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"We should not forget that there is a real chance that this is an in-house spat," Clements said. "That is interesting, but it does not solve our problem," Ford responded. He called for a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier to head toward the scene and for plans to be drawn up for laying mines in the waters around the seized ship. In the early hours of the crisis, top U.S. officials debated the tone and content of an initial public statement. Donald H. Rumsfeld, the White House chief of staff who later that year became Ford's secretary of defense, suggested a public statement declaring the ship's seizure an act of piracy and saying the U.S. expects the crew's release. He argued against demanding their release
-- because, he said, that would "activate the Congress" and "seems weaker." Robert T. Hartmann, counsellor to the president, told Ford at a National Security Council meeting on May 13: "This crisis, like the Cuban missile crisis, is the first real test of your leadership. What you decide is not as important as what the public perceives." The documents portraying the Ford administration's response to the Mayaguez seizure are among thousands of pages of documents published in a new State Department volume of "Foreign Relations of the United States," covering the period January 1973 to July 1975. It focuses on U.S. policy toward Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.
[Associated
Press;
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