territory which the Parties by unanimous agree- ment may hereafter designate, would A-39 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive of them, in exercise of the right of individual or collective self-defense recognized by Article 51 of the Char- ter of the United Nations, -will assist the Party or Parties so attacked by taking forthwith, individually emd in concert with the other Parties, such action as it deems necessary, includ - ing the use of armed force , to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area. ^"Armed force" is not specifically men- tioned in the SEATO Treaty^ Any such armed attack and all measures taken as a result thereof shall imme- diately be reported to the Security Council. Such measures shall be terminated when the Security Council has ta,ken the measures necessary to restore and maintain international ' peace and security. ^/This requirement is not in the SEATO Treaty// 7 endanger its own peace and safety, and agrees that it will in that event act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes . Measures taken under this paragraph shall be immediately reported to the Security Council of the United Nations. /The SEATO Treaty specifically covers non-members -- "any state" -- this is not specific in the NATO Treaty^ 3* It is understood that no action on the territory of any State desig- nated by unanimous agreement under paragraph 1 of this Article or on any territory so designated shall be taken except at the invitation or with the consent of the government concerned. /This understanding is not specific in the NATO Treaty// ARTICLE 6* For the purpose of Article 5> &n aimed attack on one or more of the Parties is deemed to include an armed attack: ARTICLE VIII As used in this Treaty, the "Treaty Area" is the general area of South- East Asia, including also the entire * As amended by Article 2 of the Protocol to the North Atlantic Treaty on the accession of Greece and Turke y A~>;0 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive on the territory of any of the Parties in Europe or North America, on the Algerian Departments of France** on the territory of Turkey or on the islands under the jurisdiction of any of the Parties in the North Atlantic area north of the Tropic of Cancer; on the forces, vessels, or aircraft of any of the Parties, when in or over these territories or any other area in Europe in which occupation forces of any of the Parties were stationed on the date when the Treaty entered into force or the Mediterranean Sea or the North Atlantic area north of the Tropic of Cancer. territories of the Asian Parties, and the general area of the South- West Pacific not including the Pacific area north of 21 degrees 30 minutes north latitude. The Parties may, by unanimous agreement, amend this Article to include within the Treaty Area the territory of any State acceding to this Treaty in accordance with Article VII or other ■ wise to change the Treaty Area. /This emphasis on flexibility of application is not in the NATO Treaty^ * ARTICLE 7 This Treaty does not affect, and shall not be interpreted as affecting, in any way the rights and obligations under the Charter of the Parties which are members of the United Nations, or the primary responsi- bility of the Security Council for the maintenance of international -oeace and security. ARTICLE 8 Each Party declares that none of the international engagements now in force ARTICLE VI This Treaty does not affect and shall not be Interpreted as affecting in any way the rights and obligations of any of the Parties under the Charter of the United Nations or the responsi- bility of the United Nations for the maintenance of international peace and security. Each Party declares that none of the international engagements now in force between it and any other of the Parties or any third party is in conflict with the provisions of this Treaty, and under- takes not to enter into any inter- national engagement in conflict with this Treaty. ** On l6th January, 1963, the French Representative made a statement to the North Atlantic Council on the effects of the independence of Algeria on cer- tain aspects of the North Atlantic Treaty. The Council noted that insofar as the former Algerian Departments of France were concerned the relevant clauses of this Treaty had become inapplicable as from 3rd July? 19&2. A-ia TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive "between it and any other of the Parties or any third State is in con- flict with the provisions of this Treaty, and undertakes not to enter into any international engageraent in conflict with this Treaty. ARTICLE 9 The Parties hereby establish a coun- cil, on which each of them shall be represented to consider matters con- cerning the implementation of this Treaty. The Council shall be so organized as to be able to meet promptly at any time. The Council shall set up such subsidiary bodies as may be necessary; in particular it shall establish immediately a defense committee which shall recom- mend measures for the implementation of Articles 3 and 5. ARTICLE 10 The Parties may, by unanimous agree- ment, invite any other European State in a position to further the prin- ciples of this Treaty and to contrib- ute to the security of the North Atlantic area to accede to this Treaty. Any State so invited may become a party to the Treaty by depositing its instru- ment of accession with the Government of the United States of America. The Government of the United States of America will inform each of the Parties of the deposit of each such instrument of accession. ARTICLE V The Parties hereby establish a Coun- cil, on which each of them shall be represented, to consider matters con- cerning the implementation of this Treaty. The Council shall provide for consultation with regard to military and any other planning as the situ- ation obtaining in the Treaty Area may from tme to time require. The Coun- cil shall be so organized as to be able to meet at any time. /See also NATO #12^ ARTICLE VII Any other State in a position to further the objectives of the Treaty and to contribute to the security of the area may, by unanimous agreement of the Parties, be invited to accede to this Treaty,, Any State so invited may become a Party to the Treaty by depositing its instrument of accession with the Government of the Republic of the Philippines. The Government of the Republic of the Philippines shall inform each of the Parties of the deposit of each such instrument of accession. ARTICLE 11 ARTICLE IX This Treaty shall be ratified and its provisions carried out by the Parties in accordance with their respective constitutional processes. The instru- ments of ratification shall be deposited 2. The Treaty shall be ratified and its provisions carried out by the Parties in accordance with their respective constitutional processes. The instruments of ratification shall k-kZ TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive as soon as possible with the Govern- ment of the United States of America , which will notify all the other signatories of each deposit. The Treaty shall enter into force "between the States which have ratified it as soon as the ratifications of the majority of the signatories, includ- ing the ratifications of Belgium, Canada, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States, have been deposited and shall come into effect with respect to other States on the date of the deposit of their ratifications. ARTICLE 12 After the Treaty has been in force for ten years, or at any time thereafter, the Parties shall, if any of them so requests, consult together for the purpose of reviewing the Treaty, having regard for the factors then affecting peace and security in the North Atlantic area, including the development of universal as well as regional arrangements under the Charter of the United Nations for the main- tenance of international peace and security. be deposited as soon as possible with the Government of the Republic of the Philippines, which shall notify all of the other signatories of such deposit. 3. The Treaty shall enter into force between the States which have rati- fied it as soon as the instruments of ratification of a majority of the signatories shall have been deposited, and shall come into effect with respect to each other State on the date of the deposit of its instrument of ratification. ^Touched on in Article V of SEAT0_J ARTICLE 13 After the Treaty has been in force for twenty years, any Party may cease to be a party one year after its notice of denunciation has been given to the Government of the United States of America, which will inform the Governments of the other Parties of the deposit of each notice of denun- ciation. ARTICLE X This Treaty shall remain in force indefinitely, but any Party may cease to be a Party one year after its notice of denunciation has been given to the Government of the Republic of the Philippines, which shall inform the Governments of the other Parties of the deposit of each notice of denunciation. A- 1*3 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive [ ' ARTICLE lk This Treaty, of which the English and French texts are equally authentic, shall be deposited in the archives of the Government of the United States of America. Duly certified copies will be transmitted by that Govern- ment to the Governments of the other signatories. ARTICLE XI The English text of this Treaty is binding on the Parties, but when the Parties have agreed to the French text thereof and have so notified the Government of the Republic of the Philippines, the French text shall be equally authentic and binding on the Parties. FROM ARTICLE IX 1. This Treaty shall be deposited in the archives of the Government of the Republic of the Philippines. Duly certified copies thereof shall be transmitted by that Government to the other signatories. UNDERSTANDING OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA The United States of America in executing the present Treaty does so with the understanding that its recognition of the effect of aggres- sion ajid armed attack and its agree- ment with reference thereto in Article IV, paragraph 1, apply only to Communist aggression but affirms that in the event of other aggression or armed attack it will consult under the provisions of Article IV, paragraph 2. In witness whereof the undersigned Plenipotentiaries have signed this Treaty. Done at Manila, this eighth day of September, 195*+. A-kk TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive JOn 23 October 195^ a NATO Protocol permitted accession of the Federal Republic of Germany// PROTOCOL Designation of States and territory as to which provisions of Article IV and Article III are to be appli- cable: The Parties to the South-East Asia Collective Defense Treaty unani- mously designate for the purposes of Article IV of the Treaty the States of Cambodia and Laos and the free territory under the jurisdiction of the State of Vietnam. The Parties further agree that the above mentioned States and territory shall be eligible in respect of the economic measures contemplated by Article III . This Protocol shall enter into force simultaneously with the coming into force of the Treaty. In witness whereof, the undersigned Plenipotentiaries have signed this Protocol to the South-East Asia Collective Defense Treaty. Done at Manila, this eighth day of September , 195^. A-45 - TOP SECRET - Sensitive t . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 n n NATO CIVIL AND MILITARY ORGANIZATION ! t NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL n PRESIDENT: Change Atwe&f CHAIRMAN: The Uavtar/ C-ir.cn't J *w j m' » u: I *a o COUNCIL COMMITTEES CANADA -U.S. REGIONAL PLANNING GROUP . 1 ■ u :. ••••• Lohco orrf c^cfd/wtten fbr certa/n eptntlnat trxrttti *_ n A-U6 TOP SECRET - SENSITIVE n PRINCIPAL COMM' "EES OF THE COUNCIL .. z 2: a O ^ ™^ , — i - n> 1— h b c re 3 cr -1 CD m X Z a z a <— » < o*^ m U-> L»J O .— Mj r> D- • CO -1 z to ^ On 10 a 00 fl> a ^ r- ^ J 3 • • 3 to Ltl O L*J w NATO INTERNATIONAL STAFF/SECRETARIAT i H O EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT iECURiTY BUREAU SECRETARIAT AND hinute. WRUER* CIVIL EMERGENCY CIVIL/MILITARY AIRSPACf PLANNING SECRETARY GENERAL CHAIRMAN OF THE COUNCIL DEPUTY SECRETARY GENERAL SERVICE Of THE FINANCIAL CONTROLLER roi ITiCAL a/fairs POLITICAL AFFAIRS DIVISION INFOP NATION OrflCE Of THE SECRETARY GENERAL PtPSONN'L AND ADMINISTRATION KRVICI RD3S5COTUfT< ECONOMICS AND FINANCE DIVISION FINANCE and DEFENCE planning PRODUCTION. LOGISTICS AND INFRASTRUCTURE DIVISION ECONOMICS ' STATISTICS •ARMAMENTS INFRA- STRUCTURE DIVISION OF SCIENTIFIC AFFAIRS PURE scicnci APPUEO SCIENCE 2 a a ,o ST «' 8 o — • ~ B! -* en S J U3 O CD co II Z to ^ J* us 5r o to U> O u> W n H T~wrr ii .i . ny . M| «■■» » .»■ ■■■' i » 'W . ■>«. »<»'^«» " «^ » , * » ■» en W en H ■ H O to o H H i to W to NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL Paris ami*iifiViumnr«*iim-nirue»\ 1 MILITARY COMMITTEE STANDING GROUP Wcshlnnion U.S. — wWCgMBMBW ~aa aasgaaci? STANDING GROUP REPRESENTATIVE Pan's . ALLIED COMMAND EUROPS ft J* France \s^s>> O NATO DEFENCE COLLEGE (Paris) "O MILITARY AGENCY FOR STANDARDIZATION ftairfoflj "O COMMUNICATIONS AGENCIES IN EUROPE (Por/s-Lonc/on) "O ADVISORY GROUP FOR AERO NAUTICAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT (Par/s) ALLIED COMMAND ATLANTIC Norfolk' u.s. 'X^L'-./Jiv^rBiiTr: CHANNEL COMMITTEE London U.K. tsv . Ti-in:,- li-^rr . WTgmnTirr- ^a aaTtT-'^'irfu- i r;Tv a V- .. i a ALLIED COMMAND CHANNEL srawrag** Por:smouth[Northwaod BaBMMBWBWtta—aaaBtaaMi u./c CANADA-U.S. REGIONAL PLANNING GROUP Wbs/i/ngeon i-aftirrKitfiigfccr^vs&aas - -^r-a-.--'V>,r- /n Was/j/ngton D.C., U.S., when /n Permanent Session . . ...... - . .,.,. I I a ►d ^^ <2. r/i o ■*• i— h BJ c ft 3 cr -0 2 m X Z a> Z O 1— f <" ON n> LO U> (J ^_— "^ C* 0- ■ (D Z 1 ON O O <— t- p <— * ( ) • • 3 to UJ U) h— * 1 — ' I i 00 C O ►d en W O W H i cn W en ALLIED COMMAND EUROPE SUPREME ALLIED COMMANDER, EUROPE Paris France NAVAL DEPUTY DEPUTY SUPREME ALLIED COMMANDER Hi •wami^c»TC Tri;r ■gr-YT.c?r^g=^i asaSB! as: ?.r/ - pgaPCCMSBW — » COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF ALLIED FORCES NORTHERN EUROPE Kolsaas Norway ! COMMANDER ALLIED LAND FORCES jj NORWAY B Os/o fcl- i rm nv» Norway COMMANDER ALLIED LAND FORCES DENMARK | Copenhagen Denmark COMMANDER ALLIED AIR FORCES NORTHERN EUROPE Kohaas Norway r;m* . TC COMMANDER ALLIED NAVAL FORCES NORTHERN EUROPE I Kolsaas Norway COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF ALLIED FORCES CENTRAL EUROPE Fontainebleau France COMMANDER ! ALLIED LAND FORCES CENTRAL EUROPE 4 Fonzaineblcau France COMMANDER ALLIED AIR FORCES CENTRAL EUROPE Fontainebleau France ■a COMMANDER ALLIED NAVAL FORCES CENTRAL EUROPE ( Fontainebleau France v gSS3' AIR DEPUTY COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF ALLIED FORCES SOUTHERN EUROPE Naples Italy »,..ftij, ^ > n.mifT "-*-.-»-; S COMMANDER I ALLIED LAND FORCES 1; SOUTH EASTERN EUROPE t«i Izmir Turkey COMMANDER -jj ALLIED LAND FORCES SOUTHERN EUROPE " Verona Italy COMMANDER ALLIED AIR FORCES SOUTHERN EUROPE Naples Italy ( COMMANDER NAVAL STRIKING AND SUPPORT FORCES SOUTHERN EUROPE Naples Italy COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF ALLIED FORCES MEDITERRANEAN Malta *x?.rz; ■U" ~ i srwnr nrjzts zzrezjK^cxaf COMMANDER WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN Algiers COMMANDER EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN Athens Greece ^. '• . 5rj i Trr-fYr , -t-<- < na « r aJ o-» jri r r« f« «i COMMANDER NORTHEAST MEDITERRANEAN Ankara Turkey COMMANDER GIBRALTAR- MEDITERRANEAN Gibraltar COMMANDER CENTRAL MEDITERRANEAN Naples Italy COMMANDER SOUTHEAST MEDITERRANEAN Malta a -a ^^ a &9 o c/i o ■*• i— ► BJ c ft a. 3 a* -0 2 m X Z CD 2 O 1— f <" UN n> IjJ U) O , "-» r> O- ■ L>J O L>> ■ w oir,\ i*i»'s'v • ; , «m J O w H O w H i W 2! en H ALLIED COMMAND ATLANTIC SUPREME ALLIED COMMANDER, ATLANTIC Noifo/i- U.SA DEPUTY SUPREME COMMANDER — .'i — ri'T T — — ~-r rt i *7rrriirr*r*i'*imiT i -T f>iitw"Ti-i a ogi'ar COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF WESTERN ATLANTIC AREA Norfolk U.S.A. COMMANDER STRIKING FLEET ATLANTIC New York COMMANDER OCEAN SU3-AREA Norfolk U.S.A. COMMANDER CANADIAN ATLANTIC SU3-AREA Halifax Canada ! COMMANDER NORTH AMERICAN ANTI-SUBMARINE DEFENCE FORCE ATLANTIC fm i n ■■»■■ ■nr.TtoirVrTf -1 1 -1 1 i u ntil U.S.A. COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF EASTERN ATLANTIC AREA I Northwood COMMANDER MARITIME AIR EASTERN ATLANTIC AREA Northwood U.K. H COMMANDER NORTHERN SUB-AREA Rosyih U.K. COMMANDER MARITIME AIR NORTHERN SUB-AREA Rosyih U.K. U W M riBK 1 TfTM Blt Plymouth COMMANDER CENTRAL SUB-AREA U.K. COMMANDER MARITIME AIR CENTRAL SUB-AREA U.K. rmmnmm* U.K. COMMANDER I SUBMARINE FORCE EASTERN ATLANTIC AREA | Cosport U.K. Brest COMMANDER BAY OF BISCAY SUB-AREA France — a i i wi' i i ■ nnwr j c ; ~ »». n .i s*' id re -y o a' 63 C/3 n ■■— • i—r n* a. 3 T3 cr (0 -1 a> -t m X z a> 2: c 9 <— * < L»-> U) O )iMtf ■-* O a. ■ n> By: Z to 1 in rt> a ft P3 3 to L>J L>J • J - ALLIED COMMAND CHANNEL 4 I 1 CHANNEL COMMITTEE London U.K. s jujuc^ u - Tj~-aBm-TT i T n> ffrvTir Airy- • JL ALLIED COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF CHANNEL Portsmouth U.K. COMMANDER [ALLIED MARITIME AIR- 1 p i CHANNEL I ) Norlhwood U.K.. Ty rrT rt *iT > T :?: '^ p g,,i g^*gar^ COMMANDER BENELUX SUB-AREA CHANNEL Ndh. COMMANDER NORE SU3-AREA CHANNEL Rosyth U.K. xu COMMANDER MARITIME AR NORESU3-AREA CHANNEL COMMANDER PLYMOUTH 5U3-AREA CHANNEL U.K. 'yg « "£\T,^H^-. , .»-,i' y ? ^; ^**.-T.T .,y - , Y;»~. ^^;7Tr??--t- COMMANDER CHERBOURG SUB-AREA CHANNEL L -aisncy cs rB cap France COMMANDER BREST SU3-AREA CHANNEL L- Brejt Franct '-»T—" r '-^- , - TI "■»— -•"?*"— —--; COMMANDER MARITIME AIR PLYMOUTH SUB-AREA CHANNEL 3 Plymouth >rgTjrr.-!.'-;*- l . , " , .'.»vi.- U.K. ^c I » - I I l I a -tf CD O ^^ o S3 CB r/i O ■*• i— h BJ c 3 -0 2 m X Z a> Z O 1— f <" UN CD u> U) (J , *1 r> Q- ■ (D cd Z ^ ON O CO O <— t- p r- 1- ( j • • 3 N> UJ O UJ H O ►a w W n w H H Security Office ****** When Council is in session -Chairman of P. W.G. A- 50 TOP SECRET - Sensitive - I I J 1 I I Senior Planners ^•foO :cmrrjittee Planning Teams Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ■ • r • I • t » I • • ■ 1 • t t Military Advisers . Group Chief, SEATO Military Planning Office Military Secretariat Administrative Staff . ^, Deputy, PIO (Military) Security Co-ordinator Senior Planners also act as the representatives in the Military Planning Office of their respective •Military Advisers A- 51 TOP SECRET - Sensitive [ « ■