Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday, Not. 22, 1967 Griffin Daily News
Gen. Westmoreland Sees
Phasedown Two Years Away
WASHINGTON (UPD—Gen.
William C. Westmoreland says
the end of full * scale U.S.
military involvement in the
Vietnam war is coming into
sight and a phasedown of
American troops may be less
than two years away.
The four-star general, com
mander of U. S. forces in
fatten
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South Vietnam, wrapped up a
week of White House war
councils Tuesday with an
optimistic and carefully worded
review of the war for the
National Press Club.
Westmoreland said the South
east Asia struggle had gone
through two distinct phases,
was entering a third and would
2
begin the fourth and last phase
some time in late 1969, perhaps
sooner.
He outlined these main
aspects of the war’s evolution:
Phase I—Build-up of U.S. men
and aircraft, communications,
supply lines, operating bases
and intelligence facilities.
Equipping and revitalizing
South Vietnamese forces, and
defending the country against
defeat or being cut in half.
Completed by mid-1966.
Enemy Into Hiding
Phase 2—Driving the enemy
into hiding or sanctuary, further
expanding and strengthening
South Vietnamese forces, pro
moting free elections and
stabilizing the economy while
consolidating the pacification
program. Will be completed by
the end of 1967.
Phase 3—lmproving South
Vietnam's military effective
ness, with training turned over
to the South Vietnamese.
Increasing U.S. team efforts
with the regional forces and
popular forces, South Vietnam’s
militia style military organiza
tions.
Phase 4—With the Communist
infrastructure near collapse, the
Vietnamese Army in control of
the Viet Cong and the militia
forces strengthened, “U.S. units
can begin the phasedown as the
Vietnamese army is modernized
and develops its capacity to the
fullest.’’ Westmoreland said it
was “conceivable” this would
be reached “within two years or
less.” The mopping up of the
Viet Cong, a chore that “will
probably last several years,”
will be left to the South
Vietnamese, he said.
Withdrawal Question
Westmoreland stopped short
of predicting just when the
United States might be able to
withdraw, but declared:
“I am absolutely certain that
whereas in 1965 the enemy was
winning, today he is certainly
losing . . . there are indications
that the Viet Cong and even
Hanoi know this.”
For one thing, he said, the
Viet Cong no longer can
replenish its ranks in the South,
but must depend increasingly on
replacements from the North.
“However,” Westmoreland
added, “The enemy may be
operating from the delusion that
political pressure here with the
tactical defeat of a major unit
might force the United States to
throw in the towel.”
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STAMP MACHINE JACK POT—Donald Hawkina stands by the
stamp machine in Memphis, Tenn, which paid off like a
one-armed bandit gone berserk—all those nickel stamps,
1,021, $51.05 worth, for just one nickel. Hawkina returned
the overage to the Post Office.
Dynamite Rips
Rabbi’s Home
By ANDREW REESE JR.
JACKSON, Miss. (UPD—A
dynamite explosion Tuesday
night tore apart the home of a
rabbi whose synagogue was
bombed two months ago.
Neither the rabbi who has been
outspoken on racial violence nor
his wife was hurt.
It was the third such bombing
in Mississippi in the past week
and the fifth over the last two
months.
Rabbi Perry F. Nussbaum, 60,
and his wife, Arene, were in a
back bedroom of their home in
a fashionable area of northeast
Jackson when the bomb explod
ed on the front lawn.
“It felt like an earthquake.
The whole house was shaking,”
said Mrs. Nussbaum. “I don’t
see how we escaped injury.
Glass was flying all around us.”
The roof of the $25,000 home
was torn off, the front door
blown loose, a large plate glass
window shattered. The Jiving
room was a shambles. The
explosion also broke windows in
homes nearby.
A large crowd gathered.
Police arrested two youths
across the street, but Dist. Atty.
William Waller said the charges
apparently were not related to
the bombing.
Nussbaum’s home is about
two miles from Temple Beth
Israel, where an explosion last
Sept. 18 heavily damaged the
new structure. The snynagogue
the furniture shop
123 NORTH HILL STREET
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the furniture shop
123 NORTH HILL STREET
occasionally has Negro visitors.
Nussbaum, who has lived in
Jackson 13 years, has spoken
out against racial violence in
Mississippi and is founder of the
Biracial Committee of Concern,
an interdenominational group
formed In 1964 to help rebuild
burned Negro churches.
Police had posted a guard
near Nussbaum’s home after
the synagogue blast, but later
withdrew it at Nussbaum’s
request because he thought the
danger had passed. The rabbi
said he had considered asking
that the guard be reinstated
after the home of R.B.
Kochtitsky, a Methodist lay
leader active In church-affiliat
ed civil rights programs, was
bombed Saturday njght.
“I figured I could be next on
the list,” Nussbaum said.
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