367. Memorandum of Conversation1
SUBJECT
- Meeting Between the Secretary of Defense and Major General Khammash of Jordan, 11 a.m., December 13, 1966; Deputy Assistant Secretary Hoopes was also present
Secretary McNamara opened by expressing the US Government’s admiration for the coolness and courage with which King Hussein and the Government of Jordan were meeting the present crisis. He reiterated the US view that the Israeli raid of November 13 had been a serious and unfortunate miscalculation; he acknowledged that great psychological damage had been done, and that the pressing problem now was to repair that damage. He said however that we have reason to believe that the raid presaged no basic change in Israeli policy.
He said he would hand General Khammash a paper which represented his own recommendations, that he had discussed this paper with his colleagues in the USG, and that he believed they were in agreement with him. While the paper did not represent at this point a definite US decision and was therefore labeled “draft,” he expected that it would be formally approved, and he wished General Khammash to take a copy with him. He said that the President was prepared to send Ambassador Macomber to Jordan immediately to discuss the entire range of problems, including those dealt with in the paper. (It was subsequently agreed that, since General Khammash was pausing for 24 hours in London, it would be more appropriate for Ambassador Macomber to depart Washington on 14 December than 13 December.)
The Secretary then read aloud, paragraph-by-paragraph, the paper entitled “Measures For Strengthening Jordan’s Defenses” which is attached as Tab A hereto.
[Page 719]At the conclusion of the reading, General Khammash appeared grave, quiet and crestfallen. He responded in a low voice. He said that he was aware of the large financial and manpower implications in the lists he had presented on his arrival here, but that the lists did not exaggerate Jordan’s true requirements. He said terrorism is rising; Jordan is beleaguered; Israel is not the only foe; Jordan must also face the PLO, Syria, and the UAR. Iraq is another potential enemy, although quiescent for the moment. Unfortunately, whatever the Israeli intentions may be, their assurances can no longer be trusted. The Jordan Army was humiliated by the raid of November 13 and this has caused the people of Jordan to view the Army with suspicion; it has also caused the Army to question King Hussein’s leadership and his policy of moderation toward Israel.
General Khammash said that Jordan was projecting no military buildup, but was merely seeking to remedy “deficiencies” in supporting arms, especially artillery and air defense. He emphasized that the Jordan Army is presently handicapped by obsolescent equipment, and that it needs a great deal more mobility than was indicated in the US response (60 APC and a number of trucks). He said he must be very frank regarding the US response. He appreciated the assistance it represented, but it would not meet the criteria of “adequate defense” as set by the Jordan Officer Corps; therefore, it would not meet the problem of loyalty and reliability. Again he expressed the view that the projected increase of 16,000 men and the infusion of new equipment would represent no military buildup. He expressed the hope that Ambassador Macomber would be endowed with the necessary authority to “expand the list.”
The Secretary said that the US response had been developed in the context of three constraints: (1) availability of items, having in mind the heavy US requirements in Southeast Asia and Europe; (2) the financial cost to the US, having in mind the continuing downward congressional pressures on the MAP budget; and (3) the heavy cost to Jordan arising out of a substantial enlargement of its armed forces. With respect to point (3), he alluded to a “partnership relationship” between the US and Jordan, and said that partners must restrain each other from irresponsible acts. General Khammash said he could only repeat that he was “honest,” and that his requests represented “bare minimum needs.”
The Secretary said that we agree in principle on the necessity of some pay increase for enlisted personnel, but we want to discuss with Jordan how the funds can be found, and also how Jordan proposes to finance the purchase of the ground equipment and the F–104s under existing agreements. He said that these would be among the matters which Ambassador Macomber would be prepared to discuss in Amman.
[Page 720]General Khammash asked whether the Secretary had yet seen his own paper assessing the current situation in Jordan. The Secretary replied in the negative, and General Khammash then presented him with a paper which he had prepared after his arrival in Washington.2 The Secretary thanked him for the paper and said that the US earnestly desires peace and stability in the Middle East. He said that he hoped sometime to visit Jordan “as a tourist.” General Khammash assured him that we would be welcome “in office or out.” The Secretary concluded the meeting by reiterating the US view that King Hussein has acted with courage, wisdom and restraint; that we believe the US package represents a substantial and prompt response; and that Ambassador Macomber will be departing Washington on 14 December to pursue the entire range of outstanding problems with the King and the Government of Jordan.
The meeting was adjourned at 11:40 a.m.
Principal Deputy
- Source: Washington National Records Center, RG 330, OASD/ISA Files:FRC 70 A 6648, 333 Jordan. Secret. Drafted by Hoopes and approved by Secretary McNamara on December 17. Filed with a December 16 covering memorandum from Hoopes.↩
- The paper, undated, bears a notation that Khammash gave it to McNamara during their meeting. (Ibid.,OSD Files: FRC 70 A 4443, Jordan 091.3 MAP)↩