WORLD STRENGTH OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY ORGANIZATIONS

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CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6
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INTELLIGENCE REPORT
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Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 INTELLIGENCE REPORT NO. 4489 R-15: W"R Y&IJ& C/ &,,w cc"" ~av A 4 BUREAU OF INTELLIGENCE AND RESEARCH JANUARY 1963 State Dept. review completed Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 TABLE O F C O N T E N T S F,. ea Introduction. ............ .......... .............................................. 2-3 Regional Tabulation of Corumulist Party Strength Outside the United States Western Europe .................... .................. ........ ................... 4-15 Central Europe ................................................................... 16-19 Northern Europe .................................................................. 20-25 Eastern Europe .................................................................... 26-35 Africa ........................................................................... 36-63 Near East. .................................................... ................. 64-73. South Asia ............................... ........... .......................... 74-79 Fat. East......... .. ........ . . . . . . .. .. . ... .. . .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ...... . . . . 80-99 Canada, the Caribbean, and European Possessions in the Western Hemisphere........ 100-111 Middle America ................. *................ ........... ............ ...... .. 112-119 South America .................................................................... 120-129 Appendix: List of Countries in Which Communist Parties Have Been Proscribed........... 130-131 Alphabetical Index of Countries .............. :.......................... ..............- 132-134 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 I N T R O D U C T I O N This annual report presents, for the year ending December 1962, data on the strength of the communist movement throughout the world, including information on ccxm unist voting strength, parliamentary representation, and estimated or claimed communist party membership. A list of proscribed communist pw ties is appended. The report generally omits estimates of numbers of fellow-travelers or communist supporters because reliable data are so often lacking. For each country or territory there is a brief statement on the overall status and the strengths and weaknesses of the Communists. In November 1962, Pravda claimed there were 90 communist parties (excluding Yugoslavia Z) with a membership of 42.5 million. World membership for the 90 communist parties recorded here is roughly 4+0-4+l million. Counting the CPUSA, there are a total of 91 parties. This calculation includes the communist parties of Jamaica and the Ivory Coast, whose credentials are uncertain, and excludes communist parties which exist in a few countries alongside parties traditionally associated with the world movement, e.g., in Brazil and Iraq. The communist state parties, of course, make up the bulk of the world membership, with about 35.5 million - 36.5 million including Yugoslavia. Communist China, with the largest party, accounts for 17 million compared to 10 million for the Soviet Communist Party. The largest parties outside the communist orbit remain the Indonesian and Italian with an estimated 1.9 and 1.2 - 1.5 million members respectively. Membership figures, compared to last year, show no startling trends. In Cuba, however, membership in the so-called Integrated Revolutionary Organizations doubled to where it is now 60,000. The paties in Chile, Peru, and Venezuela increased their following, while the Paraguayan Communist Party declined. In India, the Communist Party, suffering the conse- quences of the Sino-Soviet split and the Sino-Indian border dispute, lost an estimated 25,000 members. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Probably the most interesting communist parliamentary development of the year occurred in the French national elections of November when the communist party received 21.8% of the popular vote (3% more than in 1958) and increased the number of seats from 10 to 41. The poor showing of all the other anti-Gaullist parties helped to reduce the isolation of the French Communist Party, particularly as a result of widespread electoral collaboration with the Socialists in the second round of the election. Estimates have been used in this report except where a membership claim appeared to be fairly accurate. The reader is reminded, as in previous years, that although the best usable sources have been consulted, communist party membership figures are very difficult to obtain and are not subject to verification. Again, in the tabulation of "national parliamentary status", a conventional political spectrum ranging from communist to con- servative has been used where applicable to provide some comparative data for the reader. The arrangement of parties in the spectrum is meant to be suggestive and need not be taken literally. In generalizing about the status of the communist movement from the data given here, the reader is cautioned that this report has a limited purpose and does not pretend to present a definitive picture of communist strength and capabilities. While size is one indicator of party strength, it is not necessarily decisive; the vulnerability of a country may have no direct relationship to the size of its communist party. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIA ENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'1. part. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative UNITED KINGDOM Communist Party - Labour Party Liberal Party Conservative Party 8 Oct. , 1959 7 votes 0.10) 3079 12,215 538 votes (43.8%) 1, 638,571 votes (5.9%) and supporters No seats 258 seats (40.9;) 6 seats (i%) 13,7 F9, 3O votes (49.4 0) 365 seats (58%) Independents 224,405 votes (0.8%) 1 seat (0.1) IRELAND Irish Workers' League* Labour Party Fianna Fail Fine Gael Oct. 4, 1961 277 votes 0.025 136,117 votes (11.70 512,102 votes (43.8%) 37 ,F~ 100 votes (32%) No seats 16 seats (11%) 70 seats (48.60) 47 seats (32.6%) Clann na Poblachta Independents Clann na Talmhan 13,170 votes (1.1) 67,462 votes (5.8%) 17,693 votes 1.5%) 1 seat (0.7%) 6 seats (4.3%) 2 seats (1.4%) National Progressive Democrats 11,490 votes (1%) 2 seats (1.4-%,) * Name since changed to Irish Workers' Party. Sinn Fein - the political arm of the clandestine Irish Republican Army - won 36,386 votes (3.10), but failed to win a single seat in the Dail. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 ' OMMUNIST PARTY MEMBER3HIp SOURCES-OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 32,500 The Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) has not been represented in. Parliament since 1945-. UNITED KINGDOM .(estimate) Nevertheless, because of their strategic location in certain trade unions and pressure groups, especially peace organizations, the Communists have a potential for exercising influence out of all proportion to their numbers. Communists are members of the leaderships of a number of large unions, e.g., the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU), and the National Union of Railwaymen (NUR), and hold important positions as shop stewards in major industrial establishments. Moreover, they also appear in the leaderships of a number of smaller unions, and according to the Radcliffe Committee on security in the public service, in various civil service unions. Communist influence in the trade union movement, which had suffered a setback in 1961, when the courts ruled that the communist officials of the Electrical Trades Union (ETU), once a showcase of communist control, had been fraudulently elected, sustained further blows in 1962: the new non-communist executive of the ETU expelled the communist general secretary and president and took various disciplinary measures against nearly a dozen other officials. According to party claims, communist membership has climbed steadily in recent years -- from 24,900 in February 1958 to 30,486 in February 1961 to 34,492 in June 1962. Although the number of new recruits is fairly high, the number of drop-outs is also high; John Gollan, the party's general secretary, has stated that in order to achieve a net increase of 3,400 members between mid-1961 and mid-1962 the party had to recruit nearly 7,000 new members. The Young Communist League claims 4,503 members and circulation of the Daily Worker was claimed to have been 61,105 in November 1962. Among the themes that the party stressed during 1962 were opposition to UK entry into the European Economic Community, to US policy on Cuba, to US bases in the UK; to resumption of nuclear tests, and to the Conser- vative government's wage-restraint policy. The tiny Communist Party of Northern Ireland, separate from the CPGB and the Irish Wor l.ers' Party (commu- nist), held its Congress in Belfast, May 26-28, 1962. 100-150 The Irish Workers' Party (communist), formerly known as the Irish W,,Torkers' League, is not believed to IRELAND (estimate) have any significant influence in the trade union movement or in politics. WES TERN EUROP E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 6 COUNTRY Date of last natl. parl. elections NETHERLANDS Mar. 12, 1959 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist Netherlands Communist Par regular 144,542 votes (2.41%) 3 seats (2%) Socialist Workers' Party (dissidents) 34.,723 votes (0.58%) No seats Non-Communist Left Labor Party 1,821,2&5 votes 1+8 seats (32/0) (30.370 Pacifist Socialist Party 110,499 votes (1.84%) .2 seats (1.33%) Center Conservative Catholic People's Part Party for Freedom and 1,895,914 votes (31-590p) Democracy 49, seats (32.67%) 732,952 votes (12.22%) 19 seats (12.67%) Anti-Revolutionary Part 562,996 votes 9.39% 11+ seats (9.33%) Christian Historical Union 486,204 votes (8.10%) 12 seats (8%) Political Reformed Party 129,621 votes (2.16%) 3 seats (2%) Reformed Political Union 40)033 votes (0.67%) No seats Farmers Party 39,352 votes (0.65%) No seats Positive Christian National Union 1,349 votes 0.02%) No seats W E S T E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-R-DP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF CONAIUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 12,000 (estimate) The influence of the Netherlands Communist Party is negligible; its front NETHERLANDS groups remain ineffectual; and the communist-dominated EVC labor organization is weak.. The impact of the Sino-Soviet rift on the party has been minimal. A formal split in the party, which led to the establishment of a Socialist Workers' Party in November 1959, added to its difficulties. The main centers of communist electoral strength are in the large industrial and commercial centers of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and The Hague. Membership in the communist- controlled labor unions is estimated at approximately 45 (or 20,000) of total Dutch trade union membership, primarily among Amsterdam and Rotterdam workers in construction, metal trades, and transport and among seamen. Communist attempts at infiltration of noncommunist labor organizations continue to be unsuccessful. On September 1 the aging and ailing Secretary General of the party, Paul de Groot, was relieved of his duties on the ground of ill health and given the new title of Chairman of the Party. Leadership of the party is presently being shared by Henk Hoekstra and Jaap Wolff, with the possibility that Hoekstra will assume undivided leadership. The position of Deputy Secretary General has been abolished. Although de Groot is now only the titular head of the party, his personal influence and power will continue to play a large role in the party's activities. W E S TERN EUROPE Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last natl. par].. elections BELGIUM Mar. 26, 1961 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist Non-Co*imlunist Left Center Conservative Communist Party Socialist Party Social Christian Party Party of Liberty and Progress 163,823 votes 3.11%) 1,933, 05 votes (36.73$) 2,182,778 votes (41.7%) 646,403 votes (12-325) 5 seats (2.36%) 84 seats (39.621,x,) 96 seats (45.28%) 20 seats (9.44 Peoples Union 179,561 votes (3.41%) 5 seats (2.36%) Independent Party 70,000 votes (approx.) (1.33%) - 1 seat (0.47%) National Rail 42,398 votes o.81%) 1 seat (0.47%) LUXEMBOURG Communist Part Socialist Party Christian Socialist Democratic Party Feb..1, 1959* 220,425 votes (9.1%) - 848,523 votes (31i..9%,) Part 410,387 1$.4y6) 3 sea us (5-77%) 17 seats (32.69%) 6977, 40 votes (36.9%) 11 seats (21.1s0 21 seats (40.39;6) In endent 15,621 votes (0.7%) No seats * Each elector has as many votes as there are seats to be filled in his multi-member district. Hence the total vote greatly exceeds the number of voters. W E S T E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 11,000 estimate In the 1-9-6-1 elections the Belgian Communist Party (PCB) obtained five seats reversing for BELGIUM the first time its continual decline during the postwar period. Communist candidates ran for election in six of the nine provinces, hoping to benefit from the.dissatisfaction of the Socialist left with the Socialist Party leadership, which failed wholeheartedly to support the violent December 1960 - January 1961 strike. This hope was partially rewarded when the party's strength rose from 1.89% in 1958 to 3.11% in 1961, primarily through the protest votes of ordinary Socialist voters. Nevertheless, communist strength in Belgium remains minimal; the party's front groups are ineffectual and communist labor support is very slight. The industrial and mining areas of Liege and Hainaut provinces remain the centers of party. strength. Communist membership in the socialist labor organization is estimated to be very small, with the greatest strength among the public service workers, Antwerp dockers, metal- workers, and whitecollar workers. During 1962 increased tension in the international communist movement helped to fan factionalism in the PCB. The Party found itself in the throes of a full-fledged crisis when the powerful Brussels Federation opposed the Party leadership's support of Moscow's condemnation of Albania and Communist China. The PCB has managed to contain this rift within its ranks, but only by disciplining the rebellious federation and expelling its leader, Jacques Grippa, from the Central Committee. 500 (estimate) The Luxembourg Communist Party remains an ineffectual force in the nation's political LUXEMBOURG and labor spheres. Its front groups are without influence. The impact of the Sino- Soviet rift on the party has been minimal. Communist strength is almost entirely centralized in the urban, mining, and industrial centers of the south where the communist- dominated labor organization has a membership estimated at 3,500. In the 1959 national elections the party presented candidates in only two of the four electoral districts but, in spite of a general shift to the right, they gained a fractionally larger percentage of .the total vote than in the preceding parliamentary election in 1954. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 10 COUNTRY Date of last natl. part. elections FRANCE Nov. 18 and 25, 1962 (All percentages of votes are based on the first round of the election.) NATIONAL PARLIPIM TARY STATUS Communist Non-Communist Left Communist Party Soci& is Party 3,992,431 votes (21.8%) 2,319,662 votes (12.70) 41 seats (8.6%) 67 seats (14.0%) Miscellaneous Left. 449,743 otes (2.5%) 5 seats (1.1%) Center Radical Socialists 1,4 ,625 votes (7.9%) 44 seats (9-355) Catholic Popular. R ublicans 1,635,452 votes (8.9%) 38 seats (8.0%) Conservative UNR (Gaullist) 5,847,11.03 votes (31.90 234 seats (48.5%) Independents 2,456,9bb votes (13.4%) 50 seats (10.5%) Extreme Right. 159,682 votes (0.9%) No seats Other No ascertainable vote l seat ( - ) In the case of the Socialists, the Radicals, the Catholic Popular Republicans, the Independents, and the miscellaneous Left, the number of seats assigned to each party is subject to change because of constant realignments among the various parties. EUROPE Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 2 0,000 (estimate) The French omiu_~ st Party (PCF) was the only party opposing de Gaulle which gained FRANCE 429,000 (claim) strength in the recent election. Though the PCF remains well below its 1956 level, .when the party commanded 25.5 percent of the popular vote and had the largest parliamentary delegation, its vote increased by about 120,000 as compared to 1958, its share of the popular vote by almost 3 percent, and its parliamentary seats from 10 to 41. The most important aspect of tYfe recent election, however, is the fact that the defeat of all the other anti- Gaullist parties has contributed to an improvement in the PCF's political position by lowering the barriers that have separated the Communists from the other parties since 1947. This situation contributed to widespread electoral collaboration between Socialists and Communists in the second round of the election and has brought about a cautious rapprochement between the two parties.as a result of their common dislike of the present regime. The results of the recent election suggest that the PCF continues to derive its chief support from urban workers, both industrial and whitecollar, particularly in the Paris area and the industrialized north, traditional strongholds of the party, as well as from farmers and farm laborers in the rural areas of central France and near the Mediterranean coast. The Communists still control the largest French trade union, the Confed4ration Gdne'rale du Travail (CGT), although its membership now is only about 1 million compared to almost million in 1947. The party still operates numerous front organizations, although many of them are only "paper" organizations. Party membership has remained stable over the last few years, but it is aging. The party leadership's iron control over its members seems to have kept dissension in the party to a minimum in the wake of the increasing turmoil in the inter- national communist movement. W E S T E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. parl. elections ITALY May 25-26, 1958 Chamber of Deputies, total seats: 596 (Distribution as of Dec. 15, 1961) NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS I Communist Italian Communist Party PCI 6,707+,454 votes (22.7%) 141 seats (23.7%) Non-Communist Left Italian Socialist Part (PSI) 4,-2-9,726 votes (14.2%x) 87 seats (14.60) Center Republican-Radical Parties PRI-PR 405,7$2 votes 1.4) 6 seats (1%) Italian Democratic Socialist Party PSDI 1,345,477 votes (4.5%) 19 seats (3.2%) Christian Democracy DC 12,520,207 votes (42.4%) 273 seats (45.8%) Liberal Party (PLI) 1,047,061 votes 3.50) 21 seats (3.5%) Other groups 465,936 votes (1.7%) 16 seats (2.7%) NOTE: The. present distribution of seats differs slightly from that of.1958 because.of movements of individual deputies from one party to another and the disintegration of the Monarchists after that year. Riot Monarchists (various parties 1,436,916 votes (4.8%) 9 seats (.1.50) Italian Social Movement HSI (Fascist) 1,407,71:8 votes (4.8%) 24 seats (4%) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 13 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP 1,200,000 1,500,000 (estimate) 1,729,000 (claim Oct. 1961) SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY The Italian Communist Party has supporters in almost every social class and in every ITALY geographic area of Italy. Most of its members, however, are urban workers (40%), farm laborers (180), and tenant farmers (12%). The dedication of its cadres, many of whom were formed in 20 years of underground and exile opposition to the Fascist regime, is one of the main sources of party strength; a second major source of strength is grass- roots political work; and a third is the party's propaganda machinery, which uses both an extensive daily and periodical press and pervasive face-to-face communication to win and hold supporters. The Co~riiraunists dominate Italy's largest trade union and cooperative organizations, the Italian General Confederation of Labor (CGIL), and the National League of Cooperatives. In coalition with the Nenni Socialists (PSI), the Communists control some 1,300 local governments, about one-sixth of the country's total. While PCI membership has declined, somewhat in recent years, its electoral strength has shown remarkable stability. Nevertheless, in the local by-elections of June and November 1962, the communist popular vote suffered a slight decline in comparison to the 1960 and 1961 local elections. The most important development reducing the strength and influence of the PCI is the deterioration of its relations with the PSI, with whom the Communists were allied by a "Unity of Action Pact" from 1934 to 1956. While the PSI still collaborates with the Communists in the CGIL, in cooperatives, and in many local administrations, the two parties have drifted apart slowly but significantly in recent years. PSI parliamentary collaboration with the present "center-left" government of Premier Fanfani has increased communist isolation and has pushed the PCI further away from its erstwhile Socialist allies. NOTE: The Communist Party of San Marino, while nominally independent, is an offshoot of the Italian Communist Party. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 l1 COUNTRY Date of last nat' 1. part. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS The Spanish regime is a coalition of conservative groups under the dictatorship of Generalissimo Franco. These groups consist of the National Movement (Falange) -- the only legal party -- the army, the church, and the conservative business and landholding classes. Most members of the Cortes, or parliament, represent these groups. Over a third are ex-officio members, about 10% are appointed by Franco, and the rest are indirectly elected under strict government supervision. Such elections take place over a period of several months; the last elections occurred in late 1959 and early 1960. PORTUGAL Portugal is governed by an authoritarian regime under the control of Prime Minister Antonio Salazar. Nov. 1957 Only one legal party, the National Union, is allowed to function. All members of the National Assembly, the lower legislative house, are either members of, or fully support, the National -Union. At the National Assembly election held in November 1961, some opposition candidates withdrew at the last moment, and the National Union candidates were automatically elected in all districts. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST SZR:;l'GTH COUNTRY 5,000 Since the end of the Civil War in 1939, the Spanish Communist Party Partido Communista Espanol -- SPAIN (estimate) PCE) has been illegal; laws passed in 1939 and 19+0 established criminal penalties for membersb p in the party and participation in communist-sponsored political activities. However, despite periodic its of known and suspected party members and sympathizers, the PCE has maintained an active underground organization that engages in recruitment, the dissemination of propaganda, and occasionally in strikes and demonstrations. During the major strike wave of April-June 1962, the PCE sought to capitalize on worker discontent, but failed. Other opposition groups in Spain and in exile generally refuse to collaborate with the Communists, but in recent years the PCE has had some success in appealing to younger Socialists within Spain for joint anti-regime activities. Spanish Communists are also active'in the Revolutionary Directorate for Iberian Liberation (commonly known as DRIL), which is based in Latin America and aims to overthrow both the Salazar regime in Portugal and the Franco regime in Spain. Within Spain, communist party members are found in most urban centers and are drawn mainly from classes of manual workers and intellectuals. PCE members and organizations also operate in communist countries, France, North Africa and Latin America. AI1iough the top PCE leaders are usually in communist countries,. most party members outside Spain are in France,` despite the fact that PCE organizations and press organs were outlawed in France in 1950. Communist propaganda reaches Spain clandestinely in the form of leaflets and a number of more or less regular publications, of which Mundo Obrero (Workers' World), an official monthly, is the most important. Communist propaganda is also transmitted through communist radio broadcasts and through Radio Espana Independiente,,which identifies itself as a clandestine transmitter in the Pyrenees but actually operates from Eastern Europe. 2,000 Because of its illegal status, the Portuguese Communist Party (Partido Communista Portugues -- PCP PORTUGAL (estimate) operates as an underground and exile organization. Within Portugal, the PCP is hampered by constant police surveillance and-periodic arrests; many rank-and-file members and some top leaders are now in prison. The party nevertheless has had some success. in maintaining an underground organization, re- cruiting new members, disseminating propaganda, and penetrating noncommunist opposition groups. During an unprecedented series of popular demonstrations in Lisbon and Oporto in the first half of 1962, the PCP sought to increase its following among the numerous discontented elements there. PCP activities along this line decreased sharply, however, after a number of party leaders were arrested in June. Communist membership within Portugal consists mainly of urban workers (concentrated in Lisbon and Oporto), a small number of farm laborers (concentrated in the Upper Alentejo area), and a minority of middle class groups, including younger intellectuals. PCP members are also active in France, Brazil and the Portuguese African colonies of Angola and Mozambique. Communist propaganda is distributed clandestinely in the form of leafle s, pamL et de in with cial subjects, and a number of fairly regular periodicals, including Avante (Forwarpd.~, tie oic al wont y. This domestic propaganda is supplemented by short daily broadcasts in Portuguese from Radio Moscow. WESTERN EUR OP E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 .16 COUNTRY Date of last natl. part. elections SWITZERLAND Oct. 214-25, 1959 Communist Communist Part Partei der Arbeit) Estimated vote: 26,000 votes (2.7%) 3 seats (1.5%) Non-Communist Left Center _ Conservative Social Democratic Party Radical Democratic Party Catholic Conservative Party 264,000 votes 2 .3 238,000 votes 23.7 237,000 votes 23. 51 seats (26%) 51 seats (26%) 47 seats (24%) Peasant, Artisan, and Middle-Class Part 117,000 votes 11.7%) 23 seats (11.7%) ---------------------------- Others. 122,000 votes (12.0,) 21 seats (10.8%) AUSTRIA Nov. 1$, 1962 Communist Party and Left Socialists 135,482 votes (3.0%) No seats Socialist Party Austrian People's Party Liberal Party of Austria 1,9 0,590 votes (44.0,) 2,02 ,579 votes 5. formerly Union of 76 seats (46.10) 81 seats (49.10 Independents) 314,596 votes (7-0%) 8 seats Various minor groups 21,535 votes 0.5 * * Vote percentages total less than 100% due to rounding of,decimals. NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 17 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 6,000 (estimate) The small Swiss Communist Party -- known as the Partei der Arbeit or Parti du Travail -- SWITZERLAND. has no appreciable influence among the essentially conservative Swiss population. Upon its reemergence in 1947 after the wartime ban on the Party, it elected 7 deputies to the National Council (lower house of parliament) and polled almost 50,000 votes (5.1%). However, in 1959 the party elected only 3 deputies, all from French-speaking Switzerland, and received 26,000 votes in the 5 cantons in which lists of candidates were presented. Party voting strength since 1951 has remained fairly constant. The main concentration of communist strength today is in the canton of Geneva. The party's growth has been continually inhibited by internal struggles, failure of the communist front organizations to expand, and adherence by the party to unpopular Moscow lines. 50,000 (estimate) The Austrian Communist P arty has steadily declined in influence since 1949. It has not AUSTRIA been represented in the National Council (lower house of parliament) since 1959, and in the 1962 election its popular vote declined in both absolute and relative terms to its lowest point since World War II -- 3% of the total, compared with about 5% in elections prior to 1959. Communist strength in the powerful Austrian trade union organizations is limited to a small segment of industrial workers, chiefly in Vienna and the oilfields of northeastern Austria. Coim=ist front organizations have negligible support among the Austrian population. The party's unpopularity is heightened by the rigid adherence of its leadership to Moscow. During 1962, the party has suffered from rifts among its followers in the wake of the recent more extensive de-Stalinization campaign in the Soviet Union and as a result of the deterioration in Sino-Soviet relations. CENTRAL EUROP E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 18 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last natl. parl. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative GERMANY Communist Party Social Democratic Part Christian Democratic Free Democratic Party Federal Republic Not eligible to 11,427,353 votes 36.20 ) Union Christian ,02,765 votes 12. %) of Germany) participate 190 seats (38.1%) Social Union 67 seats (13.4%) Sept. 17, 1961 1 ,2 ,372 votes (45.3%) All-German Party (seats as of Communist-Front 242 seats (48.5%) combination of German Dec. 1961) German Peace Union Party and All-German 609,918 votes 1.9%) Bloc or refugee party) Includes Saarland No seats 970,757 votes (2.8%) as of Jan. 1, 1957 ----------------------------------------- No seats Others Minor groups including ultranationalists 315,73 votes No_seats 1 GERMANY Socialist Unity Part Social Democratic Party Christian Democratic Union German Party West Berlin) 31,572 votes 1.9 50,127 votes 52. 609,097 votes 37.7 53,912 votes (3.3%) House of No seats. 78 seats (58.6%) 55 seats (41.4%) Free Democratic Party No seats Representatives 61,119 votes 3. Dec. 7, 1958 NOTE: No other parties eligible No seats (seats as of to participate in Free People's Party Dec= 1961) Dec . 7, 1958 elections (Split off from Free Democratic Party 1956) 10,681 votes (0.7%) No seats GERMANY The 195 parliamentary elections were conducted on orthodox communist patterns,i.e. a "National Front" German Democratic representing the Socialist Unity Party (SED), four satellite parties, and various mass social organi- Republic and East zations received 99.87% of the total vote on a single list basis. 13% of the vote was either invalid Berlin) or negative. In addition to the 400 voting members of the parliament (Volkskammer), 66 deputies without Nov. 16, 1958 voting rights represent East Berlin. (East Berlin has its own 180 member legislature, whose election and composition is analogous to the Volkskammer). Although termed in the Constitution the highest organ of the State, with budgetary, legislative, and planning authority, the Volkskammer is a rubber-stamp for previously devised SED proposals. There exists no trace of parliamentary debate in its session, which are usually very short and initiated for ad hoc approval of major regime moves. C E N T R A L E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 19 COMMUNIST PARTY COUNTRY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH 35,000 - 50,000 The West German Communist Party KPD was outlawed by order of the Federal Constitutional GERMANY (estimate) Court on August 17, 1956. At that time it had only a limited influence in the politics and (Federal society of the Federal Republic, and had long been recognized as simply an appendage of the Republic of East German Communist Party (SED). Since 1956 communist candidates running in State and Germany) Federal elections have obtained only a negligible fraction of the vote. The scattered communist influence in organized labor is limited to the coal mining, metallurgical, and shipbuilding industries; Communists are not represented in the leadership of any national trade union organization. Most German communist-front organizations, operating out of East Berlin, have been outlawed in the Federal Republic. There are an estimated 5,000 party members active in illegal operations. Less than 5,000 Communists in West Berlin are organized as part of the East German SED. The legal status GERMANY (estimate) of the SED organization in West Berlin is not affected by the outlawing of the KPD in the (West Berlin) Federsl (West Berlin) Republic. However, the actual influence of the SED in West Berlin is. nil. 1,610,000 Maintaining a facade of multiparty government through the existence of four non-SED GERMANY (official claim, groups represented in the Volkskammer, the East German regime is completely dominated (German Dec. 31, 1961) by the SED, which in turn controls all aspects of national activity. Party member- Democratic ship as of December 1961 reflected a plurality of white-collar workers and intelli- Republic and gentsia, followed by workers, who represent about one-third of the total, and peasants, East Berlin) who, having firmly resisted recruiting pressure, constitute less than 1010 of the total. Women currently make up one-quarter of membership, while the number of youths (under 25) is less than 1050. The highest levels of the East German government are almost entirely composed of SED Central Committee members. Party First Secretary Ulbricht - who is also head of state - has succeeded in retaining his dominant position longer than any other East European Communist leader by means of Soviet support and successive purges of actual or potential opposition elements. Although control facilities have been greatly strengthened by the erection of the Berlin Wall, the East German authorities continue to be isolated from the populace by a barrier of distrust and popular contempt, and are, in effect, dependent upon the security services and Soviet armed force for their continued survival. C E N T R A L E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last natl. part. elections ICELAND Oct. 25-26, 1959 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STA.TJS Communist Non-Commiunist Left Center Labor Alliance Social Democratic Party Progressive Party Communist-front) 12,910 votes (15.2%) 21.,88 v~ otes 25,70 13,621 votes (16%) 9 seats (15%) 17 seats (28.3%) 10 seats (16.7%) National Defense Party 2,882 votes 3. ) No seats DENMARK Nov. 15, 1960 Communist Party Social Democratic Part Radical Liberal Part27,3+5 votes (1.1%) 1,024,039 votes 2.1 140,608 votes 5.8%)'- No seats 76 seats (42.5%) 11 seats (6.1%) Socialist Peoples Part 149,482 votes ( .2 11 seats (6.1%) Conservative Conservative Part 33,798 votes 39.7%) 24 seats (40%) Conservative Part 436;005 votes 17.9%) 32 seats (17.9%) Independent Party 1,09 votes 3.3`x) 6 seats (3.4%) Moderate Liberal Party 511,388 votes 21 38 seats (21.2%) Justice Party 52,232 votes (2.2%) No seats Five seats, in addition to those listed in this chart, are held by Greenland (2), the Faeroe Islands (2), and the Slesvig Party (1). These groups are constitutionally overrepresented in the Folketing. The two Greenland delegates and one Faeroese delegate have agreed to support the new Social Democratic-Radical Liberal Government, giving it a working majority. N O R T H E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 950 - 1,000 Communist strength in Iceland has declined since 1959, at first in the general elections of ICELAND (estimate) that year and more recently in the 1962 local governmental and trade union elections. As a result, the communist-controlled Labor Alliance lost much of its representation in local and provincial councils. The Alliance also found itself in a minority at the November 1962 con- vention of the Icelandic Federation of Labor (IFL), which dominates the Icelandic trade union movement. The position of the Communists nevertheless remains formidable. Cooperation of the Progressive Party has allowed the Labor Alliance to retain the chairmanship of the IFL as well as a majority of the seats on its executive board. Thus the power of the Communists to harass the government's program of economic stabilization remains great, and communist-controlled unions have already given notice of their intention of again seeking increases in wages and wage bene- fits, similar to those secured in 1961. For their part, the Conservatives and particularly the Social Democrats, who are joined in the government coalition, have been reluctant to oppose such demands for fear of alienating labor support in the forthcoming general elections. Nevertheless, Social Democratic-Conservative campaigns against the Communists continue to be effective, and the Progressives have ceased to cooperate with them in parliament and in campaigns against Icelandic participation in NATO. Factionalism within the party, fanned by conflicts in the international communist movement, have also hindered its activities. 5,000 (estimate) The pacifist and neutralist Socialist Peoples Party SFP dealt the Danish Communist Party DENMARK (DKP) a crushing blow in the November 1960 Folketing elections, winning 11 seats while the D lost its entire Folketing representation. The SFP appears to have won most of the former DKP electorate, while gaining sizable numbers of voters from the Radical. Liberal, Justice, and left-wing Social Democratic parties. The durability of the SFP is still uncertain; much of its appeal seems centered in the personality of its leader and only really prominent figure, Aksel Larsen, former Chairman of the DKP. Apparently free of Soviet influence, the SFP pro- vided a "respectable" place to register pacifist, neutralist, and radical economic sentiment. DKP party membership has remained largely unaltered, however, despite the extent of the party's electoral losses. DKP and SFP followers are largely concentrated in urban areas, particularly in Copenhagen and four or five other large provincial cities. The Communists and SFP control less than 5% of organized labor, and no national labor unions. N O R T H E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'1. part. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative NORWAY Communist Party Labor Party Liberal Part C y onservative Party Sept. 11, 1961 53,000 votes 2.9,) 7,000 votes (46.8%) 129,000 votes (7.2%) 336,000 votes 19.1,) 74 seats (49.4%) 14 seats (9.3%) 29 seats (19.3%) Socialist Peoples Party Christian Peoples Party Center Party 42,000 votes 2. 169,000 votes 9.0 125,000 votes (6.8%) 2 seats (1-3%) 15 seats (10.0%) 16 seats (10.7%) Electoral percentages do not add to 100. SWEDEN Sept. 18, 1960 Communist Party 190,559 votes (4-W 5 seats (2.2%) Social Democratic Part 2,032,937 votes 7. 114 seats (49.10) Liberal Party 7++,097 votes (17.5%) 40 seats (17.2%) Center-Agrarian Party 579,006 votes (13.6%) 34 seats (14.7%) Conservative Part W4,412 votes (16.6%) 39 seats (16.8%) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 23 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 7000 - 5,000- The Norwegian Communist Party (NKP) lost its single parliamentary seat in the September NORWAY (estimate) 1961 parliamentary election and its percentage of the vote dropped from the 3.38% which it received in the 1957 election to 2.90. This loss is attributed largely to the establish- ment of the pacifist Socialist Peoples Party, which ran for the first time and gained the support of the Communists. The principal centers of communist support lie in Finnmark, the northernmost province, and in the Buskerud, Bergen, and Hedmark provinces. Communists control no national labor unions, and there are no known Communists among the national officers of the Norwegian Federation of Labor Unions (LO). Out of a total LO membership of approximately 550,000, less than 10011. are Communists. Communists are strongest in the construction industry and include workers in the iron and metal, wood, transportation, and electro-chemical industries. The only remaining communist newspaper in Norway is Friheten, which has a small circulation. Factionalism among party leaders, fanned by conflicts in the international communist movement, has increased to where it threatens party unity. 25,000 (estimate) In the -1960 parliamentary elections the Swedish Communist Party (SKP) regained most of the SWEDEN losses it suffered as a result of Swedish reaction to Soviet suppression of the Hungarian revolution but still received only 4.5% of the vote. This compares to 3.4 in the June 1958 special election, about 4`in the 1958 local government elections, and 4.6% in the 1956 regular election. In the 1962 local elections its share of the vote dropped to 3.8%. It holds only five out of-252 seats in the Second Chamber-of Parliament, and it continues to be isolated by all noncommunist parties. SKP electoral support is concentrated in the traditional strongholds of Norrbotten Province in the far north, the port city of Goteborg, Ggvleborg Province in east central Sweden, and the capital city, Stockholm (in the order of descending electoral district percentages). Communist electoral strength increased slightly in 1960 in G8teborg (8.8~ to 9.3;0) and Gdvleborg Province (7.6% to 9.1fl) but it continued to decline in Norrbotten (16.1';% to 15.5%). The Party's attempts to foster cooperation with the Social Democrats as a manifestation of "working class solidarity" have met with failure at the trade union level as well as in national and local government politics. Communists control no national unions and only about 80 of the approximately 9,000 union locals. They lost slightly in 1961 elections of leaders of trade union locals. What little support the Commmmists retain in trade union locals is found largely in the building and construction workers and forestry workers' unions. NORTHERN EUROPE Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 24 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAME D t of l NTARY STATUS a e ast nat'l. parl. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center C FINLAND Finnish People's i l S onservative b. 4 oc a Democratic Part Agrarian Party National Coalition Fe -5, 1962 Democratic League SKDL (Ri ht i s g -w ng Socialist 525,491 votes (23%) Party 507,124 votes 22 0 4 2 448,930 votes (19.5%) 53 seats (26.5%) 346,638 votes (15%) 7 seats ( 3.5%) 38 seats (19%) Swedish People's party 32 seats (16%) Workers' and Small Farmers' 14775 votes 14 seats (7%) Social Democratic League (Skogists) Left-wing Finnish People's Party Socialists) 146,005 votes 6.3 100,394 votes (4.4%) 2 seats (1%) 13 seats (6.5% Liberal Union 12,000 votes (0.5%) 1 seat (0.5%) Other groups ,b~+ 759 votes (2.9%) No seats N O R T H E R N Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19:CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 0,000 estimate The Finnish Communist Party (SKP) is represented in Parliament by the Finnish People's FINLAND Democratic League (SKDL), a front organization dominated by Communists and including radical labor and small-farmer elements. SKDL voting strength after World War II has remained fairly stable in relation to that of the noncommunist parties. In the 1962 parliamentary elections the SKDL polled 226 of the votes, compared to 23.2% in 1958. Although the Communist Party controls 47 of the 200 seats in Parliament, communist efforts to infiltrate other branches of the national government have failed, mainly because of the strictly enforced merit system. They have not been represented in the cabinet since 1948. Communist influence is strongest in Lapland, the underdeveloped northernmost province of Finland, and in urban industrial centers. The most important area of communist penetration is the Confederation of Finnish Trade Unions (SAK), member of the Inter- national Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) since July 1957. Communists have taken advantage-of the open split which occurred in early 1957 in the Social Democratic Party and the consequent fight between Social Democrats and Skogists within-the SAK leadership. In May 1960, the Skogists with communist support gained control of the SAK with the result that the Social Democrats in November 1960 formed ,a rival confederation, the Finnish.Trade Union Organization (SAJ). This organization comprised 15 unions with about 70,000-members in late 1962. Communists and fellow- travelers control only 7 of the remaining 23 SAK unions, but account for about 60% of their 150,000 members. The greatest obstacle to further growth of communism in Finland is the Finnish people's inherent distrust and dislike of Russia, Tsarist and Soviet alike, to which communism and the SKP are closely linked. Many Finnish Communists have long realized that a nationalist brand of communism would have greater appeal among the Finns than the slavish devotion to the Soviet party demonstrated by most SKP leaders. Recent reports indicate the emergence of a nationalist opposition group within the hitherto monolithic SKP. N O R T H E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 26 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'l parl. elections Communist-controlled Bloc Non-Communist Opposition ALBANIA Communist-controlled Democratic Front (Single list) Votes against - 37 less than June 3, 1962 389,868 votes were cast of a total electorate of 889,974 Invalid - 3 ) 00.01, 889,828 votes were cast in favor of regime candidates (99.99 plus %) 214 seats (100%) BULGARIA Feb. 25, 1962 Communist-sponsored s n e is Fatherland Front '5, ,517 votes (99.90 1,668 opposition votes 321. deputies (100%) 3,625 invalid ballots E A S T E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 27 COMMUNIST PARTY MI BERSHIP "About" 53,000 members (official claim, Nov. 1962) 506,261 members 22,413 candidate members (official claim, Nov., 1962) SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY The membership of the Albanian Workers' communist Party has increased by about 15,000 ALBANIA since 1956. This small increase reflects purges intended .to "strengthen the quality of the ranks", staged at the same time as the recruitment. Despite the periodic purges of unreliables and efforts to improve quality, however, the educational, ideological, and cultural level of members is poor. The regime claims that the percentage of workers in the party has increased from 29.6% at the time of the February 1961 Congress to 30.3% in November 1962. Since the 1956 Congress, about 50 percent of the members accepted in the party have been workers as compared with 33.7% between 1952 and 1956. The 1961 social composition of the party was as follows: industrial workers 29.7%, peasants on cooperative farms 23.6%, private peasants 3.2%, employees and white collar workers 41.9% and others 1.6%. Since the Albanian leadership dispute with the Soviet Union, purges of high and low level officials have removed pro-Soviet elements from party ranks. Subsequent to the open break with Moscow at the 22nd.CPSU Congress, the party's main external source of strength is Communist China, and it has received popular support for its break with the Soviet Union, despite basic opposition to communism. Party members and candidates constitute of the country's population. Workers constitute BULGARIA the largest category in the party (over 40%), and the largest category among new members., The proportion of collective farmers in the party is high, constituting 28.5%. White collar and intelligentsia membership is increasing and constitutes 28.40 of total. The Party has been plagued by factional and power struggles which resulted in a major purge of Stalinists and of opponents of Party First Secretary Todor Zhivkov at the Party's Eighth Congress (November 1962). At the Congress the Party's leadership was strengthened markedly and the Party pledged itself to follow the CPSU line in its policies, but its Stalinist orientation has not been wholly eradicated. EASTER N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l part. elections CZECHOSLOVAKIA June 12, 1960 Nov. 16, 1958 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist-Controlled Bloc Communist-sponsored single list (National Front, a coalition of puppet political parties and mass organizations controlled by the Communist Party). 9,059,838 (99.86%) votes cast for National Front candidates 300 seats (100%) Communist-sponsored single list Patriotic People's Front 6,431,832 votes 99.6$j (The total vote cast was 6,493,680 out of total eligible vote of 6,600,686.) 338 seats (100%) Non-Communist Opposition 12,819 invalid ballots 12,775 (0.14?) ballots cast against National Front candidates 26,691 no votes (0.04%) 32,010 invalid ballots) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP 1,680 , 19 members 92,230 candidates (claim Oct. 1, 1962) 511,565 members (official claim, Nov. 1962) SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, comprising about 11. of the total popu- CZECHOSLOVAKIA lation of Czechoslovakia, is proportionately ore of the largest, if not the largest, communist party in the world. Party membership has been traditionally higher in the Czech lands of Bohemia and Moravia than in Slovakia. The party leadership. has over the years attempted to recruit more youth, workers and peasants. into the ranks. The party's age composition is said to have improved.in 1961 and the membership's average age at-that time was alleged to be 45. Almost half of the new candidates to the party (the period of candidacy in the party was reduced in 1960 from two years to one year) was reported to be under 26 years of age. A ratio of 80% worker-peasants and 20% other categories appears to be the basic directive for admission to the party. In 1961, the party claimed that workers represented half the membership and that one of every five workers engaged in production was a party member. In rebuilding the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party after the 1956 revolt, the Kadar HUNGARY regime has not attempted to restore it to its Previous., nearly double the third of the total membership and the size. Industrial workers constitute roughly a Party has its strongest organization in Budapest. In 1962 the Party leadership began a gradual purge of county and local Party organizations removing "dogmatic" officials opposed to its pragmatic policies, reaffirmed its anti- Stalinist stance through expulsion from the Party of former Stalinist leaders, and strengthened its hand by purging two opponents from the top Party organs. A Party Congress, held in November 1962, reaffirmed Kadar's policies and increased the number of pranatic.ani efficient Kadar-supports on boththe Politouro and the Secretariat. A cautious policy of ,national reconciliation and emphatic ,support of CPSU characterizes the current Party line. EASTERN E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 30 COUNTRY Date of last nat'1 pail. elections POLAND April 16, 1961 RUMANIA March 5, 1961 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist-Controlled Bloc National Unity Front 17,653,646 votes (94-83% of electorate) 98.34% of total votes cast for National Unity Front candidates. There were 616 candidates for 460 seats with communist majority assured. Communists hold 55% of the seats. Communist-sponsored single list People's Democratic Front 12,368,786 votes 99.77 456 seats (100%) Non-Communist Opposition 24,461 "no" votes (0.4) 5,552 invalid ballots (0-03%) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 31 COMMUNIST PARTY i4EMBERSHIP 1,123,151 members & 213,808 candi- dates (official claim as of March 31, 1962) SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRE1`1GH COUNTRY The Polish United Workers' Party communist is continuing its mild expansion begun POLAND in 1960, but there is no apparent intent to have the membership exceed its present level of 4~0 of the country's population. White collar workers and the intelligentsia still constitute the largest single membership category (approximately 42',); industrial workers are the next largest group (approximately 41%). The percentage of peasants, in spite of recruitment efforts, appears to have remained stationary (12%). The Party claims to have had some recruiting success among professionals, particularly doctors, whose membership is said to have increased by a third, but the total number of Party members in that profession is believed to be very small. Approximately a third of total Party membership has joined since 1958 as a result of a turnover promoted by the Party itself. Renewal of de-Stalinization elsewhere in Eastern Europe has had no internal effect on the anti-Stalinist Polish-Party which had completed its own purges long before. Rather it has had the effect of boosting the standing of the Polish Party in the world communist move- ment. Current membership in the Rumanian Workers' communist Party is the highest since 1948, RUMANIA reflecting the fact that there have been no membership purges for the past four years, while recruitment has been stepped up. Although "improvement" in the party's social composition has been below expectation, the number of members of worker origin has in- creased from-42.6% in 1955 to 51.10 in May 1962. Peasants constitute 22.70, function- aries 23.4%, and "others" 2.8% of the membership. The chief source of the Party's strength lies in the traditional passivity of the Rumanians combined with rigid controls. The chief potential weakness is historical antipathy toward communism and the Soviet Union. E A S T E R N E U R O P E Approved For Release 2006/12119: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l parl. elections UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS march 18, 1962 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Communist-Controlled Bloc "Bloc of Communists and Non Part Peoples" 139,210, 31 votes 99.47%) 791 delegates (100%) -- Council of the Union 139,391,455 votes (99.60%) 652 delegates (100) -- Council of Nationalities NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS The delegates in each council include seven representing Soviet military forces stationed abroad. EASTERN EUROPE Non-Corm=ist Opposition 746,563 n' o votes 815 invalid ballots 56+,155 "no" votes 706 invalid ballots Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY --1- SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH (official claim) public and state." It is a highly cuscipiineo. n~erareui~u.L Vle W"y~AA ..,. _ REPUBLICS sectors of Soviet political, economic, and social life. The totalitarian nature of the regime is due to the comprehensiveness of party controls and authority. It is universally recognized as the ruling organ of Soviet society, and while the degree of its popular support is questionable, broad acquiescence to its rule is not. Despite its attempts to counteract the tendency Jf the Part to become isolated from the public at large and to become a conventional ruling caste more conscious of its power, privilege and promotion through extensive recruitment in recent years, the Party remains essentially a white collar organization of careerists. Its membership comprises about 8% of the adult population, including 12% of the male and only 2% of female popu- lation. About 6 times as many Party members work in urban areas as opposed to farming. The highest concentrations of membership are found in the upper echelons of society: more than one-third of all university graduates are Party members, as opposed to less than 4% of collective farmers. In proportion to population, the peoples in the areas annexed by the Soviet regime during WW II are notably underrepresented in the Party, as well as the peoples of Central Asia. But all important positions in Soviet society are staffed by Communists thereby insuring the Party's continued dominance. EASTERN EUROPE Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 34 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l parl. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS YUGOSLAVIA (Yugoslavia is currently preparing the promulgation of a new constitution which, while retaining March 23, 1958 the distinctive features of Tito's communism, would change several important elements of parliamen- tarian election, structure, and process. The current term of members of parliament has been extended until the new constitution is adopted.) The Yugoslav parliament (Narodna Skupstina) consists of two equal houses, and a sub-chamber dealing with questions concerning two or more of the six federal republics. Non-Communist Opposition Federal Council Federal Council The Federal Council has 371 deputies, 301 of whom are Abstentions and invalidated elected directly on the basis of one to every 60,000 ballots amounted to 9.11% inhabitants, and 70 of whom are delegated by the various in the 1958 elections. Six republican and autonomous provincial assemblies. These seats of the total of 371 delegated deputies form the Chamber of Nationalities, which were contested on the ballot. functions as an optional sub-division of the parliament on matters of legislation concerning more than one republic, e.g. constitutional changes, the economic plan, inter- republican disputes, etc. Virtually all candidates in the 1958 election were nominated by the communist-dominated Socialist Alliance of the Working People of Yugoslavia (SAWPY). Council of Producers Council of Producers The Council of Producers has 216 deputies elected indirectly 79 electors in the industrial by members of economic organizations in the ratio of one deputy category, and 5 in the agri- to every 70,000 members. The deputies are divided into two cultural category cast invalid categories: a) those representing industry, trade, and handi- ballots. crafts (168), and b) those representing agriculture (48). This division is adjusted according to percentual contribution to total national income. The regime-controlled Federation of Trade Unions plays a key role in the nomination of candidates. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY N04B SHTP Approximately 1 million (official claim, July 1962) SOURCES OF COM11IST STREDTGT3 COUNTRY The Union of Communists of Yugoslavia UCY differs from other ruling communist YOWSLAVIA- parties in that it terms itself "a moral and educative force", and rejects overt administrative control of national life. Party control is assured, however, through its dominant position in trade unions, the national political mass organization, and local, republican, and federal governing bodies. Membership in the UCY is practically a requisite for political office, although this is not true in other, and important fields of activity, e.g. science, education, foreign and domestic trade, etc. The relatively permissive nature and the nationalist background of Yugoslav communism have succeeded in preventing the creation of an integral opposition, while tie total absence of a unifying, national alternative to the present Tito regime fosters its appeal to Yugoslavs who remember the national animosities and factionalism which marked pre-World War II-Yugoslavia- Regional affiliation of Party membership roughly corresponds to population figures in each of the republics, and the Party has recently expressed a desire to raise the percentage of workers within it, which now runs about 38%. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 36 COUNTRY_ Date of last nat' 1 virl elections ALGERIA Sept. 20, 1962 _NATIONAL -PARLIAMENTARY - TATtTS- A Ccnsti.tuent Assemblyof 96 members has a popular mandate of one year in which to frame a national; constitution. In the interim, a ministerial team, headed by Prime Minister Ahmed Ben Bella, together with the Political Bureau of the National Liberation Front (FLN), has assumed complete responsibility for the management of national affairs. Morocco has been an independent state since March 2, 1956. In theory, Morocco is ruled by an absolute monarch, King Hassan II, but in practice he delegates political power to a cabinet in which various Moroccan political groups have been represented since independence. The present cabinet is personally headed by the King. Neither the powerful Union Nationale des Forces,Populaires, a radical nationalist party, nor the more conservative Istiglal are in the government. In December 1962, King Hassan introduced a new constitution which was approved in a national referendum. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 37 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 5,000- ,000 The Algerian Communist Party, which had been outlawed by the French from ALGERIA (estimate) September 12, 1955, until Algerian independence on July 3, 1962, was out- lawed by decree of the Ben Bella Government on November 29, 1962. The Party, however, continues to agitate for full legal status. It has some support from student and war-veteran elements and has a large proportion of Europeans in its membership. It has received material and financial support and training from the Italian and especially French communist parties. It exerts some limited influence in labor and other national organizations. The Party central organ, Al-Hurrijya, is banned; but the communist paper, Algier Republicain, still appears. 1,000-1,500 The Communist Party of Morocco (PCM) was outlawed in December 1952 by a (estimate) decree of the French Protectorate administration which was continued in force after independence.' In 1959 the government took legal action to dissolve the party after it applied for legal status. In February 1960 an appeals court sustained the government's action. Despite these legal restrictions, some PCM activity is tolerated, apparently on the condition that the party label not be used. There are no significant front groups. MOROCCO Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Date of t nat'1 part. elections! TUNISIA Tunisia became-independent on March 20, 1956, and a republic on July 25, 1957. The Tunisian Nov. , 1959 constitution, promulgated on June 1, 1959, provides for a pCresidential system of government modeled in many respects on that of the United States. President Habib Bourguiba is also head of the Neo-Destour Party, which holds all the seats in the National Assembly. Communists 3, 461 vo s (0. ,,) No seats National Union (Neo-Destour and affiliates) 1,009,127 votes 99.6; 90 seats LIBYA Libya is a constitutional monarchy with a federal system of government. Parliament consists Jan. 17, 1960 of a Senate and a Chamber of Deputies. The Chamber is popularly elected. The Senate is chosen partly by royal appointment and partly by indirect election. There are no organized political parties. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 39 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 1,0007-estimate) Although the Parti Communiste Tunisienne (PCT) has operated legally,* its popular TUNISIA appeal has always been limited, since it is regarded by most Tunisians as a foreign body. This attitude is a holdover from the period of French rule, when. most PCT members were French, and does not appear to have been altered by the fact that the party's small membership now consists largely of Moslem and Jewish Tunisians. Like communist parties in similar circumstances, the PCT currently gives major emphasis to nationalist themes -- e.g., North African federation -- and tries to give them an anti-American twist. The most active front group appears to be the Tunisian-USSR Friendship Association. Tunisia's dominant labor organization, the General Federation of Tunisian Workers (UGTT) is strongly anticommunist and is affiliated with the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU). Communist influence in youth and student organizations still appears to be slight. The communist paper At-Talia (Arabic) and the communist-front Tribune du Progres (French) are Tunisia's only real opposition newspapers. * Note: The Party, At-Talia and Tribune du Progres were banned in early January 1963. No organized There are no known Cbmnmmists in the Libyan Parliament, and no official communist LIBYA party party has been formed. Communist attempts to organize appear to have been stymied by determined government countermeasures, dating from the expulsion of suspected Italian communist organizers during late 1951 and 1952. Soviet influence was strengthened somewhat by the establishment in January 1956 of a Soviet Embassy but Soviet interests have suffered since the breach in late 1958 between the USSR and the United Arab Republic (which enjoys considerable popular sympathy). The Soviet News Agency TASS has managed to introduce its wire services into Libya, and thus the Soviet interpretation of news can be regularly sent to Libyan news offices. There are no known official communist technicians in the country, but there has recently been a notable increase in the visits of Soviet professional and cultural groups. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 `.Grt L&ft?sigi. ~~~ SUDAN March 1958 ETHIOPIA Sept.-Nov. 1957 SOMALI REPUBLIC March 1959 (Somalia) Feb . 1960 (British Somaliland) Parliament was dissolved and all political parties were declared illegal by the military regime headed by General Ibraham Abboud, which assumed power on November 17, 1958. Former leaders of the Uinma Party, the National Unionist Party, and the Peoples Democratic Party are still pressing for the reestablishment of some form of representative government. A national committee is drafting a constitution, but no date has been set for return to parliamentary rule. The Empire of Ethiopia is a monarchy. The present constitution was promulgated in 1955. The first elections to the lower house of Parliament took place in the fall of 1957, with candidates running as individuals since no political parties are allowed. The Senate is appointed by the Emperor. The independent Somali Republic was established July T, 1960. -It includes former British Somaliland and the ex-UN Trust Territory of Somalia, which had been under Italian administration. The Somali Republic has a unicameral parliamentary system with a president, prime minister, and cabinet. Representatives to the former Somalia and British Somaliland legislative bodies sit as a group in the Somali Republic National Assembly. Parliamentary parties: Somali Youth League - 85 seats Somali Independent Constitution Party (Hizbia Dastur Must it Sgagied - H11?S) 5 seats Somali National League - 20 seats (ex-British Somaliland a United Somali Party - 12 seats (ex-British Somaliland) National United Front - 1 seat (ex-British Somaliland) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY COUNTRY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH 1,500 members The Sudan Communist Party SOP has been illegal since it was founded in the SUDAN (estimate) mid-1940's. The party's fortunes have fluctuated with such factors as its ability to identify itself with Sudanese nationalism and its compatability with other opposition groups. The SCP achieved its greatest popular appeal in the early 1950's during the agitation for independence, but declined in popular strength after it opposed the 1953 Anglo-Egyptian agreement on the Sudan. When the military regime came to power in 1958, it dissolved the SCP's political cover organization, the Anti-Imperialist Front, and since then the SCP itself has been harassed by sporadic repressive measures. The party's hard-core organization has apparently remained intact, however, and Communists still exercise considerable influence among- organized labor and university students., Soviet efforts to maintain cordial relations with the Sudan have apparently caused some embarrassment to the SCP, which is openly hostile to the military regime. No organized party No political parties are permitted in Ethiopia, and the security forces have generally ETHICL'Ii moved energetically against dissident political activity. Communist propaganda is disseminated through a Soviet-supported hospital and information center in Addis Ababa and through the TASS news agency. Communist representatives recruit Ethiopian students for schools in communist countries. The USSR has begun to build a secondary school that may be staffed in part by Soviet teachers and supplied with Soviet teaching materials. It is to begin building an oil refinery at the port of Assab in 1963. No organized party There has been some infiltration of political, labor and student organizations SOMALI REPUBLIC by pro-communist elements, but there is no organized Somali communist party. (An organization under that name was established in 1956 but dissolved after a few months.). More than 300 Somalis are studying in communist countries at the present time. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 442 COUNMY Date of last nat'l part. elections TANGANYIKA November 962 UGANDA April 1962 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Tanganyika became independent on December 9, 1961. The government is formed by the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU), which enjoys a virtual monopoly of political power. On December 9, 1962, Tanganyika became a republic headed by President Julius Nyerere, who was elected in a national election in November 1962. The election was contested by the Tanganyika African National Congress (TANC), but the vote was overwhelmingly in favor of Nyerere. A third party, the People Democratic Party (PIP) headed by Christopher Tumbo, ineffectually advocated boycott of the elections. Uganda became independent in October 1 2. The government is formed by a'coalition of the Uganda Peoples Congress (UPC) and the Kabaka Yekka, a movement representing the supporters of the traditional:ki don of n8 Buganda. ThePrime Minister is Milton Obote. Kenya is administered by a governor responsible to the United Kingdom Colonial Office. As a result of the Lancaster House Conference held in the spring of 1962 Kenya has limited internal self-government and is on the way to independence. However, no date for new elections leading to fall self-government or for independence has.yet been set by the UK. The African nationalists are demanding early elections and independence. The present government Is-.formed by a coalition of the Kenya African National Union (KANU) and the Kenya African Democratic Union (Kaw). KM is based on a coalition of smaller tribes and organized principally as a reaction against the stronger Kikuyu-Luo dominated KANU. New elections will probably be held in 1963 with independence perhaps in late 1963 or in early 1964. AYR I C?A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 43 COW4JNIST PARTY SOURCES OF CONIRUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY MEMBERSHIP No organized The Tanganyika African National Congress has a pro-communist, orientation, and some TANGANYIKA party members both of this party and of the Tanganyikan African National Union have made trips to communist countries. Soviet and Chinese Communist embassies were established in Dar-es-Salaam in early 1962. No organized Uganda has no communist party. It has agreed tote est lishment of Soviet an party Communist Chinese embassies, and a Chinese Communist chargel d'affaires in December 1962 opened diplomatic representation in Uganda. No organized There is no communist party in Kenya, but some Kenyan politicans have adopted party markedly pro-communist positions. Over,300 Kenyan students are studying in communist countries. Since the lifting of restrictions by the British authorities, a number of delegations have travelled to the communist orbit. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 44 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l part. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS ZANZIBAR A coalition government has been formed by the Arab-dominated and leftist-oriented Zanzibar British Protectorate) Nationalist Party (ZNP) and the Zanzibar and Pemba People's Party. The Afro-Shirazi Party June 1961 (ASP), which has an African membership, forms the opposition. The ZIP is the most articulate party, but the ASP appears to be increasing in importance. MAURITIUS Under the present 19 constitution, the Legislative Council consists of 0 elected members, British Colony) plus 12 nominated members. The majority is the Labour Party, which in May 1961 split into the Last general Parliamentary Labor Party (PLP) and the' Mauritius Labor Part election: Y (HIP). The PLP is considerably stronger, and represents a large part of the Hindu community. The MLP is a splinter group of March 1959 coloreds. The opposition consists of the radical Independent Forward Bloc (IFB) and the moderate Parti Mauritien (PM). A constitutional conference in June-July 1961 agreed that Mauritius would obtain full internal self-government in two stages, but no dates have been set. AFRICA Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 l.5 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENIC H COUNTRY Estimate The formation of a Zanzibar Communist Party was announced-in August 1962. ZANZIBAR unavailable No estimates are available on its strength, but the membership is probably small. No organized Communist activity in Mauritius currently is concentrated in the trade unions party and among the Chinese community. Of a total of 25,000 Sino-Mauritians, some 20% may be actively supporting the Chinese. Communists. The leader of the Parliamentary Labor Party and Minister of Finance, Dr.. Ramgoolam, is rather sympathetic to communism, as is a significant wing of the PLP. The Independent Forward Bloc, the most radical of the parties, is led by a pro-communist, and it has attracted some Hindus who have become dissatisfied with the Labor Party. MAURITIUS Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l part. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS PORTUGUESE AFRICA Angola and Mozambique are legally "overseas provinces" of Portugal, administered by governors- Angola, Mozambique general under the direction of the Overseas Ministry in Lisbon. Partly-elected advisory and Portuguese Guinea) Legislative Councils were established in both territories in 1955. As in metropolitan Nov. 1961 Portugal, the Uniao Nacional is the only political party legally permitted to function. SPANISH AFRICA The Spanish territories ca are legally provinces of Spain, ruled by governors- (Spanish Sahara, general who are responsible to Madrid. There are no parliamentary institutions, although Ifni, Rio Muni, Rio Muni and Fernando Po send delegates to the Spanish Cortex. Fernando Po) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 47 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRMGTH COUNTRY No organized The rebellion in Angola and the developing nationalist movements in PORTUGUESE AFRICA party Portuguese Guinea and Mozambique have created important potential Angola, Mozambique opportunities for the Communists. At present, however, communist and Portuguese influence is mainly to be found in some. of the leftist-oriented Guinea) nationalist organizations which, with the possible exception of Portuguese Guinea, have not generally had as much influence and support from the indigenous populations as some of the more moderate nationalist groups. The leftist-oriented organizations have been particularly active in organizing Portuguese Africans living abroad into "united front" groups. They have.also established closer contacts with some of the radically- inclined African states and with communist countries. The small number of Portuguese Africans who have had any contact with communist ideas were exposed to them either while studying in Portugal and France or while traveling in communist countries. As in many parallel situations, it is difficult to differentiate between Africans who are convinced Communists and those who simply are willing to profit from communist aid and advice. No organized ere is no known communist activity in the Spanish African territories. SPANISH AFRICA party (Spanish Sahara, Ifni, Rio Muni, Fernando Po) A F R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'l parl. elections FEDER TION OF RHODESIA The Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland consistsof the self-governing colony of Southern AND NYASALAND Rhodesia and the British protectorates of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland. Nyasaland is April 1962 entering the constitutional stage of full internal self-government. Northern and Southern Rhodesia, both under new constitutions, have significantly increased African participation in governmental organs. As a result of elections in December 1962, Northern Rhodesia has an African government formed by a coalition of the African National C ngress (ANC) and the United National Independence Party (UNIP). General elections in Southern Rhodesia in December resulted in an upset victory over-the United Federal Party by the more conservative European Party, the Rhodesian Front. The appearance of such different regimes in Northern and Southern Rhodesia may hasten revision of the present federal association of the three territories. The federal government at present is in most respects autonomous in respect to the powers assigned to it. The predominant party at the federal level is the United Federal Party, which is controlled by Europeans, and which is now an opposition party in all three territories. REPUBLIC OF SOUTH South Africa became a republic in 19 1 and left the commonwealth in the same year. The ruling AFRICA Nationalist Party has a heavy parliamentary majority.. There are no known Communists in the Oct. 1961 Parliament. BASUTOLAND The British colony of Basutoland is one of the three UK "High Commission Territories" in Southern Africa. The other two are the Bechuanaland Protectorate and Swaziland. A F R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 49 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY No organized There is little evidence of communist activity to date. FEDERATION OF RHODESIA party AND NYASALAND 800 The illegal South African Communist Party SACP continues to exploit the tensions and REPUBLIC OF SOUTH (estimate) frustrations generated by the government's apartheid program. The party's membership is AFRICA relatively small but it has, perhaps, 6,500 sympathizers. The SACP's basic objective has been to gain influence and, if possible, control over organizations opposed to the govern- ment's racial policies, and especially those representing non-whites. Among the important organizations in which there is a significant degree of communist infiltration or control are the African National Congress, in which there are important noncommunist elements but in which the SACP seems to exercise a preponderant influence; the Congress of Democrats (an organization of whites opposed to apartheid); the South African Congress of Trade Unions, important because it in- cludes African trade unions, which are not recognized by South African law; the South African Coloured People's Congress, a small group which purports to represent the racial element known as the Coloureds; and the Indian National Congress. These organizations are linked in the commu- nist-dominated "Congress Alliance". Since 1959 communist efforts have met strong opposition from the Pan-Africanist Congress, which is antagonistic to the white leadership of SACP and resentful of its efforts to direct protest movements toward a strengthening of the communist apparatus rather than toward the organization of a non-white nationalist movement. During the latter half of 1962, the Government of the Republic put into motion a concerted program to curb Communists and pre- vent further outbreaks of organized sabotage. Approximately 2 dozen alleged Communists have been placed under house arrest for violation of the harsh "Anti-Sabotage Act". The Government has published a list of over 400 individuals now banned from political activity under the new Act. Statements made by-any banned or restricted person may not be published anywhere in the country. The Congress of Democrats and the weekly New e a communist periodical, were banned shortly be- fore the end of the year; but the communist weekly, ,Spark, continues. to appear. Basutoland has become a major haven and base of operation for the SACP. (See entry for Basutoland). Probably. less The existence of the "Communist Party of Lesotho" (Basutoland) was made public for the BASUTOLAND than 100 first time-in Nov. 1961. The leadership of the new-party will presumably be strongly in- fluenced or dominated by "exiled" South African Communists, who have made Basutoland a major base of their operations. Early in 1962, the party made an unsuccessful attempt to seize con- trol of the Basutoland Congress Party, the country's leading political organization. Since that time, the party seems to have had little success in developing its own following among the Basuto people. A F R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 50 COUNTRY Date of last nat' l part. elections ENTENTE STATES IVORY COAST Nov. 190- DAHOMEY Dec. 1960 NIGER Dec. 1958 UPPER VOLTA April 1959 CAMEROON April 1960 CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC April 1959 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS The Ivory Coast, Dahomey, Niger and Upper Volta are all members of a consultative union known. as the Council of the Entente, which was formed in 1959. All four states were autonomous republics within the French Community before becoming independent in August 1960. Their constitutions provide for a presidential type government with a unicameral legislature. In each state the government is dominated by a local section of the RDA (Rassemblement Democratigue Africain). Ivory Coast President Felix Houphouet-Boigny is titular head of the RDA and the leading political figure in the Entente. The Trust Territory of the Southern British Cameroons merged on October 1, 1 961,, with the Republic of Cameroun. The legislative assemblies of the two federated states chose from their membership deputies to the transitional Federal National Assembly. The forty deputies from the former republic are members of President Ahidjos' Union Camerounaise party, and the ten from the former trust territory are members of that. territory's governing Kamerun National Democratic Party. The independence of the Central African Republic (formerly known as Ubangi-Shari) was proclaimed on August 13, 1960 and.a presidential system of governorgnt introduced. President David Dacko is hea fte d of the largest political party, the Mouvement d12manciation Sociale de a 14ESAN). :'.country's other ai Icant ply, the Mouvement d' Evolution D&nocrati en Afrique Centrale (MEDAC), has been reduced in importance. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 51 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY No organized No organized communist parties-are Town to exist n Ivory Coast, Upper Volta, ENTENTE STATES parties Niger, or Dahomey. Following the discovery of a reporte& plot against the Ivory Coast Government in January 1963, 'the communist party"- -- previously unheard of -- was outlawed. he RDA and the Communists had important ties with the French Communists in the early postwar period, and although these were severed in about 1950, some residual influences and organizations have presumably re- mained. In 1962 Dahomey concluded-cultural, economic, and technical accords with a number of communist countries and agreed to the establishment of diploma-tic IVORY COAST relations with the USSR, Poland, Bulgaria, and Czech?sl.ovskia. Niger in 19&e- UPPER VOLTA signed cultural, technical, and commercial accords with the USSR, Poland, and Czechoslovakia. No organized There is no communist party in Cameroon. A communist-supported terrorist party organization, the military arm of the rebel Union des Populations du Cameroun (UPC.), operates in southwestern Cameroon. At present it is effectively contained by government security forces. Ccemnunist countries have supplied the UPC with small quantities of arms and anununition and have provided financial and diplomatic support. There are some indications that Peiping is taking a special interest in the Cameroonian rebellion: UPC leaders have made a number of visits to Communist China and the Chinese have trained Cameroonian rebel cadres in guerrilla warfare technique. UPC representatives participate in various international communist front organizations. The two largest Cameroonian trade unions, the Confederation Generale Kamerunaise du Travail and the Union Generale des Travailleurs du Cameroun, are affiliated to the a nist-front World Federation of Trade Unions. In France the Union Nationale destudiants Kamerunais (UUEK) gives evidence of considerable communist indoctrination. Through the UPC and the UNEK the communists give scholar- ships to Cameroonian students. More than 50 are studying in communist countries at the present time. CAMEROON No organized Modern organizations are still very rudimentary and there have been no indications CENTRAL AFRICAN party of communist activity. REPUBLIC Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 52 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'l parl. elections CHAD The opposition Parti National Africain PNA agreed to merge with the governing Parti Progressiste May 1959 Tchadien (PPT) in March 1961, but the parties are still independent organizations. Together they. hold 77 of the 83 seats in the unicameral National. Assembly. The PPT and the PNA are center- conservative parties. REPUBLIC OF CONGO The Republic of Congo (Brazzaville) became independent on August 15, 1960. A new constitution BRAZZAVILLE in 1961 established a presidential system of government. Abbe' Fulbert Youlou is president of June 1959 the. republic and leader of the dominant political party, the Union D(nocratique pour la Defense des Inter6ts Africains (UDDIA). Since 1960, the UDDIA has been in coalition with the Mouvement Socialiste Africain. GABON . Gabon became independent on August 17, 1 A National Unitry ticket, representing the dominant Feb. 12, 1961 Bloc Democratique.Gabonaise (BDG) and the opposition Union Democratique Sociale Gabonaise (UDSG) was elected. without opposition in the February 1961 elections. In the same month, the newly- elected Assembly adopted a new Constitution providing for a strong presidential-type regime. Under this Constitution,.the Assembly, which is elected for five years, has only limited power. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 53 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH No organized There is no communist party, and no signs of communist activity. party COUNTRY No organized There is no communist party, and no practical communist political influence. REPUBLIC OF CONGO party Students and trade unionists are the principal elements susceptible to BRAZZAVILLE communist influence, which is exerted through French Communists and representatives of international communist or communist-dominated organizations. No organized There is no communist party or knojm communist front in Gabon, nor do the communist GABON party states have any diplomatic representation. A F R I C A. For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 51i COUNTRY Date of last nat'l parl. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS SENEGAL Like other territories in former French West Africa, Senegal became an autonomous republic in March 1959 1957. In January 1959 it formed the Mali Federation with the autonomous republic of Soudan. Both states voted to join the French Community in the 1958 referendum. The Mali Federation subsequently received its independence on June 20, 1960. Two months later, on August 21, 1960, Senegal broke away and became an independent republic. The institutions inaugurated in the period of autonomy have been continued with little basic alteration. All but one of the seats in Senegal's unicameral legislature are held by the government party, the Union Progressiste Senegalaise (UPS). MAURITANI4 Mauritania became independent on November 28, 1960, During l!961,, the unicameral legislature May 1959 adopted a new constitution replacing the parliamentary system of government with a presidential system. Both the legislature and the executive are controlled by a coalition government which includes the dominant Parti du Regrow ement Mauritanien (PRM) and the former opposition parties, An Nahda and the Union Nationale Mauritanienne (UNM). MALAGASY REPUBLIC Madagascar became independent June 26, 1960. It has retained the constitution which was adopted (MADAGASCAR) in April 1959 when it was still an. autonomous republic. The moderate Parti Social D nocratique Sept.-Oct. 1960 Malgache, led by the President of the Republic, Philibert Tsiranana, won a large majority in both houses of the legislature in elections held on September 4 and October 2, 1960. Although the Communists have no seats in Parliament they support the Parti du Congres pour 1' Independence de Madagascar (known as A FM by its Malagasy initials) which has three of the 107 seats of the lower house. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COM"IST PARTY SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRII~IGTH COUNTRY No organized There is no communist party in Senegal. Communist influence is mainly found in SENEGAL No party certain trade unions (e.g.) teachers' unions), in student and youth organizations, and in small left-wing parties, particularly the Parti Africaine de 1'Indep (Per), which was proscribed in July 1960, and the Parti du Regroupment Africain- Senegal (PRA-Senegal). A Soviet embassy was established in Senegal in October 1962, after agreements on economic, technical, and cultural cooperation were signed between Senegal and the USSR earlier in the year. No organized There is no known communist movement in Mauritania. party MAURITANIA No organized The Madagascar Co unist Party claimstoi ei neitherhvery active nor influenitial AG p~ty, movement, but of Titoist Persuas . in Malagasy politics. The major target for international communist penetration in Madagascar appears to be the AKFM, an alliance of radical nationalist movements. Communist influence among the AKFM leadership is strong, and is also evident in three of the party's. affiliated organizations: its labor arm, the Confederation of Workers Unions of Madagascar (FISEM), which is affiliated with the communist-front World Federation of Trade Unions; its youth organization, the Union of Young Democrats of Madagascar (FM); and its welfare organization, the Malagasy Solidarity Committee (COSOMA). In September 1960 parliamentary elections AKFM obtained 247,862 votes, principally in the provinces centered in Tananarive, the capital, and Diego Suewez, the island's chief port. AKFM does not have great influence elsewhere on the island. AFRICA 55 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 56 COUNMY Date of last nat'l pail. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS GUINEA Guinea became independent in October 195 March 1 , after rejecting the proposed French Community 957 constitution in: the referendum held in September of that year. is governed by its sole political party, y In practice the country the.Parti D&mocrati ue de Guin~e (PDG). The cabinet and the various governmental agencies carry out the directives of the Political Bureau of the PDG. All members of the National Assembly belong to the PDG. _injuvx The ruling Convention People's Party Cpp dominates the Ghana National Assembly. In July 1956 September the National Assembly adopted a motion aski +I,- 1145 government to introduce a one-party system into the country. Another motion, which would have made Kwame Nkrumah life president, was refused by Nkrumah. A F R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 57 COMMUNIST PARTY COUNTRY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH No organized There have been communist sympathizers , in. the ruling party and its affiliated GUINEA party trade union and youth organizations but their ranks have diminished significantly since the end-of 1961, when some of the most prominent spokesmen of the extreme left were imprisoned on charges of conspiring against the regime. All communist states except Albania and East Germany have embassies in Conakry. East Germany is represented by a permanent trade mission having consular status.. The substantial involvement of communist states in Guinean affairs has been reduced with the com- pleting of a number of projects. (There were more than 1,000 technicians from communist countries in Guinea in 1961.) Guinean delegations and students continue to visit the communist countries. Wo organized There is no communist party as such in Ghana, although communist influence is GHANA party strong in the CPP, the Ghana Trade Union Congress, youth organizations, and the press. This influence is enhanced by the close relations between Ghana and the communist states and by the important role played by left-leaning radicals within the ruling CPP and the government. As estimated 500 Ghanaians are studying in the communist orbit. There are a larger number of visits than before of Ghanaians to the communist states and of communist personnel to Ghana. In July, the Lenin Peace prize was conferred on Nkrumah. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 58 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l parl. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS MALI The Republic of Mali is the former French Soudan. Linked to Senegal in the Federation of March 1959 Mali in January 1959, the Soudan became independent of France when the Mali Federation acquired independent status on June 20, 1960. When the Mali Federation broke up two months later, the Soudanese renamed their state the Mali Republic. Its legislature, like its government, is dominated completely by the radical left-wing Union Soudanaise (Soudanese Union.) SIERRA LEONE Sierra Leone became independent on April 27, 1961. The parliament, as presently constituted, May 1962 consists of a Speaker and 74+ members, 62 directly elected and 12 Paramount Chiefs elected by the 12 district councils in the provinces. The Sierra Leone People's Party under Prime Minister Sir Milton Margai holds 56 of the seats and the All People's Congress under Siaka Stevens, if. LIBERIA The conservative True Whig Party holds all of the seats in the 10-member Senate and the May 1959 31-member House of Representatives. There is no organized opposition in the country. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 59 COMMUNIST PARTY UNTRY I ERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COOUN T No organized Mali's ruling party, like that of Guinea, harbors a number of communist party sympathizers, some of whom have positions of considerable influence. As in most African countries, there is no communist party as such, but pro-communist elements appear to operate within the framework of the dominant Union Soudanaise. Mali's relations with communist countries have been cordial and the communist presence is substantial. Credits from the USSR, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Bulgaria amount to over $75 million. Communist China has also offered economic assistance of an un- known amount. A Mali delegation attended the 22nd CPSU Congress at Moscow in the fall of 1961. The installation in 1962 of regular air service between Mali and both Czechoslovakia and the USSR facilitates regular Malian contact with the commu- nist countries. Czechoslovakian and Soviet crews operate Mali's airline. No organized Sierra Leone has no communist party. Communist efforts at penetration thus far SIERRA LEONE party have been largely confined to offers of scholarships for study in the Soviet Union and to expense-paid visits to communist countries for a few selected Sierra Leoneans, particularly labor and women's leaders. Some Soviet support is reported to have been given to the opposition All People's Congress Party. The Soviet Union opened a diplomatic mission in Freetown late in 1962. A pro-Soviet attitude is prevalent among the student body of Fourah Bay College. Nearly 100 Sierra Leoneans are studying in the Soviet Union. beria.inSeveral Soviet delegations, one of which LIBERIA No organized There is no communist in Liberia. party included Yuri Gagarin, Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l part. .elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS TOGO Togo became independent on April 27, 1960. Until January 1963 the overning April 9, 1961 Unite To golaise of pro-Western President Sylvanus Ol g P 'ty was the Assembly f the ympio, which won all seats in the National April 1961 elections. In January 1963 President Olympio was assassinated in a military coup and Nicholas Grunitsky was installed as provisional premier. NIGERIA A coalition of the Northern Peoples Congress NPC and the National Council of Nigeria and the Dec. 1959 Cameroons (NCNC) hold about 250 out of the 312 seats in the Federal House of Representatives. The NPC is conservative, and the NCNC and the opposition Action Group are left-center parties. GAMBIA A new constitution went into effect in April 1962, and elections were held in May for the House British Colony of Representatives. David Jawara of the Peoples Progressive Party became Gambia's first Premier, and and Gambia obtained internal self-government. Protectorate) May 1962 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH TOGO MEMBERSHIP in Togo, but President Olympio's death and the No organized There is no known communist party regime have in motion party loitare the many installation of a provisional exploitation. $Perhaps fore-most political amo g thesen be susceptible of communist eTogolese youth educated in France who have been influenced The by Marxist doctrine. Their government kept main political organization has been the Juvento paz'ty? dissatisfied with the existing a close rein on these younger elements, who were deeply le in the rate of economic development and frustrated at beeinOTee ied and perhaps decisive active Now, it appears likely that they will play a much on the political scene. An estimated 30-40 Togolese are enrolled in communist higher institutions of learning, with Togo Government approval. In the labor field, there appear to be some communist a ) vailleurs efforts to infiltrate a dissident faction of the Unction Nation le desrTrw in Togo and a federation of Togo's principal trade unionams. s. sing 1962, the USSR stepped up its program is active in propaganda and cultural pros The USSR, Bulgaria, and of invitations to Togolese opinion-make to oscommunist Said programs. Czechoslovakia tiraae was formed in February 19 1, but it has attracted less than 100 IA NIGIIs than 500 A Nigerian Communist P arty have not affiliated with it. A Nigerian- Most Nigerian Communists apparently s Le nificant following so far. i n th s g ) followers. e any ( a e$s the Nigerian Trades Union Congress t Friendship Society has also failed to aform l i y e er Sov The Independent United Labor Congress (have been prime targets for communist (NTUC), and certain student and youth groups fist-front penetration and have a significant minority of Comm sizeable fists an sidies from the C?t their membership. The 0= has been receiving now as acted World Federation of Trade Unions and other communist sources for several years and d has ac e as a channel for distributing scholarships for study in the Bloc. There may unist countries. as 300 Nigerians studying in comm No organized There is no known communist activity in Gambia. party AFRICA GAMBIA (British Colony and Protectorate) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date oY last nat' 1 part. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO The Republic of the Congo Leopoldville became independent on June 30, 1960. Its governmental LEOPOLDVILLE institutions, modeled closely on those of Belgium, are established under a provisional loi May 19 0 fondamentale. Executive powers are divided between the President, who serves as chief of state, and the Premier, who heads the cabinet. Both offices are filled by parliamentary election. The parliament is bicameral, with a Chamber of Representatives elected by direct suffrage and a Senate elected indirectly from provincial assemblies and by co-option. After the death of the first Premier, Patrice Lumumba, and a prolonged political stalemate, Cyril Adoula was unanimously confirmed as Premier on August 2, 1961. There is no single predominant party. The principal problem which beset the Congo after independence was the secession of Katanga Province, led by Moise Tshombe. The UN has been active in aiding in the reintegration of Katanga. REPUBLIC OF RWANDA The United Nations Trust Territory of Ruanda-Urundi under Belgian administration since 1916 became KINGDOM OF BURUNDI independent July 1, 1962, as two separate countries, the Republic of Rwanda and the Kingdom of Sept. 1961 Burundi. Previously, the national elections of September 1961 returned a Bahutu majority in Ruanda and an aristocratic Watusi-dominated coalition regime in tTrundi. Rwanda deposed its Mwami (king), while in Burundi the Mwemi?has been retained. Ruanda has a unicameral National Assembly dominated by President Kayibanda'a Parmehutu party. Kayibanda's cabinet is coazposed overwhelmingly of Parmehutu representatives. Burundi also has a unicameral National Assembly, in which the Watutsi-led UPRONA party has a clear majority. Upon the assassination of Prince Rwagasore in October 1960, the UPRONA leadership and the premiership fell to Andre MUhirva. Mwami Mwambutaa retains nominal institutional powers and some political standing, but the policies of Muhirva and UPRONA prevail. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 63 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY Very small A small number of Congolese claim sympathy with communism. Most of these REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO are not organized in a communist party but rather constitute extremist LEOPOLDVILLE elements in the several radical nationalist parties. A very few individuals consider themselves part of a "communist party," but their organization has no practical existence. The most ideologically socialist Congolese are organized in the tiny Parti du People, which is avowedly Marxist but appears to be oriented more toward European socialism than Soviet communism. A significant but still relatively small number of Congolese have had some contacts with Communists, chiefly through communist representatives in the Congo, the Belgian Communist Party, and travel abroad as visitors or students in communist areas. Communist contacts have served less to indoctrinate Congolese than to excite anti-white, anti-colonial sentiment and assist radical political elements. Communist activity was greatly curtailed by Lumumba's political ouster and the withdrawal of communist diplomatic representatives in September 1960. Communist diplomats were again accredited at Leopoldville in December 1961. At present, there are Embassies of the USSR, Poland and Czechoslovakia in the Congo. No organized There are no known Communists in Rwanda and Burundi. Some UPRONA leaders REPUBLIC OF RWANDA parties. in Burundi have had contacts with and support from the communist countries KINGDOM OF BURUNDI but they have shown no readiness to permit communist influence to grow. Burundi has agreed to-the establishment of diplomatic relations with the USSR. The constitution adopted by the Rwanda legislative assembly in August 1962 stipulates that "all communist activity and propaganda is forbidden." Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 64 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l pail. elections GREECE Oct. 29, 1961 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist The United Democratic Left (EDA), a "front" of the outlawed Communist Part of Greece (KKE) 75b 970` votes (14.65$) 24 seats (8%) (In the last elections the EDA formed a National Agrarian Party /EAKJ as a front with which it ran under the ticket Pan- Democratic Agrarian Front of Greece PAM .. EAK was given 2 seats in Parliament.) Center Conservative Center Union The National Radical Union 1,550,113 votes (33.69%) with the (ERE) Party of the Progressives 66 seats (28.80%) (8% of the Center Union Deputies declared themselves independent but cooperating as of March 1962.) Independents . . . . . . . . . . 2,341,924 votes (50.77%) 176 seats (58.66%) Party of the Progressives KP 14 seats (4.66%) (Ran on the Center Union ticket) Greece is a constitutional monarchy and has a unicameral parliament with 300 seats. Parliamentary elections are legally required every four years, but elections can be held at any time before the four-year period. The law governing the electoral system and the number of deputies may change from election to election. The Center Union has been pressing for new elections on the charge that the elections of 1961 were rigged. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 20,000 (estimate) The Communist Party of Greece (KKE) was outlawed on December 27, 1947, including all GREECE its operating arms -- the press, youth, labor and other front organizations. Follow- ing the end of the communist guerrilla war in the summer of 1949, the Communists developed a front political structure known as the United Democratic Left (EDA), which is recognized as a legal political party. The KKE continues to exist with headquarters either in Rumania or Bulgaria and takes part in international communist party councils. It controls some 30,000 guerrilla-worthy elements in exile. Inside Greece, the Commu- nists exploit the country's low standard of living, the unequal distribution of wealth, and the dissatisfaction of labor in urban and rural areas, particularly among the tobacco workers in the province of Xanthi and among factory workers and stevedores in the principal cities of Kavalla, Thessaloniki, Athens and Pireaus. Unemployment and under-employment is a serious problem in Greece. Since the elections of October 1961, however, the EDA has lost the political initiative it had had as an opposition party to the Center Union. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'l parl. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative CYPRUS Reform Party of the Working The Democratic Union of The Patriotic Front The Patriotic Front People AK L is the official Cyprus (DEK) was formed -FP-M7,-which sup- PM , which was Presidential name of the communist party for the Presidential ported Archbishop formed to support Dec. 13, 1959 of Cyprus. In the first elections in which, with Makarios for the Archbishop Makarios elections for the House of support of AKEL, it Presidency in the for the Presidency, House of Representatives AKEL elected polled 33% of popular elections of Dec. polled 66.8% of the Representatives 5 deputies out of the 35 vote. It did not take, 13, 1959, contains popular vote. It July 31, 1960 Greek deputies. This repre- part in the elections many center elements controls 29 of the sentation was based on a for the House of as does the Demo- 35 Greek seats in Coal AsseUbl political deal with the Representatives. cratic Union of the House of Aug. , l9bO nationalist Patriotic Front Cyprus. Representatives. rather than on the returns of The Socialist Party the election. The popular of Karamanos participated The Pan-Cypriot vote cannot be estimated, in the House of League of Fighters since AKEL did not run in 3 Representatives' elections, took part in the of the 6 electoral districts. but failed to elect any House of Also, in the Greek communal deputy. Its vote in the Representatives' A.ssembly AKEL was given 3 electoral district of elections, but got seats out of 29. Limassol was about 3,500 only about 4,000 votes out of about 16,000 out of about 30,000 voters. in the electoral district of Nicosia. Cyprus was proclaimed an Independent Republic on August 16, 1960, after 82 years of British rule. It has a President elected every 5 years, a House of Representatives which seats 35 elected Greek representatives and 15 Turkish members. Cyprus also has two separate elected communal assemblies for the Greek and the Turkish communities, which have a membership of 29 and 35 respectively. The Greek Communal Assembly consists of 23 Patriotic Front representatives, 3 Communists, and 3 for the Christian minorities, Armenians, Roman Catholics and Maronites. Elections are due in 1965. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 67 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY About 10,000 (estimate) The communist Reform Party of the WorkingPeople (AKEL) is the oldest and CYPRUS 10,432 (claim as of best organized political party in Cyprus, dating from 1927. It controls May 1962) the principal labor structure, Pan Cypriot Labor Organization (PEO), which claims to have from 35,000 to 51,000 members out of a total 130,000 wage earners and of 67,000 organized workers in all labor unions. Its youth organization EDON claims to have 26,000 members out of 135,000 youth between the ages of 15 to 29. It has also an organization of secondary education students with an estimated membership of 2,100 (PEOM), most of whom are members of EDON. Its organization for women (POGO) is estimated to have about 2,500. The total figure of all elements within the AKEL apparatus, including various fronts, is estimated to be about 60,000. The Communists in Cyprus have the opportunity to exploit the semi-independent character and complicated constitution of the Republic, the British sovereign bases on the island, inter-communal differences between Greeks and Turks and the unemployment situation. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 68 . COUNTRY Date of last nat'l part. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC The UAR is governed by a president and two councils appointed by him. The Presidential Council functioning as a "collective leadership," is the decision-making body; the Executive Council is~ more nearly a Cabinet in the traditional-sense without overall power of decision. A National Convention of Popular Forces was called in 1962 as a prelude to organization of a mass political organization -- the Arab Socialist Union -- designed to spread the base of political power. Political parties are illegal. SYRIA Syria is a parliamentary republic the president of which is elected by a unicameral. legislature -Dec. 1, 1961 of 172 members. Under a provisional constitution, approved by popular referendum following Syria's secession from the UAR, the parliament elected Dec. 1, 1961 is a constituent as well as a legislative body. LEBANON Lebanon is a republic. Its President, who is chosen by the legislature, exercises broad June 1960 executive powers. As a result of the civil strife of 1958, the Prime Minister has assumed more authority than the position previously carried. The basic political fact in Lebanon is confessionalism, and traditionally each of the three top governmental posts is-held by one of the three most important religious sects; therefore the President is a Maronite Catholic, the Prime Minister a Sunni Muslim, and the Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies a Shia Muslim. The 99-member unicameral legislature has a ratio of six Christians to five Muslims and Druzes. IRAN The Iranian Parliament was dissolved in May 1961 by imperial decree. No new elections have been Jan.-Feb. 1961 held since that time. N E A R E A S T Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 69 COMMUNIST PARTY I EMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 1,000 The Communist Party of the UAR (Egypt), which has never had a legal status, comprises UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC (estimate) one primary organization and at least two splinter groups. As a result of sustained surveillance, communist activity has been negligible and the movement's adherents have been reduced to a small hard core. There are no significant front groups. Under 2,000 The Communist Party of Syria has been.illegal since 1939. It operated openly and SYRIA (estimate) effectively, however, from 1954 until the formation of the United Arab Republic in 1958. Since Syria's secession from the UAR in September 1961 the party has operated underground. Taking advantage of anti-Nasser hysteria, the party tries to ingratiate itself with a government worried over vestiges of Nasserite influence, and to make expedient alliances with ambitious nationalist leaders as a cover. The government, however, shows no disposition to lift the ban on the communist party, or to permit the return of'its key leaders now residing in communist countries. 300 The Lebanese'C mmunist Party has been illegal since 1939? Operating covertly, however, LEBANON (estimate) Lebanese Communists from time to time conduct propaganda campaigns and demonstrations, such as were carried out last summer in preparation for the World Congress for General Disarmament and Peace at Moscow and the World Youth Festival at Helsinki. Normally propaganda activities are maintained through two communist newspapers -- an Arabic-language daily and an Armenian-language weekly. Other communist efforts are directed mainly toward union organizations, with varying degrees of success. Communists control the Hotel and Restaurant Workers and have significant influence among post and railway workers, but they still have had little success, in gaining a foothold in the central Federation of Independent Trade Unions.. The capital city of Beirut provides a useful channel of communications for various Arab communist leaders to coordinate activities and to maintain contact with the regional leadership now residing in communist countries.. 1,000-2,000 The communist party, called the Tudeh Party of'Iran, was banned by a cabinet decree in 1949, IRAN (estimate) and its activities were effectively curtailed after the fall of Prime Minister Mossadeq in 1953? Its leaders live abroad. The security organizations of the Iranian government have been successful in keeping the Tudeh party on the defensive. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 70 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l parl. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS JORDAN Jordan is a constitutional monarchy. The bicameral legislature consists of an elected 60-member Nov. 24, 1962 Chamber of Deputies and an appointed 30-member Senate. Unlike the 1961 elections, candidates for the 1962 elections were permitted to campaign freely, although not under a political party label. As a result 184 candidates contested the 60 Chamber seats, a record number for Jordanian elections. TURFY Oct. 15, 1961 The new constitution of the Turkish Republic, adopted by referendum in July 19 1, provides for a bicameral Grand National Assembly (parliament). In the October elections for both houses, the four parties that met the requirements for participation in national elections received the following percentages of the votes and numbers of seats (all four are conservative): ' Republican Peasants Republican People s Party Justice Party New Turkey Party Nation Party Senate : Votes :3,734,285 (37.2%) 3,560,675 (35.4%) 1,401,637 (13.9%) 1,350,892 (13.4%) Seats: 36 (24%) 70 (46%) 28 (19%) 16 (11%) Assembly: Votes : 3,724, 752" (36.7 6) 3,527,435 (34.7%) 1,391,934 (13.7%) 1,415,390 (13.996) Seats: 173 (38%) 158 (35%) 65 (15%) 54 (12%) ISRAEL Israel is a parliamentary republic governed by a coalition led by Mapai. Aug. 15, 1961 Election to the *Mapai (moderate socialist) - 42 seats. Knesset Liberals (liberal, nonsocialist) - 17 seats (parliament) Herat (extreme rightist) - 17 seats *National Religious Party (religious) - 12 seats Mapam (extreme left socialist) - 9 seats *Ahdut ha-'Avodah (left socialist) - 8 seats. Maki (communist) - 5 seats, 42,111 votes (44) Arab parties, (Mapai affiliates) - 4 seats Agudat Yisra' el (orthodox religious) - It. seats *Poalei Agudat Yisra' el (orthodox religious labor) - 2 seats *Parties in coalition Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 71 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 200 (estimate) The Communist Party of Jordan was outlawed by royal decree, as were all other political JORDAR parties, after an abortive attempt to topple the monarchy in April 1957. Some of the less radical parties, nevertheless, have been permitted to operate on a limited scale, but the Communist Party has been constantly harassed and restricted by security organs. Non-member supporters of the Party number perhaps 1,500, mostly among the young intelligentsia, but their capacity for agitation or political action is limited. The Party has no front groups, nor does it have access to the embryonic trade union movement. Under 1,000 Communist activity has been banned in Turkey by Cabinet decree since 1922. Government suppression has prevented the Communists from achieving an effective organization. There are about 1,000 known Communists,about half of whom have been arrested at one time or another, including 131 members imprisoned in 1951. Communist activity is apparently limited; supporters and sympathizers number perhaps 2,000-3,000. Political difficulties and increased economic and social problems have fostered greater concern with ideology among Turkish intellectuals. Vested political groupings claim communist interference not infrequently when challenged. The Communist Party has had great difficulty in exploiting this situation, how- ever, because it is considered an instrument of the Russians, the traditional enemy of Turkey. Less than Maki is a mixed Arab-Jewish party which derives its strength from a hard core of ideologically- ISRAEL 2,000 of whom conditioned Communists, augmented at the polls by those who vote communist to demonstrate their 500 are Arabs dissatisfaction with the government. Most of those Arabs who vote for Maki do so to protest (estimate) against the creation of the state of Israel and to endorse the communist party program's special appeal to the Arabs, particularly its position against military government in effect in areas of Arab settlement. Among economically depressed Jews, especially immigrants from Iraq, Bulgaria, and Poland, a vote for Maki. is generally intended as a protest against the state's failure to improve their standard of living. The Communists do not play a significant role in Israeli politics and constitute only 2.8% of the trade union membership, a percentage smaller than they hold in the parliament. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 72 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l parl. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS SAUDI ARABIA Saudi Arabia is a monarchy, with a cabinet currently headed by the Crown Prince. His new government recently announced that it will undertake a series of reform measures. THE YEMEN KUWAIT BAHREIN The Yemen is a republic, the result of a military coup on September 26, 1 2 which ended more than 1,000 years of monarchial rule. The current government, headed by a President, was installed for a five-year transitional period, after which elections and a constitutional republic have been promised. The State of Kuwait is an independent sheikhdom under an absolute ruler. A Constituent Assembly was elected in December 1961 and a constitution drafted in late 1962. The Sheikhdom of Bahrein is governed by an absolute ruler of a hereditary dynasty which traditionally maintains close relations with the United Kingdom. Iraq is a republic ruled in fact by the Prime Minister, Major General Abd al-Karim Qasim, who assumed power following a military coup d'etat in 1958; the nominal chief executive is a three-man Council of State. Under the temporary constitution, the Cabinet serves also as the, legislative body. Political parties are stringently controlled and organized activity is discouraged. D E A R E A S T Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 73 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY Negligible. Saudi Arabia, as keeper of the most venerable relics and holy cities of SAUDI ARABIA Islam, views communism as wholly incompatible with its state religion and does not permit communist activities of any kind. Although there are a few Communists operating in The Yemen, there is no THE YEMEN formally organized communist party. Communists were closely suppressed under the Imamate, and the new republican regime has giver no indication that they now will be allowed any freedom of action. Nevertheless, the republican government has requested economic assistance from the USSR on a scale as large or perhaps larger than the old regime had received. By the will of the ruler there is no communist party in Kuwait. There KUWAIT is a small number of Communists, most of whom are nationals of other Arab states working in Kuwait. They are believed to be organized in separate cells along national lines and to maintain contacts with the parties in their own countries. As in Kuwait, the ruler of Bahrein does not permit a communist: party BAHREIN to exist. Communist activity is severely suppressed. 800 - 1,000 (estimate) The licensed "Communist Party of Iraq" is a moribund splinter group; the IRAQ internationally-recognized party is the illegal Ittihad al-Sha'b (People's Union). Many thousands who flocked to the Party immediately after the 1958 revolution became disillusioned and dropped away. Hard-core membership probably does not exceed 500-750 with perhaps 10 times as many sympathizers. Numerous front groups are proscribed but are permitted open, activity from time to time, as.Qasim finds them useful to him. Communists control two labor unions and hold some influential positions in government offices. The Party is strong in the teaching profession and among organized students. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 74+ COUNTRY Date of last nat'l pail. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS AFGHANISTAN The political institutions of Afghanistan operate under the surveillance and control of the Apr. l W1; royal family, an oligarchic branch of the Barakzai section of the Durani Pushtun tribe, current sitting of which has dominated Afghan affairs since the first half of the last century. Political. National Council. parties do not exist nor is there independent expression of public views by press or radio. began June 8, 1961. The Afghan parliament consists of the House of Nobles (Senate), composed of about 30 life- members appointed by the King, and the National Council, which now has 173 members elected for a three-year term by adult male suffrage. The main duty of the House of Nobles is to assent to measures passed. by the National Council; the authority of the latter is restrict- ed to influencing the details of measures proposed by the government. The most prestigious assemblage of the Afghan people is the Los Jam, a national forum which is summoned irregularly at the instance of the royal fancily. Membership in the Los Jir is determined by traditional means and. is a function of social and religious influence anti status. The Loa Jirga is the most important institution presently available to the royal family to ob- tain public support for vital policy decisions; at the same time the Loa Jirgm. is also of unique significance as a means through which the Afghan people as a whole can bring influ- ence to bear directly on the government in a manner which accords with. their historical method of resolving problems. There are no k noirn cc nunis t members in these Afghan institutions . PAKISTAN April 28, 1962 Parliamentary government was overthrown by a coup in October 1958. A martial law adminis- tration headed by President Ayub, former Commander in Chief of the Army, governed Pakistan until June 1962 when a new Constitution drafted by the Ayub Government came into effect. The Constitution provides for a presidential and federal form of government with power concentrated in the executive branch. The members of the present National Assembly were chosen by an electorate of 80,000. SOUTH ASIA Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 75 COMMUNIST PARTY LEAD SHI' SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH No organized party. 2,000 - 4,000 in East Pakistan; 200 - 400 in West Pakistan (estimate) COUNTRY AFGHANISTAN As a domestic movement, communism continues to be unrepresented in Afghanistan. Commu- nist influence is rather a function of Afghanistan's official relations with the Soviet Union. The already sizeable Soviet economic aid effort will continue during the second Afghan Five-Year Plan, according to an agreement reached between the two countries in 1961. The Soviet Union has also given propaganda and political support to the resistance of Pushtun nationalist elements against Pakistan authority, an issue of pivotal concern for the Afghanistan government. The Soviet Union has continued to give special assistance to Afghanistan since 1961 when the Pushtun issue led to a break in relations with Pakistan and an end to the transit trade across the Afghan frontier. While these.and numerous other measures have undoubtedly had a major -- and for the Soviets beneficial -- impact on official and popular Afghan attitudes, there are as yet no discernible ideological or organizational results.of consequence in Afghan domestic affairs. In July 1954 the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1908 was invoked to declare the party illegal. Imposition of martial law in 1958 thus served to reinforce a previous ban on communist activity. The headquarters of a national organization does not appear to exist even underground. In West Pakistan, party organization exists only in separate urban and rural centers; a more formidable underground persists among the Bengalis of East Pakistan, but its influence is fitful. Communist control over front organizations cannot be satisfactorily measured. Such influence is nonetheless considered to be significant in certain areas, particularly among the peasants of Sindh and East Pakistan and among Bengali students and factory and dock labor. PAKISTAN While the Communists of Pakistan have little influence nationally, there are certain persistent factors which explain their ability to survive: (1) the rapport which has existed between the party's basic program and the desire of major ethno-linguistic population elements for more local autonomy; (2) the post-independence development of new urban groupings whose demands continue to furnish the Communists with a series of exploitable issues; and (3) the support which accrues to Pakistan Communists from`their fellows in neighboring Indian territories and from the regional influence of the Soviet Union. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 76 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l part. elections INDIA February 1962 House of the People: approximately 115,000,000 votes polled; 494 elected seats NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist Communist Party of India 11, 415,652 votes 10 29 seats (5.9%) Revolutionary Socialist Party. 35b,496 votes (0.396 ) 2 seats (0.4%) Peasants and Workers Party 703,582 votes (0.6%) 0 seats Forward Bloc 791,167 votes (0.7%) 2 seats (0.4%) Non-Communist Left Pra a Socialist Part 7,944,509 votes ) 12 seats (2.5%) Socialist Part 2,737,71 votes (2.496) 6 seats (1.2%) Socialist Labour Party 80,227 votes 0.7 0 seats Center Indian National Co ess Party 51, ,790 votes (45.1%) 361 seats (73.6%) Conservative Communal Independents Swatanta Party Dependents 21'171 (.92%) 9,513,188 votes(8.3%) 22 seats (4.5%) 23 seats (4.7%) Bharatiya Jan San 7,2$6793 votes ) 14 seats (2.9%) Republican Party 3,251,292 votes (2.8%) 4 seats (0.8%) Dravida Munnetra Kaz 2,315, 10 votes 2. 7 seats (1.4%) Hindu Mahasabha 33,732 votes 0.7%) 1 seat (0.2%) Shiromani Akali Dal 829,129 votes 0. ) 3 seats (0.6%) Ram Rajya Pan-ishad 721,245 votes 0.7%) 2 seats (0.4%) Jharkhand Part 79,399 votes 0.49) 3 seats--(0.6%) Muslim League 304,450 votes (0.3%) 2 seats (0.4%) ------------------------- Parties polling less than 100,000 votes: Lok Sevak Sangh, 68,295 (1 seat); Tamil Nad Party, 63,768 (0 seats); Gurkha League, 41,127 (0 seats). SOUTH. A S I A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 77 COMMUNIST PARTY ME ERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 150,000 estimate The Communist Party of India (CPI) contested the 1962 general election under the INDIA handicaps of intense internal factionalism and a dark record of equivocation on the Sino-Indian border dispute. Nevertheless, it managed to preserve roughly the same relative strength in Parliament as that gained in-the 195'7 general election. Its total representation in Parliament remained very small, however, as compared with that of the majority Congress Party. Much of the CPI's strength derives from a substantial labor base; it controls the All-India Trade Union Congress, India's second largest trade union federation, which boasts of a membership of well over 500,000. The CPI also holds some appeal for students, urban unemployed, and intellectuals. To date, it has failed to make much of an impression on the peasantry, India's largest socio-economic group. CPI membership and electoral strength are distributed in a spotty fashion throughout the country; the Party enjoys significant strength in such widely separated states as West Bengal, in the northeast; Punjab, in the northwest; and Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, in the south. It forms the major opposition in the legislative assemblies of the states of West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, and Kerala. The CPI apparently suffered a sharp drop in public acceptability and a sizable loss in membership in October and November of 1962 in the wake of major offensives by Chinese Communist armed forces against Indian border positions. Thousands of demonstrators stormed and severely damaged the central office of the CPI in New Dehli on October 31. On the next- day, the National Council of the CPI passed a formal resolution charging the Chinese Communists with aggression and extending virtually unqualified support to the Indian Government. Despite the resolution, several hundred CPI members, including many of its more prominent figures, were later placed under arrest on the ground that they presented a threat to the national security. At the same time, a substantial number of resignations were reported. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l parl.' elections CEYLON July 20,,-1960 3,01+4,949 votes polled.* 151 elected and 6 appointed by Governor General to ensure adequate minority representation Communist Communist Party of Ceylon Moscow-oriented ** 90,219 votes 3 4 seats (2.6%) Lanka Sava S a Part (Trotskyite)** 22 ,993 votes (7.4$) 12 seats (7.9%) People's United Front (formerly Lanka Sama S a Party-Revolutionary) 1 ,573 votes 3.5 3 seats (1.9%) NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Non-Communist Left Center Sri Lanka Freedom Part United National, 1,022,162 2 votes 33. Party 75, seats (50%) 1,151,902 votes (37.8%) 30 seats (20%) Conservative or CoMnInal Independents Ceylon Democratic Independents Party 117 M , votes 30,207 votes (1%) 2 seats (1.3%) Federal Party 2(133,,753 votes 16 seats (10.6%) Tamil Congress 46,803 votes (1.5%) 1 seat (0.6%) National Liberation Front 1 ..030 votes (0.5%) 2 seats (1.3%) the total . no-contest agreement, Other minor parties, not separately listed, received 26,311 votes (less than one percent of Sri Lanka Freedom Party, Lanka Sams, Samaja Party, and Communist Party of Ceylon joined in a probably contributed to lower popular vote for the latter two parties, SAL The parliament of Nepal was dissolved and all political parties were made illegal by royal decree on December 15, 1960. On that date, the King of Nepal assumed all governmental powers. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 (3- s (4%) 6 6 eat Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 79 COMB JNIST PARTY. ME(ERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH Communist Party of Ceylon The Communist Party of Ceylon became progressively disillusioned with its (CCP) policy adopted in 1960, of extending "critical support" to Mrs. Bandaranaike'a 3,500 (estimate) government and, following the example of the. Trotskyite Lanka Same, Samaja Trotskyites Party, decided in late 1962 to pull no punches against the party in power, 1,400 (estimate) the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. The Communists of Ceylon, both orthodox and Independent Communists Trotsky-oriented, failedtto build up membership despite extensive enrollment- 650 (estimate) campaigns, and apparently lost prestige and strength in the wake of ineffective strike attempts in the winter-of 1961-1962. Traditionally, the Communist Party of Ceylon has drawn support from port workers, students,, and low-grade clerks. While it has always emphasized participation in united front movements, the Party does not seem to have been able to strengthen its position materially through this sort of activity. The Lanka Sama Samaja Party draws much of its strength from various segments of labor. 3- estimate Despite the existing ban on political parties., the Communist Party of Nepal apparently managed to operate in a more or less open fashion during 1962. Although it holds some appeal to the peasantry in certain districts and to urban elements, notably students and educators, the Party remains numerically small. Much of its activity. seems centered in Kathmandu, the capital. Press accounts suggest that the Party is divided into two main factions. One of these has issued public statements indicating that it favors a revolutionary approach to power and that it welcomes cooperation from other political elements, of whatever orientation, to overthrow the King. The other principal faction has indicated publicly that it supports the King, presumably for tactical reasons. The Soviet and Chinese Communists maintained the level of their substantial economic aid programs in Sepal in 1962. Of particular. interest was the completion of preliminary surveys by Chinese engineers of a projected road running from Kathmandu to the border of Tibet. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 80 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. part. elections THAILAND. NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS The Union Revolutionary Government dissolved parliament on March 2, 1962. All legislative, executive and judicial powers were invested in the Chairman of the Union Revolutionary Council on March 9, 1962, effective as of March 2. There were no admitted Communists in the parliament elected February 6, 1960. In that election communist and known pro-communist candidates received only 5% of the total vote. No elected parliamentary body. The National Assembly was dissolved and the Constitution abrogated on Prime Minister Sarit,Thanarat's assumption of power, October.20, 1958. A Constituent Assembly of 240 members was appointed by the King on February 3, 1959. There are no Communists in the Constituent Assembly. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 5,000 (estimate) of The Burma Communist Party, the largest and most powerful of the insurgent communist groups BURMA which 1,500 are in in Burma, was outlawed in October 1953. Its power, along with that on the insurgent Communist the Burma Commu- Party (Burma), which was outlawed in 1946, is considerably diminished. Leadership of the pro- nist Party under- communist legal National United Front lies with the Burma United Workers Party which contains ground and 500 or the above-ground elements of both the Burma Communist Party and the Communist Party (Burma), and less are in the a group of persons who consider themselves orthodox Communists but identify themselves with neither Communist Party the BCC' nor The CPB. Other members of the NUF.include the Burma Trade Union Congress, and small (Burma) youth, peasant, and women's organizations as well as other minor parties and ethnic organi- zations. Neither the aboveground nor the underground Communists exert appreciable political strength. Political activity in general is at a low ebb in Burma as a consequence of the military coup of March 2, 1962. The only key target group in which the Communists have shown appreciable political strength has been the student union organizations. Student political activity is proscribed and students unions have been dissolved; however, pro-communist agitators have continued to lead demon- strations against the disciplinary measures introduced by the government. Underground communist insurgents do not pose a serious threat to internal security. They are limited to sporadic, hit-and-run raids on isolated outposts, railroads, and poorly-protected villages. No estimate The Communist Party has been outlawed in Thailand since the passage of the Anti-Communist THAILAND available Control Act in November 1952. In addition, martial law, banning all political parties, was established in 1958. Communist propaganda and publications appear occasionally on a clan- destine basis. The Thai Communist Party has always been small and relatively ineffective in comparison with the Chinese Communist Party (Thailand) which has an estimated population of about 3,000,000 Chinese to exploit. 81 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 82 COUNTRY Date of last natl. part. elections FEDERATION OF MALAYA August 19, 1959 (104 seats in the Lower House of Parliament--- Dewan Ra' ayat )?* Communist The Malayan Communist Party was banned in 1948 and does not participate openly in either national or local elections. At the time this listing was compiled one SINGAPORE May 30, 1959, 51 seats in the unicameral Legis- latifft Assembly* The Malayan Communist Party (MCP), outlawed in 1948, does not participate as such in elections. NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Non-Communist Left Center Conservative Socialist Front Independents Alliance 73 People's Progres- Party Negara Pan-Malayan sive Party 5 Islamic Malayan Party 1 Party 12 17 7 95 vacant due to the death of an Alliance member. Barisan Socialis 13 People's Action Singapore People's Workers Party 1 Party (PAP) 25 Alliance (SPA) 3 United.Tpople'a Independent 1 United Malays Party (UPP) National Organi- zation '(UMO) 4 2b- 7 * At the time this listing was compiled one seat was vacant due to the death of a People's Action Party member. F.AR EAST Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 83 COMMUNIST PARTY M~ERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 00 (estimate) The Malayan Communist Party (MCP) was banned by the government on July 23, 1948, following FEDERATION OF the armed insurrection of the Communists in Malaya. Both the.MCP and the Malayan Races MALAYA Liberation Army (MRLA) have steadily deteriorated in strength in recent years. The armed revolt, although nominally continuing, is now limited to less than 500 rebels located along the Thailand-Malaya border. The Government of Malaya was able to end its 12-year State of Emergency on July 31, 1960, but retains stringent security laws. The Prime Minister has launched a campaign to ferret out the Communists in legal parties. The MCP has concentrated on penetrating legitimate organizations such as youth groups, labor unions, and minor political parties. Its major appeal is the Chinese minority (38% of the total population) for reasons similar to those obtaining in Singapore. A00(estimate) The Malayan Communist Party MCP maintains some organizational ties with the Singapore SINGAPORE Communists, although it has been banned in Singapore since. the armed communist in- surrection of mid-1948 (see Federation of Malaya). Seventy-five percent of the population of the partially self-governing State of Singapore is ethnic Chinese. The Chinese Commu- nist regime has exploited the past frustrations of the Chinese in the former British Colony. The Communists and those who either follow their lead or who use them to further other political aims are entrenched in some labor unions, splinter political parties, and the middle school system. The prospect of merger with the Federation of Malaya caused the extreme left of the ruling PAP to split away and form the Barisan Socialis. The Barisan Socialis publicly supports merger with the Federation of Malaya, but actually works against it on the ground that it would result in Malay domination of the State. The Party's political tactic is to attempt to bring down the present government with the hope of increasing, its parliamentary representation in the subsequent election and perhaps forming the next cabinet. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 84 COUNTRY Date of last natl. pail. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM All political parties represented in the National Assembly, as well as most independents, generally (South Vietnam) support the government of President Ngo Dinh Diem. There is no communist representation in the April 9, 1961 National Assembly. The composition of the National Assembly is: National Revolutionary Movement - 78 Independents - 36 Vietnam Socialist.P arty 4 Social Democratic Party - 3 National Restoration Association - 2 123 NORTH VIETNAM The Indochinese Communist Party, officially dissolved in November 1945, reemerged as the Vietnam Lao ("Democratic Dona, (Workers) Party in February 1951, and controls the North Vietnam regime. A National Assembly Republic of of 453 deputies (including 91 allegedly elected in 1946 and reassigned their seats by an Assembly Vietnam") resolution passed in December 1959) meets in very short sessions periodically to approve policies May 8, 1960 formulated by the communist leadership. Any breakdown of party strength in the Assembly would be of little significance, since the Workers Party controls the other political groups. According to North Vietnamese publications, all Assembly deputies elected in the May 1960 elections were spore- sored by the Fatherland Front, the communist-dominated national front organization. There are two "political parties" (the Democratic Party and the Socialist Party) other than the Workers Party in North Vietnam, and some of their members hold ministerial posts or are represented in the Assembly. However, these groups have no real power. They exist mainly to help furnish a democratic facade to the regime. Their major known activity during 1962 has been issuing public statements in support of the regime's policies. Some noncommunist groups may remain in North Vietnam, but they could operate only underground. F A R E A S T Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 85 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY Estimate unavail- In practice, communist activity and the Communist Party have been outlawed in the REPUBLIC.OF VIETNAM able. Estimates Republic of Vietnam since about 1955. The constitution stipulates that communism (South Vietnam) of communist is incompatible with its principles, and the constitutional ban is reinforced by guerrilla considerable anti-subversive legislation. movement vary up to 20,000 in hard- core personnel and many thousands more in part-time personnel. W-0,000 to 700,000 (estimate) The communist threat to the Republic of Vietnam is represented by: 1) the numerically superior regular armed forces of the communist "Democratic Republic of Vietnam" (MV); 2) a residual apparatus of trained guerrilla cadres and clandestine agents left behind in South Vietnam following the evacuation of regular DRV armed forces from south of the 17th parallel in 1954-55; 3) the infiltration of guerrillas, agents, and equipment from the DRV; and 4) the forceable conscription of peasants and youth in the south. In addition, some opponents of President Diem have shown themselves vulnerable to agitation by the DRV and the DRV-controlled "National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam" for ousting Diem and for "reunification" through nationwide elections and formation of a new coalition government. Through considerably increased guerrilla, terrorist, subversive, and propaganda activities and direct intimidation at the village level, the Communists attempt to discredit, weaken, and eventually supplant local government authority while they develop sufficient armed and subversive force to carry out a direct take-over of South Vietnam. At the same time, they support. any group which seems likely to develop an effective challenge to the established order. The Workers Party completely controls the "Democratic Republic of Vietnam" DRV which NORTH VIETNAM includes about 53; of the total population of Vietnam, or some 17,000,000 people, and "Democratic about half of the territory (the area north of the 17th parallel). It employs numerous Republic of controls to eliminate opposition and compel popular support, including country-wide Vietnam") organizations of the Party and the Police (Cong An), neighborhood surveillance groups, and domestic propaganda. The DRV government has a communist President and Vice President; Communists hold the positions of Chairman of the National Asseioly Standing Committee, Prime Minister, 4 of the 5 Vice Premiers, and head almost all ministries and functional agencies. Communist cadres have been installed in all sensitive posts throughout the armed forces and .local government. The "Fatherland Front", composed of numerous front organizations designed to elicit mass participation in government programs, is completely dominated by the Workers Party. In addition, the Communists in Hanoi control the "National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam" and the "Vietnam Peoples Revolutionary Party", two clandestine groups which they founded in South Vietnam in late 1960 and late 1961 respectively for the purpose of advancing the commu- nist-led warfare there. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 86 COUNTRY Date of last nat' l . pail. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS LAOS The Communist Party of Laos exists covertly and operates mainly through the Neo Lao Hak Xat NLHX , April 1960 a legal party. There are no Communists or overt sympathizers inthe National Assembly (59 seats) which-was elected on April 24, 1960. The NLHX obtained only 1% of the total vote for the nine candidates which it ran and its close ally, the Santiphab party, received 0-05% for its five candidates. Following the grant of plenary powers for one year to the government of national union on October 8, 1962, the National Assembly recessed and, presumably, will not reconvene until the expiration of the plenary powers. CAMBODIA Prince Sihanouk's People's Socialist Community won all 77 seats (unopposed) in the National June 10, 1962 Assembly elections. The communist Pracheachon Party refused to contest the elections. No member of the National Assembly is a known Communist. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 87 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 100 estimate Hostilities between anti-communist forces and neutralist-communist forces ended with the LAOS formation of a government of national union and the conclusion of the Geneva Agreements. of July 1962, which provide for the neutrality of Laos. The government of national union is a coalition of neutralist, anti-communist and pro-communist forces under a neutralist prime minister. The pro-communist NLHX has four representatives in the cabinet. Although it is the policy of the coalition to unify the country through the integration of adminis- trative authorities and military forces, its three factions continue to retain control and administer the areas under their respective control. The NLHX has at least nominal control over about half of Laos in areas occupied by its military forces, the Pathet Lao, numbering about 20,000. The main sources of communist strength in Laos are the support of North Vietnam, Communist China and the USSR; the disunity of the noncommunist forces; and group cleavages and tensions, particularly between Lao and non-Lao tribes. about 100- The embryonic Cambodian Communist Party operates covertly and concentrates its overt CAMBODIA (estimate) political activity in the Pracheachon Party which it controls. The Pracheachon Party has an estimated 1,000 members and about 30,000 sympathizers. There are also probably large numbers of Communists and pro-Communists among Vietnamese residents of Cambodia. Vietnamese Communists have in the past directed pro-commmist activities among Cambodians of the KYeiter race, although attempts are made to portray communism in Cambodia as of strictly native development and control. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 88 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. pail. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS REPUBLIC OF CHINA The Communist Party is illegal in areas under the control of the Republic of China. The Kuomintang, headed by Chiang.Kai-shek, is the dominant political party, and holds about 90% of the approximately 1948 480 active seats in the Legislative Yuan (total elected membership in 1948 was 760). Two minor parties, the Young China Party and the Democratic Socialist Party, also hold a few seats each in the Legislative Yuan. Although two nonministerial portfolios in the Executive Yuan are reserved for them, neither party has availed itself of this opportunity since 1953. HONG KONG Hong Kong is ruled by a Governor appointed by the British Crown, with the assistance of two appointed bodies, the Executive and Legislative Councils, and of a partially elected Urban Council. No political parties are recognized in Hong Kong, but political "associations" have participated in the Urban Council elections. In the 1961 elections, the two associations ran a single ticket. Although the Communist Party has not been declared illegal in Hong.Kong, the Emergency Regulations adopted in 1949 oblige the Registrar of Societies to refuse registration tc any local society which is affiliated with any political organization outside the colony. OUTER MONGOLIA Almost 1000,; of the voters were reported to have participated in the June 19, 1960 elections-at which the `Mongolian People's candidates nominated by the "People's Bloc ofngolian People's Revolutionary (Communist Party and Republic") non-Party members" won 99.98% of the votes cast as Representatives to the Fourth Great People's Hural June 19, 1960 (national parliamentary body). Representatives elected numbered 267 and are distributed according to estimate as follows: "Workers, including agricultural workers" -- 31%, "herdsmen" -- 15%, and "intel- lectuals and cadres," -- 54;x. Although the percentage of votes won by the "People's Bloc" is identical with the figures of the past two elections (1954 and 1957), there is no explanation given for the fluctuation in the number of representatives elected, i.e., 295 in 1954, 233 in 1957, and 267 in 1960. Women were reported to have won 20% of the seats in the parliament. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 89 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY Negligible The Communist Party is suppressed by the Government of the Republic of China, and REPUBLIC OF CHINA there is no evidence that a communist underground organization of significant size exists on Taiwan. Any subversive efforts there are directed from the mainland by the Chinese Communist Party. estimate un- The Communists in Hong Kong are members of the Chinese Communist Party CCP . They HONG KONG available) operate through labor unions, leftist-controlled schools, communist-controlled banks, and commercial firms, communist and left-wing newspapers, and the New China News Agency (NCNA). Hong Kong is a distribution center for a large volume of Chinese language communist propaganda, most of it produced in Communist China, to overseas Chinese. 46,000 claim The Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party directs all political, economic, and OUTER MONGOLIA social activity. At the time of the Party's 14th Congress in July 1961, the ("Mongolian People's number of members and candidate members in the Party had reportedly increased Republic") by 1,006. Of the total membership, 18.1% were women. At the time of the Party's 13th Congress in March 1958 (the latest reported as to composition), about 52% of the members were classified as "intelligentsia," 29% as "stockbreeders," and about 19% as "workers . " Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 90 COUNTRY Date of last natl. parl. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS COMMUNIST CHINA The Chinese Communist regime is a one-party dictatorship, dominated by a small communist elite, which "People's Republic holds a monopoly of key posts in the government and the armed forces. A facade of constitutional of China") government is maintained around the National People's Congress (NPC) of 1,226 deputies elected in- Mar. 1958- Feb. 1959 directly from the various administrative regions of the country as well as from the army, national minorities, and overseas Chinese. Elections take place every four years. Although the Chinese Communist Party exercises complete control over the NPC, it also maintains the fiction of multi- party administration by permitting several small and. powerless parties token participation in government activities through a communist-led United Front. This Front was particularly active in the early years of the regime as a tool for the control of intellectual and business groups but since 1957 has become increasingly circumscribed. Mere was no NPC meeting in 1961, probably because of the grave economic difficulties the regime was then, encountering. A session was helm in 1962, however, and one is scheduled for the second quarter of 1963- FAR, EAST Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY over 17 million Since the end of 1957, the Chinese Communist Party CCP has grown from 12.7 million COMMUNIST CHINA (1961 claim) members to over 17 million. The expansion of membership has been due primarily to a eolets deliberate aim to increase the proportion of party members to the population Republic of (currently 2.4% or roughly half that in the USSR), to reward cadres who proved their China) loyalty during the "anti-rightist" and "leap. forward" campaigns of 1957-58, and to tighten party control over the population. It has officially been estimated by the CCP that iO% of all party members in 1961 joined the Party after the regime was established in 1949. The growth in membership has been accompanied by efforts to "purify" the Party and improve its morale and discipline. Prom early 1960 to mid-1961, for example, a virtually continuous but low-key "rectification" campaign was carried out to eliminate bureaucratic inertia and corruption, to weed out dissident party elements, and to strengthen morale and efficiency. An undetermined number of party members was transferred from urban and bureaucratic posts to rural areas in order to strengthen party leader- ship and -co reenforce the partial shift in emphasis in 1959-61 from industrial to agricultural production. The Party appears to have gone through this without a major purge of its ranks or drastic changes in the dominant leadership core, although several important military and economic figures came under a cloud. Domestic economic difficulties during the last four years have almost certainly resulted in a rise of popular discontent, particularly in rural areas, which the regime has attempted to meet by a temporary relaxation of its more rigid policies in the countryside. There is little evidence of active or effective opposition to the regime, and the general mood of the people appears to be one of apathy and passive resignation. There has, however, been an apparent revival of petty thievery, corruption, and venality centering mainly around the search for food. The CCP is the only channel to power, position, and prosperity in Communist China. The core of party support probably comes mainly from the younger element of the population who lack a basis of comparison with the past, have been indoctrinated through their youth by the regime, and find the Party and the state the only outlet for their talents and ambitions. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 92 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. part. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS NORTH KOREA The North Korean People's Assembly is an important part of the democratic facade which the Communists T'Democratic People's use to conceal their totalitarian regime. Theoretically invested with considerable power, actually Republic of Korea") the Assembly is controlled by the Korean Workers (communist) Party, and it automatically votes approval of decisions taken by the communist leadership. The parliamentary elections of October 8, 1962 were October 8, 1962 the third in the history of the North Korean regime, the first two having been held in 1948 and 1957. The constitutional provisionlimiting the tenure of an Assembly to four years has not been obeyed. The regime announced that all 183 candidates had been elected to the Assembly. Like the 1957 elections, the 1962 elections featured a single slate of candidates with the electorate limited to registering simple approval or disapproval of the candidate in each district. A breakdown of party strength in the new Assembly is not available, but, in any event, it is known that the.Workers Party dominates all other political groups in North Korea and hence the Assembly. Two minor "political parties", the Democratic Party and the Religious Ch'ongu Party, have been per- mitted to exist in an attempt to give a democratic appearance and to attract popular support for the regime. However, both these groups are closely controlled by the Workers Party, and they have no real power. REPUBLIC OF KOREA In the wake of a military coup d'etat on May 16, 1961, martial law was declared pursuant to (SOUTH KOREA) pertinent provisions of the constitution. Parliamentary government was replaced by the Supreme Council for National Reconstruction, staffed entirely by military. officers, with absolute control over legislative and executive powers. Political parties were dissolved and political activity prohibited.. The military government has stated that it will.return the government to civilian control in the summer of 1963, following the adoption of a new constitution and general elections.. Martial law was lifted on December 5, 1962 and a referendum approving a new constitution was held On:_December 17. Political parties are to be allowed to resume activities in early 1963 in preparation for general elections which are expected to be held in May. The new constitution calls for a presidential system and a unicameral legislature. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 1,311,563 official The Korean Workers (communist) Party, which now dominates the political life NORTH KOREA claim, Aug. 1, 1961) of North Korea, was formed.in 1946, while Soviet troops were occupying that ("Democratic People's region. It represented a merger of the Korean Communist Party, composed of Republic of Korea") pro-Soviet Koreans and indigenous Communists, and the New People's Party, formed by Koreans who had returned from communist-controlled territory in China. In 1949, the Party formally joined forces with the South Korean Workers Party, thus establishing a claim to be an all-Korean party, and it assumed its present name. (It had formerly been called the "North Korean Workers Party".) Today, by means of the usual communist techniques of interlocking leadership among Party, Government, Armed Forces, and Front, of police-state surveillance and sup- pression, and of communist infiltration of all organizations, the Workers Party .controls and directs the North Korean regime. All officers of_the armed forces are Party members. The Party has created a network of mass organizations, in- cluding federations of youth, students, women, labor, and farmers, which are designed to mobilize popular support for the regime, and it controls them through the apparatus of the "United. Democratic Fatherland Front". Negligible Most South Korean communist leaders have been in North Korea since 1948.. The REPUBLIC OF KOREA passage of the National Security Law on December 1, 19118, severely restricted (SOUTH KOREA) communist activities and the South Korean Office of Public Information formally dissolved the'South Korean Labor (communist) Party in October 1949 on the ground that it had not continued to provide the necessary information to the government. The military government established in. May 1961 announced the elimination of communist subversion as one of its main goals and through its police and intelligence agencies has acted vigorously against communist agents and suspected Communists. Although a small underground may continue to exist in the urban areas, there is virtually no procommunist sympathy among; the general population. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 94 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'l. part. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative JAPAN Japan Communist Party Japan Socialist Party 7 Independent and Minor- Liberal-Democratic Party Lower House 1,15 ,723 votes (2.91p) 10,77 ,137 votes 27.60) Parties 22,770-,265 votes 57.5%, (House of 3 seats 145 seats _172-670749 votes 296 seats Representatives) As of: 6 seats 467 seats Dec. 7, 1962 Dec. 7, 1962 Dec. 7 1962 Nov. 20, 1960 3 seats 142 seats Dec. 7, 1962 , 293 seats 3 seats Democratic Socialist party 3,464,147 votes (6.87p7 17 seats As of: Dec. 7, 1962 15 seats Upper House (House of Councillors) 250 seats July 1, 1962 Triennial elections held for one-half the membership divided into 75 seats from prefectural constituencies (PC) and 50 from the nation at large (NC). Japan Communist Part PC-1,760,249 votes +.8%) NC-1,123,945 votes (3.1%) 4 seats As of: Japan Socialist Part Soka Gakkai PC-11,917, 7 votes (32.8%) PC- 957,-179 NC-8,666,806 votes (24.2%) NC-4,124,268 66 seats 15 seats Dec. 7, 1962 Dec. 7, 1962 Dec. 7, 1962 4 seats 66 seats 15 seats Independent (JCP- Democratic Socialist party endorsed) PC-2,649,422 votes .7.3%) PC-27,301 votes (.08%) NC-1,899,755 votes (5.3%) 1 seat 11 seats As of: Dec. 7, 1962 Dec. 7, 1962 1 seat 11 seats Independents PC-1,729,972 NC-1,699,759 4 seats As of: Dec. 7, 1962 4 seats Vacancies Dec. 7, 1962 11 seats Vacancy 1 seat Liberal-Democratic Party PC-17,112, votes 7.1%) NC-16,581,634 votes (46.4%) 142 seats Dec. 7, 1962 141 seats Doshikai 1 nr= 25 A l- (n 14. +v 128 `3-r 'v'otes ~v.4rjo1 NC-1,.660,466 votes (4.6%) 7 seats Dec. 7, 1962 7 seats term "Center" is one which is not usually applied in categorizing political parties in Japan. The Democratic Socialist Party is a centrist party in the sense that, as a rightwing socialist party, it sometimes sides with the Liberal-Democratic Party against the Japan Socialist Party. The Soka Gakkai, based on the strongly nationalist Nichiren sect of Buddhism, is essentially a rightist party, but takes a position similar to that of the left on such issues as rearmament and constitutional revision. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 100,000 (estimate) The Japan Communist Party JCP is a peripheral force in Japanese political life. The JAPAN 100,000 (claim, JCP benefits to some extent from the acceptance of Marxism and Leninism among intellectuals, July 1962) who in turn are widely respected by the general populace, and. among non-communist left-wing politicians. The JCP also derives strength from its ability to mobilize a nationwide organization and an extensive network of front organizations to present the communist line. It has been most successful in its manipulation of front organizations designed to attract public support for "peace" and closer relations with the communist states, and against re- armament, atomic and nuclear weapons, and Japan's alignment with the United States. The party's subservience to external communist requirements and a past record of violence militate against the party's growth as a popular movement. Its appeal on nuclear themes has been somewhat prejudiced in the past year by the timing of Soviet nuclear tests. The JCP continues as in 1961 to have difficulty eliciting cooperation from the Japan Socialist Party and from the largest labor federation, the leftist Sohyo (General Council of Trade Unions of Japan). Both these organizations are in general reluctant to show too close identification with the JCP. Voting support for the JCP (about 3% in the 1960 general elections and 4% in the 1962 Upper House elections) is concentrated in the urban areas. The JCP draws a larger proportion of its votes from that segment of the population than does any other Party. The JCP holds seven Diet seats (3 out of 467 in the Lower House and 4 out of 250 in the Upper House), its largest representation since 1952. The steady growth and the organizational activity of the JCP-affiliated Minseido (Democratic Youth League) have attracted attention among non-communist observers in Japan during the-past year. Minseido membership has grown from under 5,000 in 1958 to an estimated 70-80,000 in 1962. Approximately 25% of the present membership consists of card-carrying JCP members. The official JCP newspaper, Akahata (Red Flag) claims.a daily circulation of 140,000. 95 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 96 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. parl. elections NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS INDONESIA Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) 30 The Indonesian parliament is filled by appointment Proletarian Party not election. The (Murba) present parliament, in- stalled on June 25, 1960, consists of 261 members appointed on March 27, 1960, and 22 additional members appointed June 17, 1960. Indonesian Nationalist Party (PNI) 44 Islamic Union Party of Indonesia (PSII) 5 Movement for the Expansion of Islam (Perti) Indonesian Party (Partindo) Moslem Scholars NU 3 Indonesian Christian (Protestant) Party 6 Catholic Party Party Representatives: 31 47 Functional Group Representatives: 34 26* 73* Total 65* 73* 120* * Functional group representatives are not, in their capacity as members of parliament, formally identified with political parties. These figures are based on available information on party affiliation, and must be regarded as approximate. No information is available on the party affiliations of 20 functional group representatives, who are therefore not listed on this table. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 97 COMMUNIST PARTY NEMERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 1,900,000 estimate The PKI's strength rests. basically on its legitimacy and respectability, and on INDONESIA its strong organizational control over its followers. Its legitimacy and re- "More than 2,000,000" spectability are attributable to President Sukarno's public endorsement of the (claim as of Dec. 1962) party as a genuine participant in the political process and in the nationalist movement. This endorsement has been concretized by the appointment of large numbers of PKI members to the parliament and to advisory organs of the government, such as the Supreme Advisory Council and the National Planning Council. The PKI's organi- zational control in the labor field gives it a strategic position in such key sectors of the economy as transportation and estate agriculture, and to a lesser extent among government employees and oil field workers. Its control over both front groups and party membership give it a force which can be mobilized for demonstrations and propaganda. The communist-front labor federation SOBSI claims 2,700,000,, probably comprising a majority of organized labor. No other communist front holds such a predominant position in its field. Other communist front organizations of numerical importance include the Peasants' Front (BTI) 3,700,000; the People's Youth (Pemuda Rakjat) 1,000,000; and the Women's Movement (Gerwani) 800,000. Proletarian Party Murba is described as a national communist party. It appears to have no organizational (Murba). Estimate ties to international communism and advocates strict neutrality in the cold war. Its not available. numerical strength is negligible, and its significance on the Indonesian scene stems from the fact that several influential advisers of President Sukarno are Murba sympathizers or members. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 98 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last natl. part. elections. Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative NEV ZEALAND Communist Party Labour Party Social-Credit Part P National Part Nov. 2 , 1960 ,05 votes 0.17%) 508,179 votes (43.42%) 100,905 votes . 2%) 557,046 votes (47.59%) No seats 34 seats No seats 46 seats Parliament: 80 seats . -------------------------------- (unicameral) Other Parties 2,319 votes (0.20%) No seats AUSTRALIA Dec. 9, 1961 Senate House Senate: 60 seats Liberal-Country 30 Liberal-Country 62 House : 124 seats Labour 28 Labour 60 Democratic Labour 1 122 Independent 1 Non votip.g members 2 60 PHILIP IN Nov. 14, 1961 Senate House Senate: 24 seats Nacionalista 11 Nacionalista 45 House :,104 seats Liberal 12 Liberal 55 Independent 1 Independent 4 27 -107 F A R E A S T Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 99 COMMUNIST PARTY XWERSHIP 500 or less. (estimate) 6,000 or less (estimate) 1,500 - 2,000 including some 300 - 500 Huks (estimate) 300 - 400 Chinese Communists (estimate) SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY Although the New Zealand Communist Party in 1960 more than doubled the number of NEW ZEALAND votes it received in the 1957 national elections, it remains very weak. It has little influence in New Zealand national life, though through its front groups it has increased its effectiveness from the low reached immediately after the Hungarian uprising. Its influence among labor groups is negligible; party sympathizers are estimated around 3,000. The Australian Communist Party finds its greatest support in organized labor. Commu- AUSTRALIA nists have three representatives on the 16-man Interstate Executive of the Australian Council Qf Trade Unions and control or hold important positions in the Waterside Workers' Federation, Sheet Metal?Workers Union, Building Workers' Industrial Union, Australian Railways Union, Miners' Federation and the Seaman's Union. Through these positions they gain the stature to exert some pressure on the Australian Labour Party. Communists are also active in immigrant organizations, and in peace and friendship societies, and are attempting to influence students. The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) was declared illegal by a Supreme PHILIPPINES Court ruling in 1932 and specifically outlawed by the Anti-Subversion Act of 1957. Since the collapse of the communist-led Huk rebellion, communist guerrillas have been reduced to some 300-500 men located in the mountains of zentral and southern Luzon. The Communist Party of the Philippines has switched from a tactic of insurrection to one of infiltrating noncommunist organizations. It has achieved some success in a few labor, youth, and intellectual groups and in those circles which advocate a policy of Filipino nationalism. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. parl. elections CANADA June 18, 1962 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative Communist Party of Canada New Democratic Part Liberal Party Proessive Conservative 6,307 votes 0. 1,0A056 votes 13.4%) 2,671, vote 666 (37.4) 2,867;555 votes (37.3%) No seats 19 seats (7.2%) 100 seats (37.7%) 116 seats (43.8%) ----------------------------------------------- Other Parties Social Credit Independents 896,427 votes (11.7%) 9;-007 votes (0.1%) 30 seats (11.3%) No seats * A new party formed by the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation and the Canadian Labor Congress in 1961. C A N A D A , T H E CARIBBEAN, A N D E U R O P E A N P O S S E S S I O N S Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 3,000 - ,000 The Communist Party of Canada CPC is essentially an urban party of industrial workers, CANADA (estimate) white collar employees, and students, more heavily concentrated in Ontario than in any other province. The party has little or no political strength; it received an even smaller percentage of the total vote cast in the 1962 general election (0.06%) than it did in the 1958 contest (0.1`). In the 1962 election, the CPC backed candidates of the New Democratic Party, a new party formed by the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation and the Canadian Labor Congress, in constituencies in which no Communists were standing. No Communist has been elected to Parliament since 1945, and none has sat in a provincial legislature since 1948. Communists continue to be active, however, in several large trade unions, especially the International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers, the United Fishermen and Allied Workers' Union, and the United Electrical, Radio, and Machine `'wrkers of America, and assertedly in a number of smaller unions. They have also reportedly been active in certain disarmament and peace Croups. So far as has been noted, party leaders have not recently made public any figures on the size of the party, but during 1961 they claimed it had 6,000 - 7,000 members. C A N A.D A, T H E C A R I B B E A N , A N D E U R O P E A N P O S S E S S I O N S Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat'l. earl. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative BRITISH GUIANA Aug. 21, 1961 People's Progressive Party United Force (UF) PPP * 35,771 (16-476) 93,075 votes (42.6%) 4 seats (11.40) 20 seats ** (57.2%) People's National Congress PNC 89,501 vote (l%) 11 seats (31.4%) * The PPP is placed between the communist and non-communist left 4--oluins because the party is professedly socialist, has often followed a pro-communist line, and certain of its leaders are allegedly communist. The rank-and-file is not communist. ** Since the 1961 general election the number of PPP seats won has been reduced by two. One seat was invalidated by a court decision in November 1961, and a by-election has not yet been held. Another seat was lost to the PPP in June 1962, when the incumbent, B. S. Rai, then Minister of Home Affairs, was expelled from both his cabinet post and the P. Since then, he has voted as an independent. CANADA, THE CARIBBEAN, AN 13' EUROPEAN P OSSESS IONS I N T H E W E S T E R N H E M I S P H E R E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY No organized Although there is no organized communist party in British Guiana, several PPP leaders BRITISH GUIANA communist have been alleged to be Communists, and the publications and statements of the self- party. styled socialist People's Progressive Party (PPP) have often echoed the communist line. Over the years, a number of PPP officials, including Janet Jagan, the party's general secretary, have made numerous trips to Cuba and various communist countries, including Communist China, sometimes for the purpose of attending meetings of communist or communist- front organizations. Several score Guianese students have gone to study in Cuba, Eastern Europe, and the USSR. Dr. Cheddi B. Jagan, the leader of the PPP and the Premier of British Guiana, describes himself as a Marxist and has refused to answer directly the question of whether he is a Communist or not. In June 1962, testifying before a commission of inquiry investigating the February 1962 disorders in Georgetown, Jagan was pressed on this point by opposing counsel; he would concede only that he believed the "tenets of communism to be 'from each according to his ability, to each according to his need,' " and that he believed "in that.". This statement, however it may be interpreted, led the commission chairman later to characterize Jagan as "an avowed Communist." The PPP, which originated as a small political discussion group in 1946, was established as a party in 1950, and won the April 1953 general election, the first ever to be held in British Guiana under universal suffrage. Although the party was restricted'for a time as a result of the UK suspension of the constitution, and a 'sizable faction led by L.F.S. Burnham split off (eventually to become the People's National Congress), the PPP won the largest number of elective seats in the 1957 general election. In 1961, it won its third straight electoral victory and formed the government. Recent firm figures on PPP membership are not available, but the party'is estimated to have 10,000 - 12,000 members. The PPP, predominantly an.East Indian and rural party, receives its mass support from the Indian sugar workers and rice farmers; it. is backed also by some. Indian businessmen, a few rural Negro workers, and some Negro intellectuals and extremists in the urban areas. The best-organized and most homogeneous party in British Guiana, the PPP has benefited from the racial situation. in that country -- 49% of the population is Indian, while only 44% is. Negro and mixed, and the Indian pro- portion in the.total is steadily growing greater. Moreover, Jagan has successfully exploited Guianese aspirations for political and economic independence, the sugar workers' demands for better working conditions, and the Indian desire for land and for jobs formerly held only by whites and Negroes. CANADA, T H E CARIBBEAN, A N D EUROPEAN P O S S E S S I O N S I N T H E WESTERN H E M I S P H E R E 103 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 l04 COUNTRY Date of last natl. par. NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS elections Communist. Non-Communist Left Center TRINIDAD West Indian Independence People's National Movement Democratic Labor Party Dec. , 1961 Party- 18-o,241 votes 57. ,0 131,760 votes 0. No candidates entered 20 seats (66.7 ). 10 seats (33.3%) Conservative Other Parties Butler Pam African National Congress Independents- 1,333 votes (0.4%0) 1,634 votes (0.5%) 1,502 votes (0.410) No seats, No seats No seats NOTE: Trinidad was formerly a member of the federation of The West Indies. The federation was formally dissolved in May 1962, and Trinidad became independent in August 1962. JAMAICA People's Freedom Movement People's National Party Jamaica Labor Party April 10, 1962 No candidates entered 27b,704 votes (4b.7,)- 2 3,351 votes 9.7x0) 19 seats (42.2%) 26 seats (57.8%) Socialist Party of Jamaica Not formed at time of election Other Parties People's Progressive Party ,votes (0.9 No seats Independents 2;842 votes (0.5%) NOTE: Jaamaica was formerly a member of the federation of The West Indies. The federation was formally dissolved in May 1962. and Jamaica became independent in August 1962.. BRITISH DEPENDENT TERRITORIES THE WEST INDIES Barbados, Windward Islands, Leeward Islands, Grenada and others) NOTE: The federation of West Indies, which includes Jamaica and Trinidad. know inaepenaenti) as weJ-L as these islands, was formally dissolved in May 1962. Seven of the eight members of the former federation are considering the formation of a new "little seven" federation. Grenada is considering joining Trinidad. CANADA, T H E C A R I B B E A N , A N D E U R O P E A N P O S S E S S I O N S I N T H E WESTERN H E M I S P H E R E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 105 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH Negligible The party through which the Communists in Trinidad work is the West Indian Independence Party. So far as is known, it has little, if any, influence in the political or trade union fields. Negligible The parties through which the Communists in Jamaica work are the People's Freedom Movement (PFM) and the Socialist Party of Jamaica, which splintered off .from the PFM in September 1962. A group of 20-30 individuals describing itself as the Jamaica Communist Party protested the Jamaica Government's decision to refuse shore leave for the crews of two Soviet training vessels that visited Jamaica in early May, but so far as is known, this group has not engaged in public activities since then. These groups are not believed to have any political influence, but the fanatic, back-to-Africa Has Tafari cult, the inhabitants of the Kingston slums, as well as the trade unions, constitute targets for communist penetration. Negligible ` r- as is 1own, t ere Is no organized ccm,-r+unis act vity in 1these islands. CANADA, T H E C A R I B B E A N , A N D E U R O P E A N I N THE WESTERN H E M I S P H E R E COUNTRY TRINIDAD JAMAICA BRITISH DEPENDENT TERRITORIES THE WEST INDIES Barbados, Windward Islands, Leeward Islands, Grenada and others Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 106 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. part. elections FRENCH OVERSEAS DEPARTMENTS IN WESTERN HEMISPHERE MARTINIQUE Nov. l & 25, 1962 3 seats for French Assembly NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist Non-Communist Left Communist Party Democratic Progressive Radicals 10,510 votes 23.40 (PPM) C- saire TI-5170-Votes .(19.0%) 10,680 votes (23.5%) 1 seat 1 seat Socialist Party 13,276 votes 24.4%) 1 seat GUADELOUPE No- v. 166& 25, 1962 3 seats for French Assembly Because of insufficient data, percentages do not add to 1007; Communist Party Socialist Party dissident 23,612 votes (33.7%) 10,53-14 Votes (14.c,%) 1 seat FRENCH GUIANA None Nov. 18 9-2-5, 1962 1 seat for French Assembly Guiana Socialist Party ,209 votes 9.7 1 seat .In endent 8,2 votes (11.8,) 1 seat Because of insufficient data, percentages do not add to 10Uilll CANADA, T H E CARIBBEAN) AND E U R O P E A N I N T H E W E S T E R N H E M I S P H E R E Conservative UNR Gaullist 12,476 votes 17.8%) 1 seat UNR Gaullist Tk2b2b votes 50.30 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 107 COINUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH - COUNTRY FRENCH OVERSEAS DEPARTMENTS IN - WESTERN HEMISPHERE 700 (estimate) Communist strength in Martinique has declined steadily since the end of World MART,_ TR War II. The party suffered its most serious blow when its most prominent leader, Aimcf C6saire, left it in 1956 and started a rival movement, the Progressive Party of Martinique (PPM). The Communists also have run into difficulties with local French authorities which barred them from participation in the April 1962 refer- endum. As the most outspoken advocate of Martinique independence the party has attracted little support inasmuch as the much more popular PPM has also advocated greater autonomy for the island. However, the Communists are still able to exploit racial discrimination and local grievances. which helped them to come close to winning a seat in the recent national election. 1,000 (estimate) In Guadeloupe, where the party has not been plagued by any rival movement, the GUADALOUPE Communists have just about held their own. In the recent election the party dropped only slightly in terms of votes compared to the 1961 municipal elections but never came close to winning a seat. The principal difficulty for the Commu- nists in Guadeloupe in 1962.seems to have been their inability to develop any popular issues. Negligible In French Guiana, communist strength depends on the fortunes'of a few individuals. FRENCH GUIANA Moreover, the absence of any labor surplus offers the party few opportunities for labor agitation of any kind. CANADA, T H E C A R I B 'B E A N. A N D E U R O P E A N P 0 S S E S S I 0 N.S I N T H E W E S T E R N H E M I S P H E R E Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. part. elections Communist NETHERLANDS No communist parties POSSESSIONS: exist in these terri- WEST INDIES tories Legislative elections June 4, 1962* Bonaire Curacao Windward Islands NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Non-Communist Left Aruba Workers Front (FOA) 372 votes 1.95,1 No seats Radical Party (RP) 1249 votes (2.72%) No seats '. cao o _ar. Union 60-3 votes 1 No seats Center Center Patriotic Party of Aruba (PPA) Aruba People's Party (Affiliate of the Curacao Democratic Party) -` ::. ' 10,613 votes (55.62%) 6,2b9 votes (32.96%) 5 seats (62.5%) 3 seats (37.5%) Windward Island People's Party (WIPP/A) Aruba National Union 323 votes 1. i1 (UNA) No seats 1,484 votes (7.78Q No seats United Bonairian Progressive Party (PpBu) 1,121 votes 3.55 No seats Curacao National People's Party (NVP) Curacao Independent Party (COP) The NVP and the COP united during the election to form a joint list. Totals given are for the combined list.) 22,526 votes (49.13%) 7 seats (58.33%) Democratic Part (DP/B) 1,453 votes (56.40) 1 seat (100%) Curacao Democratic Party (nP) 18,953 votes (41.347/) 5 seats (41.677/) Curacao Constructive People's Part KVP 2,521 votes 5.50%) No seats Windward Island People's Party (WIPP/WWI) Democratic Party 7 77( votes 5.5511 (UP/WI) No seats 893 votes (54.45%) 1 seat 1001 C A N A D A, . T H E C A R I B B E A N , A N D E U R O P E A N P O S S E S S I O N S Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 log COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY No organized parties There is no communist party in the Netherlands West Indies and communist N~JD6 influence is negligible. POSSESSIONS (NETHERLANDS WEST INDIES) (Aruba, Bonaire, Curacao, Windward Islands) CANADA, T H E C A R I B B EAN, AND EUROPEAN P O S S E S S I O N S Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. pail. elections NETHERLANDS POSSESSIONS SURINAM Legislative Council elections June 25, 1958. NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist Non-Communist Left Center No communist party National Party of Surinam (NPS) exists 121,797 votes-(32-5W 9 seats (42.86%) Progressive Surinam People's Party (PSV) 76,977 votes 21.1, 4 seats (19.05%) United Hindustani Party (VHP) 17,901 votes .7 4 seats (19-05%) United Indonesian Farmers' Party KPTI 7,77-votes (2%) 2 seats (9.52%) Nickerie Independent Party (NOP) 4,588 votes 1.23 2 seats (9.52%) Surinam Democratic Party (SEP) 54,26-5 votes (14.5%) No seats Surinam Party (PS) 40,4votes (10.81%) No seats Surinam People's Party (SVP) 39, votes 10. 5 No seats Although the Surinam Democratic Party (Sir) obtained the second largest number of votes, none of its candidates was elected because of the system of distribution of seats by electoral districts. CANADA, T H E C A R I B B E A N, A N D EUROPEAN P O S.S E S S I O N S IN THE WESTERN H E M I S P HERE Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY No orga zz d party While there is no communist party in Surinam, several small political groups are NETHERLANDS suspected of being led by Communists. Actual communist influence in the country, POSSESSIONS however, remains negligible. SURINAM C A N A DA, T H E CARIBBEAN, A N D E U R O P E A N P O S S E S S I O N S Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last natl. parl. elections HAITI April 1961 NATIONAL PARLIAn'LENTARY STATUS Center Conservative There have been neither parliamentary election nor functioning legislature in"Cuba-since the takeover by Castro on January 1, 1959? As Prime Minister, Castro governs by decree with the help of a cabinet of his choice. The balloting which took place on April 30, 1901 was non-competitive in most districts, wit hl the-pro- administration candidates winning in all cases. President Duvalier's name appeared on the ballots of all candidates, even though his term of office was not scheduled to expire until May 15, 1963 and no Presi- dential election had been announced.. The results. of the congressional voting were interpreted as confer- ring upon him a new six-year term. The National Unity Party received 1,320,7+8 votes and occupies all 58 seats in the legislature. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Dominican Revolutionary Party PRD National Civic Union UCN) Dec. 20, 1962 628,o44 of 1,05 ,99 votes 59;x) 317,327 votes 3a, 22 of 27 Senate seats (820) 4 Senators, 20 Deputies 4+9 of 74 Deputies (66q) Dominican Popular Democratic Nationalist Socialist Party (PSPD) Revolutionary Party (PNRD) Communist 1 Senator, 14 Deputies National Revolutionary Party Social Christian Revolutionary Party PNR PRSG AIthdrew 1 Deputy 14th of June Party Dominican Revolutionary Vanguard Social Democratic Alliance PCJ Al J) (VRD) ASD Abstained from No seats. No seats. elections. Dominican Popular Movement (MPD) National Party Progressive Christian illegal (PN) Democratic Party PPDC) No seats. Abstained from elections. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 113 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 60,000 The Cuban Communist Party is currently called the ORI Integrated Revolutionary Organi- CUBA (estimate) zations). It is made up of the old communist party (Popular Socialist Party - PSP), the moribund 26th of July Movement and 13th of March Revolutionary Directorate. In 1961 the ORI was simply the PSP under another name, but in early 1962 changes were made to give Castro and some of his earlier followers the leading role in the Party. ORI itself will be transferred into the PUBS (United Party of the Socialist Revolution), probably early in 1963. Initial membership is estimated at 60-80,000. Its chief functions will be to indoctrinate other Cubans in Marxism-Leninism and to provide support for the regime's policies. In addition to the Party mechanism the regime sponsors a tremendous indoctrination program in Marxism- Leninism through communications media,-the education system, adult education programs, special Schools for Revolutionary Instruction, labor unions, the Communist Youth organization and the militia.. Through such means the regime has built up a hard-core following, chiefly among youths under 25 years of age. The population at large, however, is apathetic or opposed to the regime. mown The communist movement was outlawed by legislative action, February 27, 1948; the Haitian HAITI Communist Party (PCH) had dissolved itself in April 1947- Overt communist activity ceased in December 1950 with suppression of the Popular Socialist Party (PSP). In the. last year or two, at least 2 clandestine communist political organizations have become increasingly active: The Party of Popular Accord (1 ) and the peoples National Liberation Party (PPLN). These entities, although relatively small in number, appear to be fairly well organized and growing. There is also increasing communist influence in the countryts weak labor movement. Unknown The Dominican Popu_lar_Socialist (communist). Party has been outlawed and in exile through DOMINICAN most of-the period of its existence. Most recently proscribed. by law No. 5576 of July 14+, REPUBLIC 1961, the party's leadership, and much of its following, continues in residence in Cuba. The Dominican Popular Movement (MPD), outlawed in October 1961, is regarded as,a communist front and its leaders, along with those of other organizations regarded as subversive, have been. exiled by the ruling Council of State. The legal National Revolutionary Party (PNR 2 strongly pro-Castro, did not participate in the elections; the 14th-of June Party (APCJ?1 'hich has been characterized as communism-dominated also abstained. Vigorously suppressed. during the Trujillo era, The Communists have. generally 'been given little opportunity by the subsequent governments to gain a firm footnold in the Dominican Republic. As a result of the December elections, the Council of State is scheduled to turn over the govern- ment on February 27 to the successful Dominican Revolutionary Party (PRD) candidate, Juan Bosch. M I D D L E A M E R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 114 COUNTRY Date of last natl. parl. elections MEXICO July 2., 1961 GUATEMALA Dec. 3, 1961 (partial) Dec. 6, 1959 (partial) Communist Mexican Communist Party PCM Mexican Workers and Farmers. Party POCM). (PCM and POCM lack membership required for electoral registration.) Socialist People's Party (PPS) Communist front formerly known as Peo le's Party, Pp) 1 seat (0.6 Guatemalan Labor Party (PGT) Outlawed by the 1956 Constitution, and reaffirmed by. legislative action on February 21, 1961 * This breakdown is necessarily arbitrary as shifts HONDURAS Honduran Communist Party Sept. 1957 PCH (Constituent Assembly which became the Congress in Dec. 1957) NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Non-Communist Left Center Conservative Institutional Revolutionary Party National Action (PRI) Party (PAN) 172 seats (96.6%) 5 seats (2.8%) The PRI represents a spectrum of political opinion ranging from Right to Left, with the dominant position under President Lopez Mateos being Left of Center. Revolutionary Party (PR) Democratic National National Democratic 7 deputies (10.61o) Reconciliation Movement MrN) Part(Redencion) 8 deputies (12:1%) Guatemalan Christian 26 deputies (39.47o) Democracy DCG duties (7.6%) Democratic Union Part (PUD deputies (6.1 ) National Liberation Movement N 1 deputy (1.5%) Independents 15 deputies (22.7%) are constantly taking place in the highly personalistic Liberal. Party, 209,109 votes (61.3%) 36 seats (62%) The Liberal Party represents a spectrum of political opinion ranging from Center to Left, with the dominant position being just Left of Center Nationalist Part 101,27 votes( 30%) 18 seats ('31%) Reformist Party 29,459 votes (8.7%) 4 seats (7%) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 115 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUAITRY PCM 5,000-6,000. The communist-front National Liberation Movement MU'! ; which was established following the MEXICO (estimate) Latin American Conference for National Sovereignty, Economic Emancipation and Peace held in POCM 100 - 200 Mexico City in March 1961, has been the principal activist communist. organization in Mexico (estimate) in the past year. Its efforts to move Mexico further leftward have met with strong re- PPS 70,000 sistance,on the part of the center and right, both inside and outside the government. Comma- (estimate) nist groups, which are composed principally of intellectuals, students, and professionals, have tended to divide following the Cuban crisis into "activists"-and proponents of "peaceful co- existence". The Mexican government's stand on the Cuban crisis, in which it identified Castro as a tool of Moscow and the Soviet Union as "interventionist", has reduced the appeal of the strongly pro-Castro communist organizations, dulled the edge of their propaganda, and deterred the growth of their movement. 1,000 - 1,100 Building on the ruins of the organization developed during the pro-communist regime of ex- GUATEMALA (estimate) President Arbenz, the Guatemalan Labor Party (Partido Guatemalteco del Trabajo - PGT) receives encouragement from the presence in Cuba of Arbenz himself and a number of his chief communist advisors. During the past two years most of the able and experienced leaders of the communist movement have returned from exile and stepped up efforts to regain lost ground, particularly among students and organized labor -- where the Communists control the Autonomous Union Federation of Guatemala (FASGUA), one of the major labor entities in the country. Commu- nists hope that the December 1963 presidential elections will result.in a leftist government under which they can begin to repeat the process which led to their domination of the country in the years immediately -preceeding; the overthrow of the Arbenz government in mid-1954. The Communists have considerable influence within several non-registered "revolutionary" political parties and will strive to gain a foothold within the new parties which can be expected to emerge during the 1963 campaign, particularly those associated with the candidacy of former President Juan Joser Aredvalo (1946-51) the strongest leftist contender. They recently suffered a psychological blow with the defection of Carlos Manuel Pellecer, a top party leader. 11500 - 2, The Honduran Communist Party has not met legal requirements for registration and its HONDURAS (estimate) activities are occasionally suppressed. Communist influence exists in many sectors of Honduran life, including students, academic groups, and the bureaucracy. In the past year and a half, , however, prodemocratic elements have wrested control of student organizations from procommunists. Communist penetration of labor extends to a relatively small number of unions in the Tegucigalpa area and to the economically depressed North Coast, but is becoming more serious. The Communists have an important forum in the Tegucigalpa daily, El Cronista. The breaking of relations with Cuba in April 1960 marked the beginning of a period of increased awareness of the communist danger on the part of the noncommunist left. MIDDLE AMERICA Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 116 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIP14NTARY STATUS Date of last nat'l. parl. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center EL SALVADOR Salvadoran Communist National Conciliation Authentic Constitutional Dec. 17, 1961 Party PCS Part PCN Part (PAC) (for 'a 236,864 votes (68.6%) T028 votes (7.5%) constituent and April and May 54 seats (100%) Union of Democratic Parties (UPD.) legislative Revolutionary Party . which was an electoral alliance of assembly) (PRAM) the Christian Democrat Party (PDC) (communist front) and the Social Democrat Party (PSD) Renewing Action Party (PAR) 82,629 votes 23. No seats NICARAGUA Feb. 1957 Socialist Part of Nicaragua PSN) Outlawed August 1945, by decree, and sub- sequently by consti- tutional amendment. The PAC and the UPD do not have specific political programs or orientations; they represent a broad spectrum of political opinion opposed to the PNC. On balance,: they each appear to be somewhat to the right of the PCN. National Liberal Party (PLN) Chamber of Deputies, 28 seats Senate, 12 seats Nicaraguan Conservative Party (PCN) Chamber of Deputies 14 seats Senate, 4 seats The Constitution of 1950 provides that all seats in the Chamber of Deputies are to be divided between the two principal parties. These are defined by law as the Nationalist Liberal Party, the administration party which is often referred to as the Liberal Party, with two-thirds, and the Nicaraguan Conservative P arty (opposition) with one-third. The apportionment of seats in the Senate is also determined by constitutional provision. The officially recognized PCN is a minority faction of. the Traditional Conservative Party (PCT), the major opposition party in Nicaragua. MIDDLE AMERICA Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 117 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF.COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 500 The strong measures taken by the Civilian-Military Directorate in the first half of 1962 EL SALVADOR (estimate) against El Salvador's communist elements have been continued and intensified by the new administration. President Rivera, who was inaugurated on July 1, 1962,pledged himself to conduct a counteroffensive against communism. Government Decree No. 28 of February 1961 and the Electoral Law of September 1961 outlawed communist activity and the govern- mentenacted an antisubversive decree on September 29, 1962. The communist-dominated General Confederation of Salvadoran Workers (CGTS) has been steadily declining in member- ship and influence and has recently attempted to recou_o its strength by forming a new front group, the National Union of Unemployed Workers (UNTD). Additional front groups include the April and May Revolutionary Party (PRAM) and the United Front for Revolutionary Action (F[JAR). With the declining strength of the communist movement in the labor field, the principal source of communist activity has become the communist-dominated student organization, the General Association of Salvadoran University Students (AG_EUS), which exploits the advantage of university autonomy. Strong anticommunist movements, such as the Democratic Civic Association, have been inaugurated in the past year. 200 - 300 The Socialist (communist) Party of Nicaragua PSN has been banned since 1945 and a few NICARAGUA (estimate) of its. leaders are in exile. Nevertheless, the Nicaraguan Communists have exerted considerable influence among groups opposed to the Somoza regime, and the party organi- zation has been an active supporter of the Cuban revolution. The PSN has several thousand sympathizers of whom perhaps half may be regarded as militants. Communist fronts inside Nicaragua include the Republican Mobilization (MR), which claims.5,000 members; the communist-led National Patriotic Youth (JPN); and Nicaraguan Socialist Youth (JSN). The Communists are active in the student'center at the National University (CUUN), the country's principal? although weak labor confederation (CGS ,the Managua Federation of Labor (FTM) and several individual unions. Communist fronts outside Nicaragua include the Nicaraguan Unitary Front (FUN), active chiefly in Costa Rica and Honduras; the Rigoberto Lopez Perez Nicaraguan Revolutionary Army, based in Mexico; and the Sandino Revolutionary Front, active largely in Honduras. M I D D L E A M E R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Date of last nat' L parl. elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative COSTA RICA Po ular Vanguard Party National Liberation Party National Union Part Feb. . 4; 1962 PVP 192,65 votes 50.3 51,570 votes 13. Outlawed July 17, 1948 29 seats (50.9%) 9 seats (15.8%) PANAMA May 1960 Democratic Action Party PAn ' 3,359 votes (0.9%) 1 seat (1.7%) People's Party (j National Republican Party 135,533 votes 35. 18 seats (31.6%) National Opposition Union rLINO 1 100,152 votes (41.39,) 28 seats (.52.83%) National-Patriotic Coalition PCN 8,192 votes (35.62%) 18 seats (33.960 Popular Alliance (AP) 55,613 votes 22.98%) 7 seats .(13.200) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 119 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY About 300 The Popular Vanguard communist Party of Costa Rica was outlawed by Decree-Law No. 105 C TA RICA (estimate) of July 17, 1948- In the most recent elections, the presidential candidate who rare under the banner of the Popular Democratic Action Party (PAID), a communist front, received less than 1% of the total votes cast. The party's congressional ticket, which polled in excess of 9,000 votes, was able to obtain, one seat in the 57-member legislature. (This latter figure represents the approximate strength of the communist party plus its sympathizers.) The party is active in its efforts to organize the workers in the acific banana zone and other labor groups, and it has effectively infiltrated the General Confed- eration of Costa Rican dorkers (CGTC). Efforts to expand its influence and numerical strength have been met by countermeasures on the part of unofficial anticommunist groups and increasingly by the Costa Rican government. A strong movement is afoot to strengthen legal provisions which deal with subversive activities. The PVP puublication, Adelante, was closed down by executive order of October 29, 1962; subsequently circulated clandestinely for a brief period; and was then reissued as Libertad on November 11. Libertad has since appeared sporadically. Membership of communist front groups, which include Costa Rican Socialist Youth, Society of Friends of the Cuban. Revolution, and Alliance of Costa Rican Women, is estimated at. s, maximum of 2,000. About 150 The PIP has faced continual internal crises since it was outlawed on December 23, 1953 PANAMA (estimate) (Law No. 43) and has lost much of its former influence. Prohibited from participation in elections, the party ran some members and supporters -- with little success -- as candidates on the slates of other parties in the 1960 national and municipal elections. The party controls only a very small minority of Panama's trade-union movement, though it has regained control of the influential student organization (UEU) at the National University. The PIP controls the local-pro-Castro organization (CPIRC), which has become less effective because of the growing awareness-of the threat of Castro-communism; the party also works closely with ultranationalistic groups seeking to carry on anti-US activities. Among the PIP's front groups is a small and ineffective women's organization (Vw). An insurrectional group affiliated with the PIP is the National Vanguard- (VAN). The Panama Communists have derived some support from the extreme left wing of the small but increasingly active Socialist Party; leaders of this group have cooperated with the PIP and assumed positions on issues unually identical with those of the Communists. . ._ef'forts to. attract new members are impeded by the party's internal disorganization and illegal status, and by the fact that party membership constitutes a barrier to teaching positions in the government-controlled educational system and to employment in the Canal Zone. MIDDLE AMERICA Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. parl. elections COLOMBIA Mar. 1962 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Communist Non-Communist Left Center Communist Party PCC Revolutionary Liberal Liberal Party (PL) No representation in Movement (MRL) 1,04T000 votes (34.6%) Congress. 589, 000 votes (19.6%) 96 seats (34.0%) 45 seats (16.0%) Conservative Party (PC) Os inista faction Laureanista faction Tdd,OOO votes (26.1%) 484,000 votes.(16%) 81 seats (28.7%) seats 18.4 Rojista faction 111,000 votes (3.7%) 8 seats (2.9%) NOTE: Colombian political office is shared euqally by the Conservative and Liberal Parties, under provision of the National Front agreement ratified as a constitutional amendment on December 1, 1957. VENEZUELA Communist Party PCV Democratic Action (AD)* Dec. 1958 161,000 votes 6.2 ) 1,27 ,000 votes 49.4%) 9 seats (4.8%) 65 seats (34.9%) COPEI (Social Christian) 392,000 votes (15%) 25 seats (13.6%) Republican Democratic Union (URD) 690,000 votes (26.8%) 44 seats (23.6%) ARS (nickname for nationalistic, dissident wing of AD)* 25 seats (13.4) Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR)* 16 seats 77 NOTE: The AD-COPEI coalition is sup orte by a large number of political independents. * The AD vote includes ballots cast for congressmen now representing MIR and ARS, dissident groups which split off from AD in 1960 and 1961, respectively. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 121 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY (8,000 - 10,000) The Communists have had a certain degree of success in infiltrating the Revolutionary COLOMBIA (estimate) Liberal Movement (MRL) a faction of the Liberal Party which is opposed to the National Front. MRL leader, Alfonso Lopez Michelsen, moved against the threat of communist control of the Party at a showdown congress in late 1962, but he did not call for a complete ouster of the communist forces. The PCC has made repeated attempts to control and coordinate the activities of Colombia's guerrilla enclaves but has met with only in- different success. The spread of communism in Colombia is inhibited by the National Front agreement which tends to preclude the possibility of successful political agitation by subversive elements. In addition, conversion to communism is particularly difficult in a country where membership in the traditional political parties, Liberal and Conservative, is practically hereditary. The Liberal-supporting CTC (Confederation de Trabajadores de Colombia) and the more Con- servative-oriented UTC (Union de Trabajadores de Colombia represent the vast majority of organized Colombian workers. The CTC broke with the communist-front CTAL and WFTU in 1950 and affiliated with the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. During 1960-61 it expelled communist-dominated affiliates from its ranks. These communist-dominated unions speak for somewhat more than. 50,000 workers, principally in the nation's major cities - Cali, Barranquilla, Medellin and Bogota. Principal front groups of the PCC are: Committee for the Defense of the Cuban Revolution; Colombian Society of the Friends of China; and, 7th of January Worker-Student Movement. The communist youth organization (UJCC) itself numbers around 3000. About 30,00 The Communist Party of Venezuela PCV regained its legality with the overthrow of the VENEZUELA (estimate) Perez Jimenez dictatorship in 1958. Although it originally supported the coalition govern- ment headed by President Betancourt, the PCV shifted to militant opposition in mid-1960 and has since caused as much trouble for the government as possible. Thus, in cooperation with the T it has participated in guerrilla warfare, terrorist activities and attempted revolts in .seeking to overthrow the Betancourt government. This subversive activity led the government to announce on Oct. 15, 1962, that the Supreme Court had been petitioned to outlaw the PCV and MIR. Although no court. decision has yet been forthcoming, significant numbers of PCV and MIR militants have been arrested, brought to trial and convicted for subversive activities in recent months. In Congress the PCV has aligned with the MIR, URD and ARS against the AD-COPEI government coalition.. PCV strength is centered in the Federal District, the area in which the AD is the weakest. Con- versely, the PCV is weak in the rural areas, and the organized peasantry is overwhelmingly loyal to the AD. Although as many as 150,000 trade union members may be under communist leadership, this represents less than one-fifth of the organized workers in Venezuela, more than three- quarters of whom are in AD-led unions. Among the politically active students at the Central University, Venezuela's principal institution of higher education, the PCV currently is stronger than the AD.. C mmunists are also influential among secondary school students, and PCV adherents control the influential Venezuelan Newspapermen's Association. SOUTH AMERICA Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l..parl. elections Conznunis t BRAZIL Brazilian Communist Party (PCB) Oct. 1962 Communist Party of Brazil (PCB) dissident group: did not participate in election. NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Non-Communist Left Brazilian Labor Party (PTB 11 seats (2k.0%) Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB) 8 seats (1.7%) Since most Brazilian parties are heterogenous and At stake in the Oct. 1962 congressional elections At least four known Communists and a small number Center Social Democratic Party 173- -seats-00-4) National Democratic Union UDN 115 seats (24.2,) Social Progressive Party PSP 24 seats ().0`%) Rural Labor Party 3 seats 0. Christian Democratic Party (PDC) 19 seats National Labor Party (PTN) 15 seats 3.1, Social Labor Party (PST) 3 seats 0. Labor Renovation Movement (MTR) 3 seats O. PSD Conservative Republican Part PR 15 seats 3.1 Popular R!gresentatidn Party (PRP) 5 seats (1.5%) (PRT) Liberator Part (PL) 5 seats 1.7_ lack a firm ideological base, the above classification is somewhat arbitrary. were the 409 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 45 of the 66 Senate seats. of sympathizers were elected to Congress on other party tickets. PARAGUAY Communist Party (PCP) Febrerista Party CFR Liberal Party (PL)* National R can March 1960 Did not participate. Did not participate Party, PNR , commonly in elections. in elections. called Colorado Party 255,000 votes 9 All seats. * The Liberal Party. attempted to register for the parliamentary elections scheduled for Februarl 10. 1963, but its application was MId In, *key= ce ,by the National Electoral Board, which did inscribe a small dissident Liberal, gro cal7.ed, the Revolutionary Directorate of the-Liberal Party. S O U T H A M E R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP Brazilian Commu- nist Party (PcB) 25,000 - 35,000 (estimate) SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH The Brazilian Communist Party (PCB), outlawed May 7, 1947 by action ofthe Superior Electoral Court, has only partially been able to exploit the opportunities resented by the P y politico- economic crisis in Brazil since August 1961. Its record in the October 1962 election was not substantially better than in 1958 and 1960, although it was able to elect a small number of COUNTRY BRAZIL 123 Communist Party of Brazil (dis- sidents) 1,f (estimate) followers on the tickets of other parties. Nevertheless, the candidacies of several Communist Party members from Sto Paulo were disallowed by the electoral courts, and appeals against this action have so far been unsuccessful. The Brazilian Labor Party (PTB) of President Jc? o (tango) Goulart and the small Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB) contain significant numbers of Communists and sympathizers, with the latter including Peasant Leagues organizer Francisco JuliMo, newly elected Federal Deputy and self-proclaimed Marxist, who has called for a Castroist type revo- lution among the downtrodden peasants of Brazil's distressed Northeast. Another leading pro- communist figure is Miguel Arrais, recently elected Pernambuco State Governor on a combined PSB- PTB ticket. The Communist Party has been hampered by continuing internal dissension sparked by "leftist" opponents of the "soft" line of long-time party boss Luiz Carlos Prestes, and party membership has declined steadily in recent years. In December 1961, a number of leading Prestes opponents were expelled from the PCB, and they subsequently formed the dissident Communist Party of Brazil, which favors violent tactics on the Cuban and Chinese Communist model as a means of promoting the Socialist revolution in Brazil. The orthodox PCB has gained in respectability, however, due to the reestablishment of diplomatic relations with the USSR, and has been successful in controlling the principal national organization of university students and local. state and national labor grows such as the National Confederation of Industrial Workers CNTI . 3,000 to ,000 The. Paraguayan Communist Party, which was outlawed by Decree No. 5484 of October 7, PARAGUAY (estimate) 1-936,. bas minimal influence. The majority of its members are in exile. The party has never been able to establish an effective base in labor because the economy is largely agrarian and also because the government firmly controls the one small con- federation of labor. The principal source of communist support has been in intellectual circles. where the communist-inspired Democratic Students' Front (FEDRE) appears to be making inroads among university and secondary school students. The Party is also attempting, but with slight success so far, to penetrate the army and rural areas. The most effective of the communist- infiltrated exile organizations is the United Front for National Liberation (FULNA) with head- quarters in Montevideo, which has the support of some noncommunist exiles opposing the present Paraguayan government. S O U T H A M E R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 124 COUNTRY Date of last I 1 NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS nat 1. par . elections Communist Non-Communist Left Center Conservative ARGENTINA The parliamentary elections of March 18, 1962, which were intended to renew one-half of the membership of the March, 1962 Chamber of Deputies, resulted in heavy gains by Peronist candidates, who ran under an assortment of neo-Peronist (annulled) party labels. .The communist vote -- estimated at about 300,000 out of a total of nearly 8,000,000 -- went chiefly to the Peronists. When the magnitude of the Peronist victory became apparent (Peronist candidates received 33.4, of the total votes cast), the Argentine military ousted President Frondizi and installed in his place JoserMar-fa Guido, who formally. annulled the results of the March elections and eventually dissolved Congress altogether. G neral elections are now scheduled to be held. June 25, 1963. URUGUAY Communist Party (PCU Nova 25, 1962 Frente Izquierda de Liberacion FIDEL nist fr 3. ) P 7O votes seats (3.1% Colorado Parma National Party (Blanco)** 461,45V votes (45%) 7+2,317 votes (46%) 59 seats (45.4%) 61 seats (46.9%) Socialist Party (PSU) Socialist front, pop ul~,r Union Christian Democratic Party (PDC) 23,567 votes (2.3%) formerly Civic Union 2 seats (1.6%) 31,561svotes %)0%) Three factions of the Colorado Party ran separate lists in the elections. The majority faction, List 15, is slightly left of center; List 14 is more conservative; and List 99, headed by Deputy Zelmar Michelini, is almost as far left as the Socialist Party. The National Party is divided into two;distinct factions. The majority faction-consist Qf the less conservative White Democratic Union (UBD) and a wing of the so-called Herreristas headed by Councilor Vietar Haedot.the minority faction is composed of...-the rest of the He:Ereri-stas, led. by Councilor Martin Echegoyen, and the Ruralistas ef Benito Name. S O U T H A M E R I C A Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 125 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 110,000 - 50,000 The PCA has in effect been illegal since 1959, when federal attorneys were instructed by ARGENTINA (estimate) executive decree to institute judicial action against Communists in each of the country's provinces. The Political Parties Statute promulgated November 19, 1962, excludes from participation in future elections parties which seek to establish totalitarian or dic- tatorial regimes, or which are controlled from abroad. In practice, communist party activities are suppressed, although Communists are free to vote as individuals for non- communist candidates. The Party holds a significant, although far from dominant, position in the General Confederation of Labor (CGT) and controls several of the smaller unions. These, with the help of Peronist labor leaders, are presently seeking representation on the 20-man governing committee of the CGT. The PCA strategy is to link up with the left-leaning faction of the Peronist movement, and it hopes to benefit from strains between leftist and more moderate Peronists. Besides its own membership, the PCA is estimated to have an additional 100,000 sympathizers, including the pro-communist activists among the Peronists and in various Socialist groups. Communists and pro-Castro. forces among university student groups have suffered significant setbacks recently in student elections, particularly at the University of Buenos Aires. Communist attacks on the Argentine Communist's close support of the Cuban quarantine did not receive support from moderate groups and their efforts to create dis- turbances during the Cuban crisis failed completely. 3,000 - 5,000 The major reasons for the PCU's small influence after 0 years of existence are the success URUGUAY (estimate) of the government's welfare policies in undercutting the communist. appeal and the socialists' refusal to ally with the PCU. Although active and articulate, the PCU can accomplish com- paratively little without allies. Its gains in the November 1962 elections. stem from its success in forming the Leftist Liberation Front, FIDEL (Frente Iz uierda,de Liberation), consisting of the PCU, several small pro-Castro groups, and the MRO Movimiento Revolucionario Oriental), headed by former Nationalist Deputy Ariel Collazo. Not a Communist, Collazo will occupy one of the deputy seats won by FIDEL. The front's gains were achieved primarily at the expense of the Socialists, also pro-Castro, whose parliamentary representation was cut in'half. The main sources of communist strength are organized labor and intellectual groups. Communists control the Central. Confederation of. Uruguayan Workers (CUTU), although the majority of the rank and file unions are not procommunist. PCU's continuing influence in university student circles can be attributed to the apathy of many students and also to the influence of some leftist- oriented professors. A number of professors and other intellectuals are affiliated with FIDEL. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l. parl. NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS elections Communist Non-Communist Left CHILE Communist Part PCCh March 1961 157,451 votes (11.7%) 20 seats (10.40) Center Conservative Radical Party (PR) Liberal Party PL 296,704 votes'(22p) 221,361 votes-(16.5%) 53 seats (27.6%) 35 seats (18%) Socialist Part (PS.) Christian Democratic Conservative Part (PC) 1 9,x+20 votes 11.2 0) Party PDC 197,151 votes (1T~7%) 20 seats (10.4,%) 213,559 votes (16%) 21 seats (10.9%) National Democratic Party 27 seats (14%) (PADENA) 95,282 votes (7.1%) Independents 12 seats (6.2%) 3 seats 1.5) National Vanguard of the People (VNP) 17,173 votes (1%) 1 seat (0.5%) NOTE: In the 1961 elections, the Communist, Socialist, National Democratic and National Vanguard parties collaborated in the Popular- Action-Front (FRAP). The one representative of the National Vanguard subsequently joined the National Democratic Party. Since the elections, the Radical Party has moved slightly to the right, forming an electoral alliance with the two government supporting conservative parties. The Christian Democratic Party is a little left of center. BOLIVIA Bolivian Communist Part Nationalist Revolutionary Movement MNR June 1962* PCB No seats, but (partial) reportedly received over Chamber of Deputies 64 seats (88.9%) June 1960 2% of the vote. Senate 27 seats (100%) (partial) Authentic Revolutionary Party (PRA) Revolutionary Workers Party 3 Deputies .20 (POR) No seats Bolivian Socialist Party of the Revolutionary Left Falange (FSB) PIR No seats 4 deputies (5.7%) Social Christian Party (PSC) 1 Deputy (1.4%) In elections for 15 Senate seats and 38 of 72 Deputy positions, several opposition parties abstained; VA* FSB and PRA considered boycotting the elections on the grounds of government favoritism toward the M. The dominant MNR is divided into at least four factions with the divisions becoming sharper as the question of presidential succession comes to the fore. Its left wing is infiltrated by the Communists, while its moderate wing includes many centrists. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 127 COMMUNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP SOURCES OF COMMUNIST STRENGTH COUNTRY 20,000 - 25,000 The PCCh has not climbed back up to its 1947 peak of 1 .5'0 of the total vote, although CHILE (estimate) the 1961 elections showed that the Party had retained a considerable following even during its 10-year period of illegality (1948-58). Alone it can exert only moderate influence, but the willingness of other parties, including even the non-Marxist PADENA, to participate in thetPepmm~znist-inspired FRAP, greatly increases the PCCh potential. Any weakening of the FRAP would, therefore, constitute a setback for the party. Since the Cuban missile crisis, a growing sector of the PADENA appears to oppose. continued collaboration with the Communists, and some realignment of political forces may occur after the March 1963 municipal elections. Communist strength is mainly in industrial labor and in intellectual and artistic circles. It has generally dominated the Central Confederation of Chilean Workers (CUTCh), but the August 1962 CUTCh congress showed a marked increase in Socialist and Christian Democratic strength. Christian Democrats have also cut deeply into former communist influence among university students, although the PCCh is currently having some success in expanding its youth wing.. It is also seeking new avenues of influence and may have found an important one in the organizations of slum dwellers, poblaciones, in all major cities. The PCCh has shown great ingenuity.in setting up a variety of fronts, which include an estimated 5,000 active communist sympathizers. Bolivian Communist Communists in Bolivia are divided into three parties, all numerically weak and each in- BOLIVIA Party (PCB) ternally divided (with this division being most pronounced in the case of the POR). The 4,000 to 5,000 PCB has control over several labor unions and exercises some influence within the MNR- (estimate) dominated Bolivian Workers Central (COB), which includes white-collar as well as manual Revolutionary labor and rural elements. The POR retains a shadow of its old influence in certain sectors Workers Party (FOR) of the mineworkers and peasants. Due to this entrenchment in the labor movement the Bolivian (Trotskyite) Communists are able to exert political influence far out of proportion to their small numbers. 3,000 to.k,000 Since the Cuban crisis, when Communist -promoted demonstrations led to bloodshed, important' (estimate) elements among factory, transport, and teachers unions have rejected collaboration with the Party of the Revo- Communists and are seeking to establish a free labor movement outside the COB. lutionary Left (PIR) 1,000 (est.i.mate) Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 128 COUNTRY Date of last nat'l earl. elections Communist ECUADOR Communist Party (PCE) June 1962 No representation in Congress seats (5.5%) NATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY STATUS Non-Communist Left Center Conservative National Democratic Conservative Party Front FDN 19 seats (26-3) tats (32.9%%) Concentration of Popular Independent Right Forces CFP 11 seats 15.1 Ecuadorian National Velas uistas Revolutionary Action 3 seats 4.15) Party ARNE 2 seats (2.7%) Arosemenistas 5 seats (b.95) Independent 5 seats .9%) NOTE: Composition shown is only for the 73-member chamber of Deputies. The National Democratic Front representation includes a few moderate Socialists and independents but is chiefly made up of Liberal Party members. A number of the Independent Right representatives support the Conservative Party but do not carry the party label. The Velasquistas, Arosemenistas and Independents are placed to the left of center but in fact all three groupings include representatives whose political views range from far left to right. PERU In the Peruvian National Elections of June 10, 1962 none of the seven presidential candidates received the June 1962 necessary one-third minimum of the popular vote to be elected. Thus under the Peruvian Constitution, the new Congress was to decide between the first three candidates by majority vote at the inaugural session on July 28. During the period between the election and the inaugural session there were charges of fraud in the elections by the armed forces and some political groups. On July 17 the National Election Board declined to accede to the demand of .the armed forces that the elections be nullified. The following day the armed forces overthrew the Prado government and nullified the electoral results. Peru is now being governed by a Military Junta, composed of high ranking officers of the armed forces who have promised to hold new elections on June 19, 1963. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 129 COMNNNIST PARTY MEMBERSHIP , - 3, Although legal since 1944, the Communist Party of Ecuador (PCE) has never been able to meet ECUADOR estimate) the constitutional requirements necessary to launch a national electoral ticket. It is estimated to have around 3,000 active sympathizers, particularly among left-wing socialists. In recent years the PCE has dominated the Confederation of Ecuadorean Workers (CTE)1 which includes most of the ten percent of the labor force that is organized into unions. As the only political group making a determined effort to penetrate the Sierra Indian groups, the Communists have attracted a few hundred Indian followers in the area around Quito. The party's principal auxiliary is the Communist Youth of Ecuador (JCE). It also has strong in- fluence in, if not control of, the Revolutionary Union of- Ecuadorean Youth (URJE),.a-vociferous pro-Castro group formed in 1959 by the JCE, the Socialist Youth, and the CFP Youth. The in- fluence of the CTE and URJE, which was relatively high in November 1961 because of their,sponsor- ship of street demonstrations which helped to effect a -change in government, appeared to diminish greatly after the Cuban missile crisis in October 1962. 8,000 -'10,000 The Peruvian Communist Party PCP is denied legal status by Article 53 of the Constitution PERU (estimate) and is thus unable to enter candidates in elections, but there are few limits on its activi- ties otherwise. In addition to its hard core members, the PCP has been a vigorous rival of APRA for control of the Confederation of Peruvian Workers and the outlawing of APRA during the Odria dictatorship encouraged their efforts. APRA regained considerable strength during the Prado administration (1956-1962) but may- have lost ground to the Communists in the labor movement since the military takeover. Communist labor strength is particularly evident in Lima and in southern-Peru where it is beginning to penetrate agricultural labor. Several serious agrarian disturbances in the Department of Cuzco and violence at the Cerro de Pasco mines in late 1962 were in large part the result of communist agitation. The Communists and their allies now control the National student- Federation (FEP) and all major university federations, having captured this leadership from the Apristas and their allies. In addition to its student and labor following the PCP has the support of several front. groups, including the National Liberation Front, the=political group created by the PCP in order to participate in the 1962 elections. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 130 APPENDIX: LIST OF COUNTRIES IN WHICH COMMUNIST PARTIES HAVE BEEN PROSCRIBED COUNTRY METHOD OF PROSCRIPTION DATE Algeria Decree Nov. 29, 1962 Argentina Decree 1959 Law Nov. 19, 1962 Resolution of Superior Electoral Tribunal May 7, 1947 Decree Oct. 1953 China, Republic of Decree July 1947 Costa Rica Decree July 17, 1948 July 26, 1950 Dominican Republic Decree July 14, 1947 Law July 14, 1961 El Salvador Decree Feb. 1961 Electoral Law Sept. 1961 Germany, Federal Republic of High Court Decision Aug. 17, 1956 Law Dec. 27; 1947 Constitution 1956 Law Feb. 21, 1961 Haiti Law Feb. 27, 1948 Iran Decree Feb. 5, 1949 Iraq Law Also various decrees of military government Jan. 6, 1960 # In certain countries, Brazil for example, an illegal communist party is permitted to engage in open political activities. There are also situations, in the Arabian peninsula, for example, where communism is simply not tolerated but no formal ban exists. See the text of the report for ampli-, fication of this listing. Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 131 COUNTRY METHOD OF PROSCRIPTION Ivory Coast Decree Jan. 1963 Lahr Sept. 1951 Decree Apr. 1957 Korea, Republic of Law Dec. 1, 1948 Lebanon Decree Sept. 28, 1939 Malaya Decree July 23, 1948 Morocco Decree Dec. 1952 Nepal Decree Dec. 15, 1960 Nicaragua Decree Aug. 1945 Pakistan Law 1908 Panama Law Dec. 23, 1953 Paraguay Decree Oct. 7, 1936 Peru Constitution (as interpreted by electoral authorities) 1933 Philippines Court Decision Oct. 26, 1932 Law June 1957 Portugal Decree 1926 Spain Law Feb. 9, 1939 Sudan Decree. 1958 Syria Decree Sept. 28, 1939 Thailand Law Nov. 13, 1952 Tunisia Government announcement Jan. 1963 Turkey Decree July 1922 Union. of South Africa June 1950 United Arab Republic Decree Jan. 1954 Vietnam, Republic of Constitution Oct. 26, 1956 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 ALPHABETICAL INDEX COUNTRY Page Afghanistan........... ............................... 74. Albania ................................................ 26 Algeria ................... ............................. 36 Angola ................................................. 46 Argentina ....... ............ ........................... 124 Aruba:.......................... ........................ 108 Australia........ .. .................................... 98 Austria.......... .. ................................... 16 Bahrain, ............................................. 72 Barbados........... .................................. 104 Basutol_and..................... ........................ 48 Bechuanaland ........................................... 48 Belgium ............. 8 Bolivia......,........,... ..................... .......... 126 Bonaire.. ............................................... 108 Brazil ............................... .......... ....... 122 British Dependent Territories (Glestern Hemisphere)..... 104 Bulgaria* ................. ........................... 26 Burma.... a ................. 00 ................... *00.0 ... 80 Burundi, Kingdom of ....... ............................. 62 Can+bodi a .... . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. ..0.00 ... ... . . . . . . ...... ? 86 Cameroon......................... ..................... 50 Canada... 90 .. . ... . .. . . . . .... . .... ... . . .. .. . . . . .. ....1. . .. . 100 Central African Republic ............................... 50 Cey1pin ................................................... 78 Chad............ ....................... Chile.... ............................................... 126 China, Communist ("People's Republic-of China")........ 9o China, Republic Df... .................................. 88 Colombia ............................................... 120 Congo, Republic of (Brazzaville) ....................... 52 O F C O U N T R I E S COUNTRY Page Congo, Republic of the (Leopoldville)...... 62 Costa Rica ................................. 118 Cuba..... .................................. 112 Curacao .................................... 108 Cyprus ................. .................... 66 Czechoslovakia ............................. 28 Dshomey- ..................................... 50 Denmark... ...................,...... ....... 20 Dominican Republic ......................... 112 Ecuador, ................................. 128 Egypt ... .................................. 68 ite n e ~ades'( very'Coys$;')5a omey,':tiger 116 and Upper Volta .......................... 50 Ethiopia ............ .'.....,.....,.......... 0 Federation of Rhodesia and TTyasa_lan_d....... 48 Fernando Po ..............................0. 46 Finland ................ .................... 24 France. .. .................. 10 French Overs as Departments in Western Hemisphere (M.rtinique, Guadeloupe and Frenc Guiana)) 106 Gabon ...................................... 52 Gambia .................. ... 60 Germany ("German Democratic Republic" and East Berl-in) .............................. 18 Germany (Federal Republic- and West Berlin). 18 Ghana.* ..... **to ........ ....... * .... 56 Greece... ................................... 64 Grenada........ 104 Guadeloupe..o .............................. 106 Guatemala. .-..........o ...................... 114 Guiana, British ............................ 102 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 COUNTRY Page Guiana, French ......... ............................... 1.06 Guinea........ . ................ ..................... 56 Guinea, Portuguese .................................... 46 Haiti............................ ..................... 112 Honduras .............................................. 114 Hong Kong.. ......................................... 88 Hungary ............................................... 28 Iceland........ ........................................ 20 Ifni .................................................. 46 India ................................................ 76 Indonesia ............................... 96 Iran....... ....................... .................... 68 Iraq .................................................. 72 Ireland........ , ..................................... 4 Israel ................................................ 70 Italy ................................................. 12 Ivory Coast............ ............................... 50 Jamaica ............................................... 104 Japan....................... ........................... 94 Jordan--o .......... oo.-o ...... sees ... o ......... . 70 Kenya.................. ............................... 42 Korea, North ("Democratic People's Republic of Korea").... .. .. .................................. 92 Korea, Republic of (South Korea)...................... 92 Kuwait ........ .............. ....................... .... 72 Laos .................................................. 86 Lebanon ............................ .................. 68 Leeward Islands.............................,.......... 104 Liberia ................................................ 58 Libya .................................................. 38 Luxembourg....... ........... .......................... 8 Malaya, Federation of... sees ........... o ...... * ... so.. 82 Malagasy Republic, (Madagascar)........ .......... ....... 54 Mali. ................................................. 58 Martinique ................ ... ......................... 106 COUNTRY Page Mauritania ................................... 54 Maur itius ............................ti:...... 44 Mexico ...................................... 114 Morocco ..................................... 36 Mozambique .................................. 46 Nepal.. ................................... 78 Netherlands ............................. 6 Netherlands Possessions (western Hemisphere) 108 New Zealand.. ........... ...............-... 98 Nicaragua ................................... 116 Niger . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . ..... . . . ..... . . . . . ? . . 50 Nigeria.......... .... ....................... 60 Norway. ...........r ......................... 22 Nyasaland, Federation of Rhodesia and....... 48 Outer Mongolia ("Mongolian People's Republic") Pakistan ...... . ...... ...... ........v.......? 74 Panama ................. ..................... 118 Paraguay*.*.*.* ........ *.so ... o .......... so. 122 Peru......... ................................ 128 Philippines ................................. 98 Poland..... ................................... 30 Portugal................... t o o .............. 14 Portuguese Africa (Angola, Mozambique and Portuguese Guinea) ......................... 46 Rhodesia, Federation of /Rhodesig and Nyasaland.. ................................ 48 Rio Muni ....... ............................ 46 Rumania ..................................... 30 Rwanda, Republic of ........ ..... 62 Sahara, Spanish .................... ..:...... 46 San Marino .................................? 13 Saudi Arabia ............. ........:........ .. 72 Senegal. ...... ............................. 54 Sierra Leone .......... ...................... 58 133 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 134 COUNTRY Page Singapore ............................................... 82 Somali Republic ........................................ 40 South Africa, Republic of .............................. 48 Spain. ................................................. 14 Spanish Africa (Spanish Sahara, Ifni, Rio Muni, Fernando Po).....?..?............sss...ss........s...s 46 Sudan..*****.* ...... o ....... ...... ............... 40 Surinam .........................................-........ 110 Swaziland .............................................. 48 Sweden. ................................................ 22 Switzerland ............................................ 16 Syria..................G............................... 68 Tanganyika ........... ..G............................... 42 Thailand ............ 0 ..................... 80 Togo ................................................... 60 Trinidad ............................................... 104 Tunisia ................................................ 38 Turkey.*..*..* .......... O G... 0 0 0 G O O. O O O O O G O G O O O O O. O O O O O 70 Uganda......... ......................................... 42 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics .................... 32 United Arab Republic (Egypt) ........................... 68 United Kingdom ......................................... 4 per Volta ............. ............................... 50 Uruguay ..................... ........................... 124 Venezuela .............................................. 120 Vietnam, North ("Democratic Republic of Vietnam")...... 84 Vietnam, Republic of (South Vietnam)................... 84 West Indies (Barbados, Windward Islands, Leeward Islands, and Grenada) (British)..... .................. 104 West Indies (Netherlands)............. ................. 108 Windward Islands (British) ............................. 104 Windward Islands (Netherlands) ......................... 108 Yemen, -The............................................. 72 Yugoslavia.-... .......? .......................r....... .. 34 Zanzibar. ................. ............................. 44 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-00756R000300100001-6 An Index to the Trends in World Communism: How Wolfgang Leonhard sees the Ideological Spectrum of the East. Die Zeit, Dec. 28, 7962 Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP65-007568000300100001-6