CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY

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CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1
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July 1, 1959
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SUMMARY
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Approved' F e ease 2005/03/15: CIA-RDP79-OGWA 2300070001-1 CONFIDENTIAL COPY NO. 56 OCR NO. 3527/59 1 July 1959 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY AUTHij-IR 70-2 dft DOCUMENT NO. NO CHANGE IN CLASS. 0 0 DECLASSIFIED CLASS. CHANGED TO_w NEXT REVIEW DATE: 25X1 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE CONFIDENTIAL State Department review completed Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO023 00 0001-1 25X1 Approved F ReWse 2005/03/15: CIA-RDP79-009 AO 300070001-1 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 7 94, 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 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 Approved4w lease 20 ''IA-RDP79-067''2300070001-1 CONFIDENTIAL CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 T H E W E E K I N B R I E F OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST THE SITUATION IN THE CARIBBEAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 1 The situation in the Caribbean area remains explosive. Leftists and liberals, led by the Fidel Castro government of Cuba and apparently supported by President Betancourt of Venezuela, still seem determined to overthrow the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic and the Somoza regime in Nicaragua. The majority of Latin Ameri- can governments appear ready to support a meeting of foreign ministers, the highest policy-making group of the Organization of American State to attempt to deal with the entire Caribbean problem. MIDDLE EAST HIGHLIGHTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 2 The Iraqi Communists continue at odds with recent actions of the Qasim regime. The regime's decision to restrict the activities of the Popular Resistance Force is being carried out, and non-Communist "nationalists" are being further encouraged. UAR President Nasir is building up the Palestine issue again, and both he and the Israelis are undercutting UN Secretary General Hammarskjold's efforts to ease tension. The Israeli cabinet crisis, a result of maneuvering by minority mem- bers of Prime Minister Ben-Gurion's cabinet, marks the opening of the campaign for the parliamentary elections scheduled to be held in November. EAST-WEST NEGOTIATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 4 Moscow is maintaining its posture of hopeful optimism regarding prospects for agreement when the foreign minis- ters' conference resumes on 13 July. In Western Europe there appears but little sentiment favoring concessions to the USSR to achieve a Berlin settlement except in Britain, where a general election is expected this fall. The British Governement continues to emphasize its hopes on summit talks, and the West Germans and French suspect that Britain will press for Western concessions when talks 25X1 resume. CONFIDENTIAL iCC i Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 THE WEEK IN BRIEF 25X1 25X1 Approved F06Re1 se 2005/OMkff DP79-009WO 00070001-1 1 July 1959 PART I (continued) BRITISH LABOR PARTY'S NUCLEAR ARMS POLICY . . . . . . . . Page 8 The British Labor party's evident success in compro- mising its internal differences over nuclear disarmament policy is likely to add to the already considerable pres- sures on the Macmillan government to achieve a test-sus- pension agreement. Labor's new policy, adopted in expec- tation of general elections this fall, calls for indefinite suspension of British nuclear tests. It also calls for complete abandonment of Britain's nuclear weapons if all other nations except the United States and the USSR agree to forego them, a proposal which most top Labor leaders recognize as unacceptable to France. 17 NOTES AND COMMENTS PROTOTYPE AIRCRAFT USED BY KOZLOV . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 1 The CLEAT (TU-114) turboprop passenger airliner which transported Soviet First Deputy Premier Frol Kozlov non- stop from Moscow to New York on 28 June is the prototype aircraft first displayed in Moscow in November 1957. The use of a prototype to transport a Soviet high official is unprecedented. The last-minute change in the type of air- craft used by Kozlov was made apparently in an attempt to acquire prestige and give an impression of equality with the United States in the development of heavy transoceanic transport aircraft. No other CLEAT aircraft is known to be in service or in production. ARGENTINE MOVES TO COUNTER MILITARY UNREST . . . . . . . . Page 2 Argentine President Frondizi appears to be weathering threats of a military coup. Having reorganized the cabi- net, he is considering the appointment of compromise offi- cers to top positions to meet demands made by moderate military elements as well as by those still advocating a coup. Moreover, the new economy and labor minister, Alvaro Alsogaray, a strong exponent of :Free enterprise, has included among his policy announcements various meas- ures to counter popular discontent--particularly the ending of army control over labor in three industries and the strict enforcement of price controls on about a dozen essential consumer items. SECRET 25X1, 25X1 25X1 ii Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved FowAei se 2005/0,1 ,'.Jj,A?RDP79-0092 00070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 PART II (continued) PRESSURES ON THE BOLIVIAN GOVERNMENT . . . . . . . . . . . Page The Bolivian Government of moderate President Siles, periodically threatened by leftists within the ruling party who object to the US-backed stabilization program, was confronted on 26 June with an uprising of opposition elements in the eastern provincial city of Santa Cruz. The government's extensive use of armed force to suppress the outbreak and its subsequent military operations against rebel groups reflect its well-grounded fear of further trouble in the area, but also seem to have been designed in part to unify hostile factions in its own party. The powerful Miners' Federation reportedly has threatened a strike if Sites goes through with the sched- uled unfreezing of mine commissary prices in mid-July. DE GAULLE'S ALGERIAN POLICY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page De Gaulle's policy toward Algeria is emerging with increasing clarity after a year of sometimes ambiguous pronouncements. Measures now being pressed vigorously on all economic, military, diplomatic, and political levels indicate that De Gaulle's ultimate goal is the retention of French sovereignty over an Algeria remaining within the aramework of French political institutions, but having a distinctive culture, a greatly expanded economy, and predominantly Moslem local governments. MOSCOW TO PRESS FOR CLOSER RELATIONS DURING VISIT OF HAILE SELASSIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 5 Soviet leaders will probably utilize the official state visit of Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie as their best chance thus far to press for closer economic and cultural relations with Addis Ababa and to encourage his desire to appear as a neutralist. The Emperor, who is trying to stress his independence of the West and to associate Ethiopia more closely with pain-Africanism, will probably accept some aid as a demonstration of this policy. NEW AGRICULTURAL PROGRAM IN POLAND . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 5 Party First Secretary Gomulka has recently given new impetus to the Polish seven-year agricultural program (1959-65). The program will be administered by "agricul- tural circles," which are voluntary cooperative peasant associations. For the past three years, agriculture in Poland has been largely private, so this move is probably intended to identify Poland more closely with standard bloc agricultural policies. The peasant, traditionally suspicious of government actions and offended by regime plans to continue compulsory deliveries for seven years, may be laggard in joining these "circles." 25X1 SECRET iii Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 THE WE&I, IN BRIEF Approved F Re ase 2005/0 J&k&DP79-0097 x'300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 PART II (continued) YUGOSLAVIA WOOS WESTERN SOCIALISTS . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 6 In the past month Yugoslavia has again started wooing West European socialist parties--a policy it has followed in the past whenever the bloc has succeeded in partially isolating it. While no dramatic move has accompanied this campaign, recent visits by prominent Yugoslavs to. foreign socialist parties may open the.doors for greater economic and--to a much lesser extent--political cooperation, and help deepen Belgrade's ideological rift with the bloc, SOVIET BLOC MOVES TO EXPAND CREDIT RELATIONS WITH WEST . . Page 7 The Soviet bloc is attempting to obtain additional credits in the West for the purchase of technologically advanced equipment, principally for the plastics, synthet- ics, and petrochemical industries, fields to which the bloc has only recently given high priority. The emphasis has been on medium-term credits--up to five years--for which the USSR has been trying to get government guaran- tees in order to encourage the flow of private credits. Besides wanting to expand exports, the bloc appears anx- ious to establish a new field of economic competition. DEVELOPMENTS IN CHINA'S TRADE WITH THE :FREE WORLD . . . . Page 9 Continued reports of serious difficulties affecting Communist China's foreign trade position are supported in part by trade statistics for the first months of 1959. Imports from Western Europe of manufactured goods and semifinished products to bolster the "leap forward" indus- trialization program have declined from the high levels of late 1958. China's difficult export position was reflected at this spring's Canton Trade Fair, where Western business- men were disappointed by Peiping's reluctance to make new export commitments. PEIPING "WARNS" WASHINGTON ON PARACEL RECONNAISSANCE . . . Page 10 Peiping's recent "serious warnings"--numbers 50, 51, 52, and 53--protesting the "intrusions" of American naval reconnaissance aircraft are the first regarding the Para- cel Islands in the South China Sea, which the Communists assert are part of Kwangtung Province. The Chinese Communists apparently intend the warnings to add weight to their claim to the islands--also claimed by Saigon and Taipei. The warnings contain no threat to take military action against US flights in the area. SECRET iv Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 THE WEEK IN BRIEF 25X1 25X1 1 July 1959 PART II (continued) SITUATION IN KERALA STATE . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . Page 11 Agitation against the Communist government in India's Kerala State has been intensified following high-level Congress party discussions in New Delhi. National party leaders gave qualified support to the ainti-Communist cam- paign by calling for elections in Kerala on grounds that the Communists no longer represent majority sentiment. Both sides in the state now are more determined than ever to hold out. A renewal of serious violence is likely to result from the stepped-up agitation, and New Delhi may yet impose direct rule. THAI - NORTH VIETNAMESE REPATRIATION TALKS . . . . . . . . Page 11 Negotiations on the repatriation of the approximately 50,000 Vietnamese refugees in northeast Thailand opened on 20 June in Rangoon between representatives of the North Vietnamese and Thai Red Cross Societies. Initial conver- sations have bogged down over a procedural dispute. Thai- land regards the predominantly pro-Commmnist refugees as a security threat in the northeast and appears determined to repatriate them--even at the risk of' offending South Vietnam. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 13 25X1 President Sukarno, who returned to Djakarta on 29 June from a two-month trip, is consulting political leaders on the constitutional crisis and the acute financial situ- ation. even- tually Sukarno will request Parliament for permission to impose the 1945 constitution by decree. Another problem which had been pigeonholed pending Sukarno's return is the resolution of a "mutiny" in the Indonesian Navy and the demand of junior officers for the replacement of Navy Chief of Staff Vice Admiral Subijakto. 25X1 SHANS BECOMING INCREASINGLY TROUBLESOME FOR BURMESE GOVERNMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 13 Growing restiveness among Burma's one million Shans, stemming from the central government's efforts to e x e..r t more direct control over the Shan State, is causing Rangoon serious concern. The Ne Win regime seems particularly worried over the threat by Chinese Nationalist irregulars in eastern Burma to support a group of Shan dissidents operating in the area near the Thai frontier. Such support might enable the Shan dissidents to extend their operations to other parts of the Shan State, weakening Rangoon's authority in a large area contiguous to Com- SECRET v Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved F et ase 2005/0k 1 DP79-00 9M300070001-1 Approved F ? ase 2005/0,S,RSI3DP79-009 1BG@'300070001-1 1 July 1959 PART II (continued) COMMUNISTS LOSE STRENGTH IN ICELANDIC ELECTIONS . . . . . Page 15 The Communist-front Labor Alliance suffered a setback in Ice-Land's general elections on 28 June, losing some 20 percent of its popular vote--largely to the pro-NATO Con- servatives and the rural Progressive party. The Social Democrats will try to form an interim government, having as its principal tasks the final passage of the electoral reform bill and preparation for a new general election in the fall. Such a government would have to depend on Con- servative and Communist support, however, for a parliamen- tary majority. PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES INDIGENOUS MINORITY PROBLEMS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA . . . . . . Page The indigenous ethnic minorities throughout Southeast Asia, proud of their cultural traditions and often subject to government repression, are highly susceptible to dissi- dent and subversive activities. Communist China and North Vietnam have already exploited these tendencies to gain influence with the Laotian, Cambodian, and Vietnamese minor- ities, and, through the Burmese Communist insurgents, have on occasion assisted the Karen rebels. The Karens have confronted the Burmese Government with a troublesome insur- gent force, and minorities in Laos have lent considerable support to the local pro-Communist movement. 25X1 LATIN AMERICAN FINANCIAL PROBLEMS AND THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 4 Political repercussions from financial reform measures stipulated as a condition of assistance by the Interna- tional Monetary Fund (IMF) have led to critical situations in several Latin American countries, largely because of exploitation of the austerity aspects of these measures by extreme nationalist and Marxist-influenced groups. At the same time, the over-all economic outlook in Latin America is improving, with export earnings expected to be back at their 1957 peak by the end of this year. Undermining of the IMF-sponsored stabilization efforts would intensify deficit financing, inflation, and foreign-exchange mal- adjustments, and prevent the area from taking advantage of these favorable developments. F__ I 25X1 ,SECRET vi Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved Fcelse 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-009 7Q00070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 PART III (continued) POLITICAL TENSION IN NIGERIA . . . . . . . . . . Page 8 There is increasing friction among political parties of Nigeria in anticipation of the general elections this autumn. Basic political and social problems in Nigeria, scheduled for independence in October 1960, may increase the difficulties the British colony will encounter in attempting to function as a unified state and to exercise the moderate influence it expects to exert in West African nationalist circles. SECRET 25X1 vii Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved F1ase 2005/9.3/~DP79-00#99300070001-1 CONFIDENTIAL HAITI CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 THE SITUATION IN THE CARIBBEAN The situation in the Carib- bean remains explosive. Left- ists and liberals led by the Fidel Castro government of Cuba, and apparently supported by President Betancourt of Ven- ezuela, still seem determined to force the overthrow of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic and the So- moza regime in Nicaragua. The majority of Latin American gov- ernments appear ready to sup- port a meeting of foreign min- isters, the highest policy-mak- ing group of the Organization of American States, to attempt to deal with the entire Carib- bean-problem. Evidence is accumulating that the Cuban Government has been actively supporting and directing reh&l. i,ncursions into THE CARIBBEAN AREA' l I MEXICO,'. BRITISH HONDURAS E`L SALVADOR NICARAGUA Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic during June. Arms and other equipment captured by Costa Rican and Honduran au- thorities during the week of 22 June from Nicaraguan rebel groups attempting to cross in- to Nicaragua clearly reveal their recent Cuban origin. Sim- ilarly, there is little doubt that the Dominican insurgents were trained and equipped in Cuba and possibly even, as the Dominican Government charges, escorted part way to the land- ing; areas in the Dominican Re- public by Cuban naval vessels. During the last week in June, the American Embassy in Cuba received persistent reports that as many as 2,000 troops are being trained there to reinforce the Dominican rebels DOMINICAN REPUBLIC PUERTO _ VIRGIN RICO ISLANDS CONFIDENTIAL ~OeeftB 'I Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 1 of 7 BRITISH` GUIANA Approved Fctese 2005/,9j0JC-RDP79-009-00070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 Venezulean President Betan- court, an implacable foe of Dominican dictator Trujillo, has probably also provided material support for the Nicaraguan and Dominican rebels, although he has repeatedly denied it and appears careful to avoid com- promising his announced policy of nonintervention or alienating the Venezuelan military. Ven- ezuelan civil aircraft may have been used to transport. arms, equipment, and Nicaraguan exiles to rebel bases in Costa Rica. Generalissimo Trujillo as- sured the American ambassador on 27 June that he will resist the sentiment he says exists in the Dominican military in favor of an armed attack on Cuba. How- ever, further Cuban-backed rebel incursions, which the Dominicans expect, could provoke an attack, and Trujillo has said he will provide Haiti with military assistance if that country is attacked and requests help. There have been frequent re- ports, ng that the Cuban prime minister is preparing a group of Haitian exiles for an attack on Haiti in the near future. Meanwhile, Nicaraguan Pres- ident Somoza says he has re- fused to aid a perennial Honduran revolutionary who has been seek- ing Nicaraguan backing fora coup against Honduran President Vil- leda Morales. MIDDLE EAST HIGHLIGHTS Iraq The Iraqi Government's or- ders to disarm the Communist- infiltrated Popular Resistance Force (PRF) and to curtail its activities are being implemented. A statement by Military Governor and Army Chief of Staff Abdi on 25 June confirmed that the PRF has been relieved of all security duties. While it is not to be disbanded, the or- ganization is to confine itself to training activities. There have been no PRF street patrols in Baghdad since the night of 21 June and none in Basra since 23 June. The government issued a public proclamation on 29 June forbidding any individual from carrying any kind of firearm or lethal weapon without a spe- cial permit from the governor general's office. The Communist party organ and other Communist-line jour- nals have refrained from comment on the PRF issue but have con- tinued to attack other aspects of governmental policy. The press battle between the Com- munist and National Democratic party (NDP) newspapers continues. The formerly pro-Communist but now pro-NDP daily Al Thawra has accused the Communist party of "spreading terror and trying to dominate the political sit- uation." The Communist press has countered by describing this journal as 'distinguished for malice and for encouraging op- portunists, imperialists, and stooges." The Communist party re- sorted to a new strategem on 29 June with the announcement that the "national front," now com- posed of the Communist party, "the NDP," and the United Demo- cratic party of Kurdistan, had been reconstituted. This trans- parent effort by the Communists to re-establish an appearance of SECRET 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 2 of 9 Approved F ase 2005/03/15: CIA-RDP79-00 A442300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 respectable association with other parties will probably deepen the antagonism between important NDP leaders and the Communist party, since the "NDP" with which the Communists have created this "national front" is only the extreme, Communist- permeated splinter group of that party. While the effect of Qasim's recent moves has been to place the Communists on the defensive psychologically and to reduce 'their power to some extent, there is little reason to be- lieve that he wants either to suppress their influence alto- gether or to force a showdown with them. His past reference to Iraqi Communists as "patriots who do not plot against the nation" and his obvious lack of concern about the danger from Communist ideology suggest that his real aim is to move toward what he may consider a healthier political balance, in which the Communist party becomes one of several political organizations and sources of influence, all of which remain susceptible to his control. His measures to assure his own control over the military and paramilitary forces are an essential first step toward redressing the po- litical balance. Nasir seems to be making the most of the emotions aroused in the Arab world by the publi- cation of the UN report on the Palestine refugees, which en- visages the possibility of the refugees' being absorbed in part by their present host gov- ernments. A new Palestine "study" committee has been formed. In a speech on 30 June in which he charged that the "im- perialists" and the Israelis were cooperating to create an incident over the issue of the Is- raeli use of the Suez Canal, Nasir called again on the West-- ern powers to take some action on behalf of the refugees. Nasir's two main Arab opponents, the Iraqi and Jordanian govern- ments, have also sought to capi- talize on the issue and to por- tray Nasir as a compromiser. .Nasir's remarks, made just be- fore the arrival in Cairo on 1 July of UN Secretary General Hammarskjold, will make the latter's attempt to mediate even, less likely to succeed. The UAR's stand on the canal issue remains somewhat cloudy, because Cairo does not want to make any statement or agreement which would be con- strued as a concession to the Israelis. It appears, however, that Israeli cargoes would be allowed through the canal if the ships carrying them were not under Israeli charter or other Israeli control and if the Is- raeli-origin cargo is to be sold F.O.B., but the really im- portant thing to the UAR au- thorities would seem to be that no reference to Israel appear in the ship's papers. The Is- raelis hinted they might be interested in some such arrange- ment, but the Tel Aviv Foreign Ministry subsequently unoffi- cially rejected a compromise along these lines. The UAR continues to show concern that the Israelis might retaliate for the seizures of canal cargoes by interfering with UAR air and sea traffic be- tween Egypt and Syria. At least some UAR vessels are taking a northerly route around Cyprus. SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 3 of 9 Approved F%jte' se 200 Wft-RDP79-009? ,000070001-1 1 July 1959 The cabinet crisis which developed in Israel late last week is the opening gun in the political campaign which will culminate in parliamentary elec- tions next November. Members of'minority parties in Prime Minister Ben-Gurion's cabinet again, as in December 1957, seized on the emotion-charged issue of Israel's relations with West Germany as an oppor- tunity to dissociate themselves from the policies of the prime minister's predominant Mapai party. The actual question in- volved the revelation that the Israeli Government was prepar- ing to sell a quantity of gre- nade launchers to Bonn. Ben-Gurion has insisted, since the 1957 crisis on the principle of cabinet discipline, that critics must either be silent or get out of the govern- ment. He apparently intends now to force out the minority critics and may preside for the next four months over a caretaker government or over a new coali- tion with moderate right-wing parties--the Progressives and General Zionists. These two parties joined Mapai in winning a confidence vote on 1 July. Western Divergencies The recess in the foreign ministers' conference finds the major Western European countries clinging firmly to their diver- gent viewpoints. Pressures for acco':.modation with the USSR re- main high in Britain, where gen- eral elections are expected this fall, but German and French lead- ers are determined to oppose any concessions to the USSR. Prime Minister Macmillan's public statements continue to lead the British public toward relatively optimistic expecta- tions when the negotiations are resumed. On 25 June he spoke of the "great gain" in East-West relations over the past six months as the atmosphere changed from one of "ultimatum" to one of "negotiation." Reiterating his hope that a summit confer- ence would take place, Macmillan indirectly chided his European critics by affirming that flex- ibil;Lty was based on confidence "in the moral strength of our position." SECRET 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 4 of 9 Approved Fo 1@t`se 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-0092ZA 00070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 I The British press, while unimpressed by Soviet proposals at Geneva, supports the government's in- tention to keep negotiations going, preferably proceeding to the heads-of-government level. Gromyko's statement of 28 June has been reported as a withdraw- al of the Soviet ultimatum. Substantial criticism of Ade- nauer and De Gaulle for insuf- ficient flexibility is also evident. Although discussion of specific issues has waned, George Brown and Aneurin Bevan, responsible for defense and foreign affairs respectively in the Labor party's "shadow cab- inet," told the American Embassy on 23 June that they favored greater Western willingness to deal with the East German re- gime on a de facto basis. Bevan favors acceptance of the parity principle for an all-German com- mission to prepare for reunifi- cation. Official circles in Bonn and Paris in the past week have renewed their warnings against Western concessions. The French press continues to support the De Gaulle government's firmness, and several papers have charged the West with conceding too much without Soviet countercon- cessions. Chancellor Adenauer's simi- lar feeling that the West had already made "risky" concessions on Berlin has received mixed support from the governing Christian Democratic Union (CDU). While some CDTJ members share the chancellor's view that firm- ness will be needed in the re- sumed negotiations, others have called for a new pro- posal on German reunification, possibly reviving the idea of a four-power commission to direct the work of some all-German groups. Berlin's Mayor Brandt told the Berlin legislature on 25 June that the Western proposals were the "extreme limit which can be tolerated." He sug- gested, however, a return to discussions on German reunifica- tion and European security along the lines of the official policy of the Social Democratic party, which, envisages a neutral Ger- many. Since returning from his mid-,June visit to Geneva, Brandt has been in close touch with Herbert Wehner, the party's left-wing deputy chairman. Pressures for Consultation Other Western differences have emerged regarding procedures for consultation in advance of the resumption of the Geneva talks on 13 July. Italy's pro- posal for a meeting of NATO foreign ministers, coolly re- ceived in the North Atlantic Council, has been offered pub- licly by Belgium. Italy now will be satisfied to have For- eign Minister Pella included in consultations with his American., French, British, and West Ger- man counterparts before the talks with the USSR are resumed, as initially proposed by De Gaulle in the communique is- sued on 27 June at the end of his Italian visit. De Gaulle also introduced into the com- munique what has apparently be- come his pet topic for summit SECRET. Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 5 of 9 Approved F e se 2005/0g/ 5 : CJA DP79-009 ,0 00070001-1 CRET 1 July 195.9 discussion--aid to underdevel- oped areas. In those European countries not directly involved in the conference, the belief has grown that a negotiated settlement with the USSR regarding Berlin may not prove possible. The US Embassy in Oslo believes that the stiffening of Norwegian public and official opinion is partly attributable to the coun- terproductive Soviet efforts to influence Norwegian foreign policy. The desire for summit talks appears only in spots, as in the Italian Government's ad- vice to the West to go to con- siderable lengths, including a summit meeting, to try to elim- inatO any kind of Soviet dead- line on Berlin. Moscow's Stand Moscow is maintaining its posture of hopeful optimism re- garding prospects for agreement when the foreign ministers' con- ference resumes on 13 July. The statement issued by Gromyko on 28 June in reply to Secretary Herter's report to the nation on the Geneva talks said the first phase had been "definite- ly useful" in defining positions, making disagreements more pre:-Oise, and helping bring the two sides "nearer on certain ques- tions." Gromyko declared that "there exist points of departure which make it possible to hope that the Geneva conference will have a positive outcome" if the West adopts a cooperative attitude, He went out of his way to en- dorse the British approach, stating: "We share to a great extent the evaluation of the prospects of the Geneva confer- ence and that of the following summit conference voiced in the House of Commons on 24 June by Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd, who spoke about the chance of the success of the conference." The high priority Moscow attaches to using the Geneva conference to promote East Germany's international status was again evident in Gromyko's statement. He declared that the presence of representatives of the two German states "has a great significance as a matter of principle" and stated that, although the Western powers "have not yet recognized East Germany diplomatically, they have nonetheless been forced to recognize its de facto ex- istence.." This, he said, con- sti.tutes an "important success for the Geneva conference and the German people." The Soviet foreign min' ister's review of his proposals on Germany and Berlin contained no hints of future modifications. He again attempted to refute the Western charge that the Soviet proposals for an "interim agree- ment" on Berlin would leave the Western powers without any rights in negotiations at the end. of the 18-month time limit and give the USSR freedom to take unilateral action at the expiration of that period. Gromyko carefully evaded a direct reply to this charge,. however, stating only that the Soviet proposal for further negotiations at the end of the 18-month period "speaks for it- self." He also attempted to blur the issue by saying Moscow would not have proposed a guaranteed "temporary status" for West Berlin if it had con- templated a "unilateral solution of the question of Western rights in Berlin." As part of its tactics to :make its Berlin proposals the basis for discussion when the conference resumes, the USSR SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 6 of 9 Approved Fo eI a 2005/03/15: CIA-RDP79-0092 ( 0070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 probably will attempt to create the impression of willingness to work out a compromise on this crucial issue of Western rights under an interim agreement. In this connection, a TASS corre- spondent in Geneva stated private- ly on 22 June that the Soviet delegation believes that a com- promise formula on this point could be negotiated. Following Gromyko's line, the correspondent evaded a direct reply when asked why the USSR had not specified that Western rights in Berlin would remain unchallenged and undisturbed after the expiration of the 18-month period. He implied, however, that Western rights would be preserved not only during a review by the big four of the problem at the end of the 18-month period, but also during subsequent "periodic" foreign ministers' and summit talks on the German problem. He remarked that. Berlin would "fall into second place" and stated that the USSR "does not want to force the West out of Berlin." Khrushchev reportedly prom- ised party chief Ulbricht during the recent visit of East German leaders to Moscow that no further concessions would be made to the West when the Geneva talks resume, The firm stand attributed to Khrushchev against further concessions probably was in- tended mainly to reassure the East Germans that the USSR would protect their interests in negotiations with the We 25X1 25X1 Britain is the most reasonable of the Western powers and that they will. continue their efforts to exploit differences between London and the other Western powers. Balkan' "Zone 'of Peace', Continued Soviet attention to the issue of Balkan and Baltic atom-free zones suggests that: the USSR anticipates that the broader questions of dis- engagement and disarmament in Europe will be raised in future high-level East-West negotiations. In notes on 25 June to the United States, France, Britain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Yugoslovia, Bulgaria, Albania, and Rumania, the Soviet Union formally pro- pased creation of an atom-.and rocket-free zone for the Balkan and Adriatic area. According to the Soviet plan;, the United States, Britain, and France would join the USSR in "guaranteeing the security and independence" of the countries in the zone--expanding a recent Rumanian proposal--and "facili- tate in every way its establish- ment." The notes expressed re- gret that, in favbr~ng estallish- rrent ?of missile bases on their territories, Italy, Turkey, and Greece had created a "serious obstacle" to the creation of such a zone. The statements suggested that these nations "need the sensible voice of their SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 7 of 9 Approved Fcese 2005/03SCIATDP79-009 00070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 25X1 neighbors before it is too late." The notes pointed with fa- vor to the Rumanian proposal for a conference of the heads of government of the Balkan countries to "discuss pressing matters concerning that area" and cited a statement on 8 June by President Tito as support for creation of the zone. This latest move on the part of the USSR climaxes the Soviet-bloc diplomatic and prop- aganda attack on projected-Amer- ican missile bases, in Italy, Greece, and Turkey. Since Khru- shchev's call during his recent Albanian visit for the creation of an atom-free zone, formal notes have been issued to Greece and Italy by the Soviet Union, Rumania, Bulgaria, and Albania, interspersed with a strong prop- aganda campaign on the subject. The notes of 25 June were probably designed to elicit a more direct American, British, and French reaction to the bloc campaign. The Soviet leaders probably calculated that any Western rejection of this for- mal proposal could be used to justify the installation of Soviet missile bases in Albania and the other satellites. BRITISH LABOR PARTY'S Nuclear Test Ban Talks The Soviet delegation to the technical talks on high- altitude detection has carefully tied all discussions with'the 1958 Geneva Technical Report, claiming that no new information has been introduced which would "in principle" modify last year's conclusions. The Soviet ex- perts have hoped to confine the fin,al.report to little more than a confirmation of the accuracy of :Last year's experts' con- clusions to avoid setting any precedent which could be used to support Western efforts to consider basic modifications.in these conclusions in light of new American data on detecting underground explosions, In plenary sessions Moscow has announced that it will drop its insistence on veto rights over the appointment and dis- charge of control system per- sonnel if agreement can be reached on control post staff- ing and on an annual inspection quota unrelated to the-number of unidentified seismic events, The Soviet delegate also agreed to drop the veto over commis- sion actions to deal with pos- sible treaty iolations, 0 25X1 Concurred in Y NUCLEAR ARMS POLICY The British Labor party's evident success in compromising its internal differences over nuclear disarmament policy seems likely to add to the pressures on the Macmillan government to achieve a test-suspension agree- ment.. With the Labor party's former policy calling for a uni- lateral one-year suspension of tests outdated by the present suspension, which began when the Geneva talks started, the party and eight-wing trade-union lead- ership faced an unexpected chal- lenge from union ranks demand- ing unilateral banning of all nuclear weapons from British territory, SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 8 of 9 Approved F eW'ase 200 LFRi --RDP79-OO Q( 300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 The new policy, agreed to on 23,June, represents a clear victory over the rebels, It demands the indefinite suspen- sion of British nuclear weapons tests and calls for Britain's ultimate abandonment of these weapons through the organization of a "nonnuclear club" embracing all nations except the United States and the USSR. While ad- vocating "tighter control" over American bases in Britain, the statement emphatically reaffirms that the next Labor government will honor Britain's NATO com- mitments. The initially favorable British press reaction suggests that the public will view this statement as a moderate, respon- sible attempt to prevent nuclear war. Although Aneurin Bevan, foreign secretary in Labor's "shadow cabinet," has privately stated that Britain would never have to make good on its "non- nuclear club" plan because France would never accept it, the American Embassy believes the proposal is meant as a gen- 25X1 uineeffort to reduce the risks of nuclear war by stemming the spread of nuclear weapons to other countries. Any cred it gained by the Labor party indi- rectly puts additional pressure on Macmillan to show clear progress in the Geneva test-sus- pension talks before the general elections expected in the fall, An outside chance remains that. Bevan and party leader Gaitskell will find themselves in trouble on this moderate pol- icy as elections approach. The 6Juily . conference of the Trans- port, and General Workers Union-- Britain's largest--will provide a crucial test, since its lead- er, Frank Cousins, dissented from the statement agreed to on 23 June. In the unlikely event that Cousins pushes through a significantly more radical res- olution by his union, the Gait- skell-Bevan leadership would :face a grave threat that would probably come to a head at the annual party conference in early October. SECRET 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 9 of 9 Approved Fo Rel se 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00921AD0 0070001-1 CURRENT 99ROP;RAILY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 NOTES AND COMMENTS PROTOTYPE AIRCRAFT USED BY KOZLOY The CLEAT (TU-114) turbo- prop~passenger airliner with fuselage number 5611, which transported Soviet First Depu- ty Premier Frol Kozlov nonstop from Moscow to New York on 28 June, is the prototype air- craft first displayed in Mos- cow in November 1957. The use of a prototype to transport a Soviet high official is unprec- edented. The last-minute change in the type of aircraft used by Kozlov appears to be an attempt to acquire prestige and give an impression of equality with the United States in the develop- ment of heavy transoceanic transport aircraft. Development of the CLEAT was first indicated by Soviet officials in January 1956. Subsequent publicity for about 20 months lauded the aircraft and indicated it would be in service soon. In early 1958, however, publicity was directed to a TU-114D, a modified BEAR (TU-95) four-engine turboprop bomber. In May 1959 the CLEAT made a rLonstop flight from Moscow to Khabarovsk. The Soviet press claimed the world record for a long-distance transport aircraft flight, and identified A. P. Yakimov as the chief test pilot. He also flew the aircraft to the United States. The first flight outside the USSR was to Tirana, Albania, in early June. In mid-June the CLEAT apparently carried its designer, A. N. Tupolev, to Paris for the International Aeronau- tical Exhibition. While at the exhibition the Russians indi- cated the CLEAT could not give a flying display as the tractors could not haul it into position on the runway--although a trac- tor had towed ramp. 25X1 dicate Is une prototype has numer- ous fatigue cracks stopped with drilled holes at both ends. Buckling, caused by heat, has scarred the engine nacelles. Other CLEAT aircraft are not known to be in service or COhIAL Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Pace 1 of 15 Approved For RgWase 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 in production. Impressive as it is in size, the obvious com- promises made in using avail- able bomber components detract from the aircraft's potential as a profitable civil or mili- tary transport. Wings, power plants, and landing-gear assembly of the types used in BEAR bombers,were? probably used for the CLEAT, These components are mounted low on the transport fuselage, giving it an extremely high ground clearance of at least 12 feet. Less practical is the resulting placement of passenger and cargo decks about 18 feet above the ground, necessitating ground equipment of unique design for loading and main- tenance. in by OR ARGENTINE MOVES TO COUNTER MILITARY UNREST Argentine President Fron- dizi appears to be weathering threats of a military coup. Having re-organized the cabi- net, he is considering the ap- pointment of compromise offi- cers to top positions to satisfy demands made by moderate mili- tary elements as well as by those still advocating a coup. The new economy and labor min- ister, Alvaro Alsogaray, has included among his policy an- nouncements various steps to counter popular discontent which stems primarily from aus- terity measures under the US- backed stabilization program. Probably because of suspi- cion in left-of-center circles of .Alsogaray's.outspoken ad- vocacy of free enterprise, his first official act was to an- nounce a decree effective 30 June ending army control over personnel in the petroleum in- dustry, railways, and the Buenos Aires bus system. This move will eliminate one issue used by the Peronistas and Communists for strike agitation and possi- bly mollify somewhat the con- siderable number of Intransi- gent Radicals--members of Fron- dizi's own party--who consider Alsogaray too conservative,. Emphasizing the necessity of the stabilization program, Alsogaray said the government intends to bear the brunt of austerity for the people by re- ducing bureaucratic and mili- tary expenditures. State con- trols over the economy, will be lessened, and price controls enforced over about a dozen es- sential consumer items. In a clear reference to military complaints about Peron- ista and Communist influence, Alsogaray stated that the cabi- net reorganization was not a change in policy but in person- nel, giving responsibility to those having clearly defined political, economic, and social views. He asked a six months' trial period--which would be bleak at the outset--before judgment is passed on the gov- ernment's policies, While the majority of the armed forces reportedly are satisfied with Alsogaray, they still insist, ,on shifts in mili- tary commands. Frondizi de- scribed the situation to Ambas- sador Beaulac as an institution- al crisis in the armed forces, mainly the army. This break- down in discipline.in both army SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 2 of 15 Approved For (ease 2005/0/,l DP79-00927A300070001-1 and navy has resulted in con- flicting demands, but negotia- tions are under.wayltoward a compromise, which may include soft treatment of rebellious officers. 25X1 25X1 PRESSURES ON THE BOLIVIAN GOVERNMENT The Bolivian Government of moderate President Siles, peri- odically threatened by the left- ists within the ruling party who object to the US-backed stabilization program, was con- fronted on.26 June with an up- rising of opposition elements in the eastern provincial city of Santa Cruz. The govern- ment's extensive use of.armed force to suppress the outbreak and its subsequent military op- erations against rebel groups. reflect its well-grounded fear of further trouble in the area, but also seem to have been de- signed in part to unify the hostile leftist and moderate factions in its own party. The government apparently precipitated the Santa Cruz un- rest by removing local offi- cials allegedly subservient to the opposition "Santa Cruz Com- mittee" as a step toward reim- posing its authority over the area, long a center of resent- ment against the ruling Nation- alist Revolutionary Movement (MNR). The government also was concerned over renewed reports of subversive activity in the Santa Cruz Department by the principal rightist group, which perennially plots against the regime and made its most recent 25X1 coup attempt on 19 April. 25X1 25X1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 the Siles regime aces serious civil war in the department, where an armed rebel force of an estimated 1,000 men is reportedly being pursued by strong government forces. The government's apparent provocation of this unrest could have been timed to distract growing discontent against stabi- lization, to reduce dissension within the MNR, and to undercut the threat of a general strike of the miners. Unions in the Miners' Federation, including those which have backed Siles in previous clashes with the leftist labor leader Juan Lechin over stabilization, reportedly are unanimous in support of a strike against the unfreezing of all mine commissary prices scheduled by the government about mid-July. This move, de- signed to meet a commitment to the International Monetary Fund under the stabilization program, caused considerable political tension when it was partially implemented last March. Bolivia's economy, which deteriorated sharply in 1958 and has poor prospects for im- provirement in 1959, is largely dependent on mineral production and exports. A fully effective and protracted strike by the miners would threaten both the stability of the President's regJLme and the stabilization effort. SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 3 of 15 Approved For Fase 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927Q 300070001-1 SECRET 1 July 1959 Siles,who may covertly set- tle with the miners to evade the commitment to the IMF, could find his position further compromised by the expected return of former President Paz in early July. Ac- cording to the press, Paz--head of the MNR -has been traveling in the Soviet bloc and is prob- ably investigating recent re- ported bloc offers of economic aid to Bolivia. He may use any such proposal in an attempt to extract concessions from the IMF or to reduce the country's de- pendence on US assistance. Paz is likely to weaken the govern- ment's determination to unfreeze commissary prices if he inter- venes in the dispute between Silas and the Miners' Federa- tion. De Gaulle's policy toward Algeria is emerging with in- creasing clarity after a year of sometimes deliberately am- biguous pronouncements. Meas- ures now being pressed vigor- ously on all economic, military, diplomatic, and political levels indicate that De Gaulle's ulti- /nate goal is the retention of French sovereignty over an Al- geria. remaining within the framework of French political in- stitutions, but having a dis- tinctive culture,a greatly ex- panded economy, and predominantly Moslem local governments. According to an apparently authentic "top secret" document leaked this month to a French magazine, the government's plan for Algeria gives priority to the pacification program to force the rebels to accept a cease-fire without political preconditions. It also pre- cludes using any outside "good offices." Once peace is re- stored, Algeria's own elected representatives would be permit- ted to work out gradually a po- litical program for the area. Economic and social develop- ments are aimed at giving the Moslems a standard of living nearer to that of the French and at encouraging the emergence of a Moslem elite. The key element in this scheme is the ten-year Constan- tine Plan for economic develop- ment announced by De Gaulle last fall which is now moving into advanced planning stages. Plans are being made to raise locally some of the very considerable funds required--a move which may slow up the rate at which the program can provide new jobs for Algerians. French spokesmen are con- tinuing their recently optimis- tic statements about the mili- tary situation following De Gaulle's May prediction that the end of.the war is "in sight." Indications of low morale and supply shortages among the reb- els are probably strengthening French confidence, despite the resurgence of terrorism and the rebels' apparent ability to main- tain their level of strength. Paris is pressing the dip- lomatic phase of its policy on the premise that it can toler- ate no foreign aid to the rebels. A ""black list" of foreign firms. doing business with the rebels has been prepared, and France has protested to the United States and other countries about the activities of Algerians with- in their borders. 25X1 In the light of recent de- velopments on Algeria, the key statement in De Gaulle's policy seems to be his original refer- ence to "realizing the Algerian personality" through consulta- tiorts with duly elected politi- cal representatives after hos- tilities have ended. 25X1 1 I SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 4 of 15 Approved For Lease 2005/03/15: CIA-RDP79-009272300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SU 1 July 1959 MARY. MOSCOW TO PRESS FOR CLOSER RELATIONS DURING VISIT OF HAILE SELASSIE Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie arrived in Moscow on 29 June for what is expected to be.a tiro-week visit, his first to the USSR. Soviet leaders ill probably utilize the occa- sion to press for closer economic and cultural relations with Addis Ababa and to encourage the Emperor's desire to appear'as a neutralist. On 30 June Soviet Premier Khrushchev hailed Ethi- opia as "practically the only island of independence. and na- tional freedom in an Africa enslaved by the colonizers." tine Soviet Government would present a broad selection of proposals for educational., eco- nomic, agricultural, and military assistance to Ethiopia during the visitr oscow is seeking to reduce American influence and is particularly interested in undercutting US 7 military assistance and in elim- inating US military installations in the Asmara area. The Emperor, who is trying to stress his independence of the West and to associate Ethi- opia more closely with pan- Africanism, probably will accept some form of Soviet aid as a demonstration of this policy, although he said he does not want additional bloc personnel in Ethiopia. A Soviet Embassy official'inn Addis Ababa stated in April, "If the Emperor asks for a loan, he will get it." A visiting Soviet agricul- tural team expressed interest in an assistance program in February, and a five-man dele- gation which arrived in Ethiopia on 10 June reportedly has entered into preliminary fegotiations for a commerce agreement to be signed at the end of the Emperor's visit and has discussed with Ethiopian officials plans to expand the Soviet hospital in Addis Ababa. Prague is the only other blocs capital the Emperor is scheduled to visit during this tour. NEW AGRICULTURAL PROGRAM IN POLAND A new agricultural program introduced by Poland's party First Secretary Gomulka on 22 June at the party's second plenum is in' tended to help attain by 1965 a 30-percent increase over the 1958 level of production and to provide a large increase--25. billion:. zlotys ($833,000,000), or 33 percent more than originally-. planned-?in funds available for investment in agricultural development projects, such as land improvement and partial mechanization of farm operations. The vehicle of the program is to be the "agricultural cir?- cle. "' . These "circles" are eventually to encompass all vil- lages and the majority of peas-- ants and will be the administra- tors of funds and machinery to be dispensed to their members, ers, 25X1 25X1 SECRET PART 1 1 Approved For Releass ff0 / B SECRET PART 1 1 Appage 5 of 15 Approved For Rase 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A0 300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 The funds for the investment in- crease are to come from the dif- ference between what the gov- ernment pays the peasants for compulsory deliveries and what these products would bring on the free market. A companion move essential to an improved situation for Polish agriculture is the re- cent postponement of all "her- itage" payments by farm owners for four years. This is said to free a half million farms from an annual debt charge of approximately 6 billion zlotys ($200,000,000) which can be used for investment also. The regime is also working on a draft bill to prevent a division by inheritance of medium-size and small farms. These steps are necessary, according to the regime, because Polish agriculture has failed to maintain the rate of produc- tion increase that occurred soon after Gomulka came to power. Although Polish agricultural output increased about 7 percent in 1957 and 1958 and contributed much to halting inflationary trends,, the regime feels the increase in agricultural output must continue high, given the lack of land reserves, large food imports, and the rapidly growing population. Gomulka therefore has introduced a milder measure than the brutal collectivization drives being im- plemented in'the other satellites. The success of this program will depend on the peasants' reaction, since only 14 percent of the peasantry are now in "agricultural circles." The peasant probably will not be enthusiastic at first. Conserv- ative: and distrustful by na- ture, he has come to doubt-- largely because of past experi- ence--the benefits of government actions. Increased party par-' ticipation in the circles, ini- tially to oversee fund alloca- tions, may hinder the growth of the "circle" movement. The moderate tone of Gomulka's speech, however, was designed to allay peasant fears of a new collectivization campaign. This fear may be enhanced by the prospect that, despite promises to the contrary, com- pulsory deliveries are to be continued for at least another seven years, The party appar- ently is somewhat divided over the outlook for this program, for violent discussions report- edly have taken place. However, if the regime is trying to find a plan which is feasible yet can appear to show progress toward bloc agricultural ortho- doxy at the time of the Khru.- shchev visit in mid-July, it has chosen the mildest available method and the one most likely 25X1 to be successful. (Prepared by ORR) YUGOSLAVIA WOOS WESTERN SOCIALISTS In the past month Yugoslavia has again started wooing West European socialist parties with considerable vigor--a policy it has followed in the past when- ever the bloc has succeeded in partially isolating it. Vice President Edvard Kardelj made a tour of the Scandinavian coun- tries from 26 May to 12 June and reportedly stopped for two days in Hamburg en route home, presumably to talk with West German Social Democratic party SECRET PART I I Approved For Releas ,d,~ 0 /_I, : CIA--RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 COMMENTS Page 6 of 15 Approved Fgoelease 200SJR QIA-RDP79-0092 02300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 (SPD) leaders. On 22 June, Under Secretary of Foreign Af- fairs Ales Bebler and Croatian party boss Vladimir Bakaric be- gan visits to the socialist par- ties of West Germany, Belgium, and Great Britain. The Yugoslavs exchanged views with their socialist hosts on international affairs and their experiences in establish- ing a socialist system. While it is difficult to gauge the influence of the Western social- ists on Yugoslavia's internal system, the visits have fur- nished support for such concepts in Yugoslavia's ideological po- sition as the one that all coun- tries of the world are moving toward socialism--a view unac- ceptable to the bloc. The visits cannot be ex- pected to result in specific steps toward closer political cooperation between Belgrade and the governments of these states--most of which are ori- ented toward NATO. Belgrade's claim that it is a neutral be- tween the "two blocs" partic- ularly necessitates caution. Kardelj's visit to Denmark was somewhat marred, for example, when his statement that excel- lent political cooperation existed between Denmark and Yugoslavia compelled Danish Premier Hansen in his 28 May press conference to reaffirm Denmark's NATO ties. The visits do, however, create a favorable climate for increased economic activity and cooperation toward regional European economic groupings such as the Common Market. The imprisonment of Milovan Dji:las--author of The New Class --and the leaders o! Yugos a a's prewar socialist party has also hampered the development of closer relations with West European socialist parties. All three Scandinavian premiers brought up this question when they visited Belgrade in 1957 and 1958, The British Labor party apparently also protested these arrests to Foreign Minis- ter Popovic in October 1958, The friendly atmosphere of the present visits, however, sug- gests that the Djilas issue is losing some of its negative ef- fect, and there is no evidence that the subject was broached during Kardelj's trip. The two Yugoslav visits to West Germany appear to have resulted in fruitful discussions with the SPD and general agree- ment on such questions as the Geneva conference and the SPD's program for the reunification of Germany. The SPD also served as an intermediary in setting a meeting between the Yugoslavs and a West German Foreign Min- istry representative. Such a meeting was held on 24 June to discuss the possible re-estab- lishment of diplomatic relations between the two states but had no positive results. SOVIET BLOC MOVES TO EXPAND CREDIT RELATIONS WITH WEST The Soviet bloc is attempt- ing to obtain additional credits in the West for the purchase of technologically advanced equip- ment, principally for the plas- tics, synthetics, and petrochem- ical industries, fields to which the bloc has only recently given high priority. The import of such equipment has recently been stepped up and is facil- itated by the extension of credits. The current credit drive stems from a variety of economic SECRET 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 7 of 15 Approved For4jease 2005/03/15: CIA-RDP79-00927,2300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 and political motivations. The receipt of credits from Western sources will support Soviet at- tempts to expand exports, and the introduction of credit dis- cussions with some West European countries will establish a new area of competition in East-West trade. The emphasis has been on medium-term credits--up to five years--for which the USSR has been trying to get government guarantees in order to en- courage the flow of private credits. Future repayment will be made through the export of bloc goods drawn from the larg- er productive base the bloc is establishing. tential private credit extensions are greatest in this field. Within the past two years complete West European indus- triaal units have been sold to the bloc on medium-term credits, All of these have been financed privately, but in some cases government credit guarantees have also been made available. At the same time the bloc it- self also extends such credits to the free world, to less de- veloped countries. Turkey, Iran, Indonesia, and Argentina, for example, have purchased less sophisticated factories financed by bloc loans of less than five years' duration. The largest num- ber of and most often used credits remain, however, commercial credits of up to a year connected with the financing of or- dinary trade. These credits are designed primarily to ease the flow of trade, but, beyond facilitating the expansion of eco- nomic relations, are of only minor impor- tance to the bloc. Duration of credits grant- ed the bloc in recent years has ranged from 30-day commercial credits to a 20-year loan. Of chief significance to bloc coun- tries are credits permitting lengthy deferment of payments for purchases of advanced West- ern equipment and plants for industrial modernization and development. Only Poland has received such loans; two West European and one American loan for 9-, 12-, and 20-year periods for the purchase of miscellane- ous manufactured goods. The bloc has chosen the field of medium-term Western credits as the most promising, and po- Bilateral trade agreements concluded by the bloc frequently contain "swing" credit provisions These are designed to permit temporary lances in trade under clearing agreements and usually are settled at the end of the year with payments in goods or cash. These temporary credit accounts, however, some- times are carried over periods longer than one year and have been used by the bloc to force free world creditors into ex- panding imports of bloc goods. (Prepare by OR 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMITS Page 8 of 15 Approved Forease 2005/3tRDP79-009272300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 DEVELOPMENTS IN CHINA'S TRADE WITH THE FREE WORLD Continued reports of seri- ous difficulties affecting Com- munist China's foreign trade position are supported in part by trade statistics for the first months of 1959. Trade with the free world has declined from the extremely high volumes recorded during the latter part of 1958--particularly in imports from Western Europe, where China was making heavy purchases of manufactured goods and semi- finished products to bolster its "leap. forward" industriali- zation program. Trade this year with Western Europe is greater than in.early 1958, but this has been largely due to fulfill- ment of contracts concluded last year and there has been a marked slack in signing of new export contracts, Thus it is unlikely that trade with the free world will reach the high levels of 1958 during the rest of this yearn There is no indication that China's trade with bloc countries has declined, and if existing commitments are fulfilled,a substantial increase in Chinese trade with. the bloc can be ex- pected this year. The greatest decline in Chinese sales to the free world occurred in trade with Hong Kong. Last year Peiping exported nearly $245,000,000 to that colony, but after rising to a record monthly total of $28,000,000 in December 1958, its exports there fell to a four-year low of $50, 000,000,in the first four months of this year,, Sales of Chinese foodstuffs and other traditional exports have been severely re- duced,-reflecting shortages on the mainland. in 1958--there is little evidence of renewed Chinese efforts to mount another trade offensive. Normal trade is continuing, but without the emphasis on sales- promotion techniques character- istic of last year's program. This situation was accu- rately reflected in reports from the Canton Trade Fair held in April and May 1959, at which transactions were less than 45 ,percent of those claimed for each of the two 1958 fairs,. Chinese reluctance to make new trade commitments proved disappointing to representatives from West European firms who came expecting to place large orders for Chinese goods. In contrast to its previous practices, Peiping gave little publicity to the fair and re- fused applications from many who planned to attend. Most foreign businessmen agreed that the Chinese seemed gen- uninely eager to promote further trade but simply were unable to accept orders in quantities comparable to those of last year. They also complained that the quality of many products was far be- low previous standards and unacceptable to Western cus- tomers, Chinese officials gave assurances earlier this year that any delays and difficulties in fulfilling export commitments would be overcome quickly and that. trade conditions soon would return to normal. Recently they have been less optimistic, however, and refuse to speculate when solutions will be found to the economic dislocations caused by the "leap forward" and com- In Southeast Asia--the scene of vigorous export activity SECRET 25X1 2 5 1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II. NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 9 of 15 Approved For ase 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-009272300070001-1 SECRET PEIPING"WARNS?"WASHINGTON ON PARACEL RECONNAISSANCE 1 July 1959 Peiping has recently is- ued "serious warnings" 50, 51, 52, and 53, charging US naval aircraft with "violating the skies"over the Paracel Islands, referred to as part of Kwangtung Province, 300 miles to the north. These warnings of "intrusions" are the first to involve the islands, although a long series of similar protests have al- leged US violations of Commu- nist-claimed sea and air space along the East China coast. O R LEE .00 Paracel Islands Peiping appears anxious to stress US "provocations and aggression" against Communist China0 It probably feels the Paracel warn itgs mill'reinforce its claim to the islands--a claim disputed by Nationalist China and South Vietnam--and might result in elimination of US aerial reconnaissance. Should the patrols be halted, Peiping would probably portray such a halt as implied recognition of Communist claims. Chinese be- lief that the "warnings" might result in an end to the patrols : AMPHITRITE GROUP ~..Wn?~iy 1}; CRESCENT GROUP%j Ii Ilv 1. :::l.inroIn 1. may be based on the alteration last October of a US naval patrol in the Matsu area. When a portion of this patrol near Matsu ceased, the continuous warnings concerning it also stopped. The Chinese Communists have maintained a permanent colony in the Paracels since 1955. In its intensive effort to exploit the limited natural re- sources, Peiping within the past six months has increased the colony's size; an-estimated 500-600 Chinese now are engaged in fishing and JA .excavating guano deposits. Most of this activity is centered around the base at Woody Island in the Amphitrite group, although construction has recently been observed on Lincoln Island, 25 miles to the east. Chinese fishing junks have visited most of the islands in the Paracels--including the Crescent group, where a small South Vietnamese garrison 45 miles southwest of Woody rep- resents Saigon's "sphere of influence." Several of these Chinese boats and their crews were seized in February and britfly detained by the South Vietnamese. Peiping protested strongly and small Chinese Com- munist naval vessels were sub- sequently sighted near Woody, but no further action was taken. Peiping apparently is de- termined to defend the Amphi- trite operations from any Chi- nese Nationalist or South Viet- namese attack. The "warnings," however, contain no threat to take military action against American air reconnaissance over the islands, The Communists appear intent on commercial ac- tivity and strengthening their claim to the islands. 25X1 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 10 of 15 Approved For?, lease 2005/03/1 QARDP79-0092 02300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 Agitation against the Com- munist government in India's Kerala State has been intensi- fied following high-level Con- gress party meetings in New Delhi. Clashes between Communist- directed police and demonstra- tors continue, with nearly 20,- 000 arrested thus far. The Con- gress party's top executive board on 29 June gave qualified support to the three-week-old opposition campaign by calling for general elections in Kerala on grounds that the Communists no longer represent majority opinion in the state. Prime Minister Nehru re- turned from his 22-24 June visit to Kerala apparently convinced that the anti-Communist movement had wider popular support than originally estimated and that the local Congress party could not be withdrawn from the agita- tion. Nehru conferred with the Congress high command in New Delhi from 25 to 29 June to con- sider charges that the party was using "unconstitutional" methods to force the Communists out of office. While no firm decision either to condemn the agitation or give it full support apparent- ly was taken, the national lead- ers' neutral position has been interpreted by state party chiefs as a green light to step up the campaign. The president of the Kerala Congress party--who was summoned to New Delhi to join the dis- cussions on 29 June--at the same time has been persuaded to direct. the party's effort into more con- stitutional channels. A new phase of "absolute noncoopera- tion" has been launched aimed at forcing the Communists to submit to immediate elections. One tactic being considered by opposi- tion strategists is to paralyze they state administration through mass resignations of non-Commu- nist civil officials. Congress leaders in Kerala are receiving increasing cooperation from other opposition parties, who appear equally determined to press the agitation until the Commu- nists are ousted. The Communist party's na- tional leaders maintain that the Kerala government will not re- sign under pressure and that there is no proof that new elec- tions are needed. The party's general secretary on 30 June condemned the Congress high com- mand's call for elections as "dishonest" and a "complete en- dorsement" of the opposition's "undemocratic" demand. Commu- nist officials in Kerala may decide to revert to repressive police action to intimidate the agitators. A renewal of serious vio- lence seems likely. Catholic and. Hindu communal leaders--un- der less restraint than politi- cal leaders--will be encouraged to strengthen their resistance to the government as well. Extrem- ists may try to touch off wide- spread disturbances so that New Delhi will have sufficient cause 25X1 to suspend parliamentary govern- ment and impose direct rule. Negotiations on the repa- triation of the approximately 50,000 Vietnamese refugees in northeast Thailand opened on 20 June in Rangoon between rep- resentatives of the North Viet- namese and Thai Red Cross So- cieties. The talks, an impor- tant departure from Thailand's policy of avoiding direct contact SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070p01-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 11 of 15 Approved For lease 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927 72300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 with North Vietnam, climax months of serious consideration of the refugee problem by the Thai authorities. Thailand regards the pre- dominantly pro-Communist refu- gees as a security threat in the northeast and appears de- termined to repatriate them-- even at the risk of offending South Vietnam. Practically all of the refugees came originally from North Vietnam or are de- of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), has made on-the-scene studies of the refugee communities and acted as informal negotiator between the Thai and Vietnamese governments. He is sitting in on the talks in Rangoon, but they have bogged down in a pro- cedural dispute about his role. The North Vietnamese are trying to minimize his part in an obvious effort to give the ap- pearance of a direct confronta- tion between North Vietnam and Thailand. The Thais insist, however, that Durand, as ICRC representative, play a central role. Durand is considerably less optimistic than he was a few months ago. He now believes it likely that the North Viet- namese representatives will have no specific proposals prepared for the conference and that they will use the Rangoon talks pri- marily for propaganda purposes, since they have had no previous opportunity for regional con- tacts of this kind. North Vietnam is reported to have been "slightly taken aback" at the prospect that most of the 50,000 refugees would opt for repatriation to the north. It would probably prefer to keep them in place, both because of their subversive potential and the problems posed by their resettlement, but it is publicly committed to taking back all who want to return,and it may consider the propaganda ad- vantages sufficient to allow an eventual settlement. scended from inhabitants of the north, and the vast majority feel an allegiance to Hanoi rather than Saigon. The prospects for tangible results from the present dis- cussions remain uncertain. Andre Durand, a representative The recent successful con- clusion of the Geneva negotiations on the repatriation of Koreans in Japan to North Korea may give added impetus for agreement in Rangoon. Bangkok may feel that the precedent established at Ge- neva giving the ICRC an "advisory" 25X1 role will minimize any adverse reaction from Thailand's Western allies. SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART I I NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 12 of 15 Approved For R ease 2005/03/15: CIA-RDP79-00927 2300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 INDONESIA President Sukarno, who re- turned to Djakarta on 29 June from a two-month trip, is con- sulting political leaders on Indonesia's constitutional crisis and acute financial situation. even ua y u ar- no will request parliament for permission to impose the 1945 constitution by decree, thereby strengthening presidential pow- ers vis-a-vis the legislature. The Communist party con- tinues its policy of ostensible all-out support for Sukarno. and has instructed the party faction in the Constituent Assembly to attend no further sessions of that body unless one is called for the sole purpose of voting the assembly's dissolution. Should the National party adopt the same tactic, the two parties together could block a quorum and thereby prevent further function- iig of the assembly. Both the Communist and National parties have publicly called on Sukarno to impose the constitution by decree. Another problem which had been pigeonholed pending Sukar- no's return is the resolution of a "mutiny" in the Indonesian Navy and the demand by junior of- ficeers for the replacement of Navy Chief of Staff Vice Admiral Subijakto. The admiral appears to be under house arrest. The navy's difficulties appear to stem from discontent with Subi- jakt.o's policies and are uncon- nected with either the provincial revolt or the current political crisis. The Indonesian Government reportedly has gained the agree- ment of the Malayan and Singa- pore governments to deny resi- dence and entry to Indonesian dissident representatives after July. This action, which Djakar- ta has been seeking for some time, would force the dissidents to transfer their major overseas operations from Singapore to Hong Kong. The greater distance involved is likely to add to rebel difficulties, particularly in their smuggling activities. Prime Minister Djuanda, who was scheduled to visit Mos- cow in July, reportedly has post- poned his visit in view of the continuing..; crisis in Indonesia. SHANS BECOMING INCREASINGLY TROUBLESOME.'FOR BURMESE' GOVERNMENT Growing restiveness among Burma's one million Shans, who make up the country's second largest ethnic minority group, is a source of serious concern to the central government in Ran- goon. Much of the tension stems from the efforts of the central. government, which is dominated by the country's Burman majority, to eliminate the feudal privi- leges of the 33 sawbwas (petty princes) who have traditionally ruled the Shans and whose terri- tories make up the Shan State. Many Shans--probably the vast majority of them--fear that Ran- goon?s drive to remove this "un- democratic anachronism" is merely a cloak for the "Burmanization" of the Shan State. The mutual distrust of the Burmans and the Shans is of long stand- ing and borders on open hos- tility in many cases. SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 13 of 15 25X1 Approved For lease 2005ISE?RiirRDP79-009272300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 After several years of dick- ering, the central government and the sawbwas finally came to terms this spring regarding the phased abolition of the sawbwas' privileged position in Shan State affairs. In return'for the formal renunciation of their judicial and administrative pow- ers, the princes received cash equivalent to 15 times the an- nual revenue of their respective principalities. The sawbwas are guaranteed continued control of the state government until at least 1964, at which time they will have to contest in free elections for the 25 seats in the upper house of the national parliament which had hitherto been theirs by appointment. Un- der the Burmese constitution, control of, the minority state governments is exercised by the members of both houses of parlia- ment from the respective states. Contrary to expectations, the formal agreement between Rangoon and the sawbwas has ag- gravated, rather than reduced, tensions. The Ne Win govern- ment's sensitivity and concern over developments in the Shan State are reflected in the un- usual security precautions it has imposed on travel by for- eign nationals there. It is also reflected in a recent ap- peal to Shan youths not to join a group of Shan dissidents which has been sporadically attacking Burmese Army installations in eastern Burma near the Thai frontier. This appeal is the first open admission by Rangoon that there is serious trouble in the Shan State, Rangoon's difficulties in containing the Shan dissidents, whose strength is variously es- timated at from 1,000 to 5,000, will be further complicated if the 3,000 Chinese Nationalist ir- regulars who operate in the same general area carry out their threat, contained in a recent letter to the Burmese Government, to support the Shans with weapons and ammunition. Chinese National- ist - Shan collaboration would negate any hope the Burmese Army might have of suppressing the Shah dissidents. It might better enable the latter to feed on dis- content in other parts of the Shan State to swell their ranks and extend their operations. Such a development would weaken Ran- goon's authority in a large area contiguous to Communist China and make more difficult the suppres- sion of the several other insur- gent groups still in the field in Burma. SECRET 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 14 of 15 Approved For lease 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927 902300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 COMMUNISTS LOSE STRENGTH IN ICELANDIC ELECTIONS The Communist-dominated Labor Alliance suffered a set- back in the general elections in Iceland on 28 June, losing some 20 percent of its popular vote and one of its eight seats in the 52-member Parliament. The pro-NATO Conservative party ,and the largely rural and iso- lationist Progressives both in- creased their representation, gaining one and two seats re- spectively. The Social Democrats, who with the tacit support of the Con- servatives have been conducting a'minor- ity government since last December, lost two seats. The Communists pushed hard on the popular issue of the fishing-limits dis- however, the Progressives will challenge the Conservative - Social Democratic group and attempt to bloc electoral reform. Despite their losses, the Communists are in a key position. The Conservatives and Social Democrats need their support to assure final passage by the new Parliament of the electoral reform bill. Although the Communists are pledged to elec- ICELANDIC PARLIAMENT SOCIAL DEMOCRATS PROGRESSIVES (17) pute with Britain and the dor- mant issue of American forces in Iceland, but apparently failed to benefit from either one. All parties oppose any concessions to Britain on fish- ing limits. The Social Democrats with conservative support will try to form an interim government, with the objective of passing for the necessary second time the electoral reform bill, which will partially rectify the heavy overrepresentation of the rural areas. On the basis of their considerable gains, '60 1JNE 1959 GENERAL F cT!c NS CONSERVATIVES (19) toral reform, as a price for their cooperation they may seek assurances of representation in the government to be formed after the fall general election. In the autumn elections which must follow the second passage of the ref or* bill, the Progressives are likely to lose strength to the other three parties. The Conservatives and the Social Democrats would prob- ably command a firm majority in the Parliament, which would be expanded to 60 seats, and they would be in a position to forma viable coalition gov- ernment. 25X1 -SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 15 of 15 Approved Foelease 2005 and cultural patterns and an intense fear of being swal- lowed up by the alien culture of the ethnic majority. 1 July 1951) PART - I I I PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES INDIGENOUS-MINORITY PROBLEMS IN-SOUTHEAST ASIA Throughout non-Communist Southeast Asia, indigenous mi- nority groups constitute ele- ments in the national societies which are highly susceptible to dissidence and subversive ac- tivities. The power of large alien groups such as the Over- seas Chinese and Indians--and, to a lesser extent, such dis- placed local groups as the Vietnamese refugees in north- eastern Thailand--has long been recognized and feared by the national governments. Minor- ities which have no prospects of foreign support, however, have generally been ignored and even repressed--the national governments often overriding or undermining their cultural at- tainments and group interests. Communist China and North Vietnam have already exploited these tendencies to gain influ- ence with the Laotian, Cambo- dian, and Vietnamese minorities and, through the Burmese Commu- nist insurgents, have on occa- sion assisted the Karen rebels. The minorities of South- east Asia vary in size, impor- tance, and cultural attainment. The Shans of Burma, numbering about 1,000,000, have their own state within the national gov- ernment and a tradition of a hereditary feudal form of gov- ernment. Like the Shans, though less numerous, the Kachins form a well-defined ethnic unit as Burma's northern buffer state bordering upon China and Tibet. At the other end of the spec- trum are the linguistically and culturally disparate "montag- nards"--hill tribes--of the Laotian-Cambodian-Vietnamese.: border area and the scattered aborigines of the Malay penin- sula. Sharply differentiated from one another, these groups have in common their fierce pride in their own organizations Burma The ethnic diversities in Burma were recognized even be- fore independence as a potential INDIGENOUS MINORITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA (ESTIMATES) T;URMA (total population 20,000,000) Chin 423,000-\ Kachin 361,000 Estimates of 1953 Karen 814,000 projected from 1931 Kayah 60,000 census. LAOS (total population 2,100,000) Statistics are inadequate for any esti- mate of the size of minority groups. However, the Meo and Kha peoples, to- gether with lesser minorities, make up approximately half the total population. MALAYA (total population 6,250,000) Aborigines 100,000 SOUTH VIETNAM (total population 12,100,000) No minority figures available. source of trouble. Special ef- forts were made to ensure peace- able working relations between the dominant Burmans, making up 70 percent of the population, and, the ethnic minorities. The Shans, Kachins, Karens, and Kayahs have all been given their own states within the union, while the Chins have a special CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 1 of 11 1171DENTIAL 25X1 Approved Forelease 2005/03A6KC 1 P79-00927.002300070001-1 '.1 July'.1959 Southeast Asia b]A'LAYA NORTWI-. BORN`EQ _` BRUNEI SARA ,r, t a. s ?..~.=NETN_ N D 0 NPE`"OS I A administrative district. By specific provision of the con- stitution, the minorities were given representation in the up- per house of parliament out of proportion to their population and, by the decision of the Burman-dominated Constituent Assembly, the provisional pres- idency of the union was given to a Shan feudal prince. The current President is a Karen named in an effort to gain sup- port of that minority. Despite these efforts, Burma has been plagued with minority dissidence almost con- tinuously since independence. The Karen National Defense Or- ganization has been ruthlessly fighting for an independent state. Its leaders would throw in their lot with any power at- tempting to overthrow the cen- tral government in return for a guaranteed independent Karen state. On different occasions in the past they have cooperated with the various Burmese Commu- nist insurgents, the Chinese Nationalist irregulars, and the Mon ethnic minority. They have continuously sought the help of the Thai Government and today are attempting to cooperate with incipient Shan dissidence in eastern Kengtung State. On Burma's western frontier the Arakanese, ethnically Burman but culturally divergent, have continuously fought in parlia- ment for an autonomous Arakanese state, while the Mujahid, Mos- lem, bandits in the Arakan, have been a source of dissidence along the Pakistan border. The sensitivity of the minorities to Burman domina- tion has been reinforced by Rangoon's failure to make any specific contributions to mi- nority welfare. The govern- ment's educational program re- quires the study of Burmese and makes no place for the mi- nority languages or cultural heritage. The economic devel- opment programs have been cen- tered almost entirely in the Burman-dominated Rangoon SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 2 of 11 Approved F elease 2005103L15.iIJ1 RDP79-0091MA002300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 and Mandalay areas. In the po- litical arena, despite formal concessions to the minorities, the government program of "Bur- manization" has tended to un- dermine the status of indigenous as well as alien minority groups. Cambodian Government under present conditions, they are a potential source of dissidence, available for exploitation should the state of Cambodia's relations with the Sino-Soviet bloc make this desirable. Minority peoples make up almost half the population of Laos but, except for occasional attempts at exploitation, have been neglected by the Lao-dom- inated government. The domestic pro-Communists, on the other hand, have presented themselves as the champion and the polit- ical vehicle of the minorities and, unlike the government, have taken special care to re- spect their cultural patterns. As a result, the candidates of the Communist-front Neo Lao Hak Zat (NLHZ) party--political suc- cessor of the rebel Pathet Lao-- in the 1958 elections won heavy support from the Kha tribesmen, who form a majority of the pop- ulation in several provinces of southern Laos. The NLHZ has also made con- siderable inroads among the heavy concentrations of Meo tribesmen in northern and cen- tral Laos. The recent escape and successful resistance of the former Pathet Lao bat- talion was made possible, in part, by the sympathy and sup- port of the Meo tribesmen in east-central Laos. Cambodia Although Cambodia is eth- nically the most cohesive coun- try in Southeast Asia, with most of its minority elements fairly well integrated into the Khmer community, a small num- ber of hill peoples inhabit the remote northeast near the Viet- namese border. Shunned by the Cambodians, these primitive aborigines are fair prey for Communist propagandists, who have been active in the area since it was occupied by the Vietnamese Communists during the Indochina War. While these tribesmen pose no threat to the South Vietnam South Vietnam, on the other hand, already has a serious prob- lem of Vietnamese Communist agi- tation among the mountain tribes- men, who predominate in the strategic highland plateau in Central Vietnam. The tribes- men's basic animosity toward the Vietnamese has been inten- sified by the Diem government's ambitious development and re- settlement program in the pla- teau area, heretofore their ex- clusive domain.. The Communists, through agents and radiobroad- casts in various native dialects, are active in fanning unrest in the highlands and backing an embryonic autonomy movement. Saigon is concerned over these developments and has taken steps designed to allay the resent- ment and suspicion. Inherent Vietnamese prejudice against the aborigines, however, remains an impediment in implementing the reforms. Thailand Thailand's indigenous mi- norities, like those of Cambodia, are mainly assimilated into Thai society. Only along the border with Malaya is there any poten- tial minority dissidence. Mos- lem Malays in the southern prov- inces of Thailand have been the indirect victims of Bangkok's efforts to assimilate the large Chinese minorities. In the past, when pressures to conform to Thai standards of language, re- ligion, and culture have become too strong, these Malays have threatened to secede and join their Malay kinsmen to the south. The Thai problem, how- ever.is moderate compared with those of Burma, Laos, and Viet- nan,: as the government has shown itself sensitive to local demands and has granted a large degree of local autonomy to the Moslem minority. SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 3 of 11 Approved For&Iease 2005/03SE DP79-009274002300070001 -1 1 July 1959 Malaya Often overlooked in the ma- jor problem of Malay-Chinese relations in the Federation of Malaya is the status of the 100{ 000 aborigines, Although they are scattered', throughout the jungle and make little trouble on their own, they served dur- ing the height of the Communist terrorism as a source of sup- plies and information for the insurgents. In the event of renewed insurgency, these jungle people, out of fear or ignorance, would probably aid jungle-based forces against the government. Philippines and Indonesia The Philippines and Indo- nesia present problems somewhat different from those of main- land Southeast Asia. In the Philippines, al- though the population is a heterogeneous mixture of tribal and linguistic groups, a common sense of nationality and reli- gion tends to bind the country together. Only the Moslem Moros of southern Mindanao stand aloof. Representing the farthest east- ward spread of Islam in the 16th century, they have withstood Spanish, American, and Filipino efforts at integration and cen- tralized control, On the other hand, unless swept up into a pan-Islamic movement which might have had its roots in Indonesia, they do not appear particularly vulnerable to either Communist propaganda or other outside in- fluences and are satisfied with the autonomy informally ac- corded them by Manila. While minority differences in Indonesia are potentially ex=plosive--and even now one of the basic problems which the gov- ernment must overcome--the dif- ferences are essentially geo- graphic in origin. The recent In- donesian revolt and the suspic- ions of the central government on the part of residents of Su- matra, Celebes, and other islands illustrate the outer islands" dis- trust of Java and Javanese domi- nation. Currently? however, this divisive factor is not providing Communists the opportunity for penetration among the minority groups. On the contrary, as the Communist party has gained ad- herents in Java, there has been 25X1 a strengthening of anti-Commu- nismm elsewhere as a corollas of anti-Javanese sentiment. LATIN AMERICAN FINANCIAL PROBLEMS Political repercussions from financial reform measures stipulated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as a condi- tion of assistance have led to''critical' situations in several : Latin American coun- tries, 'largely. -because of exploitation of the austerity aspects of these measures by extreme nationalist and Marxist- influenced groups. At the same time, the over-all economic out- look in Latin America is improv- ing, with export earnings ex- pected to be back at their 1957 AND THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND peak by the end of this year and with new investment capital be- coming available from US and international lending institu- tions. Undermining of the IMF- sponsored stabilization efforts would intensify deficit financ- ing, inflation, and foreign- exchange maladjustments, and prevent the area from tak- ing advantage of these f a- vorable developments. SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 4 of I-l Approved Foriease 2005/OCIA-f DP79-009272300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 Export Earnings Renewed economic expansion in industrial countries of the Western world promises to re- verse the decline in all Latin American export earnings, which fell by 8 percent or $700,000,- 000 in 1958 and occasioned pay- ments crises or financial stress in over half the 20 republics. Western Europe's imports of raw materials--which normally ;ac- count for 40 percent of Latin American exports, but had fallen off 15 percent in the recent recession--are expected to go up 5 percent in 1959 and by year's end, as expansion gains momentum, to reach the peak 1957 rate. Latin American ex- ports to the United States, amounting to about 45 percent of the total, held up well in volume but declined in price in 1957-58; they are expected to rise moderately in 1959. World prices of several primary commodities important in Latin American exports--non-- ferrous metals account for one third of the total--such as copper, lead, tin, zinc, and wool have already strengthened appreciably in response to bet- ter business conditions in the United States and restocking in anticipation of renewed expan- sion in Western Europe. Paral- lel increases in prices of cof- GOLD AND FO HANGE RESERVES (AS PERCENT OF ANNUAL IMPORTS) 1955 1956 1957 1958 UNITED STATES 176 160 ? 161 = 147 LATIN AMERICA 42 6 41 37 ARGENTINA 40 34 34 24 2 10 BOLIVIA 7 5 I I BRAZIL * i 38 50 32 , 34-1 CHILE 22 21 10 COLOMBIA 20 20 30 .. MEXICO 47 47 36 38 PERU 17 19 9 8 VENEZUELA 4 8 75 77 71 *Including $200, 000, 000, or about 40%, of the reserves not freely available because com- mitted as collateral for a gold loan. 90529 2A 1 JULY 1959 WORLD COMMODITY PRICE INDEXES 1952=100 1956 MID JUNE 1957 MID-JUNE 1958 MID JUNE 1959 i MID-MAY ALL ITEMS 92 95 87 91 FOOD 98 98.8 94.8 84.9 FIBERS 81.5 95.9 80.1 82.3 METALS 95.6 79.7 70.8 78.0 OTIHER ITEMS 101.8 0 107.2 104.3 131.9 fee, sugar, cotton, wheat, and petroleum are not expected be- cause of the world oversupply of these commodities. Some''progr'ess has been made, however, toward multi- lateral control of marketing to. discourage further seri- ous decline'in the price of>' coffee, which 'vitally affects the' economies of. Brazil,." Colombia, Ecuador, and the Cen- tral American countries. Capital Funds The prospects for addition- al investment', capital are im- proved. Early in May a specia:t committee of the Organization of American States (OAS), meeting in Biuenos Aires in connection with the establishment of the new Inter-American Development Bank long sought by Latin Ameri- cans", noted that "capital export- ing countries have recently tak- en important initiatives to in- crease capital resources of both national and international pub- lic ]lending institutions" and that "the establishment of the inter-American bank is a timely step toward meeting Latin Ameri.- can needs for external capital for development purposes." Ratification of the new bank's charter by 85 percent of its anticipated voting member- ship is expected by the end of this year. Of the total capital- ization of $850,000,000, the United States will contribute $50,000,000 by September 1960-- with additional installments later.--and also underwrite $200,- 000,000 of the callable capital SECRET 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 5 of 11 Approved F elease 2005/Q3/ 5,:, lARDP79-009 002300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 to back up issues of bonds by the bank. The United States will put up additional funds for the bank's special "soft loans"--i.e., loans in incon- vertible currencies. Existing lending institu- tions are preparing to expand their activities. The Interna- tional.Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)--the World Bank--is expected to double its capitalization by September. Other things being equal, this would permit in the current fiscal year loans to Latin America of $240,000,000, as compared with $120,000,000 in fiscal 1958. Among national lending institutions, the re- cent 40-percent increase in the lending authority of the United States Export-Import Bank (Exim- bank) would similarly permit a rise in its 1959 development loans to Latin America--to $200,- 000,000 from the $140,000,000 advanced in 1957-58. Private investors in West- ern Europe and Japan, as well as the United States, also ap- pear disposed to provide larger capital resources to Latin Amer- ica. There are already indica- tions of a resumption of the rising trend in US private long- term capital flowing to the area --a trend reversed in 1958, when the amount fell to about $400,- 000,000 from an average of $600,- 000,000 over the previous four years. Financial Stability The United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America: (ECLA) has recently attributed the increasing severity of Latin America:'s balance-of-payments problem to inflation aggravated by governmental attempts to achieve higher living standards through development programs based on misguided economic pol- icies, particularly in the fiscal and monetary fields. Since 1957 the IMF has used a large part of its resources--which are also to be increased by 50 percent this autumn--to relieve and correct these payments problems in Latin America. During the year ended last March it extended financial assistance to 13 Latin American countries, compared with only seven elsewhere. In providing increasing balance-of-payments assistance to Latin America, the IMF is extensively employing--in eight of the 13 client countries--a technique used with conspicuous success in assisting the res- toration of financial and eco- nomic balance in Western Europe following the Suez crisis, Aid in meeting payments deficits is madle contingent on a commitment to the IMF--politically much easier to give than to an in- dividual lending nation--to un- dertake a stabilization program financed jointly by the IMF and other credit sources such as the IBRD or Eximbank. The benefici- ary nation agrees to reduce budg- et deficits, curtail credit, and correct foreign-exchange maladjustments. In return, it receives not only the IMF bal- ance-of-payments assistance, but also more massive financial aid" from other credit sources which it can apply to specific economic needs such as develop- ment of resources. Commenting recently on the increased commitment of Latin American countries to stabili- zation agreements, Per Jacobson, chairman of the IMF Executive Board, cited as the most grate ifying aspect of present-day developments the growing aware- ness of the dangers of inflation and of the importance of finan- cial stability for economic growth. Jacobson referred to' the temptation to governments of the less-developed countries --short of capital and under strong pressures from rapidly growing populations for higher living standards--to resort to inflationary expansion of credit in efforts to 'accelerate development. He also conceded that it is often painful and politically difficult to take SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 6 of 1 Approved Fc elease 20051O Ckf fDP79-009 002300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 the alternative approach of avoiding inflation and encourag- ing investment by cooperating in IMF stabilization programs, since this approach involves "some austerity." The present position of several Latin American govern- ments in respect to IMF-spon- sored stabilization measures illustrates both the economic advantage and the political difficulty of carrying out the financial-reform aspects of such programs. In Mexico, a stabilization program sponsored by the United States and the IMF was readily accepted in March of this year and has been adhered to since. Benefits are already apparent in a stronger currency, less acute inflation, and improved foreign trade partly as a re- sult of budgetary and credit restraint. On the other hand, the success of governments of other countries which have partici- pated in IMF-recommended finan- cial reforms--including Chile, Bolivia, and particularly Argentina--has been serious- ly jeopardized by formidable political resistance from both narrow nationalist and leftist- oriented labor elements. This opposition enjoys widespread support in its attacks on the financial reform measures--par- ticularly the austerity aspect requiring anti-inflationary restraint in wage increases-- as intervention by the United States in domestic affairs. The Argentine Government's efforts to implement its ambi- tious financial rehabilitation program,in close collaboration with the United States and the IMF, is particularly vulnerable because of the relatively dras- tic measures required following a decade of mismanagement. Per- onLsta-Communist cooperation in strike resistance, the dis- content of the military, and the resulting violence are add- ing to the difficulty. Brazil's attitude is re- flected in its recent suspen- sion of negotiations with the IMF after refusing to make ad- ditional anti-inflationary com- mitments to obtain further aid and after failing even to carry out previous commitments. This attitude derives largely from excess confidence in the coun try's abundant resources as a basis for independent growth, as well as fear of the kind of po'Litical unrest Argentina is experiencing under its stabili- zation program. Such confidence is sup- ported by an annual industrial growth of 8 percent over the past decade. However, the re- sources remain largely unde- veloped, Brazil continues de- pendent on coffee for 60 per- cent of its foreign exchange, and the high growth rate has been achieved only at a cost of severe inflation and repeated payments crises. If Brazil flouts the IMF by obtaining assistance else- where or if other countries conspicuously reject or under- mine IMF stabilization programs, there will be a strengthening of the widespread opposition throughout Latin America to fi- nancial stability as the approach to economic health and develop- ment. Resort to inflationary wage increases and discriminatory exchange rates will be encourr aged, with resulting impairment of competitive positions in in- ternational trade and export earnings. There would be a cor- responding discouragement to the influx of foreign capital 25X1 prospectively available to ease Latin American economic diffi- culties. SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 7 of 21 Approved Fo0elease 2005/03115 ~ IA DP79-0092002300070001-1 SEREf 1 July 1959 POLITICAL TENSIONS.IN NIGERIA.. Ibadan WESTERN REGION Lagos its three main regions, which have local self-government, are divided along tribal and reli- gious lines, and cooperate large- ly because of British rule. The two southern regions have experienced the greatest amount of political evolution. European contact, dating from the early 17th century along the Gulf of Guinea, began with the slave trade and was followed by commercial and missionary interest. The Western Region is peopled predominantly by Yoruba tribesmen who have had centuries of experience in state- craft and whose. strong tribal loyalties conflict with the pan-Africanism espoused by Ghana's Prime Minister Nkrumah and Guinea's President Sekou Tourd. There is a sizable Anglican Christian as well as Moslem influence among a pagan people. The West- ern Region's prime minister, EATERN R ION 25X1 Port 1-Iarcourt SECRET Britain's efforts to pre- pare its colony of Nigeria for independence in October 1960 have resulted in the development of political institutions which function under British guidance but which may disintegrate under the impact of Nigerian tribal, religious, and political disunity. Elections this fall will pro- vide a test of national cohesion, and could establish the pattern of political power for the emer- gent nation. If it can achieve unity, Nigeria could become an important spokesman for Negro Africa and exercise a moderating influence on West African na- tionalism. Regional Disunity Nigeria--with a population of 35,000,000, the largest in Africa--is a British political creation dating from 1914. It lacks political and social unity; sou CA ERN ROONS Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 8 of l-1': Approved FaQRelease 2005/O it c fi ff DP79-0092WO02300070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 Chief Obafemi Awolowo, is gener- ally considered a leading Afri- can moderate. The Ibo tribesmen of the Eastern Region are extroverts, informal, and friendly to Ameri- cans. Their tribal ties are weaker than those of the Yoruba. and they are more adaptable to European innovations. As traders they have penetrated to all parts of West Africa and they are eager supporters of pan-African- ism. Roman Catholicism is a con- siderable force in this region. The prime minister, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, studied in the United Nigeria's third division-- the Northern Region--probably is the scene of the greatest political tension. Although containing over half of Nigeria's area and population, two-thirds: of it Moslem, the region has few local administrators or -technicians.. Only about 2 per- cent of its population is liter- ate in the Roman script and 5.5 percent in Arabic. The agri- cultural masses have been kept in ignorance by the Moslem rulers of the area's city states, and political reform is coming slow- ly. The rulers are firmly pro- British and have relied on Lon- don for protection against the dynamic nationalist forces in the south. The rulers have sympathetic ties with the Sudan, but pro-Nasir sentiment is not yet of significance. The re- gional prime minister is the Sardauna of Sokoto, Alhaji Sir: Ahmadu Bello. The Nigerian constitution helps the forces of isolation in the north because matters affect- ing local government, the judi- ciary, and education are subject to :local regional control. The northern regional government resents the non-Moslem influence of technicians from the south and hopes to'.eliminate them from its civil service, commerce, trade unions, and university program. The region has not been able to remain aloof from political evolution, however; the franchise has recently been extended to all men, and judicial reforms will give the people access to English law instead of customary Moslem justice. Political Factionalism In consultation with the Nigerian leaders, London in 1957 and 1958 established a Federal House of Representatives, an of- fice of prime minister, a cabinet, SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 9 of '11 Approved Fo ,telease 2005/03/ &J?1 P79-0092 002300070001-1 l Jul jr.' 1939'' and a federal police force. The 312 seats in the federal legislature--not counting the eight representatives from the British trust territory of Cameroons--are apportioned among the various regions on the basis of population. The North has 174 seats, over half of the tot- al; the East, 73; the West, 62; and the federal capital of Lagos, 3, One-party rule appears im- probable because of the regional limitation of each major party and the inability of the north's governing party to win enough of that region's seats. At present the three major parties are represented in the federal government with a northerner, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, as prime minister. In the House of Repre- sentatives, the Northern Peoples.' Congress (NPC) has 110 seats, a coalition of the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) and the Northern Elements Progressive Union has 109 seats, and the Action Group has 93. The political confusion leads to coalition government and unreal- istic temporary alliances between regional parties with conflicting principles. The Northern People's Con- gress--led by the Sardauna of Sokoto--is expected to win the largest number of seats in the December elections. Its strength rests on the Moslem rulers' support and their influence over the backward peasantry, but it is losing influence in a number of urban constituencies and may be sharply challenged by the Action Group in 70 districts of the non-Moslem section of the Northern Region. The leaders of the NPC, in order to achieve a legislative majority, have renewed their working arrangement with the leading party of the Eastern Region, the NCNC, led by regional Prime Minister Azikiwe. The bonds are weak, however, and might be broken abruptly if either party should feel it could do better separately. The NCNC is a more extremist party and is separately allied with the main opposition group in they north. Nigeria's best organized, most efficient, and best financed party is the Action Group (AG) of Chief Awolowo. Its appeal is strong in the Western Region, in minority areas in the Eastern Region, and among the non-Moslem areas of the north, but it is unlikely to gather enough seats to defeat the NPC-NCNC coalition. In the event of a surprising show of strength and capture of legis- lative co;.'Lrol, the threat of AG rule might lead to a violent reaction in the Moslem north and regional -secession because of Awolowo's outspoken criticism of a "reactionary, feudal, and Mos- lem North." The political confusion in Nigeria is increased by the under- the-surface controversy over the continued leadership of fed- eral Prime Minister Balewa. Balewa was originally selected as an agent of the Sardauna of Sokoto, who declined to enter federal politics, but recently there has been a serious falling out between the two men, and Balewa now is not even assured of SECRET Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 10 of l'.i; Approved Fcelease 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00902300070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 1 July 1959 sufficient support in his own constituency. Balewa, who is not of royal blood, is unaccept- able to the northern emirs now that the post of federal prime minister is to assume real power. West African Nationalism Most of the Nigerian polit- ical leaders are strongly pro- Western in orientation and be- lieve that Nigeria should exert a moderating role in West African politics. Awolowo, Balewa, and the Sardauna of Sokoto have shown considerable coolness toward Nkrumah's efforts to promote African nationalism, and they have leaned toward the more con- servative proposals of President Tubman of Liberia for a looser association of African states. Azikiwe, on the other hand, has favored the Ghana-Guinea brand of extremism. At the time of Nkrumah's February visit to Nigeria, he was not given an enthusiastic SECRET popular reception in the West, and Awolowo reportedly told him that Nigeria would think about West African union only after the consolidation of the Nigerian federation. He also stated that Lagos would not follow the neu- tralist line of Ghana because a small nation could not afford to be neutral. The Action Group is cautious about pan-Africanism because of a deep distrust of UAR President Nasir's influence in the movement. They also have little confidence in Nkrumah and are determined that the "union" of Ghana and Guinea will not be the nucleus of a West African state. On the other hand, Azikiwe's NCNC supports a federation of West Africa, it hailed the "union" of Ghana and Guinea, and assisted in organizing the Accra conference of African political parties. Both Azikiwe and Awolowo, 25X1 however, believe Nigeria must dominate any West African re- gional union. Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1 PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 11 of 11 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927AO02300070001-1 Approved For Rel ase 2005/03 P79-00927A0*MW02300070001-1 CONFIDENTIAL CON 4DENTIRI, CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2005/03/15 : CIA-RDP79-00927A002300070001-1