CURRENT INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN - 1957/12/20

Document Type: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
03184086
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
17
Document Creation Date: 
December 12, 2019
Document Release Date: 
December 20, 2019
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 20, 1957
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CURRENT INTELLIGENCE BULL[15757346].pdf569.62 KB
Body: 
4.I cMd for Release: 2019/12/10 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Ccir3,089f 1/A ori 3.5(c) 20 December 1957 oe/ 3.3(h)(2) /r lef/ CC JCiE CLASS. CLASS. CHANGED TO: TSi2o ro N;-likr. IN DECLASSIFIED 1/1/4 MCIN7NT No. NEXT REV4Ellt; DATE: 110WAI:�I REVIEWER: $0// , /10// ./;/# Copy No. 1 3S OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY TOP CRET Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 OW, ,411 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 --ror 72.07 Approved 19/12/10 C03184086 ioneJ CONTENTS 1. 1958 SOVIET ECONOMIC ND BUDGET ANNOUNCED C-- (page 3). 2, SOVIET PRESIDIUM MEMBER ASSIGNED TO IMPORTANT GOVERNMENT POST ) (page 5). 3. SITUATION IN INDONESIA (page 6). 4. DUTCH VIEWS ON THE INDONESIAN SITUATION (page 8). 5. BONN OFFERS USSR TRADE AGREEMENT IN EXCHANGE FOR REPATRIATION (page 9). R-12� 6. USSR MA 7- EXPLOIT MAJOR AMERICAN OIL DISCOVERY IN SYRIA (page 10). 7. PROBABLE CONTENTS OF EGYPT'S ARMS SHIPMENT TO TUNISIA (page .12). 8. ANTI-COMMUNIST POSITION STRENGTHENED IN GUATEMALA (page 13). 9. PREPARATIONS FOR TRIAL OF NAGY MAY BE UNDER 11-0 10. WAY IN HUNGARY (page 14). CEYLONESE PRIME MINISTER WEATHERS NO-CONFIDENCE VOTE (page 15). ANNEX--Conclusions of the Watch Report of the Intelligence Advisory Committee (Top Secret) (Noforn Except (page 16). 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 2 TOP SECRET Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 ary ArvaTTITirkiMirrillT Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 )."." 1. 1958 SOVIET ECONOMIC PLAN AND BUDGET ANNOUNCED Comment on: The speeches on 19 December to the Supreme Soviet by First Deputy Pre- mier Iosef Kuzmin, chairman of the USSR State Planning Commission, on the 1958 economic plan, and by Finance in s er rsen verev on the state budget, as summarized by TASS indicate that the Soviet leaders continue to be pre- occupied with those problems which last year forced a reduc- tion in the earlier planned rates of growth. Both reports em- phasized measures intended to increase fuel, energy, and raw materials output, agricultural production, housing construc- tion, and labor productivity. Explicit budget defense expend- itures are planned at 96.3 billion rubles, virtually the same as the planned 1957 figure. Unstated defense expenditures in- cluded in other budget categories may have increased, however. The TASS reports of the messages reflect the traditional Soviet concern with industrial growth--the pri- ority development of heavy industry as the basis for "catch- ing up with the US" in per capita industrial output and for in- suring "the security of the state." According to Kuzmin, the "main trends" of the 1958 economic plan are "determined by the goals of the seven- year plan (1959-1965), a draft of which is already being prepared." Industrial output is planned to increase during 1958 by 7. 6 per- cent, only slightly above Pervulthints modest 1957 planned in- crease of 7.1 percent. Kuzmin asserted the 1957 output increase was about 10 percent and attributed the overfulfillment to Khru- shchev's reorganization of the management of industry and con- struction. Improved labor productivity is to account for the bulk of the 1958 output increase. Soviet investments, necessary for future economic growth, are planned to increase by 7 percent during 1958, the same rate of increase planned for 1957. Actual in- vestments, for 1957, however, were about 10 percent above the previous year's Kuzmin stated. Although no great changes in the level of budget revenues or expenditures are scheduled, the reorganization of 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 3 CONHDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approvjd-ro-r- ..-e-i.e.a7e.7.-2-67.16-7T2/1 Or C03184086 Nome industry has resulted in a planned increase in the share of total expenditures channeled through republic and local budgets from approximately one-third in 1957 to about half in 1958� Expenditures for the national economy from both budget and enterprise funds (mostly profits retained by the plant)are planned to increase by 36.6 billion rubles, or roughly 10 percent over the 1957 plan. Of the increase in budget funds for the national economy, 85 percent will go to industry, reaffirming its high priority. Allocations to state agriculture will rise 6 percent over the planned 1957 level. Expenditures for health, education, and social welfare benefits will rise 13 percent, continuing the high rate of increase begun in 1956. Expenditures to finance scientific research establish- ments will increase 10 percent over 1957, reaching a total of 18.2 billion rubles in 1958. Revenues lost by such recent concessions to the population as the abolition of the compulsory mass loan and a reduction in personal income taxes have been more than made up by the growth of the turnover tax, levied primarily on consumer goods, and the profits tax, levied on state enterprises. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 4 EOMPIDENM-1, Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 lila 41,1 `I 1.1-,31.1.1. I _IL 1.-CALLI _ NW, 2. SOVIET PRESIDIUM MEMBER ASSIGNED TO IMPORTANT GOVERNMENT POST Comment on: Frol R. Kozlov, a full member of the Soviet party presidium and till now the Leningrad party boss, has been appointed chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Russian Republic (RSFSR), according to a 19 December Moscow radio announcement. The decision to effect the change was presumably reached at the central committee plenum which met on 16 and 17 December. M. A. Yasnov, the previous incumbent, will serve as deputy to Kozlov. Kozlov, a long-time party official, was raised to candidate membership in the party presidium in February 1957 and to full membership at last June's party plenum. His new appointment brings a top party man to one of the most important government positions in the USSR. It also brings another Khrushchev supporter from the provinces to Moscow in addition to the three appointments to the party secretariat announced on 18 December. Appointment of a man of Kozlov's stature to leadership of the Council of Millisters of the most important republic of the USSR may reflect its large and vital role in over- seeing and coordinating the activities of the 68 regional economic councils (sovnarkhozy) set up within its territory under the new industrial reorganization scheme. Yasnov� unlike Kozlov, has made his career on the governmental rather than the party side. He worked for a number of years under Premier Bulganin and his demotion may signify a decline in the latterts influence. As a result of the latest shift, the key post of party first secretary is now vacant in the Ukrainian and Uzbek Republics and in the Leningrad and Gorkiy �blasts. Appoint- ments to these important "steppingstbner positions will indi- cate how free a hand Khrushchev has in making such selections. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 5 -CONFIDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 'NINO 3. SITUATION IN INDONESIA both the army and mod- erate political groups, concerned over the steady drift toward political and economic chaos, are groping for means to promote their own power and influence after President Sukarno goes on "sick leave" early next month. the Masjumi and the National party are trying to establish a working rela- tionship as a first step toward a new cabinet; on the other hand, the military is planning to take over the government and rule by junta. Some credibility is lent to these reports by the time extension granted, over Communist objections, to a par- liamentary committee which is trying to re-establish the Sukarno-Hatta partnership. The committee is to give its re- port during the period Sukarno is expected to be away. To date, however, no effective leadership has emerged to co- ordinate and direct the divergent activities of these groups. The Indonesian parliament, with the Masjumi abstaining, on 18 December passed the dual nationality treaty which deals with the status of the Overseas Chinese and was negotiated with Communist China over two years ago. This ac- tion was probably prompted by Peiping's strong support of Indo- nesia's Irian claim. It may also foreshadow similar action on the long-pending Soviet aid agreement. Workers' committees apparently are strongly entrenched in former Dutch firms. The "workers' committee" at Djakarta's principle travel agency, for instance, must approve all applications for plane and ship reservations. The first major development in the anti- Dutch campaign outside Java has occurred in government-controlled 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 6 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Noe' 'Roard North Sumatra, where three large Dutch companies have decided to abandon their interests and have instructed all personnel and their families, numbering 4,000, to leave Indonesia. Wholesale abandonment of Dutch holdings in East Java is also under way, the local military authorities have ordered all Western businessmen, including Americans, to give up 25 percent of their houses without compensation. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 7 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 _ .016 'owe' 4. DUTCH VIEWS ON THE INDONESIAN SITUATION Comment on: The three-week campaign against Dutch commercial interests in Indo- nesia has thus far failed to shake Dutch determination not to negotiate on New Guinea. The Netherlands is evidently committed in principle to a complete evacua- tion of all Dutch citizens from Indonesia if this becomes necessary. Hopes of salvaging any of the Dutch invest- ments hinge on moderate elements gaining control over either the Djakarta government or the outlying islands. The Hague has not rule out the possi- bility of eventual bilateral negotiations, with or without third-party mediation, but insists that these must start with economic and financial relationships. The Indone- sian government insiSts that the Dutch must relinquish New Guinea before it will even discuss compensation for seized assets. Prime Minister Drees raised the Indo- nesian question at the NATO meeting and warned that fi- nancial losses might curtail Dutch defense expenditures. He did not press for specific NATO action but subsequently hinted that an appeal may be made to the UN. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 8 -CONFIDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 vistif 5. BONN OFFERS USSR TRADE AGREEMENT IN EXCHANGE FOR REPATRIATION Comment on: Conclusion of a trade and repatriation agreement between West Germany and the USSR is expected soon after the talks reconvene in mid-January, ac- cording to West German Ambassador to the USSR Lahr. In a draft proposal now being considered by the Soviet nego- tiators, the Germans appear to be prepared to accept most of Moscow's demands in exchange for an agreement for the return of German "treaty resettlers" in the ITSsR The term "treaty resettlers" would apply to abOut 132000.persons who were transferred from the Baltic area under a wartime agreement, and would cover only 10 percent of Bonn's orig- inal repatriation demands. Bonn would accept Soviet demands for a three-year trade agreement providing for total trade of $936,000,000, an increase over the present $200,000,000 annual rate. As an annex to the trade and payments agree- ment, Bonn may sign a treaty of commerce and navigation, including a most-favored-nation clause. The West Germans had hoped to avoid a long-term agreement and a full-scale commerce and navigation treaty. Bonn would also accept the Soviet proposal for a broad consular agreement providing in principle for the opening of consulates. Bonn, however, would require further negotiationL in each case. The West Germans originally ad- vocated consular functions only for the embassies. The Foreign Ministry is considering sep- arate talks with the USSR in Bonn on the subject of a liberal- ized cultural exchange program. Such talks were suggested by Premier Bulganin, but Bonn has refused to include them in the present trade and repatriation negotiations. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 9 SECRET Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 *IIMS 6. USSR MAY EXPLOIT MAJOR AMERICAN OIL DISCOVERY IN SYRIA Comment on: The first major discovery of oil in the Qara Shuk area of northeastern Syria, by the At/antic Refining Company in November, may be exploited by the USSR under the terms of the Soviet-Syrian economic agree- ment signed last August instead of by n. American explora- tion firm. Knowledgeable American sources state that the 6,500-foot well brought in and capped by Atlantic, which tested at about 2,000 barrels a day and is probably capable of a much higher output, suggests a field of major proportions. The new field is only about 75 miles from the great oil fields 20 DECEMBER 1957 20 Dec 57 QARA SHUR AREA Current Intelligence Bulletin 71219-2 Page 10 CONFIDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 J. -IL ALM- -IL -1-.1 saw/ of northern Iraq, but preliminary estimates indicate the two are not related. Syrian desire to have Soviet personnel exploit the new field is indicated by the fact that, after regular visits to the American well site by Soviet techni- cians and Syrian army officers, all but two Americans working there were ordered to leave Syria immediately. Both Syrians and Russians gave a clear impression that the USSR would soon take over drilling in the area. A new drilling rig, operated by Soviet technicians, is reported to have been set up near the American discovery site. A Syrian economic mission, led by pro- Soviet Defense Minister Azm, is now in Moscow to imple- ment the economic agreement and may conclude ment for Soviet exploitation of Syrian oil deposits. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 11 CONFIDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 1%01 '114.1 7. PROBABLE CONTENTS OF EGYPT'S ARMS _sitimitrisTp_m_n_TimusTA Comment on: The probable contents of Egypt's gift arms shipment which arrived in Tunisia by truck from Libya on 10 December are indicated Two thousand 7.92-Mm. semi- automatic rifles (all apparently of Egyptian manufacture; 300 9-mm. heavy machine guns (Egyptian); 100 7.92-mm. light machine guns (Spanish); 24 81-mm. mortars (Span- ish); 24 3.5-inch antitank rocket launchers (British); 12 antitank artillery pieces (British; and 2,000 antitank mines (British). All of these items may not have been included in the recent shipment from Egypt which Tunisian President Bourguiba publicly described as consisting of "2,000 rifles and some mortars." 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 12 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 vale' 8. ANTI-COMMUNIST POSITION STRENGTHENED IN GUATEMALA Comment on: The anti-Communist position in Guate- mala was strengthened on 16 December by the decision of the Christian Demo- cratic party to join the centrist coal- ition backing Lt. Col. Jose Luis Cruz Salazar for the pres- idency in the 19 January elections. Other small parties, heretofore undecided, are jumping on the Cruz bandwagon. Cruz' chief rival for their support, Col. Enrique Peralta, has withdrawn from the race. Strongest member of the coalition is the � National Democratic Movement, the party of the late Pres- ident Castillo Armas, which apparently still retains effec- tively organized vote-getting power in rural areas'. Cruz, who has been ambassador in Washington for the past three .years, is not well known to the general public and is depend- ent on this organization. He will be opposed by the rightist � General Ircligoras and by Mario Mendez Montenegro, candi- date of the Communist-infiltrated Revolutionary party. The election will be close, and none of the three may receive the required absolute majority. In such an event, the constitution requires congress to decide between the two highest candidates. The congress is heavily weighted with adherents of the center parties who could be ex- pected to support Cruz. Several rightist groups continue to plot a pre-election revolt, but the majority of army officers are be- lieved desirous of awaiting the election results. 20Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 13 SECRET Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Novi 'tlarof 9. PREPARATIONS FOR TRIAL OF NAGY MAY BE UNDER WAY IN HUNGARY Comment on: The Hungarian government appears to be setting the stage for the trial of former Premier Nagy and other high- level revolutionary leaders. Nagy and some 20 high officers are in the same prison with General Maleter and corroborates earlier in- formation that Maleter's trial started last week. friends of Istvan Bibo, a close associate of Nagy in the revolutionary government who was arrested this spring, are undergoing questioning. A wave of trials of armed participants in the revolution is now in full swing. Included are work- ers from Csepel Island--the last stronghold of the revolu- tion--the former secretary of Cardinal Mindszenty, and 16 young seminarians or priests. In at least one of these trials, it was charged that the defendants "followed the orders of Imre Nagy and General Maleter." 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 14 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 sift," **4.1i 10. CEYLONESE PRIME MINISTER WEATHERS NO-CONFIDENCE VOTE Comment on: Ceylonese Prime Minister Bandar- anaike on 19 December demonstrated his continued firm control of the gov- ernment when the lower house of par- liament rejected a no-confidence motion by 54 to 23. The no-confidence motion, based on the government's recent dissolution of the Colombo munici- pal council for "incompetence," was made by No M. Perera, leader of the opposition and of the Trotskyite Nava Lanka Sama Samaja party. The motion was supported by the Fed- eral party, which is composed of Ceylonese Tamils of Indian descent, and by the United National party, which held a majority in the municipal council. Perera, whose labor unions were mainly responsible for the series of strikes which paralyzed Colombo in late November and early December, may have hoped to turn the no-confidence vote into a further display of his strength. If so, he failed. Some 14 out of 40 opposition members ab- stained or were absentwhile the three Communists in the op- position supported the government. Bandaranaike normally controls approximately 58 seats in the 98-man house. The vote demonstrates the difficulty still faced by any group which hopes to oust Bandaranaike by par- liamentary means. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 15 CONFIDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086 1. v./ 1.--w-i-etk-16- 14kr? Noe ANNEX Watch Report 385, 19 December 1957 of the Intelligence Advisory Committee Conclusions on Indications of Hostilities On the basis of findings by its Watch Committee, the Intelligence Advisory Committee concludes that: A. No Sino-Soviet bloc country intends to initiate hostilities against the continental US or its possessions in the imme- diate future. B. No Sino-Soviet bloc country intends to initiate hostilities against US forces abroad, US allies or areas peripheral to the orbit in the immediate future. C. 1. A deliberate initiation of hostilities in the Middle East is unlikely in the immediate future. However, tensions in the Middle East continue to create possibilities for serious incidents. 2. There is no evidence of Sino-Soviet intention to become militarily involved in the Indonesian situation. However, the Communists are exploiting political instability, grow- ing economic chaos, and prospective food shortages. De- veloping conditions continue to provide opportunities for a Communist take-over of government on Java. 20 Dec 57 Current Intelligence Bulletin Page 16 TOP SECRET Approved for Release: 2019/12/10 C03184086