CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY

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Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 CONFIDENTIAL CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY COPY NO. 50 OCI NO. 5644/58 20 November 1958 DOCUMENT NN!O. --I-- No CHANGE IN CLASS. 0 ^ DECLASS( CLASS. CHANCED TO: NEXT REVIEW DAtI : AUTH: 4F4R 70-2 DATE; CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE CONFIDENTIAL ARCHIVES & RECDRDS CENTER 25X1 State Department review completed IDIATELY AU4R USE Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002000040001-6 THIS MATERIAL CONTAINS INFORMATION AFFECT- ING THE NATIONAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE ESPIONAGE LAWS, TITLE 18, USC, SECTIONS 793 AND 794, THE TRANSMIS- SION OR REVELATION OF WHICH IN ANY MANNER TO AN UNAUTHORIZED PERSON IS PROHIBITED BY LAW. The Current Intelligence Weekly Summary has been prepared primarily for the internal use of the Central Intelligence Agency. It does not represent a complete coverage of all current situations. Comments and conclusions represent the immediate appraisal of the Office of Current Intelligence. Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Next 6 Page(s) In Document Denied Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Ef 7- n r' ow- - -- - CONFIDENTIAL Khrushchev's "document" probably will seek to justify a subsequent transfer of Soviet control of Allied access to Berlin to the East Germans. Khrushchev hinted in his 14 No- vember speech that his new pro- posals would be addressed to all CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST BERLIN SITUATION The USSR last week appeared to be preparing new diplomatic maneuvers on Berlin. Soviet Ambassador Smirnov presumably disclosed the nature of Soviet plans to Chancellor Adenauer on 20 November. These probably will include official proposals to the Western powers calling on them to withdraw their forces from Berlin, to meet on a high level to revise Berlin's status and probably to recognize East German "sovereignty" over the city. Khrushchev declared on 14 November that the "Soviet Government is preparing an ap- propriate document on the status of Berlin." Moscow is seeking to bol- ster its claim that the Western powers have nullified the legal basis for their presence in West Berlin by a long series of vio- lations of the Potsdam Agree- ments. The Soviet Embassy in East Berlin on 18 November staged a press conference de- signed to dramatize long-stand- ing Soviet allegations that the West has been using West Berlin as a base for "subversive activ- ity" against East Germany and the satellites. In articles on 17 and 18 November Pravda attempted to refute themes' position that their right to remain in Berlin rests on Germany's uncondition- al surrender rather than the Potsdam agreements and called for a "radical" solution of the Berlin problem. ER ANY Vorsfelde BERLIN WEST GERMANY- BERLIN COMMUNICATION ROUTES West German = Autobahn - Highway East German checkpoints: --Railroad checkpoints: L Railroad ? Railroad 0 Highway M,- ,oo ^ Highway the countries that fought against Germany and Italy, thus raising the possibility that the USSR will call for a general peace conference to discuss a revision of Berlin's status as part of a broader German settlement. PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 1 of 10 c uth ,~ tenfuerst Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET Autobahn Highway __ _ Railroad Roil road (elevated) Subway CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY Golm o rkenwerder Hohen uendorf Ut ~111 railr Further hints as to the general nature of new Soviet proposals appeared in the Pei- ping People's Daily on 15 No- vember. An ditoal declared that a withdrawal of foreign troops from Berlin "would be a good start toward the withdrawal of foreign troops from the whole of Germany." It also stated that "unification" of Berlin would improve relations between East and West Germany and fa- cilitate solution of the unifi- cation problem by the German people themselves. The Soviet leaders prob- ably expect the Western powers to reject any proposals which abandon the principle of four- power responsibility for either Berlin or German reunification. They may believe that Western rejection would serve as a pre- text for subsequent unilateral action bythe USSR with respect to Berlin. Khrushchev's plan reportedly is to give an aura of legality to its granting full sovereignty to East Germany by offering to conclude a German peace treaty. If the treaty offer is rejected and negotia- tions fail, Khrushchev would then unilaterally turn over So- viet functions in Berlin, thus forcing the West to deal with the East German regime. SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 2 of 10 -- Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY The East Germans are strong- ly echoing Soviet demands that Berlin be turned over to them, although they are making some effort to appear reasonable. The release by East Germany of an American citizen held since 17 October was probably intended as a conciliatory gesture. Moscow-appears determined to push ahead with plans to transfer certain functions to the East Germans, and Soviet - East German negotiations to this effect may soon take place. Premier Grotewohl's statement on 14 November that'.he would be "abroad" on 11 and 13 December backs up reports that a meeting will take place in Moscow in December. The legal transfer may take the form of a new agree- ment revising or abrogating the Bolz-Zorin exhange of letters of 20 September 1955. Under these documents, the USSR re- tained control "for the time being" over the transit through East Germany of personnel and vehicles of Allied garrisons in West Berlin. The cessation of East German payments in support of Soviet occupation troops, set for January, might afford an ap- propriate occasion for some bi- lateral transaction underlining East German "sovereignty." Moscow's first move to transfer its functions may be the withdrawal of the Soviet Kommandatura from Berlin and the transfer to East Germany of ac- tual control of check points on access routes to West Berlin. This might be accompanied by ef- forts to replace Soviet repre- sentatives by East Germans at the Berlin Air Safety Center. An East German international lawyer has already alleged that the West is using the air cor- ridors illegally and has as- serted the West would have to negotiate with East Germany to enter the city by ground or air. Although the USSR has not yet handed over any of its func- tions, US officials report that East German railway police stood by while Soviet officials ex- amined Allied documents at the Marienborn check point, possi- bly indicating that the USSR will soon transfer these func- tions to East Germany. More- over, although Soviet officials permitted American Army person- nel and vehicles held on 14 No- vember to return to West Berlin, the political adviser: of the Soviet commander in chief on this occasion declared that So- viet authorities intend to ex- ercise their "right" to inspect covered vehicles belonging to the Allied garrisons. The im- mediate prospect therefore ap- pears to be further harassment of Allied access. West European Reaction West German officials, fear- ful that East German harassment of West Berlin will again threat- en the city's economic welfare, point out that continued pros- perity may have sapped the Ber- liners' will to resist. They also are concerned that the gradual introduction of a "slow blockade"--each step appearing inconsequential--may not evoke sufficient Western reaction to SECRET Page 3 of 10 _._____ __ Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 halt it. To date, however, Berliners have remained calm and there has been no panic buying. The NATO members, in agree- ing on 17 November on a firm Western stand in the, face of Soviet threats to Berlin, stressed the need for caution with respect to possible Soviet probing tactics designed to pro- voke incidents. The British and French are willing to undertake an airlift if necessary, but the British Foreign Office doubts the effectiveness of such action in the long run. French willing- ness to participate in an air- lift to a greater extent than in 1948 implies a preference for a technical demonstration rather than a military reaction. Chan- cellor Adenauer has implied Bonn would apply economic countermeas- ures, but the German Foreign Ministry feels that Bonn's ca- pacity for such measures is limited. Bonn would probably react strongly to even de facto deal- ings with East Germany, as they would undermine Chancellor Ade- nauer's entire foreign policy, which is based on Bonn's claim to represent all of Germany. Western contacts with East Ger- many would also increase senti- ment within all West German political parties favoring direct political talks with East Ger- many. Full diplomatic recogni- tion of East Germany by any of the Western powers would isolate Adenauer and could force a modi- fication of Bonn's whole Euro- pean policy. NEW SOVIET SEVEN-YEAR PLAN The theses on the Soviet Seven-Year Plan (1959-65) pre- sented by Premier Khrushchev to a meeting of the party central committee in Moscow on 12 No- vember reaffirm the priority schedule adopted by the leader- ship during the past several years. agricultural goals for 1965, while still overly ambitious, are more reasonable than before and are generally the same as those projected for 1960 by the Sixth Five-Year Plan. This ex- tension of goals is a consider- able step toward more realistic agricultural planning. The proposals show the new plan to be more realistic than its predecessor, the abandoned Sixth Five-Year Plan. The planned average annual indus- trial growth rate of 8,7 percent is believed feasible. The new Khrushchev claims that with- in five years after the Seven- Year Plan period, the USSR will lead the world in per capita industrial output. In making this prediction he apparently is assuming, as have recent SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 4 of 10 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUM RY 20 November 1958 articles in Soviet journals,, that in 1958 Soviet industrial production will be 50 percent of that of the United States; that American industrial produc- tion will grow at about 2 per- cent per year, the rate for the period 1953-57; and that Soviet industrial growth will proceed through 1970 at the proposed rate for the Seven-Year Plan. Actually Soviet industrial production will probably be somewhat less than 40 percent of American output in 1958. Furthermore, a longer and per- haps more representative base period for the United States--for example, 1948-56--would show a rate slightly above 4 percent. Using this rate and accept- ing the Soviet sched- ule for its own in- dustry, Soviet in- dustrial production would be only about 60 percent of that of the United States by 1970. Industry For the most part, the industrial goals presented in LOWER PLANNED GROWTH RATES 1952 -1958 (ANNUAL AVERAGES) 1959.1965 (ACTUAL) ( PLAN ) 11.5 GROSS INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT 8.7 12.2 PRODUCER GOODS 9.3 9.9 CONSUMER GOODS 7.3 15.2 8.5 9.6 8.5 12.2 cases exceed that in the United States and will provide the basis for a-major propaganda campaign. The new plan anticipates a shift from coal toward great- er use of crude oil and natural gas. These fuels, which pro- vided less than a third of the energy consumed in the USSR this year, will provide more than half in 1965. The pig-iron and crude- steel targets are ambitious, al- though probably feasible. How- ever, problems which have har- SOVIET SEVEN-YEAR PLAN - CRUDE OIL COAL METAL CUTTING TOOLS STEEL - ELECTRIC POWER - -11.0 - 2.6 - 5.4 - 7.0 -11.8 20 NOVEMBER 1958 assed the ferrous metallurgical industry for the last several years--inadequate supplies of iron ore, insufficient produc- tion of metallurgical equipment, and unduly long periods for mine and plant construction--must be solved if the crude-steel goal of 86,000,000 to 91,000,000 tons in 1965 is to be achieved. The planned increase in the share of investment going to ferrous metallurgy confirms the leader- ship's determination to solve these problems. While the plan calls for a lower annual rate of growth of crude-steel output Khrushchev's theses confirm that Soviet industry is scheduled to grow at a rate below that achieved in the previous seven years. Even if the regime hopes that the presently announced in- dustrial goals are overfulfilled, as they were in the past three years, the 11-percent rate of growth believed to have been achieved in the 1950-55 period will probably not be realized. The new program,nevertheless, is an impressive one; by 1965 the output of many basic raw materials and industrial prod- ucts will approach and in some SECRET OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 5 of 10 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 than that achieved during the last seven years, the required average annual increment to out- put is 4,500,000 to 5,100,000 tons compared with an annual 3,400,000 over the last seven years. During the period 1952- As a whole the output of the machinery and metalworking industries is to grow at an annual rate of about 10 percent, as compared with over 15 per- cent claimed during the previous seven years. Reflecting the USSR: STRUCTURE OF STATE CAPITAL INVESTMENT, (Figures in parentheses are estimates) 952 58 Seven-Year Plan - 1 (1959-65) Billion Percent Billion Percent "Productive" Investments 1955 of 1955 of Rubles Total Rubles Total Ferrous Metallurgy 42 3.9 100 5.1 Chemical Industry (28) 2.6 100-105 5.2 011 and Gas 73 6.8 170-173 8.8 Coal 62 5.8 75-80 4.0 Power and Transmission 75 7.0 125-129 6.5 Lumber, Paper, and Wood Processing 29 2.7 58-60 3.0 Construction and Construction Materials Industries 62 5.8 110-112 5.7 Light and Food Industries 40 3.7 80-85 4.2 Other Industry, including Machine Construction, Non- ferrous Metallurgy, Defense Industries (169) 15.8 (282) 14.4 Total Industrial (580) 54.1 (1,100-1,126) 56.9 State Agriculture* (125) 11.7 150 7.7 Rail Transport 60 5.6 110-116 5.7 Other "Productive;' including Other Transport, Communi- cations, Science, Trade, and Government (56) 5.2 (128-122) 6.4 "Nonproductive" Investments Housing and Communal Projects 208 19.4 375-380 19.3 Education 29 2.7 52 2.7 Culture and Health 14 1.3 25 1.3 TOTAL 1,072 100.0 1,940-1,970 100.0 *Total agriculture investment, including Investment of collect iw fauns, will be 495 bill ton rubles under the Seven-Year Plan, compared with 260 bill ion over the last seven years. 58, the capacity of the American steel industry increased by about 34,500,000 metric tons compared with the Soviet out- put goal for the next . seven years of 31,000,000 to 34,000,- 000 tons. emphasis on fuels and raw materials, however, the rates of growth of power-generating, chemical, and rolling- mill equipment are scheduled to increase substantially. Production of metalworking machinery will increase at half the previous rate, but heavy emphasis on spe- cialized machine tools will provide a growth rate for these items double that for metal- working machinery as a whole. The 1965 level of machine tool production, which is the same as the origi- nal 1960 goal, will provide a surplus for export. The share of in- vestment going to chemicals is approxi- mately double that of the past seven-year period. Heavy emphasis is placed on the pro- duction of artificial fertilizers and of synthetic materials. Fertilizer output is scheduled to approach 37,000,000 metric tons annually, well above current American levels, and may significantly improve agricul- tural yields. Fulfillment of the chemicals plan will depend in large measure on the success in developing the petrochemical industry. This is an area in SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 6 of 10 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 which the USSR has traditionally lagged, and achievement of the target seems improbable unless substantial assistance in the form of petrochemical technology and equipment is procured from the West. Despite promises in the proposed plan that per capita output of textiles, clothing, footwear, an' ,-I, food products will reach or even surpass West- ern levels by 1965, the output of consumer goods as a whole will remain far below Western levels and will grow more slow- ly--7.5 percent annually--than during the past seven years-- 9.7 percent. The prospect in agriculture partly accounts for this slowdown. Capital Investment State capital investment during 1959-65 is planned to total 1,940 td 1,970 billion rubles. When inves tr.e. by the collective farms--almost 350 b..llion--and other investments outside the plan are added, total capital investment may approximate 2,500 billion rubles billion if converted at an :.;vestment rate of 6.5 to 1, based on 1956 rubles and dol- lars. The proposed rate of in- vestment growth averages 8 percent per year, as compared with a 10-percent average dur- ing the last seven years. The volume of investment in construc- tion work, which was unusually high in 1957 and 1958, will in- crease at a rate lower than 8 percent, while investment in plant equipment will proceed at a rate higher than 8 percent. The ratio of "nonproduc- tive" investment (housing, com- munal projects, and social-cul- tural expenditures) to "produc- tive" investment remains ap- proximately the same as in the preceding period, although the share of industry will increase from 54 percent to 56 percent. Shares will increase for ferrous metallurgy, chemicals, oil and gas, and will drop for the coal industry and the machine con- struction industries. Over-all investment in housing and agri- culture will remain about the same share of total investment as in recent years when con- ic erable emphasis was placed on their development. SOVIET SEVEN -YEAR PLAN: PRODUCTION COMPARISONS OF SELECTED ITEMS STEEL 102 TONSON _~ 91 JUSSR(EST) MUSSR(PLAN) E:Jus CRUDE OIL NATURAL GAS MILLION 596-609 MILLION B;io;ON TONS ONS 355 306 GRAIN MEAT MILLION MI LION Tn.1 164-180 16 29.5 ELECTRIC POWER BILLION 760 KILOWATT- HOURS MOTOR VEHICLES REFRIGERATORS UNITS OUSAND 7221 THOUSAND 3350 TH r1 UNITS r5 SECRET 500 750-856 O OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 7 of 10 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUU EY 20 November 1958 The proposed plan calls for an increase of about 11,- 500,000 in the number of work- ers and employees,in the Soviet economy, bringing the total in 1965 to over 66,000,000. Dur- ing the past seven years the number of workers and employees increased by 13,900,000. Popu- lation growth and a continua- tion of past school programs would provide an increase of about 7,000,000 men in the total civilian labor force over the next seven years, compared with an increase of 9,800;000 during the last seven years. The regime is heavily com- mitted to a promise to reduce hours of work and has reaffirmed such an intention in its Seven- Year Plan announcement. Recent and prospective changes in the educational system are in part designed to free additional young people for employment in industry. The net effects of these changes are as yet un- clear, but they will probably provide an additional ..1,000, 000 workers and perhaps more to the labor force. This implies that :,some transfer of workers, possibly as many as 3,000,000, from agri- culture to nonagriculture will take place. One of the aims of present programs in agricul- ture is clearly to increase productivity in this area so as to permit the release of workers to industry. The regime may also find it expedient to re- duce further the size of the armed forces. Agriculture The plan for agriculture, which calls for lower rates of growth than those of the Sixth Five-Year Plan, calls for in- creases in production which gen- erally will be difficult or impossible to achieve--assuming average weather conditions-- under the agricultural programs adopted to date. The major new- lands expansion has been com- pleted and much of the gain pos- sible from the corn program has been achieved. Incentive meas- ures and organizational changes may have some further effect on output, but not of the magnitude of the new-lands and corn pro- grams. Khrushchev's theses suggest that the Soviet leaders may have further agricultural programs in mind, particularly with re- spect to increasing yields. Khrushchev referred, for example, to the "better utilization of the highly fertile lands in the zone of reliable and stable rain- fall." Taken together With planned high investment and the very large planned increase in the output of mineral ferti- lizers, this statement suggests that new programs may be con- templated for the European USSR. Even though the performance in agriculture will probably fall short of plan, some in- crease in consumption of high- protein foods will be possible. Nevertheless, in terms of both consumer goods output and pro- spective increases in real wages, SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 8 of 10 - - Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY the Soviet citizen will experi- ence a slower rate of improve- ment through 1965 than in the preceding seven years. The out- put of light industry--textiles, clothing, and footwear--is to increase at an annual rate of 6 percent for the next seven years in contrast with an 8.7- percent increase claimed for 1952-58, and quality will re- main below American standards. probably has underestimated the investment resources required for housing construction as it did in the Fifth and Sixth Five- Year Plans. Underestimation-- believed to be at least 15 per- cent--could necessitate either a reduction of the housing goal or an increase in investment in this area. Transport Although large percentage increases are planned in the production of durable consumer goods, especially household ap- pliances, the output of most such items at present is so low that 1965 production will still be far below that of the United States both on an absolute and a per capita basis. The brightest outlook for the consumer lies in housing, where the volume of urban housing construction is sched- uled to nearly double that achieved during 1952-58. This goal is aimed at providing a minimum of 100 square feet of living space per person by 1970, still below Western European levels. The regime, however, Railroad transport continues to be emphasized in the USSR, and in 1965 Soviet railroads will still move over 80 percent of intercity freight. The am- bitious program of electrifica- tion and dieselization will con- tinue. Although the Soviet civil air fleet continues to be publicized and the new civil air plans include the construc- tion and improvement of 90 air- fields, presumably to accommo- date jet aircraft, the planned target for passengers carried for 1965 is only about one third as great as the number Ameri- can airlines may be expected to carry that year. Motor vehicle transport will remain at a low level as will water transport. Prepared by ORR) 25X1 The military coup staged under the leadership of Lieu- tenant General Ibrahim Abboud has encountered no opposition. ou - 25X1 Fthe South----- ern u an, ra a tonally sus- picious of domination by Moslem SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 9 of 10 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 northerners and the scene of a rebellion three years ago, is normally slow to react. While the regime has included one southern representative among the five civilians in the new cabinet, the southerners may well feel they have lost influ- ence by the abolition of the parliament in which they often swung the balance. The structure of the gov- ernment now has been outlined. It consists of two bodies: a 13-man supreme council and a 12-member cabinet. The seven most senior army officers are members of both bodies. Abboud himself is head of the supreme council, prime minister, and FR. EQ AFRICA UAR (EGYPT minister of defense. The mem- bership of the council is round- ed out with other army officers, and the cabinet was completed with the appointment of five civilian "technicians." General Abboud justified the coup by claiming the gov- ernment needed to be purged of self-seeking politicians. Members of former Prime Minister Khalil's Umma party, and the Ansar sect's leader al-Mahdi, publicly indicated support for the new regime They nonetheless are hoping for the best in the belief that Abboud and his associates are "loyal Sudanese" first. There is no indication that the UAR played a role in the coup, One of Abboud's first statements, however, promised that the new regime would seek to improve relations between the Sudan and "sister UAR.'" SECRET BELGIAN CONGO OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 10 of 10 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 CONFIDENTIAL sW CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 NOTES AND COMMENTS SOVIET TACTICS IN GENEVA NEGOTIATIONS Both Geneva conferences remain deadlocked over agenda issues. At the ninth meeting of the conference on a nuclear test cessation agreement, Soviet representative Tsarapkin intro- duced a second revision of his draft agenda. Essentially the same as the draft presented on 11 November, the new proposal calls for agreement by the dele- gations to prepare two documents, one a treaty to stop tests and the other a "protocol" on a con- trol system. The Soviet dele- gation has evaded the question of the precise relationship be- tween these documents. The USSR's insistence that an agreement on test cessation and the provisions of a control system be embodied in separate documents reflects Moscow's principal aims in the Geneva talks. First, the USSR appar- ently believes this approach will facilitate its efforts to sharpen the contrast between its demand for a permanent and unconditional cessation and the Western proposals for a condi- tional suspension stressing the necessity of prior agreement on a control system. Moscow is maneuvering to place itself in the strongest possible posi- tion so that in the event of a breakoff, it can charge that Western insistence on the pri- ority of the control issue is an artificial device to evade an agreement to end testing. The Soviet demand for two separate documents also is in- tended as a safeguard against any unexpected Western conces- sions which would seriously em- barrass the Soviet leaders. Moscow has shown considerable caution on the nuclear test is- sue since the United States and Britain proposed a conditional one-year suspension last August. The Soviet leaders recognized this proposal as a major chal- lenge to their whole strategy. The refusal of the Soviet delegate to discuss controls until a basic agreement on a permanent cessation of tests has been reached is a reversion to the position taken by Moscow prior to its agreement last May to attend the Geneva talks on test detection which held that negotiations on the control of any aspect of disarmament could come only after agreements have been concluded in principle. The USSR's performance in Geneva to date suggests that its fundamental aim there,as at last year's London subcom- mittee talks, is to force a clear-cut showdown with the West on the issue of an uncon- ditional test ban separate from all other aspects of disarmament. The Soviet attack continues to be aimed at what Moscow consid- ers the most vulnerable points of the Western position--making a test cessation conditional on the implementation of other measures such as a control sys- tem, limitation and reduction of production of fissionable materials for weapons purposes, and reduction of conventional armed forces. The Soviet news agency TASS on 15 November carried the full text of the original five- part Soviet draft agreement calling for cessation of tests, with only vague language on a control system. Despite this violation of the agreement to keep the talks secret, Moscow ~Nmftpr CONFIDENTIAL NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 1 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT ' INTELLIGENCE ; WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 has not indicated any desire to break off negotiations. Surprise Attack The Soviet delegation at the talks on measures to pre- vent surprise attack continues its efforts to focus debate on broad political issues. In the 17 November meeting Kuznetsov reasserted Soviet objections to the Western working paper, again charging the West with inten- tions of using any inspection system for intelligence gather- ing. Kuznetsov reiterated past Soviet charges against United States SAC bomber flights in the direction of frontiers of other states. He introduced a draft proposal recommending that the participating govern- ments prohibit flights of air- craft carrying nuclear weapons over the territories of other countries and over open seas. The draft declares this practice increases the danger of surprise attack. Both on 17 and 18 November the Communist delegation in sited that any joint communiqud include a reference to the So- viet proposal. Kuznetsov threat- ened that if no agreement were reached, each side would have to publish its own version. Both sides have made conces- sions on the communiqud but this wrangling may develop into an almost daily problem. It seems likely that after the subject of aircraft flights is exhausted, the Communists will give similar treatment to other standard Soviet pro- posals, such as elimination of foreign bases, banning of nuclear tests, and reduc- tion of armed forces. Thus, Moscow has begun its battle to present proposals of a political nature to blur the focus of the talks, there- by avoiding serious dis- cussion and conclusions on the practical aspects of an inspection system. SOVIET CENTRAL COMMITTEE PLENUMS Khrushchev's firm control over the Soviet party and state was again forcefully demon- strated at the 12 November cen- tral committee plenum which approved his draft Seven-Year Plan and his reforms of the educational system. In his speech to the plenum, Khru- shchev for the first time branded Bulganin a member of the "antiparty group." This came almost 18 months after the group's original members---Ma len- kov, Molotov, Kaganovich, and Shepilov =had been demoted and banished, and at a time when Bulganin was no longer a polit- ical factor. Khrushchev's castigation of the former pre- mier is probably his way of re- emphasizing, as he launches a vast new economic plan, the hazards of foot-dragging and "conservatism." There also seemed to be overtones of political revenge, however. On 17 November Pravda claimed that the "antiparty- group," including Bulganin, had tried to delay the development SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 2 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 of the Soviet state and to steer it away from the "Lenin- ist path" adopted at the 20th party congress in 1956. A day later, Western press sources reported from Moscow that Bul- ganin had been removed from the chairmanship of the economic council in Stavropol Kray, a minor post to which he was rele- gated last August. If this report is true, Bulganin has probably already lost his mem- bership on the central committee, his last remaining party post. The other members of the "anti- party group" were deprived of central committee seats at the time of their ouster from the party presidium. The announcement that pre- sidium member Nikolay Belyayev has been removed from the party secretariat regularizes a situa- tion which has apparently exist- ed since December 1957, when he was transferred from Moscow to become first secretary in Kazakhstan. It now appears that Belyayev was sent by the Kremlin to central Asia on a trouble-shooting mission; his successes, particularly in ag- riculture, were probably major factors in the decision to as- sign him permanently to his position. While the announcement does not appear to presage any further change in Belyayev's status, its timing suggests that Khrushchev has begun the politi- cal maneuvering which inevitably precedes a party congress and may even be the first hint of impending personnel changes. Another central committee plenum is scheduled to meet next month to discuss agriculture. This meeting will probably set the line for the forthcoming all-union collective farm con- gress--the first since 1935. Problems of collective and state farm organization may be on the agenda, and a program to increase yields in the tradi- tional Soviet farming areas may also be initiated. mittee secretary to fill the vacancy caused by Belyayev's The December meeting may also consider other matters. While there are as yet no hints as to what other subjects might be discussed, any last-minute changes in the program to be presented to the party congress would likely be made at this time. Bulganin's removal from the central committee might be announced; less likely, although still a possibility, is the ap- pointment of a new central com- transfer. Except for minor variations, the report on the planned reor- ganization of the Soviet educa- tional system published on 16 November follows the lines laid down by Khrushchev in his memo- randum of 21 September. After a "nationwide discussion," the proposals will be adopted by the Supreme Soviet, probably early next year. The change-over to SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 3 of 17 the new system will begin with the 1959-1960 school year and will be completed in four to five years. It will be 10 months from the time Khrushchev proposed the scheme last March to the probable time of its adoption early in 1959. This lengthy discussion period is in sharp contrast to Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY the brief discussion periods allowed for Khrushchev's other major reorganizations. Ambassador Thompson in Mos- cow is inclined to believe that the adoption of these changes is likely to engender more op- position to Khrushchev person- ally than any other step he has so far undertaken since his as- sumption of power. Thompson comments, however, that this op- position is likely to be inef- fective, since it will be large- ly confined to some factory managers, intellectuals, and members of the bureaucratic elite, while the changes will be supported by a large propor- tion of the masses as well as by the party. The distaste many secondiw:ryr- school graduates feel for physi- cal labor is again cited in the theses: as evidence of the in- adequacies of the existing school system. The Soviet public is reminded it is a "very far- reaching error" to believe that automation will mean the end of manual labor, or that Communism will mean "a gentleman's life in which laziness and idleness reign." The need for physical labor will remain regardless of the degree of progress achieved. The theses add another reason for the reorganization, hereto- fore only hinted at--the "in- creasing difficulties" in find- ing jobs for secondary-school graduates and the resultant dis- satisfaction among a considerable number of young people and their parents. The theses outline the changes in greater detail. For most 15-'to 16-year-olds, com- pulsory eight-year schooling is to be followed by "socially use- ful work in production." How- ever, those with the will and stamina can continue their edu- cation in evening or correspond- ence courses. Shorter workdays or days off during the workweek are proposed for those students who can successfully combine work and study. The special schools for children gifted in music, choreography, and the visual arts are to be retained, and similar schools are being considered for gifted students of mathematics, physics, chemis- try, and biology. Graduates of these special schools are to go directly into appropriate higher educational institutions without being detoured into production work. Both polytechnical schools and boarding schools are also to be retained. The latter, established only recently, re- ceived especially high praise in the theses, being described as creating "the most favorable conditions for the education and Communist upbringing of the ris- ing generation." Higher educational institu- tions receive greater attention in the theses than Khrushchev gave them in his September memo- randum. Despite the emphasis on "productive work," universities are called on to increase "con- siderably" in the next few years the number of graduates in mathematics, biology, biophysics, biochemistry, physiology, genet- ics, chemistry, and physics. The number of well-qualified graduates in these fields will not be permitted to be lowered. Not only are the students of higher institutions to devote time to production work, but it is recommended that qualified professionals in industry and agriculture be released part time from their jobs to teach, while teachers are periodically to leave their teaching to work in "the national economy." Col- lective farms are urged to al- locate funds for the education of their youth in vocational schools; sovnarkhozy, fac- tories, and other organiza- tions are directed to allo- cate paid posts for working students. (Concurred in by OSI) SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 4 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 POLAND'S POSITION WITHIN THE SOVIET BLOC Polish party leader Gomul- ka's statements during his visit to the USSR from 24 October to 12 November convey the impres- sion that he and Khrushchev reached complete understanding of each ':other"s.. pbesitions. Gomulka apparently has no in- tention at this time, however, of changing those ushocts of his internal policies which set Poland apart from the other satellites. He reportedly re- marked prior to his departure for Moscow that the major aim of his trip was to allay Soviet suspicions of the Polish "road to socialism." Gomulka appears to have made a serious effort to accom- modate himself to'Khrushchev's foreign and ideological poli- cies, but at the same time he apparently convinced Khrushchev of the need to tolerate, if not approve, Poland's internal pro- gram. Gomulka made no public concessions on basic aspects of his domestic plans. Although little was said about economic aid, Khrushchev may have held out the prospect of increased assistance for Poland if Gomul- ka would adopt a line more em- phatically in opposition to the West and in accord with Moscow. During the trip, Gomulka repeatedly stressed that the unity of the Soviet bloc and the fraternal relations with the USSR are the bases of Polish policy. His speeches exhibited an anti-American and anti - West German attitude which exceeded in bitterness anything he had said before. In contrast to the many "peace.' initiatives" of the USSR and the "socialist camp," Gomulka alleged that there was danger in the "ag gressive tendencies of interna- tional imperialist circles," particularly the United States. In addition, he specifically endorsed I'~hrushchev's position on e %.i_sing the status of Berlin. SECRET Taking a very tough line toward West Germany--which until quite recently was con- sidering the establishment of closer relations with Poland-- Gomulka vehemently assailed Bonn's "militaristic and re- vanchist" policies. He clearly reflected Polish fear of Ger- many in warning that any at- tempt to alter Poland's west- ern border would threaten the peace of Europe and the entire world. Poland now has in the Soviet Union "an infallible friend and ally" against West- ern aggression, Gomulka as- serted. In the same vein, the Polish first secretary condemned American Far Eastern policy and charged the United States with armed interference in Chinese internal affairs. Gomulka also took a strong line in support of Khrushchev's position on Yugoslavia, terming Belgrade's present course "re- visionist." While admitting the possibility that Yugoslavia might some day abandon itopr.es- ent 'I.falce road" and again take its place in the family of "socialist",.countries, he stressed that the initiative for change must come from Bel- grade. Reacting sharply to Gomul- ka's attack, Belgrade's Borba . charged that the Poles have as- sumed the role of a "distin- guished fighter against Yugo- slav revisionism." The Yugo- slavs::undoubtedly see Gomulka's. behavior in Moscow as a seri- ous blow to the-effort to main- tain some-.influence in the bloc. While Belgrade's relations with Warsaw are not likely to sink in ;,the near future to the. level of its relations with the rest of the bloc, Yixgoslav disenchantment with Gomulka, which began with his entry in- 25X1 to the anti-Yugoslav -:cam- paign in June, is now virtually complete. NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 5 of 18 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 20 November 1958 SOVIET-IRANIAN RELATIONS Relations between the USSR and Iran, which cooled notice- ably after the coup in Iraq on 14 July, have recently deterio- rated further as a result of Moscow's efforts to forestall the conclusion, or at least to limit the scope, of an Iranian- American defense agreement. Moscow, increasingly displeased with Iranian policies, appears ready to switch from its three- year "friendship" policy to open hostility to the present regime. Premier Khrushchev's at- tacks on Iran in two speeches this month indicated Soviet dis- pleasure over Tehran's rejection on 8 November of the allegations contained in Moscow's 31 October note on the defense agreement. Speaking on 10 November at the Soviet-Polish friendship meet- ing in Moscow, Khrushchev warned Iran that by placing its terri- tory at the disposal of an "ag- gressor group," it "virtually" committed an ..L aggressive act against the USSR. The 31 Octo- ber note had warned Iran against "courting misfortune" and, using a now-standard formula, stated that the USSR "will not remain indifferent to the conclusion of an American-Iranian military agreement which will place the southern frontiers of the Soviet Union in direct danger." On 14 November, in a speech to Soviet military academy graduates, Khrushchev launched a thinly veiled attack on the Shah of Iran, alleging that "kings and rulers" of countries in partnership with the West "have begun to tremble; it is not Communism that frightens them, nor the Soviet Union, but their own people." Khrushchev's remarks appear to augur a great- er degree of open Soviet encour- agement of activity against the Shah. Since initiating its "friendship" campaign toward Iran early in 1956, Moscow has occasionally criticized Iranian policies but has persistently courted the Shah. In July 1958, however, after Soviet-Iranian relations became cool, an East German radio station began to beam to Iran anti-Shah broad- casts favoring the outlawed Tudeh (Communist) party. Recent Communist overtures to the Kurds, a substantial number of whom live in northwestern Iran, have also heightened psychological pressures on the Shah. The departure from Tehran of Soviet Ambassador Pegov, who left to attend the 12 November central committee, plenum was Tepiresented locally as being ,'a sign of Soviet dis leasure with Iranian policies. Moscow's war of nerves against Iran may be broadened to include a propaganda campaign inciting domestic fears of Soviet atomic reprisals, similar to those campaigns carried out against NATO countries a year ago. Khrushchev, in his 14 November speech, warned that one can "press a button and whole cities will be blown sky-high; whole countries can be de- stroyed." Moscow claimed that Secre- tary McElroy's visit to Tehran was linked with American plans to establish bases,, in Iran from which an atomic attack could be launched on the USSR. The Soviet effort to increase economic ties with Tehran has been stalled by lgck of Iranian i interest ,' in Soviet economic assistance overtures and by Iranian failure to implement economic agreements already concluded. SECRET PART TT NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 6 of 17 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET 20 November 1958 Recently published details for the first stage of the UAR's Aswan High Darn project indicate that it should produce on its scheduled completion in four years a substantial portion of the benefits to be derived from the entire 12-year project. Soviet aid will cover virtually all of the foreign exchange costs--$100,000,000 of a total of about $116,640,000--of the first construction phase of the project. Completion of this phase will result in an addition to Egyptian agriculture of up to a million acres of perenn.ly irrigated land and al the conversion of about 700,000 acres from flood to perennial irrigation. The first phase, however, will not provide for ASWAN HIGH DAM CROSS SECTION 'IGURES IN FEET storage from year to year, and a large portion of the newly irrigated areas would be with- out adequate water in years of low Nile flood. While the first phase will result in a small addition to electric power generated by the existing Aswan Dam, the major power increases will not come about until the High Darn itself is complete. In the first phase, two cofferdams will be built-- one upstream and one downstream --close to the construction site of the main dam--and seven diversion tunnels will be con- structed. Both cofferdams will ultimately be incorporated in the High Dam proper. The up- stream cofferdam will hold back about eight billion cubic meters of water--the existing Aswan Dam stores 5.3 billion cubic meters of water. Ultimately the. High Dam will hold 130 billion cubic meters--three times the volume of the Hoover Dam's Lake Meade--and create a reservoir about 340 miles long. The last 100 miles of this reservoir would extend into the Sudan, making rela- tively urgent a settlement of the UAR-Sudanese dispute over the distribution of Nile waters and compensation for the flooded area. 25X1 ported in southern Egypt t study the project. F By constructing the first phase, which will yield the SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 7 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY greatest impact the soonest, Moscow will receive the maximum propaganda, regardless of who finances the High Dam proper. The area newly irrigated by this phase should provide farm land for up to 150,000 new landowning families-totaling over a mil- lion persons-under the Cairo gov- ernment's land-distribution schemes. This would be a third more than the total acreage distributed under Nasir's` widely propagandized land-reform program instituted in 1952. UN DEBATE ON CYPRUS QUESTION In the UN General Assembly debate on Cyprus, scheduled to begin around 24 November, Greece will seek passage of a resolu- tion guaranteeing independence for Cyprus without a specified time limit. Greek Foreign Min- ister Averoff stated on 15 No- vember that if the UN endorsed-- however vaguely--this principle, Athens would anticipate renewed discussions in NATO in December. Greece seems confident of ob- taining majority support for its proposal if the United States does not actively oppose it either in meetings or "in the corridors." Britain hopes a compromise resolution develops which would set the stage for a conference among interested parties. It plans to initiate a strong draft proposal of its own, calling for an end to terror- ism and endorsing its recent efforts toward a resolution. By introducing a strong resolu- tion at the outset of debate, London hopes to generate sup- port for a compromise which would merely have the United Nations endorse a conference. Turkey is publicly com- mitted to the partition idea. Ankara is adamant in its oppo- sition to the independence con- cept because it suspects that in Greek strategy "independence" is a mere guise for eventual union of Cyprus with Greece. Moreover, Turkish Cypriots pro- fess to fear that their minority rights would not be recognized in an "independent" Cyprus. Since this is Greece's fifth attempt to obtain a defini- tive UN statement on the future of Cyprus, some UN members be- lieve further debates on the subject in the United Nations would only "prolong the agony, stir up more hatred, promote violence, and, if left to con- tinue as at present, come no closer to solution." Some UN members, particularly other NATO members, feel a solution might be achieved if some country, un- committed to any of the three and important enough to be able to push the three parties to an agreement, now "took a firm hand." German Chancellor Ade- nauer has been suggested as a moderator, particularly after his November talks in Bonn with Greek Prime Minister Karamanlis at which Cyprus was reportedly dis- cussed. On the island,despite re- cent successes by the security 25X1 violence may occur forces against EOKA increased SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 8 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET President Bourguiba's dec- laration of 13 November that he had sought arms from Czechoslo- vakia, Yugoslavia, and Sweden apparently was a tactical ma- neuver designed to demonstrate his freedom from Western domina- tion and to express his personal irritation over press reports that France had been consulted on the Anglo-American sale of weapons. Nevertheless, Bourguiba's irritation may be the beginning of a drift by Tunisia away from the West and at least a nod to- ward the Soviet bloc, because it will strengthen those advis- ers who have long urged that he abandon his pro-Western orienta- tion for a policy of noncommit- ment. Bourguiba prefers Western arms--primarily American--and standardized military equipment, but he probably will make at least some purchases from other sources. Bourguiba told a news correspondent that he has al- ready approached the Yugoslav and Czech governments for arms. Although Tunisia has a favorable balance amounting to $300,000 in its trade with Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav chargd claims his government would not be interest- ed in selling arms to the Tuni- sians. Last May, Tunisia sought to buy light weapons from the United States for four battal- ions--4,800 men. The Tunisian Army, equipped mainly with weapons airlifted by Britain and the United States a year ago, is estimated at 4,300 men, about a third the 12,500 which Defense Secretary Ladgham claimed in September. Bour- guiba declared publicly on 13 November that his 25X1 immediate goal is an army of 20,000 men--a figure which Ladgham implied was a long- term objective. Bourguiba considers the equipping and training of a sizable army loyal to him essential both for prestige purposes and to counter the threat to Tunisian security implicit in the presence in western Tunisia of several thousand well-armed Algerian Since the coup in the Sudan, however, Bourguiba is convinced that an even greater menace may be developing on the Libyan frontier, where UAR agents cross to contact dis- 25X1 25X1 gruntled Tunisians and Algerian rebel elements. With the approach of the 23 November first round of French ,parliamentary elections, practically all the non-Com- munist parties have pro- claimed support for De Gaulle. There are few indications of how voter sentiment will crystallize in the week pre- ceding the decisive 30 November runoff. Key party leaders are watching the electoral situation SECRET DART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 9 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY in Algeria, where the failure of liberal European and nation- alist Moslem candidates to file could result in the election of a rightist-oriented bloc. hold- ing the balance in the next National Assembly. The campaigning has aroused little public enthusiasm, but heavy registration of new voters suggests that the voter turnout may still approach the normal level of over 80 percent. Al- though the strength of the new Gaullist groups--particularly Information Minister Soustelle's Union for the New Republic-- cannot be closely predicted, most of the responsible French political commentators foresee the Socialist and rightist Independent parties mainly benefiting from the elections, and the Communist party as the primary loser. Guy Mollet has reportedly said that De Gaulle hopes for a large Socialist group in the assembly, pre- sumably to facilitate "arbitra- tion" by the first President of the Fifth Republic. Should the 71 deputies to be elected in the Algerian and Saharan elec- tions from 28 to 30 November The stability of the Ital- ian Government is increasingly threatened by opposition from the right wing of Premier Fan- fani's Christian Democratic party and growing restiveness in two of the minor center parties on which his coalition depends. The possibility of new parliamentary support from the autonomists in the Nenni Socialist party--those advocat- ing greater independence from the Italian Communist party-- was raised by the increased strength shown by this faction following the 1958 national prove predominantly rightist, however, the left-right balance might be seriously upset. Guy Mollet also said he is receiving campaign funds from elements of the powerful and highly conservative Patronat (employers' association) which reportedly feels that a power- ful Socialist bloc in the assembly would facilitate an early solution of the economi- cally costly Algerian war. Mollet is nevertheless reported "very worried" over the politi- cal make-up of the Algerian candidates, particularly at the absence of any who differ from the army-settler line that the only possible Algerian solution is the integration of Algeria into France. Independent leader Roger Duchet, however, is reported pleased with the prospect that most, if not all, the Algerian deputies will vote with the right. He says his party is taking measures to keep the new Moslem deputies, on their arrival in Paris, from "getting lost in shady hotels and coming under bad influences." P elections. This prospect is now jeopardized by the campaign of the pro-Communist wing to gain control in the January party congress. A public squabble in the Christian Democratic party has arisen over the recent formation of a new regional government in Sicily by a renegade Christian Democrat, Silvio Milazzo, with the support of both Communists and neo-Fascists. Following Milazzo's refusal to disband this coalition, Fanfani, as secretary general of the party, SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 10 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET 20 November 1958 announced Milazzo's expulsion. Thus far the Milazzo government remains in power, and Fanfani's left-wing party supporters are urging him to avoid similar measures against Milazzo's.' Christian Democratic colleagues pending regional elections in June. Despite the recent vote of confidence in Fanfani by the Christian Democratic Na- ITALIAN PARLIAMENT ^' ^-- COMMUNITY MOVEMENT CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 596 SEATS 'GOVERNMENT MAJORITY DEPENDS ON PRI ABSTENTION 81119 are apprehensive lest the Jan- uary congress of the Nenni So- cialist party permit Fanfani to accomplish reform legislation in Parliament by providing him with either additional votes or reliable abstentions on key issues. This Socialist con- gress may see a showdown be- tween Nonni and his pro-Commu- nist opponents on the issue of Socialist cooperation with the Communist party or support for Fanfani's center-left government. 14-POPULAR MONARCHISTS(PMP) NEO-FASCISTS(MSI) tional Council, his government remains in jeopardy. The Si- cilian revolt is believed to have been engineered by such right-wing leaders as Mario Scelba and Don Sturzo. In the national Parliament, several Christian Democratic deputies voted against the government in recent secret ballots. Like the Communists, the right-wing Christian Democrats An additional threat .to Fanfani has arisen in some strengthening of the groups within, the Democratic Socialist party which opposes the party's continu- ance in a Christian Democratic government. is also increasing pres- sure within the Republican party to decide at its November congress not to join the government. It will probably continue to abstain, however, on critical votes where it could bring Fanfani down. Both parties are likely awaiting the results of the Nonni Socialist con ress. BRITISH-ICELANDIC FISHING DISPUTE RENEWED Public anger in Iceland over a new trawler incident on 12 November has wiped out for the time being any progress which may have been made toward a settlement of the British- Icelandic dispute over Iceland's attempt to enforce a 12-mile fishing limit. The incident, which Ice- landic Prime Minister Jonasson describes as the most serious since the dispute began two and a half months ago, involved a British trawler which the Ice- landers allege was within three miles of the coast. The trawler was apprehended by an Icelandic coast guard vessel, but was sub- sequently "rescued" by a British frigate, which report- edly threatened to sink the policing Icelandic gunboat if it repeated warning shots at the trawler. SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 11 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY =SUMMARY 20 November 1958 Prior to the incident,,Ice- landic Government officials had hinted they might accept a rul- ing of the International Court of Justice on the question, and had abandoned their efforts to seek a substantive decision in the UN General Assembly. This incident will, however, cause the government to adopt a more unyielding attitude and post- pone any further moves toward a compromise solution. Ice- land has sent a strong protest to Britain, is considering re- questing a top-level NATO con- ference on the dispute, and may refer the incident to the UN Security Council. The Communists, who are determined to prevent an amic- able settlement of the issue in order to maintain tension between Iceland and its NATO allies, have demanded that Ice- land withdraw its ambassador from London and place formal charges against Britain in the UN. The Labor Alliance (Com- munist) is able to exert con- siderable influence in the gov- ernment through its two cabinet posts, which include the Fish- eries Ministry. There is some danger, how- ever, that all the parties will be tempted to curry public opin- ion by advocating extreme meas- ures and an inflexible negotiat- ing position in the dispute. Confronted by serious economic problems and uncertainty regard- ing the outcome of the struggle between the Communist and non- Communist factions in the im- pending Icelandic Federation of Labor (IFL) congress, the gov- ernment parties may use the recent incident to distract public attention from the grave domestic economic problems facing the country. Many Icelanders continue to expect the. United States to take the initiative to break the deadlock with Britain, but are themselves unwilling to consider any compromise which does not recognize the legality of the 12-mile fishing limit which Iceland began en- forcing on 1 September. A continuation of the deadlock increases the risk of their resentment being turned to- ward the United States and NATO as well, with the possibil- ity of renewed agitation for the withdrawal of American forces from the NATO base at Keflavik. MALAYA PLANS TO CLOSE COMMUNIST BANK OF CHINA BRANCHES The government of the Fed- eration of Malaya plans to in- troduce banking legislation at the December meeting of the legislative council which will make it virtually impossible for Malaya's two branches of the Communist-controlled Bank of China to operate. This step is designed to isolate Malaya's large Chinese minority from Peiping's influence and to cur- tail Communist economic penetra- tion of the federation. It will be the strongest yet taken in the government's antisubversive campaign. Passage of the leg- islation is virtually.certain. The Bank of China will be the only institution affected by the legislation, which will outlaw all banks controlled by foreign states. The law will probably allow the bank six months to terminate its business. The government is anxious for the action to be interpreted as legislation regulating banking and not as anyanti-Communist SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 12 of 17 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 ' 'SECRET` ' CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SAY move, probably because it has no firm evidence of subversive activities. The Bank of China, Pei- ping's only official institu- tional front in Malaya, has ap- parently sought to avoid giving the government any pretext for moving against it. Peiping is expected to protest strongly in propaganda and perhaps formally through British channels. Closing of the Malayan branches will hamper, but not stifle, Chinese economic activ- ities in Malaya, since more than two thirds of Sino-Malayan trade is handled outside Malaya by the Singapore branch of the Bank of China. The action, however, is likely to increase Malay-Chinese racial tensions and may undermine the Malayan Chinese Association (MCA), the Chinese element in the ruling Alliance party. MCA identifi- cation with this and other "anti- Chinese" government policies may hurt the party in predomi- nantly Chinese districts in the general elections next August. Any substantial weakening of the already shaky MCA could seriously endanger the princi- ple of Chinese-Malay political cooperation on which political stability in Malaya depends. The government's action is apparently timed to avoid up- setting the Chinese community until after the holding of sev- eral key municipal elections on 6 December. Thereafter, the government probably hopes to placate the Chinese prior to the general elections in Au- gust. It is not yet known wheth- er rumors concerning the gov- ernment's forthcoming action have acquired enough credence in the Chinese community to hurt the Alliance party in De- cember. INDONESIAN ARMY EXPANDING ROLE IN GOVERNMENT The Indonesian Army is planning to expand its role in government by placing more army personnel :'.in key executive, legislative, and diplomatic posts. expected to react to the pros- pect of increased army power by intensifying their efforts to undermine Nasution and arouse popular resentment against the army. Both Nasution and Djuanda, apparently anticipating charges of an army coup, have empha- sized publicly that there is complete understanding and co- operation between military and civilian officials under pres- ent martial law, and they deny that a military dictatorship is imminent. Djuanda said that lack of such military-civilian understanding had led to army coups in neighboring countries. Nasution, in an address on 10 November, asserted that Presi- dent Sukarno approved all ac- tions taken by the military. The Indonesian Army has operated under emergency powers since March 1957 and during this period has gradually in- creased its authority. During the past year, Sukarno has in- creasingly trusted and supported the army while at the same time displaying a growing distrust of the Communists. In addition to the broad power which it SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 13 of 17 ___ Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY exercises under martial law, the army holds one cabinet post, has representatives in the National Council, and has recently assigned a high-rank- ing officer as consul general in Singapore, Indonesia's largest foreign mission and one of its most significant. Al- though army powers stem from presidential decrees, its present broad authority points up the extent to which it is in fact already govern- ing Indonesia. PEIPING DISPATCHING FISHING FLEET TO ISLANDS IN SOUTH CHINA SEA Over 200 Chinese Communist fishing vessels manned by 1,000 fishermen will sail "shortly" from Hainan Island ports to "develop fishing grounds" in the Paracel and Spratly island groups, according to a 10 No- vember report in a Communist- controlled Hong Kong newspaper. The fleet will be furnished with radios and "other safety equip- ment," the article said. Ad- ministrative, supply, and navi- gation facilities will be estab- lished on the islands. The Chi- nese Communists have not men-' tioned any naval escort for the fishing fleet. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page-14 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY IMMARY 20 November 1958 In its declaration of 4 September announcing the 12-mile limit, Peiping reiterated its claims to the Paracels and Spratlys, as well as to other island groups in the South China Sea. Nationalist China and South Vietnam also lay claim to both groups, while France has asserted sovereignty over the Spratlys. A Philippine national, Tomas Cloma, has claimed several islands of the Spratly group on behalf of his government. At present there is a re- inforced platoon of Chinese Nationalist marines numbering less than 100 men on Itu Aba, largest of the Spratlys. They are believed to be armed with heavy machine guns and light arillery. South Vietnam has a token garrison of some 30 men on Prattle Island in the Para- eels, and has augmented this force in past crises.. The Chinese Communists have main- tained a group of guano gather- ers on Woody Island, largest of the Paracels, since Decem- ber 1955. In January 1957 the Vietnamese fired on a Chi- nese Communist fishing boat, thereby: drawing a protest from Peiping. The islands occupy a stra- tegic position in the central South China Sea, but they have no significant economic value, and none is large enough to permit construction of an air- field or other sizable instal- lation. The largest island in each group--Itu Aba and Woody-- is less than a mile long and only about a half mile in width. While the Japanese did maintain a small naval base on Itu Aba during World War II, the pri- mary value of the islands would be for observation and metero- logical uses. Peiping's announcement of its intention to dispatch the fishing fleet could be a challenge to the other claimants, who may be expected to react sharply. The Chinese National- ists may respond, as in the past, by sending warships to protect the Itu Aba garrison and contest the Chinese Commu- nist manuever. Vietnamese President Diem, who firmly believes the Communists respect only force, has been alert to any Chinese Communist probing operations against South Viet- nam since the Taiwan Strait crisis developed. If the Chinese Communists actually conduct the operation, their action could result in clashes with South Vietnamese or Chinese Nationalist naval units. Argentine President Fron- dizi's position has been strength- ened by firm endorsement from the military in the face of attacks on his petroleum and la- bor policies and on his declara- tion of a 30-day state of siege on 11 November aimed at suppress- ing Communist and Peronista manipulation of labor unrest. With this tactical advantage, the administration is trying to smooth over internal stresses, as seen in its handling of Vice President Gomez' resignation on 18 November, and to mollify various opposition complaints which could undermine the regime. Living costs, which have risen some 40 percent during the past year, have caused increasing SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 115 of 17 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02000040001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY S 20 November 1958 unrest among all labor elements. Moves toward a general strike have seemed inhibited mainly by political factors involving com- petition between pro- and anti- Peronista labor factions for con- trol of the trade union move- ment. The three-week strike by Peronista oil workers in Mendoza, an attempt to force cancellation of government petroleum develop- ment contracts with American firms, failed to win nationwide support mainly because its emphasis was political. On the other hand, a Peron- ista-initiated general strike effort on 10 October based purely on wage demands was so