14. Memorandum From the President’s Assistant for National Security
Affairs (Kissinger) to
Secretary of State Rogers1
Washington, January 31, 1969.
SUBJECT
- Communication with Hanoi Prior to January 20
Prior to the inauguration, President Nixon was in communication with the North Vietnamese through
a contact who is personally known to the top leaders in Hanoi.2 The messages were sent by me to the contact who
delivered them to Mai Van Bo (DRV representative to the Government of France)
and vice versa.
The President initiated the exchange with his message of December 20 (Tab A),
which told the North Vietnamese that his Administration was prepared to
undertake serious talks. On December 31, Hanoi sent its reply (Tab B), which
emphasizes that its point of primary concern is U.S. willingness to withdraw
troops. The ball was kept in play by the President’s response of January 2
(Tab C), which states inter alia that his Administration is ready to
withdraw U.S. forces from South Vietnam as part of an honorable settlement
which includes mutual troop withdrawal. The North Vietnamese replied on
January 13 to the President’s message (Tab D). The President has not replied
to this latest message.
The President has asked that this be very closely held.
Tab A
Washington, December 20, 1968.
Message From President-elect Nixon to the Government of the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam3
Message to the North Vietnamese
- “1. The Nixon
Administration is prepared to undertake serious talks.
- “2. These talks are to be based on the self respect and sense of
honor of all parties.
- “3. The Nixon
Administration is prepared for an honorable settlement but for
nothing less.
- “4. If Hanoi wants, the Nixon Administration would be willing to discuss
ultimate objectives first.
- “5. If Hanoi wishes to communicate some of their general ideas
prior to January 20, they will be examined with a constructive
attitude and in strictest confidence.”
Tab B
Message From the Government of the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam to President-elect Nixon
4
- 1.
- We have on several occasions clearly declared that we came to
Paris with a serious attitude and full of goodwill. If the US sincerely desires to resolve the
problem and reach an honorable solution, as it has often said, it
also must have a serious attitude and goodwill.
- 2.
- In order to arrive at a peaceful solution to the problem of
Vietnam our position is very clear. It is founded on the Four Points
of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, which were reaffirmed on
November 2, 1968. We also approve the Five Points for a political
solution of the problem of South Vietnam put forward by the National
Liberation Front on November 3, 1968.
- 3.
- At the present time, if the conference of the four in Paris has
not yet begun, it is because the Saigon Administration uses
procedural issues to delay its opening, and because the
representatives of the US support the
absurd demands of the Saigon Administration. It is only after the
opening of the conference that one will be able to discuss the
deeper questions relating to a peaceful solution to the problem.
However, if the US wishes, it may
communicate its general ideas, and its
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specific ideas for making more precise points
that are already known, for our serious examination.
Mai Van Bo commentary: At the
beginning, I believe that the question is to know if the US wants peace, if it really wishes to
withdraw its troops from South Vietnam, or if it only talks of this to
make it possible to do nothing. For the rest, evidence indicates that
the Saigon Administration does not want peace. Instead it wishes that
the US remain in Vietnam so that it can
continue to make a living from the war. As the US already leans on that Administration, we seriously doubt
its attitude. To be quite honest, as long as the Thieu–Ky–Huang clique remains at the head of that
Administration, it will be difficult to settle any of these
problems.
Tab C
Message From President-elect Nixon to the Government of the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam5
Message to the North Vietnamese
“We have noted with interest Mai Van
Bo’s communication.
“In reply to his question, the Nixon Administration is willing to negotiate seriously
and in good faith.
“The Nixon Administration solemnly
affirms its readiness to withdraw U.S. forces from South Vietnam as part
of an honorable settlement, which includes mutual troop withdrawal.
“It is our belief that progress depends on concrete proposals to achieve
an honorable peace.
“We reaffirm our readiness to examine Hanoi’s ideas carefully, with
goodwill and in strictest confidence.”
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Tab D
Paris, January 13, 1969,
2100.
Message From the Government of the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam to President-elect Nixon
6
- 1.
- The Conference of Four comprising the Democratic Republic of
Vietnam, the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam, the US, and the Saigon Administration, of
which the purpose is to search for a peaceful solution to the
Vietnamese problem should have started on November 6, 1968; however
as of today it has not opened. It is precisely because the
Government of the US and the Saigon
Administration deliberately seek to delay the opening of this
conference. The appointment of certain American figures who have
been deeply involved in the war of aggression in Vietnam to
responsible posts in the negotiations casts greater doubt upon the
attitude of the US.
- 2.
-
The policy of aggression of President Lyndon Baines
Johnson against Vietnam, based upon an erroneous
evaluation of the determination of the Vietnamese people to
fight against aggression, has failed.
The Vietnamese people ardently desire peace but it has to be a
peace with independence and liberty! If the US wants to settle the Vietnamese
problem, the Vietnamese people are ready to engage in serious
conversations with them. If they pursue the war of aggression,
the Vietnamese people have no other choice than to continue the
resistance in order to recover, whatever it costs, independence,
liberty, and a true peace.
- 3.
- If the US really desires to settle
the Vietnamese problem it must end the war of aggression in Vietnam,
withdraw in the shortest possible period all American and satellite
troops from South Vietnam and leave the South Vietnamese population
to settle itself its own affairs without foreign interference. The
US must as soon as possible start
without delay the Conference of Four to discuss these profound
questions.
- 4.
- The general and concrete ideas concerning the peaceful settlement
of the Vietnamese problem will be examined with care by the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam.