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of the widening responsibility being assumed by other na
tions-a trend entirely consistent with overall AID policy. Algeria The United States has enjoyed 15 years of very close relations with Tunisia and has contributed a very significant amount of eco nomic assistance - well over $600 million since 1956. We have no alliance with Tunisia , no bases there, and no real strategic inter est in that country. U.S. invest ment is minimal ( approximately $ 12.9 million in FY 1970 ) . Yet U.S. policy over the years has been marked by strong support for Tunisia's economic and polit ical independence. The United States was one of the first governments to recog nize Tunisia in 1956. Our assist ance followed the 1961 decision that Tunisia should be one of the countries to receive a long-term commitment since it possessed the infrastructure, sufficient economic potential , and political will to serve as a model for other developing countries . was entirely a Tunisian determi nation. As a result of the farsighted reforms of President Bourguiba , Tunisia is , in social terms, still the most advanced of the Arab states . Its human resources are its greatest wealth and we will con tinue to be interested in its de velopment and well - being. Tunisia has always had an in dependent foreign policy. It con tinues to do so . As its leadership passes into other hands, we look for a continuation of our close relationship, one based essen tially on a common interest in Tunisia's development. In both Morocco and Tunisia , however, the basic U.S. role has changed in the past ten years. Economic assistance is flowing to both countries from more sources and the overall U.S. share has declined . Tunisia has been one of the models of the multi lateral approach in which a Con sultative Group, under the aegis of the World Bank , has, for a number of years , coordinated the international effort. French aid to Tunisia has held Steady in real terms and aid to Morocco has increased in both real and proportionate terms. U.S. aid has declined absolutely and proportionately in both countries. Between 1960 and 1964 , the U.S. provided two- thirds of all non-Communist economic aid to Morocco and Tunisia. Between 1965 and 1969 , this proportion declined to 42 percent of the aid flowing to each . In 1970, the U.S. share dropped still further as other donors have increased their share . Our decreasing share is a reflection of the progress these countries are making, and Despite this commitment and interest in Tunisia's success , we did not attempt to determine the path Tunisia chose for de velopment. It is difficult to con ceive of a leader of President Bourguiba's character permitting such interference if it had been tried . Tunisian successes and errors are their own. There were misgivings within the U.S. Gov ernment in 1966-1969 during the period of accelerated expansion of agricultural cooperatives and increased state control over the Tunisian economy. It was agreed , however, that the Tunisian ex periment was worthy of our con tinued support. Tunisia's ensuing decision in 1969 to reverse the course of its economic policy to give greater emphasis to private enterprise and free market forces Our relations with independ ent Algeria have been quite dif ferent from those with Morocco and Tunisia . If we go back to 1962, U.S. expectations about the potential benefits of bilateral relations with Algeria were probably higher than with most other newly independent countries. They were probably unrealistic at that time given our inexperi ence in dealing with each other. President Kennedy had felt a special interest in Algeria dating from his 1957 speech urging that country's independence. The Algerian leader, Ben Bella, had flown back to North Africa, fol lowing his release by the French , in a U.S. Air Force plane. His first foreign visit as President after Algerian independence was to the United Nations and Wash ington where he was received by President Kennedy. The fact that Ben Bella chose to proceed di rectly from Washington to Cuba was perhaps an omen of what was to come. The Algerians for their part always held a strong ideological bias against the United States. They identified the United States with France through NATO. Conversely, they felt a deep bond of sympathy with those states which had endorsed and supported the long, bitter Alger ian war of independence against France: North Viet- Nam, Egypt, the People's Republic of China, and Cuba-all countries with 5 |
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