Without getting approval from the Dalai Lama, the US
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) decided to go ahead to support the Chushi Gangdruk in the summer of 1959. The CIA provided the group with material assistance and aid, including arms and ammunition, as well as training to members of Chushi Gangdruk and other Tibetan guerrilla groups at
Camp Hale. In addition to military operations, they were also trained in political and propaganda techniques. The CIA made thirty-five to forty
airdrops of weapons and ammunition (550,000 to 800,000 pounds total), including British .303 rifles, U.S. M-1 and M-2 rifles, 50 and 80 mm mortars, 57 and 75 mm recoilless rifles, 30-calibre light machine guns, 3.5 mm
bazookas, as well as hand grenades,
TNT,
C-3 and
C-4 explosives. The Tibetan involvement with the U.S. came during a period of Cold War rhetorical anti-imperialism among major world powers, used to justify contemporary imperial expansion. Rhetorically, this new push for empire-building was manifested in the United States as anti-communism, and in the People's Republic of China as anti-capitalism.
Allen Dulles, the CIA deputy director responsible for overseeing all CIA covert operations, saw an opportunity to destabilize the People's Republic of China. The primary motive was more to impede and harass the Chinese Communists, than to render sufficient aid to the Tibetans. == Surrender in India ==