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Thura.. Sept. il. 1961 Page 10-A
Reds Spoil
Old-Style
Diplomacy
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP)-Guerrilia
wars used to be ought by toughs
in jungles while diplomacy was
Die province of well-dressed and
solemn gentlemen who discoursed
on a high level and issued opaque
communiques.
Then the Russians, as usual,
had to come along and spoil
things. Now Premier Khrushchev
is using guerrilla tactics for di
plomacy and diplomacy for guer
rilla tactics.
It's simple, too. Guerrillas hit
and run, do some damage, be
wilder the opposition which dor's
not know what to expect next,
disappear for a while, and strike
again somewhere else.
At times this seemed too sim
ple for Western statesmen, who
for years have acted like villag
ers huddled in a rain forest, won
dering what next but to used
to their old ways to try new ways
of their own to strike back.
Khrushchev would bell therrt
with an unadorned blackjack and
then, just to confuse them, beit
them with a blackjack dressed in
Christmas wrappings. One minute
he'd be the bad guy talking war,
the next the good boy yearning
for peace.
Stalin used guerrilla tactics.
too. Khrushchev has gone beyond
him and added a public relations
touch that makes Madison Aven
ue look as old-fashioned as a
pitchman at a circus.
For instance: in the midst of
all his rumpus about Berlin per
haps because of it in the past
few months he has given three
distinguished and widely rcid
American newspapermen lengthy,
separate interviews.
They reported what he said in
great detail, and much length. So
he reached millions of Americans
repeatedly with his views on a
host of issues.
It seems that almost daily this
is an exaggeration, but not much
he has something to say on war,
peace, disarmament, or nuclear
testing.
All of this not only gets duly
reported over the air and in the
press of America but in Western
Europe and around the world. In
short, he has made top news witn
'whatever tactic he wanted to use
for months.
By contrast the Western leaders
have seemed hush-mouthed. Pres
ident Kennedy, for instance, could
but didn't make broad use of TV
to talk to the people. He fai's
far short of making maximum
use of other news media either
to answer Khrushchev or turn the
tables on him by putting him on
the defensive.
What Khrushchev has been do
ing apparently finally sank in on
the Kennedy administration. Last
week the White House revealed
Kennedy has set up a group of
advisers on psychological and po
litical warfare. It has met eignt
times.
The most recent example of
how Khrushchev day by day tries
to keep the West guessing and off
balance came Tuesday at the
United Nations when Soviet For
eign Minister Andrei Gromyko
talked to reporters.
Russia has long insisted that
U. N. Secretary-General Dag
Hammarskjold killed this went
in a plane crash should be re
placed by three secretaries-general,
one of whom would repre
sent the Communist world and
could veto anything the other two
wanted to do in any emergency
anywhere around the world.
This would in effect paralyze
the United Nations. Gromyko re
peated the Russian demand for
three secretaries. But now he
managed to couple this with an
other old Soviet demand that Red
China be admitted to the United
Nations.
If Russia sticks to this, it wnl
turn this U. N. session into chaos.
Gromyko got in his lick before
the world organization even had
a chance to consider a successor
to Jtammarskjold.
No Separation
For Siamese
READING, Pa. APi-Siamese
twin dauchters born Mondav to
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Schappeil
of nearby Hamburg cannot be
separated by surgery, doctors re
port.
X-ravs disclosed the hahiec have
"oyily one skull and brain." phyi
cians said. The twins are joined
almost at richt ancles with the
forehead of one resting near the
oack ot uie other.
Reading hospital rewirted tlw
twins are in fair condition nJ
are taking xxi. They have bed?
in incuoators since birth.
OtscclDLake. near rnntvrfimi-ji
N L the "Glimmerglass" of
James renimfw- Cooper's famed
Indian stories.