REVIEW OF THE WORLD SITUATION AS IT RELATES TO THE SECURITY OF THE UNITED STATES

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CIA-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4
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S
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18
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November 17, 2016
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November 9, 1999
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10
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 IEVfl I Or THE WORT 57TUU.VWN AS i1 RELATES TO THIS 5ECWt1TY OF THE W ITiJU 6TATI S 10 Emphasis on Aafao East Asia haft become the center of the world's mpxe3 irciats and urgent international tensions, The Western Powers, committed to a policy of containlnr Soviet influence, heretofore have cone contrated their efforts in Europe and the !dear East. The danger of Soviet aggression or subversion in these areas has not passed., but it has receded, k'nr the time being the ripe "revolutionary situation" of Communist doctrine is little in evidence, very much less than in trance and Italy a year or two ago. The year 1950 will be a crucial period in the efforts of the Western European community to reorganize and reconstruct its political, economic9 and military strength, These efforts? associated with the second, i.et,, con- structive, phase of the European Recovery Program (loft) and the first phase of the gil .tary Assistance Program (D4AP), remain the primary factors in calculations in US security interest s The opportunity to develop these long--awange prograws,, however,, exists because the thrrast of Communist revolution has lessened and the atmosphere of iam diaate military emergency has liftedo While the strength and stability of Europe will continue to be of prior strategic importauzce to the U$ zaost of the crises of 1950 probably will arise in Asia? Some of them are ri ready at hard, In Asia,; the situation is still fluid. As elsewhere around the Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : ClA RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/2;.}x4-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 world, the USSR is working toward the expansion of soviet ins fluence,, 1.s elsewhere, the USb t has employed the traditional pressures of power politics wh never they seemed profitable, but mainly relies on the revolutionary Communist techniques of propaganda, infiltration of government by subservient local Gomm monists, :ubversicn, and in3urrectiono In China., the local Coro?-unist movement eas able to identify itself with endemic agrarian discontent as well as with national resentment against Western in- tervention, The revolution has succeeded and, temporarily at least,, virtually has destroyed US influence in China along with the poi;er of the Kuomintang government. Peasant unrest and nationalism are not peculiar to China? They are powerful forces nearly every- where in Asia, Moreover,, at present there is a stubborn elesrnent of anti-Westernism in Asiatic nationalism, The urgent question of 19% in Asia, therefore, is whether 6ovietcoriented, China based Communism can continue to identify itself with nationalism, exploit economic privations and anti Western sentiment, and sweep into power by one mans or another elsewhere in Asia? 2, Communism in China, In the long run, and to some extent in 1950, the success of Sovielt-oriented Communism in South Asia will depend on hom China develops as a base from which to export revolution, The Chinese Communist regime in Peiping has won undisputed military control of China proper and will receive diplomatic recognition by most of the nations of the world,., 2 Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 SAC h` Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 iI C1i T an & cognitto i~ Political leaders in w ny 4k$ vatic sts mess, particularly Nehru in inch? ser thL advent Of the Coz'nur-ist rsgimes to poorer as the culmir,E. tiorl of an indigenous national ravol.ut1cn of marw years duration aanck vreicameo it as suChe Though these k,si?ttic political `leader: s.ay have misgivings about the Communist govern- ment the; consider it to have a comparativealy broad popular base and thexw.fore to be., qualified to replace the ltuomintang, which not only has bser, thoroughly discredited as an effective government but also was widely identified 'ith ti--extern intervention., dictatorial political procedurrs, and special privilege for a landed,, cotr-merdia?? and financial minority* Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 SECIMT 25X6 c:. Eclipse of the Nationalist CovernmentQ The collapse of organized resistance on the mainland Md - 14 ShCt 'T Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 .c "rY r.. I. .1, ski w t tF t Approved For Release "2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 SBCHHT retireaoent ox the National uovern ent to the Taiwan redoubt havz^ ended whatever slight chance there wa:3 that the Kuomintang could place any effective opposition in the way of Communist control of ('tzinao Various r z.ante of the old political and military machine of Chiang Kai-shek are struggling desperately to work out political realignments that will give the illusion of success- Ally coping with the gram economic and administrative difficulties in Taiwan. Discontent among the native Taiwanese, poor morale among the Nationalist _orces, and corrupt inefficiency on the part of the Chinese authorities continue as before, however, and in time would undermine the Nationalist position even if the Corm= muniets did not assault t .1-m island, Actually the Nationalists are only toying with the local problems. Basically they are concentrating on one last hop decisive bS intervention on their behalf against the Chinese Communists, In these circumstances eventual Communist capture of Taiwan probably will occur in 1950, Nothing short of outright military occupation and complete administrative control by the b5 is likely to save the island. Even assuming occupation of Taiwan to be strategically advant .genus enough to warrgnt using; the necessary forces, such US action would seriously hamper the achievement of general US aims in Asia, It would give new grounds for Communist and other anti grestern attacks on W "impsrialismFZ? Probably it Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 SECANT Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 would prevent the newly independent governments of India and Pakistan from coaperati.r g with the US in South Asia. It would diminish LAS prestige and. opportunities for leadership in the IL Inside Ghana the propaganda thus that US aims were "im- perialistic" would spread among Chinese of all shades of political belief, Finally., the more. doctrinaire S alinist leaders among the Chinese CoMaunists would advance their positions at the expense of such Communists as way be favorably disposed toward an independent policy in international affairs and an accommodation with the Western Powers d0 The Link between Peiping and Moscow. The critical question with respect to China concerns whether or not eventual accommodation of some kind between Cosw munist (hu.& and the Western Powers is a possibility. On the basis of preliminary evidence tho tentative anse-sr is that such an ac- commodation is possible but remote in tined The Chinese Communist leaders certainly are confirmed Marxist-Leninist Communists and not simply agra?ian reformers. Nevertheless, they have built their power on peasant support, most of which they won as agrarian reformers, The Peiping regirie is the victorious party in a long national rebellion. Part of their popular appeal has stemmed from their steadfast opposition to ?iehtern imperialism. As a result the Communist administration is unlikely to be overthrown by internal Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 S rt Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 foresee 'r, iadgj,; ij n to possess:b-i ; a powerful apparatus of cutatrol the Corramunis't. govr xr4nar? :=.s prob-ably core otficient and less cos rupt than any r v ? -., w:.tt 4n the rnamo,- y of living. Chinese, The d?eipi ig lee dor:_-i probably wiU tz~,T hard to widen the base of their popviar support end retsin their reputation as nationalists while at the aame time at mr ngibes;ing the rather unpopular alliance with the USSR. The i.r success will depend mainly on the degree of subservience that May b3 re-qu:&,rerd by the Soviet Politburo,, which thus far bas guided then Chinese Communists by a relatively :loose rein, At best,, Chinese Co +.rur.,i.st Party Chairman Rao Tse-tung has to look forward to many years, probably at, least a decade, of indwtriAl- iz tion and irrdcctr:illation before he has an urban proletariat of sufficient size and loyalty to permit effective socialization of Chinese economy and society, during this period,, progress in industrialization wi-7.1 dapand on extensive capital accumuIation4 Assuming that the bulk of it, does not come in the form of Soviet or other foreign iaivostiaent, which. 3eew,3 likely,, most of this capital will have to couao from thtl scanty surpluses of China's small-scale agriculture., Gonsequentiy,, long before basic socialization can begin, Chinese Communist administrative efficiency and peasant to raltie i will be severely tested by the problem of ex-- tracking this af:ricuitura1 surplus and using the proceeds as capital for zndastriali. nation'-, Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 daJ~'1 t. Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 China., in cons jlle zce of It e size, he primitive character of itc aconozry, and the durr.uility of itzt cultural tradition., always has px ved difl"i$ ul-v enou{ h for any re itae to manage, let alone razno:l.do It is true that the lLizit has developed to new height, of pro 'rtssioiial. skill the theory and practise of capturing and controU z(* social insti.tutione, Soviet penetration o f icey units of the Piping adzainiatrat.ion i8 now in process, however, and the USSR, capitalizing on the Sino--Soviet alliance and China ? s requests for assistance, Is installing itself solidly in China, thus reducing the chances for Chinese "Titoism" and reducing the impact on the USSR or whataver dissident movements develop, The ultiri.te C isi a orientation in international affairs is impossible to estimate with confidence at this stage For some time at least China will apj>Bar an uncertain quantity to Soviet leaders, in- cluding Stalin,,, whose fingers were burnt in dealing with unreliable Chinese r3volutionar y nationalists a quarter-century ago,,. +o T'se-tzang probably will bring back from Moscow a treaty of Sine-,Soviet friendship guaranteeing Soviet economic and technical assistance to China and arranging for Joint development and use of Chineso military facilities,, From the Soviet point of view all thasxr links with China are of long'ran .!strategic value, For the immediate `uture the Kremlin probably will continue to tighten the Soviet grip on the inoreasin y autonomous bordor areas of Manchuria, Approved For Release r-LA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 MT I Approved for Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 Inner Mongolia, and S3nkiang. In China proper,, privileged Soviet banks and Soviet-owned or joint Sino-.Soviet coamert: 1 enterprises will ear to influence Chinese production and trade into patterns agroesnle to general Sov1.it objectives, The tWR probably does not v3h to become deeply committed in the painful and intricate taeka of reorganizing China es economy to food its vast population, Nrrrerthelcea, many Chinese zrila hold the USS&t and the Peiping regine jointly responsible for the famine and inflation that is bound to arouse widespread disccmtent in the coming year. Resentment is already in evidence among non-Communist Chines, and apparently among a few Chinese Communist Party members over Soviet privileges end economic exploitation of Uanchuria, rumored, Soviet profiteering in trade, and the influx of Soviet political, technical and military adviser 3, If dissatisfaction against Soviet penetration of the government ard economy grow3, the Peiping regime will be increasingly vL nerable to effective criticism from the nationalist point of view, In these circumstances the Chinese Communist leadsrs will find it hard to follow the Stalinist line scrupulously,, espcc1ally in international affairs. In rogard to relations with the Western Powers in particular, foreign capital and foreign manufacture.-i will exercise a grorit attraction to e'conom,ic planners intent on industrialization, A demonstration of independdnce of &oscow, even though accompanied by continued assevdracions of Communist faith, probably would re:.re.:or.~" the Peiping regime's popular standing, Approved For Release 2000/08/23 :9=-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 Approved For Release 200%/9yq/ 3_: CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 US interests will be advencsd by ovezy new strain on the link between Peiping and scow The existing strains in Sino'Soviet relations9 however, probata.y -rill not become critical in 19%, For several years, China probably will be a reliable instrument of Soviet foreign policy$, though it will not contribute much to the Soviet uiitaz7 potential, In theses years the Chief threat China wL 11 pose to US interests in Asia will be as a base from which to carry on revolutionary activity elsewhere in Asia0 00 Beyond China. Tthatever alas is envisaged in the Politburo 9s plans for the Peiping Cormur-ist.s, the USSIt pla3nl y proposes to use the Chino base in its drive to spread Cciunis c In Asia. As of 1 January 1.950 a kind of Co sin otsa of the Orient has been set up in Peiping under the designation of "Liaison bureau" of the Go-mmuniot-con trolled World Federation of T: d,5 Unions ;YaFTU)0 it will facilitate Soviet control of Asiatic la'oor.? groups, among which opposition to Communism is alight and unorganized, and set up new labor federations where they do not exist? The Chinese representative on the bureau, one of the four "preaponsiUs" : mbero (with the represenTatdves from the USSK. Australia, and India), will be able to exploit the sympathies of overseas Chinese, The function of the Peiping Liaison Bureau is Indicated in recen Chinese Co>runist propaganda, calling for Cormunjat labor oadre to Assist in the "armed stru gle" for Approved For Release 2000/09~MlCIA-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 SECIM? "nation*l liberati.oa, 4 particularly in the more vulnerable "coloni.ri" ar4as of South xorea, Indochizsa. and Indonesia. In 3r16a of the 1u0tr. bilittr of western influence In Indochina, where the Ppejicb still have not transferred total sovereignty to the nationalist but non ist Ytetna., regime of Bso Dal, the Whole, of southeast Asia has become excellent ground for poltttcal gains at "inirum dense to Cor nist China end the USSA, Tbsre is probably more than an even chataee that the French will be forced to withdraw from Indoeb1na within two yeexe, tearing control in the hands of a Communist-led, indigenous regime. Once Indochina had succumbed, the fragile Trial and Burmese governments also would orient themselves at least nomina.ly toward China rather that toward the West. Thus the line of farthest Communist advatico would approach the borders of India ana Indon si,a. alaere Wee tern influence has been Zrovin ; rather than, diminishing since the British and Dutch gr rated nationalist regimes virtually complete independence. prompt and wholehearted French adoption of the British teclrigna, thaw is, winning influence by losing aolories,,possibly could elirAiruit, the semi-colonial situation from which Communist movement In Indochina draws its strength. The time to try is short, Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/23 gQ DP67-00059A0005001000;10-4 The eee1:4W off oC Comm auis t rauces beyond Mina will ~ to a greet "tent on the irawrMt political. stability and economic strength of stem-CCOMMtolot redone. Two stubborn feats to be dealt rich are bitter inter regional antago sms and chronic f i margins of economic cutfieir~aciy-. These facts underlie the present conflict between the pow, ?omPSrasive1y stable. and comparatively pro-Western states of the I~ atl snbcontinat. At present Pakistan and India are on8N#-Ug in a Costly caim of economic warfare that neitber country can afi''os+d. The issue is broader than Conflicting territorial claims future political affiliation of ~,. `but the stair is the main immediate of contention. For point two years the UX has tried . aAd failed to find a mutually acceptable solution of the Baslzmir case. Public opinion on both side] is sufficiently inflamed to create sore threat of the re-? newel of arced -hostilities. In this atmosphere, trade between the two countries Yirtual4 ceased after India devalued its currency and Pakistan refused to follow suit . India's Jute end cotton goods industries soon will be In severe straits, and the entire economy Pakistan will be seriously hand'"'PPed by the suspension of coal shiPnen;s from India. 2' a outbreak of war in all likelihood would to both countries. In prove disastrous ay event. the Prolongation of punitive trade interdictions would grave'y weaken both states and in time would create the economic and social 'eat the USS$ is horeftitla. a~faitingo - 12 ?- SM Approved for Release 2000/08/23 -RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 SAM T 4. ~u a n Be rovers=s,,,,1g ?her* are increasing si, s of a return to oceparat1ve "unIai4tF" in the polltice1 affairs of moat Weetersa Buropsan nations. Frlmalf r, the Chia is a result of the swoess of the first (i.e., r'ebabllttsr- Lion) phtpe of the brapeaa BCoverr Program. This cb g. has not been as rmmised blessing for zitioas facing the oo plex issues of the second p#mse of recovery, wbis involves maintaining a stable and e:qerzdins ecano r in the whol9.Weetern Etopean region. Political coalitions of moderate middle parties such as those which have cooperated in re- sistauee to Comm mist seisms of power in France and Italy tend to crumble as soon as the immediacy of the threat of Comruuish recedes. In France particularly, the "third force" government almost con- stantly is on the verge of disintegration as a result of tuademental dis- agreements over eoeiaweoo c policy, centering at preuent in the controversial issues of wage, price, and tax levels? Decisions on these issuos were avoided or compromises reached as long as Communists -a or Gaxtl vista ..,. were threatening to end both representative government and political dissension. In a aenee, the political disputes in France spring from successful inddustrial rehabilitation and from the containment of the advance of Communism a, the Luebeck Trieste line. In this sense the 5nitial success of 03 strategic aims in Europe has permitted a return to zmtional strife over domestic socio-economic policy. The Initial euaccss cannot alter the fact that the political instability of France Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 SECS or elsewhere in Western Europe threatens to sabotage the second (i.e., constructive) phase of reao+rery, undermine the Atlantic Pact silitaz7 s11iance, end eventually bring back the Comvit List sonace. Inds MA *2 Rolla MAGUA. leprovemmts in Western Suropeaa levels of tadt*stria3 production, now above 3.938 ererages, only accentuate the broader problea of re- orgaaisiag and rebuilding the several national economies to ca ete in world narkets, pasNricularly in the Western Bemisphore. The industrial nations must secure raw materials and sell manufactured goods outside Western Europe if they are to maintain employment. expand production and productivity, and coopers with one another In regional military prograve. For a le, the extraordinary economic revival of Western Germany now, has reached the stage where pressure for new markets is becoming an iutportant factor in Germany1s political as well as economic orientation. German exports are falling off. lnless German goods can cross national barriers to reach consumers in the non-Soviet worlds, there will be a strong compulsion to revive an extensive and perhaps politically entangling trade with Soviet-dominated Eastern Europe. Britain and France in particular must adjust their overseas trade in a way to reduce the dollar deficit, which threatens to persist after the and of M. whey have been making little headway in this direction. In 1949, Preugh exports to the dollar area have paid on the average for only about 15 percent of imports from the dollar area, only a slight gain -l4- SFCBET Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 Approved For Release 2000 3 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 over the preceding year. Simi1ar17, although the UK has attained a rough over-all balance of paysents, the sterling area as a whole still is biin from dollar markets goods worth approximtely one bullion dollars more than it is suing. In view of the probable persistence of dollar deficits, the Western Burgpeaan nations will be driven increasingly to put further restriotione on dollar imports. In this circumstance, unless Western Iuropo develops other markets and soirees of supply, or new forms of 11$ financial aid replace REP funds, european production will decline, perhaps to the point of frustrating US strategic aims in urope, k. Po l ttcal Crisis iu Iraece 7rance's economic recovery, accompanied by rises in the cost of living, has sharpened the political controversy over distribution or redistribution of the increased Incomes The current differences between the Socialists and the Radical Socialists over the budget and over wage policy and wage controls have been bridged by government compromises, but only with great difficulty and by a slender margin. The recent agreement to restore collective bargaining was a major concession to the Socialists, who anticipate a general wad increase as a result. Considerable economic unrest and political a. tation probably will make themselves felt in the near future, first during a drive for an additional cost-of-living bonus and later in campaigns for wage increases. By the end of December 1949, the cost-of-living index for the average Parisian worker without dependents had risen more than -15- SBC~"' Approved for Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/2P&1A-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 16 percent above the level of September 1946. when the government permitted the last increase in wages, The Bidault government way bs forced to concede zone new wage benefits along the lines of Socialist demands. but will then find. It e'en hard..er to Increase tax revenues and balsam the budget in the face of Radical--Socialist opposition. As labor costs rise and bring about higher prices, drench industrialists will resist more strorWly than ever an efforts to relax import restrictions and thus expose their products to competition from lower- cost producers. economic, political, and military weaknesses lie just below the surface of the eonparatively "normal" political bargaining and bickering in the French Assembly, 5' i onojjc Reprint tgn ms's osleyiaz. The Tito regime in Yugosslavia still appears to be more immediately concerned with economic problems than with the danger of Soviet or satellite military action. The Tugoslavs recently have wade ei.gnifi- cant advances in offsetting the Soviet economic blockade of Tii oelavia by strengthening their economic ties with the West. After long negroo. tiatious, a five'-yaar agreement, bringing Yugoslavia L 110,000,000 worth of badly needed capital equipment and raw materials from the UK, has been completed. A trade agreement with Western German r will provide Yugoslavia with $60,000,000 worth of coke, machinery, and industrial goods during 1950. The recently concluded US civil air transport agreement and t approval of Yugoslavia's purchase of civil aircraft parts will contribute further towerd 'smroved relations crith the Meat, as will ntterialization of the proposed $25,000,000 lnterni tional Banat loan. Assurance of further Western assistance, especially US dollc.r cre.Lta, may Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : Cl- RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 SGRT Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4 SECBET be required during the com z ; months to sustain Yugoslav will to resist Soviet pressure as well as to carry the Yugoslav economy through the traasitional reorientation toward the Western world. The USSR seems to be curr+entiy preoccupied with shoring up Soviet control of the other Eastern Zluropean states and reducing ?deviat oaisu" sons Commmist orgaai.satione outside the orbits especi?ilp in It .y and Prance. Recent Noscow propaGanda, has shifted its emphasis from frantic izsistence on the eradication of the Tito government to the tbame that "Fascist" and "imperialie t" Yugoslavia must be "sealed off" effectively, from the purer world of Moscow-dominated Corn k isr . This shift may indicate that the USSR is prepared to tolerate the Tito situation for some time. Temporarily, in any event, the western boundary of Soviet domination in the Balkans r=e along the Evmaaian and Bulgarian frontiers rather than along the Adriatic coast. 6. Eesvtian Elections. In B'pt's first free elections since 1935, the Wafd Party has won an overwhelming Parliamentary majority and has now formed a government. As a result of this election, the prestige and political influence of King Farouk, who dominated the coalition cab-nets of the past fire years, has been diminished. The Ward victory will bring an unaccustomed stability to the government because of Wafdist parliamentary strength and popular support. The Wafd will continue Bgypt' aliment with the Western Powers in opposition to the USSR, and relations with the British, who were responsible' for Wafd control of 3 yptiaat affairs during the wars probably will improve. The new Egyptian Government and the UK may well reach a 17.- Approved For Release 2000/08/23 j.RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 'o Approved For Release 2000/08/8i1A-RDP67-00059A000500100010-4 satisfactory compromise on revision of the Anglo-E yptian Treaty a" may also reach an understanding over reduction of Egypt's sizable blocked sterling balances. Successful settlement of these issues would permit the British to continue their stssLtegie control in the Baetern Heditenanean. which is c3mpatible with VS security interests. 7. CariblbAum Lltercatisn . Vs recent disputes between Cuba and the Dominican Republic on the one hand and Haiti and the Dominican Republic on the other have not threatened open warfare, but they do reflect the continued seriousness of underlying political tensions in the Caribbean area, They adversely affect progress toward greater solidarity within the American family of nations. The Cuban-Dominican dispute, a prominent feature of which was Dominican congressional autcorisation of special war-powers for Trujillo, was brovht to the attention of the Inter-American Peace Committee of the Orgaaiaation of American States (OAS). The second dispute came to the OAS when Haiti charged Dominican participation in an abortive plot to overthrow the Haitian President, tin with the result that the Rio Treaty was involed at the request of both governments. While fundamental differences between these countries rennin unresolved and futher manifestations of mis- trust and hostility may ba expected, the lecision of the Council of the OAS to study the Caribbean situation will at least curb open hostility. The appeal probably will increase the prestige and usefulness of the Rio Treaty and strengthen the formal machinery of inter-American solidarity against more serious tests in the future. SECRT Approved For Release 2000/08/23 : CIA-RDP67-00059AO00500100010-4