|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
DIPLOMACY: The Ritual Resumes
The scene was set for another enactment of the familiar ritual. Units of France's tough riot police were stationed along the elegant Avenue Kléber, which slopes away from the Arc de Triomphe. Outside what was once the Hotel Majestic, black sedans swung to a stop and disgorged the chief delegates, and their aides, of the four negotiating parties: the U.S., South Viet Nam, the National Liberation Front and North Viet Nam.
Before entering the building, where the Viet Nam peace talks resumed last week after a 10-week suspension, U.S. Ambassador William J. Porter stepped up to a battery of microphones. He rattled off a list of recent diplomatic developmentsthe Moscow summit, the start of East German-West German negotiations, the Korean rapprochement. Then Hanoi's Chief Delegate Xuan Thuy took over the microphonesand launched a numbingly familiar tirade against the American bombing of North Viet Nam.
On that note of disagreement, the 150th plenary session of the Paris peace talks began. It slightly increased the hope that the Communists might be returning to Paris with "a new approach." Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, the N.L.F. chief delegate, stood fast on the Viet Cong's seven-point plan, which insists upon a total U.S. withdrawal by a set date, the resignation of South Viet Nam's Nguyen Van Thieu and the establishment of a coalition government in Saigon that would include the Communists and supervise new elections.
She dismissed as "arrogant and illogical" the more limited Nixon proposal of May 8, which calls for an in-place ceasefire, a release of all American prisoners in return for a U.S. withdrawal within four months, and an end of acts of war by the U.S. in Indochina. One glimmer of movement was a remark by Xuan Thuy. He suggested that while the Communists still wanted to oust Thieu, the shape of Saigon's political future might be leftas the U.S. has proposedto later negotiations between the two Viet Nams. Then, at week's end, Le Due Tho, a North Vietnamese Politburo member who has had secret talks with Presidential Adviser Henry Kissinger, returned to Paris and indicated his willingness to enter into private talks again. Said Tho: "If Mr. Kissinger has something new to say and shows an interest in seeing me, I am ready to see him to discuss a correct solution to the Viet Nam problem."
It was too early to tell whether these remarks were simply a new variation on an old theme. Still, U.S. officials think the talks could advance. For one thing, the Communist offensive in South Viet Nam has faltered, while U.S. bombs continue to punish North Viet Nam.
Pressure on Hanoi. Less visible is the pressure that Hanoi has been under from its allies. Communist leaders are known to have pressed the North Vietnamese for an agreement based on the May 8 plan, noting that Nixon is unlikely to make more concessions. The North Vietnamese, however, know that Nixon faces an election in four months against a rival who has vowed to stop U.S. bombing on Inauguration Day and pull all U.S. forces out within 90 days thereafter. As one North Vietnamese diplomat put it last week: "Nixon is bound by time. We have no time frame."
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- The Man Behind Russia's Deadly Train Blast
- The Pakistani Taliban's War on Schoolchildren
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- The Toughest Diet
- The End of Audacity
- China vs. Disney: The Battle for Mulan
- World's Most Shocking Apology: Oprah to James Frey
- Afghanistan: Can Obama Sell America on This War?
- Why the Loan-Modification Program Isn't Working
- How Tiger Woods Can Survive the Scandal
- World's Most Shocking Apology: Oprah to James Frey
- Where's the Beef? Ghent Goes Vegetarian
- A New Fight to Legalize Euthanasia
- Man Of The Year: John F. Kennedy, A Way with the People
- Oprah vs. James Frey: The Sequel
- The Health-Care Crisis Hits Home
- Q&A: The Outlook for Home Foreclosures
- Hong Kong: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours
- Where China Goes Next





RSS