cMSoc D-Statesman, Salem, Ore., Saf Jan. 29, 1955 - w ...... - - - r n TV a zr . (P BRiii . tv a 7 n n n k. n . - I It ..War: JLomes ao PacDlfJic loere vvill K Russia Stepp War Preparat ing Up ions By WILLIAM L. RYAN . Associated Press Foreign News Analyst j THE Soviet Union, perhaps frightened by events in Asia, seems to be quickening the pace of its prepara tions for war. That is one of the more likely inferences which can be drawn from Moscow's open reversal of the post-Stalin policy of more for the consumer, x If there is actual fear among the Soviet Communist leaders that events in China sooner or later will involve them could build and wait for the ripe in a major war, the evidence! moment Eventually, if they did aueht to be forthcoming soon. It move into the China picture. probably will take the form of i broad offensive outside Soviet borders, carried on by its tools and dupes who make up the vari v ous branches of the World Council of Peaces. The Soviet reversal, an nounced si multaneously with the news that A. L Mi koyan was re lieved of his post as trade minister, is an evidence of i m a type of Stalinism 'which pre- i has spoken. zeded the second world war. It is a sign of weakness be cause it indicates the Soviet ' Kyon I Quemoy and Matsu Groups Block Red Invasion Harbors kK 4 L,TTlE QUEMOY TAN OK CUP they might never have to get out again. J But as yet Moscow is unready for war. That unreadiness stands out clearly in the enunciation of its internal policy. From here on, all major effort in the Soviet Union is to be concentrated on production of heavy industry, with the consumer public taking whatever is left over. The same order, one can be sure, now will ring throughout the European satellite countries, only recently launched on their own "new course" of mollifying the con sumer public. For the satellites the reversal will hurt a lot. It will mean more and more oublic weakness and not of strength. It bitterness in Eastern Europe.! 7th Fleet Read clear return, also, to the oui cnange tney must Moscow , rhe United States was closer to war this week than at any Ominous Parallels time since the Korean War end- v The Moscow reversal does not ed 18 months ago. aDDear to be anything like a The II.S '7th Fleet ud to full Communist hierarchy does not ; unanimous decision of the hier- j strength with three carriers dare to sacrifice any of its heavy !archy. Possible some sort of .hastily summoned from the industry sector, which provides showdown already has taken Philippines stood "at the ready" the implements of war, to better place in the Kremlin. The tough j to carry out whatever moves the lot of the public. If the So-j Communists of the Stalin breed, were ordered in the deadly viet Union's rulers considered evidently under the leadership j island chess game being con their position strong, they would Qf Party Secretary N. S. Khrush-; ducted from Washington and CHINA CMn MATSU. , F QUEMOY y f ' tADMAtt V:: : . 0s2 kaotengO : PEIKANTANGlf .... QUEMOY I. Formosa Strait NATIONALIST HELD n COMMUNIST HELD- MATSU I. j . asl Chi na peichuan ISLANDS ... - ... U. S. Would Employ ;'. ' f ... .. ..... i Strength Its Total By J. 31. ROBERTS . Associated Eress News Analyst ' . THE United States moved this week to test the idea that a position of strength can prevent a war between the forces of democracy and the forces of communism. 1. The United State's must defend an "island line".in.the Far Pacific, President Eisenhower told an enthusiastic Congress, which includes Formosa, the outlyingl'escadores, and such other Chinese Nation- QUEMOY and Little Quemoy can bring under fir shipping MATSU and its neighboring Nationalist-held islands sit astrid attempting to leave the Communist port of Amoy. the mouth of the arnportant harbor of Foochow. Deadly Island Chess Game Continues make some attempt to deliver on the promises made to the public so freely; after the death of Stalin. Fear Indicated At the same time, it is an indi V chev, may have won out andjPeiping. now need to parade a few scape goats before the public to take the blame for the state of the consumer industries, j If this is the case and there cation of fear. The Soviet Union is evidence to support it the cannot be. disinterested in the; parallels with the 1930s seem little war raging over the islands ominous. War threatened the So off Red China's coast. Should the viet Union then. Stalin, fearful Red Chinese overstep the bounds of things to come, savagely got and involve themselves in actual ;rid of any breath of .possible op- war with the United States,! position while he marked time Moscow would be gravely con-1 and made deals on the interna cerned. It has a mutual assist- tional front to give him scope' ance treaty with Peiping requir-: for full-blast preparation. . Will ins the Soviets to go to the aid Soviet history once again repeat ress in 1949 and lost thousands of the Red Chinese in the event! itself? I of men in the futile attempt It of attack from the outside, and Moscow is already on record with the view that the United States alone is the aggressor in the issue of Formosa. That does not mean the Mos- Obvious Value A crucial question fdr the im mediate future appeared to be the status of two island groups held by the Nationalist Chinese with obvious Value in hamper' ing an invasion of Formosa. Quemoy is one, strategically placed with its neighbor Little Quemoy in the mouth of Amoy Harbor and almost directly op posite the southern tip of For Imosa. The Red Chinese tried to capture this heavily armed fort- T i 4 i ' " 5s.::x.X' : - ' POWERFUL PUNCH The aircraft Carrier Essex, now In For mosan waters', launches a Banshee fighter-bomber. FLIERS: Dilemma Decided by midweek had made it fairly clear the U.S. would not permit any of its citizens to make the trip to China. One factor behind this posi tion is the tense situation in For- 7"r -lTw.;:.t ri.uri" r "c.u . . 1r.tt.""lbreak out between Americans uui tui evemuu ui6u oi n Americans neia in mnese between the Communist and jails. j Cold Connivance I j ' The Dronasanda strategists of cow hierarchy considers that So-! Red china had the U.S. State viet involvement in a major war j Department wrestling with two is just around the corner, even:unpieasant alternatives early though the internal policy re-j this week on the question of non-Communist worlds is inevl table. Moscow Waits Moscow's Communist hier Should the State Department was here last September that the' "vest pocket" war in the Pacific' started with the Reds shower ing Quemoy with shells from artillery positions on Amoy. Na tionalist batteries have vigor ously returned the fire. Foochow Blocked The other stumbling block to Red invasion is pie Matsu group, composed of four island clusters directly opposite the mainland port of Foochow. This area is opposite the, northern tip of For mosa. . .1 Any invasion of Formosa would be severely handicapped without the use of port facilities and the Chinese. Another ele ment is the bombastic speech by Chinese Communist Premier they wanted to make the trip archy may well view as danger- , and permit the Reds to make ous the events involving Red more propaganda hay on the China and the United States. ; prisoner issue or should they But it would want to pick the, turn down the applicants and time and manner of its own in-'.leave themselves open to Com volvement. That could take.munist charges of cruel disre- much timeMt would be, no sur-;gard of human emotions? grant passports to those who al-!chou made just ready have positively indicated pMt FinhftwPr-, message on U.S. intentions in the Pacific was delivered to Congress, in wfuch Chou rejected any thought prise if Moscow were basing cal -culations on a strictly two-way clash between the United States and Red China which might bog both powers down for a long time. The Soviet Communists Sidelights Charles Yaklin of Mt Clem ens, Mich., didn't mind so much floating around Lake St. Clair on an ice floe for two hours after the chunk he was fishing from broke away from the shore, but it really peeved him that two fellow fishermen simply yelled "goodbye" as he started drifting away. But Yaklin wasn't the only one with a gripe. "What really makes me mad," said his wife, "is that he didn't bother to let me know he was safe after police rescued him he just went back to fishing." . Lindsay x Paynter doesn't 'claim the result was exactly as he expected, but his performance with a gun left little to be de sired. A man entered his store at Winchester, Ky ordered beer. then pulled a pistol and grabbed the cash box. As he fled to a waiting car, Paynter grabbed a gun and fired one shot The bul let knocked the cash box out of the robber's hand. ; O There are all sorts of reasons for calling off basketball games, but Maine came ud with a new one this week. The scheduled contest between Union High and the North Haven high school squad from a Penobscot Bay island 10 miles from the main land was postponed because high seas made boat travel im possible. The Illinois State Senate eliminated "for reasons of ef ficiency and economy" four of its committees this week. Among them: the Committee on Effi- ciency and Economy. Although the early indications were that the State Department would not stand in the way of visits by relatives, developments Dates Tuesday, Feb. 1 i Atomic war exercise "Blue Bolt" starts at Ft Hood, Tex. Thursday, Feb. 3 i Council of World Affairs meets at Dallas. ' of a cease-fire and reaffirmed Communist determination to conquer the Chinese Nationalist stronghold. The offer to the families was transmitted early this month to Dag Hammarskjold, United Na tions secretary-general, who went to Peking on an official mission to obtain the freedom of the im prisoned airmen. He did not obtain their release, However, toward the close of his last session with Chou, the Com munist Premier said the pris' oners were in good health and handed over pictures of some of the men. He added that relatives who wished to visit them could obtain Communist visas. the United States will go into action was earlier employed to keep the Communists away from Chiang Kai-shek's entire string of off-shore islands. The idea was to keep the Reds guessing. Bluff Called Last week the Communists called this bluff and invaded the tiny island of Yikiangshan, using an impressive amount of power in the attack including effective air and naval bombardment. Yi kiangshan is, within artillery range of the Tachens and some 200 miles north of Formosa. Since Eisenhower did not spe cifically name either Quemoy or Matsu as inside the line of alist positions along the China coast as are necessary to., that end. . The Tachens were not consid ered necessary, it became obvi ous at once. Quemoy was listed as important, although there was some doubt among stu dents of mili tary strategy of whether this would be made to stick in the face of determined Red Chinese attack. But the nation was dead seri ous about Formosa, and ULLU Robert continuing the only going .wa&mX. in the world. -, i , ; Also gone was part oI-thV ideaT -that the Reds should be kept: X completely in the dark as to just-" what islands' the United States would fight for. Fonnos4e. came the ,key. If "movg made elsewhere; they would metjor not met according to 3 timates of the value oi -their.- objectives to ' the strategifTcpn,; cepts of maintaining the island - barrier including 'Formosa,: : ; Okinawa, Japan, the Philippines. The nation, to do this, had de-"; cided io run the calculated risk; " of war. The calculation was-that X it would' not come. ' . w. O ? -. Russian Policy ' There was the recognized danger that Russia, finding' ttSJSZZZ it was up to the Reds whether self more and more barred from tney wanted to attack it at the, the type of expansion made expense of an all-out war This time, it was made clear, possible by the aftermaths of World War IL might try to push mere would te no handcuffs on China into a conflict with the American commanders, ,no sane- United States. It is fundamental tuaries, no padlocks, on - atom Russian policy to encourage bomb storage doors. The United j such situations, if she thinks she States proclaimed itself pre-ican escape direct involvement, pared to carry out the idea of so that more situations can be. Secretary Dulles that, if attack created from which she can hope must be met, it must be met to profit. . . with a margin of power larger No softening of the' Peipine than that thrown in by the line was noted immdiatelv at Amoy and Foochow. However, with Nationalist guns emplated at the harbor mouths, the value of the staging areas is complete ly nullified. . In his message to Congress this week, President Eisenhower did not specify whether these islands would be defended by the 7th Fleet In restating the American determination to pro tect Formosa and the Pescadores, he 'simply said this included "closely related localities" which the Reds might use for an attack on Formosa. This technique of refraining from the precise definition of the line at which the armed force of American defense it appears 'forces ll&eiy Ulcil iuici UMiiuiauug the Tachens and other islands the U.S. obviously will not de fendthe Reds will again put this country's intentions to the test by starting the attempt to clear the harbor entrances of their two important ports. enemy. Policy Changed . Gone were parts of two poli cies to which the Eisenhower! administration had paid its re- was that the Chiang Kaihek I w after the American action. Broadcasts said the Reds still in tended to' take Formosa. But Communist reaction is always slow in major, circumstances, and American observers were VETERANS: Changes Due FARMERS: Decline Ended rlTtff III Y-25SOH .7 1 Great Decade Ahead 1 Most of the difficult postwar adjustment for agriculture that began four years ago has been completed and American farmers face a great decade ahead. That is the down-to-earth pre diction of Agriculture Secretary Benson who says, "The U.S. farm income has about stopped its postwar decline.' In his first appearance before the new Congress, Benson told the Senate Agriculture Commit tee, "We are in a period of com parative stability." He predicted that the prices farmers get may be expected to average close to 1954 levels while the prices farmers must pay probably will not change much in the year ahead. In his flattest statement on the Americas "WHO'S THAT KNOCKING AT MY DOOR?" Troubled Future The fitfully bubbling kettle of Central American friction was back in the lap of the Organiza tion of American States this week. - The five-man peace commit tee the OAS hurriedly cus patched to troubled Costa Rica two weeks ago managed to squelch the fighting for the time being, but no one was willing to predict how long things would remain relatively quiet. Costa Rica . appealed to the OAS for aid at the start of the rebellion against President Jose Figueres, charging neighboring Nicaraguan President Anas- tasio Somoza had trained and equipped the insurgents. The OAS sent aerial observers and the peace committee and the United States sent Costa Rica four fighter planes, on OAS rec ommendation. However, Somoza received 25 Mustang fighters last week a purchase from Sweden and announced early this week the first of them were in the air. -What effect the presence of this fighter force far surpass subject yet, Benson promised that cotton prices will be sup ported by the government at the same 90 per cent of parity as last year. The Agriculture Department had been expected to set cotton price props at that level but as yet hasn't taken any official ac tion. The department also reported that a postwar, rush by city folks with spare cash to buy farms as insurance against inflation seems to have subsided. Heavy buying by such invest ors has been called a big factor in sharp increases in farm land values, particularly after the Korean War. Since then, there has been a tendency for land values to level off in some an and to decline in others. In a report on the farm real estate market, the department said values of the nation's farm land increased 1 per cent be tween last July and November. While prices strengthened in the central corn belt, they drifted lower in most other states. The department said land values reached new peaks m Illinois, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Michigan, New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland. Biggest declines during the year were recorded in the Rocky Mountain and Pa cific Coast states and in Ken tucky and Maine. on Formosa should bei 2 - . . kept constantly ready for attack aime.Y DUl not on the mainland as a threat to r man fL wnu'ieareu me unuea oiaies deter the Communists from fur ther military adventures like was setting up a firecracker in kv. .v:-u lit. that in Korea. The new project""5 ,Y, v was a cease-fire between Red would blow e.-top off the would prevent either side from? 17 1 Tachens it would be subject to Fast Action Expected ; Congress ' started work this week on a bill which would re vise part of the administration's recent directive ending the ac crual of some veterans benefits after the last day of this month. Hearings were held in the House on a bill authored by Rep. Teague of Texas, Democratic chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, which would allow men who are in service on Jan. 31 to continue accumulating post-service schooling rights be yond that date. The rate of accumulation is V days. of school for each day m service. The Eisenhower di rective had the effect of cutting this off after the last day of January. Teague s measure is ticketed for fast action, and is expected to be a forerunner of additional legislation designed to expand benefits for veterans of peace time service. The course of these measures through the congres sional mill, however, is not like ly to be as smooth as the indi cated future of the committee chairman's bill. The whole issue poses a new problem for Congress because, except for a few short intervals, this country has never before 14 drafted men except when there was actual fighting. . j There is some sentiment for completely revoking the Eisen hower directive. Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers (R-Mass) com mittee chairman in .the last Congress, holds that .as long, as the government continues draft ing young men it should main tain its wartime scale of veter ans' benefits. Other committee members, however, feel that men. who don uniforms only for - peacetime duty should not get the pre f erred treatment accorded vet erans of a shooting war. They point out that previous wartime benefits have always had a cut- off.date. a . Quote President Eisenhower, speaking of the Red Chinese in his message to Congress on the i Formosa . question: "Their offensive military in tent has been flaunted to the whole world by words and by deeds. Just as they cre ated the situation, so -they can end it if they so choose." In Short. . . Announced: By the Soviet Union, the end of its state of war with both East and West Ger many. The move was inter preted as probably aimed at ob structing ratification of the agreement to rearm West Ger many. i. ' ; Dissolved: The Japanese Diet (parliament) in preparation for a general election expected at the end of next month. Rescued: Seven Navy airmen after 52 perilous hours in a tiny raft I on the j Pacific after they were forced to ditch their plane - . . on nignt uum Awajuua w ut rZT Johnston Island. would have remained to be seen. ( mi Rights Rntrvtd.APNtwsitatuTt) -.y t-i .. -.N- V'Li''.'- v A ' IT USED TO BE "THE HIGH COST LIVING Red attack, and that such an at tack would lead to open war. . - But President Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles had established reputations of being slow to an swer provocation. Self defense would be the role against Red interference, until a pattern of intent on war was established. -Then the lid would be off any way, and the gauntlet picked up. Firecracker incidents; strch as the isolated shooting down of a plane flying cover, or of indi- vidual attacks on ships by" Red planes, would be defended against as best possible and then ignored politically. , ; The Line Drawn The whole attitude was being taken in an effort to forestall. any possible miscalculation on the part of the Reds as to what they could get away with. It -was born of the idea that -if Germany had expected British and American intervention ' in . the last two world wars she would never have launched them, that if Russia . had ex--, pected Allied intervention in, ; Korea she would not have given s--the word for that adventure. , It .was the extension of an idea presented by Dulles long .1 ago: Militarily, it envisages no more than was contemplated in ,., , the writing of the American-Nationalist defense pact which was presented for Senate ratifica- T t tion before ,the Reds Jnvaded, J,t1 Yikiangshan. . . People THE HIGH COST OF SURVIVAL Victim of Peace "He was a hero to everyone but, himself.? That's the epitaph, supplied by a policeman who once- arrested him, for an American Indian hero of World War U found dead near Sacaton, Ariju, this week. The examining doctor's verdict on the cause of death: overexposure to freezing weather and too much drink. - The victim of peacetime glory was Ira Hayes, one of the Ma rines On Iwo Jima immortalized in the famous picture of the ML Surabachi flag-raising. .The 30-year-old Pima Indian" was never able to settle down to t a job" after the war ended. He waa frnin1 on fThirnvn's sVul row once, wandering drunk and in- . coherent He had many chances , for steady work, but he said that when things started looking, ..-, brighter he would get that "cravinz for whiskv and foul UD." . "We hit the beach at Iwo "with : 250 men in my company, Hayes once recaUed, "and left with 27)' a month and a half later. - "I still think of those things all the time.'