Guest guest Posted June 30, 2005 Report Share Posted June 30, 2005 'US wanted China to back Pak militarily in 1971' Press Trust of India Washington, May 7, 2005 Fearing that Soviets might get involved in the 1971 Indo-Pak war, then US President Richard Nixon had wanted China to make coordinated military moves in support of Pakistan, according to documents released by the State Department. The Nixon Administration was not prepared to involve itself in a civil war on the Indian subcontinent. Nor did it pay much attention to Indian concerns about "the carnage in East Pakistan" and the problems of refugees in West Bengal, said a State Department press release giving the gist of the papers on the Bangladesh war of liberation, released on Friday. But, the signing of the India-Soviet Union Treaty of Peace, Friendship, and Cooperation in August 1971, while not a mutual security treaty, was viewed in Washington as a blank check to India in its confrontation with Pakistan, it said. The US policy included support of Pakistan in UN and pressure on Soviets to discourage India, with hints that US-Soviet detente would be in jeopardy if Moscow did not comply. At Nixon's instruction, his Assistance for National Security Affairs Henry Kissinger met China's Ambassador to the UN Huang Hua to suggest that Beijing make coordinated military moves in support of Pakistan. The implication conveyed by Kissinger was that if the Soviets responded militarily, the US would support China in any confrontation with Soviet Union. http://hindustantimes.com/news/181_1352152,00050001.htm? headline=Nixon~asked~China~to~back~Pak~againt~India Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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