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A Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 *41110 "11111110~ V SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY COPY NO. _ `7 OCI NO. 0440/62 26 October 1962 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY I I I OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE SECRET State Dept. review completed 25X1 USAF review(s) completed. GROUP I Excluded from au-lomalic downgrading rind declassification Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 26 October 1962 T H E W E E K I N B R I E F (Information as of 1200 ]PDT 25 Oct) THE CUBAN CRISIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 1 The Soviet leaders, faced with the dangerous consequences of a major miscalculation of US intentions, have taken a variety of measures to minimize the danger to the USSR's prestige and interests and to deter direct US military inter- vention in Cuba. Moscow's cautious reaction to President Kennedy's 22 October address on Cuba was contrived to avoid commitments to specific Soviet countermeasures without giving an appearance of acquiescing to the measures announced by the President. Khrushchev's present intention, as reflected in the diversion of Soviet ships away from the US quarantine zone and in his call for a summit meeting, apparently is to avoid incidents which might make the crisis more difficult to control and to rely primarily on political pressures to fore- stall further US actions in Cuba. There are no indications that the USSR is planning retaliatory action in other areas, such as Berlin or Southeast Asia. SINO-INDIAN BORDER FIGHTING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 6 Chinese Communist military action against India appears aimed at clearing away Indian outposts in areas at both ends of the frontier, improving Peiping's bargaining position by seizing new territory, and teaching New Delhi a lesson in border warfare. New Delhi has rejected Peiping's Moscow- supported proposals for negotiations THE YEMENI SITUATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 9 Crown Prince Faysal, who returned home is wee to assume leadership of the Saudi Government, has become a particular target of Cairo's propaganda attacks. Inside Yemen, there continues to be friction between Prime Minister Sallal and Cairo's hand-picked man, Deputy Prime Minister Baydani. DEVELOPMENTS IN LAOS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 9 Souvanna this week went to Hanoi to urge complete with- drawal of North Vietnamese forces from Laos. Souvanna's apparent determination to chart an independent course has drawn strong criticism from the Pathet Lao. SECRET Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 - SECRET i4mv CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 26 October 19612 CONGO DEVELOPMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 10 No further progress has been made on the UN reconcilia- tion plan. Although Adoula has repudiated the cease-fire and financial agreements, at the same time he is demanding that Tshombd comply rigidly with the plan in its entirety. Tshombd now says that any attempt by Acloula to renegotiate the cease-fire agreement will. delay a settlement for a long time. UN Under Secretary Bunche arrived in Leopold- ville on 22 October, presumably to try to break the impasse NORTHERN RHODESIAN ELECTIONS FAVOR AFRICAN NATIONALISTS Page 11 Elections in Northern Rhodesia on 30 October are ex- pected to give African nationalists a decisive role in the legislature for the first time. Africans opposed to the present structure of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland will thus be in a strong position in both Nyasa- land and Northern Rhodesia. Pressure then will mount to revise the federal constitution in the direction of a much looser union, especially between the two northern territories and white-dominated Southern Rhodesia. PROSPECTS FOR THE REFERENDUM IN FRANCE . . . . . . . . . . Page 12 e u an cris s wi inc i.ne many vo ers o c ng o a strong leader. In any case the opposition political parties are concentrating on the National Assembly elections in SPECIAL ARTICLE SOUTH KOREAN MILITARY FACTIONALTSM . . . . . . . . . . . , Page 1 The overthrow of civilian government in South Korea last year by a military clique has made army factionalism a major factor in political affairs. Two principal groups-- subdivided into numerous factions-,-are maneuvering for in- fluence, and a third group is beginning to emerge. The maneuvering is likely to increase in intensity during the transition to the civilian regime promised for mid-1963. SECRET Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY WEEKLY REVIEW THE CUBAN CRISIS The Soviet leaders, faced with the dangerous consequences of a major miscalculation of US intentions regarding strategic missiles in Cuba, have taken a variety of measures to minimize the damage to the USSR's pres- tige and interests and to deter direct US military intervention in Cuba. Moscow's cautious reaction to President Kennedy's 22 October speech was contrived to avoid commitments to specific countermeasures without giving an appearance of acquiescing to the measures announced by the President. Khrushchev's pres- ent intention, as reflected in the diversion of Soviet ships away from the US quarantine zone and in his call for a summit meeting, apparently is to avoid incidents which might make the crisis more difficult to control and to rely primarily on polit- ical pressures to forestall further US actions in Cuba. There are no indications that the USSR is planning retaliatory actions in other areas, such as Berlin or Southeast Asia. Moscow's initial reaction to President Kennedy's speech was intended to underscore the USSR's military preparedness to meet any eventualities. The commander in chief of the War- saw Pact forces, Marshal Grechko ordered pact representatives in Moscow to increase the military readiness of member nations. Defense Minister Malinovsky re- ported to the Soviet Government on measures to raise the "battle readiness" of Soviet armed forces. Two days later, Mali- novsky repeated earlier Soviet claims of a "mighty and in- vulnerable" global rocket and of the capability to destroy enemy rockets in flight. Mos- cow also announced that all military leaves had been can- celed and that release from active duty for members of the strategic rocket forces, anti- aircraft defense forces, and the submarine fleet had been postponed until further notice. The Soviet Government state- ment of 23 October, warning that the US is "recklessly playing with fire," was aimed primarily at gaining time and placing the US on the defensive while Moscow attempts to generate growing pressures on the US which, the Soviets hope, will deter further US military action and oblige the US to ease the quarantine on shipping. The statement carefully refrained from. specifying the USSR's reaction to the quarantine and to possible US military action to remove the strategic missiles in Cuba. It evaded the central issue of the missiles and re- affirmed the claim in Moscow's statements in September that the military equipment being sent to Cuba is "designed ex- clusively for defensive pur- poses." It sought to play down the USSR's role in the crisis by portraying the con- flict as one between Cuba and the US. Moscow's statement replied only indirectly to President Kennedy's warning of US nuclear retaliation against the USSR if any nuclear missiles should be launched from Cuba against any nation in the Western Hemisphere. It stated that So- viet nuclear weapons will never be used for aggressive purposes but added a vague and ambiguous warning that the "Soviet Union will strike a very powerful re- taliatory blow" if the "ag- gressors touch off a war." Although the statement denounced the US quarantine and denied Washington's right to halt and inspect foreign vessels on the open seas, it avoided any hints of Soviet reaction beyond stating that SECRET 26 Oct 6P W1i99(T.V RTi.VT1 W D~^^^ 7 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY the USSR "resolutely rejects such claims." The statement also implied that the USSR will seek to circumvent the US de- mand for the prompt dismantling and withdrawal of all offensive weapons by contending that all military equipment in Cuba is defensive and owned by Cuba. Moscow termed the US demand as one which "naturally no state which values its independence can meet." Although the Soviet state- ment did not unequivocally deny President Kennedy's statement about the presence of strategic missiles in Cuba, Soviet spokes- men and propaganda have attempted to cast doubt on the authenticity of US information. The state- ment dealt only indirectly with this question by noting that the US accuses Cuba of "allegedly creating a threat to US security" and termed this allegation "hypocrisy." Soviet UN delegate Zorin, however, charged that US "fabrications" were designed to persuade the UN Security Council to "approve retroactively" US aggressive acts against Cuba. He claimed that the US had failed to present proof of its charges. Moscow radio on 24 October as- serted that the US Defense Department had produced "some kind of faked photographs taken from spy planes" to justify its "aggressive acts." It said the "big lie" spread by Washington is aimed at justifying "far- reaching aggressive actions." The Soviet ambassador to Mexico publicly denied that there is an "arsenal of Soviet aims" in Cuba, and a Soviet diplomat in Britain said Soviet weapons supplied to Cuba are not equipped with nuclear warheads. The Soviet statem"nt of 23 October again sought to justify Moscow's military presence in Cuba by pointing to the deploy- ment of US forces and armaments throughout the world and to US rejection of Soviet proposals for withdrawal of all foreign forces from alien territories. Khrushchev's call for a ""meeting at the highest level" Uggests that the Soviet leaders believe that time will work to their advantage and provide grow- ing opportunities to press the US to agree to enter negotiations with Cuba and the USSR and pos- sibly to suspend implementation of the quarantine and other measures. In his reply to a mes- sage from Bertrand Russell, Khru- shchev sought to contrast Soviet and 113 positions by pledging that the USSR will do everything in its power to avert war. He said Moscow will avoid "reckless decisions" and will not allow itself to be "provoked" by US actions. He also tried to en- hancEe the urgency of a summit meeting by warning that if the US carries out its announced "program of pirate action," the USSR would have no alternative but to "make use of the means of defense against the aggressor." He added that US "aggression" against Cuba would render a sum- mit meeting "impossible and use- less." The Soviet leaders are seeking to convey an impression of composure and discipline in dealing with the Cuban crisis. Khrushchev and other top Soviet leaders went backstage to greet an American opera singer after a performance on 24 October. The performances of other US cultural groups in the USSR received an unusually cordial reception on 23 October. The demonstrations in front of the US Embassy in Moscow on 24 October were per- functory by comparison with other demonstrations. Gromyko made a demonstrative stop in East Berlin on his trip back to Moscow from New York. His public remarks there on 24 October, however, contained no SECRET 26 Oct 6? ."""'r'" - 2 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY hint of Soviet retaliatory action against the Western position in Berlin. He re- stated the Soviet position that an agreement with the West is possible but only on the condition that Western "occupation troops" are with- drawn and East German sovereignty is respected. He avoided any mention of a deadline but declared that the West should realize that the East German There are nine Soviet of- fensive missile sites in Cuba. Five sites--all for 1,100-mile medium-range ballistic missiles (MRBMs)--appear to be fully operational. One additional MRBM site is expected to be- come fully operational on 28 October. One 2,200-mile inter- mediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) site may become operational by I December, the other two by 15 December. SAGUA CA GRANDE MRPM COMPLEX frontiers are "firmly and reliably secured." Soviet propaganda continued to play down the possibility of a "new Berlin crisis" in the near future and professed to see a "more realistic approach" to the German problem at the UN General Assembly. It now is apparent that the deployment to Cuba of So- viet offensive missiles and associated construction equip- ment and prefabricated materials began last spring. Necessary surveying, road construction, and initial building con- struction were mostly concen- trated in August, September, and October. Four MRBM sites are grouped in the San Cristobal area of western Cuba, and two are near Sagua la Grande. Each has or will have four launchers with at :least two missiles for each launcher. Two fixed sites for IRBM missiles are in the Guanajay area near Havana. One IRBM site is near Remedios, and there probably is a second, companion site there. Each of the IRBM sites has four launch pads. There is no positive evi- dence that nuclear warheads for these missiles are present in Cuba. However, certain buildings under construction at the sites appear to be for storage of nuclear weapons. SECRET 26 Oct 62 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 3 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY ?Effective air defense perimeter (estimated radius: 20-25 nautical miles) The 24 Soviet surface-to- air (SAM) sites in Cuba now are in operational status and give air defense cover to most of Cuba. Other Weapons In addition to the Ml'WM and IRBM deployment and'the SAM de- fensive system, there are three known short-range cruise-missile sites in Cuba and 12 short-range missile-equipped KOMAR motor torpedo boats. Aircraft counts at the various fields show a total of 22 IL-28 (Beagle) medium jet bombers at San Julian in extreme western Cuba. None have been observed else- where. Jet fighters are concen- trated in areas near surface-to -surface missile installations. All. 39 known MIG-21s (Fishbeds) are at Santa Clara airfield in central Cuba, about midway be- ? Confirmed surface-to-air missile (SAM) site X Possible SAM site, exact location unknown Support facility for processing equipment Airfield with MIG aircraft MISSILE ACTIVITY IN CUBA, OCTOBER 1962 tween the Sagua Grande MRBM site and the IR'.3-M site near Guanajay. As many as 26 MIG-15s (Fagots) and 9 MIG-19s (Farmers) recently have been located at the Cuban Air Force Headquarters base at San Antonio de los Banos, south of Havana and near both the IRBM installation at Guana- jay and the MRBM sites at San Cristobal. Thirteen IL-14 (Crate) trans- port aircraft have been noted at nearby P1.aya Baracoa. Two other unidentified transports are located here also, and there is one apiece atSan Antonio de los Banos and. at Camaguey. As many as.40 helicopters have been re- ported at Playa Baracoa air- field, Cuba's major heliport. Cuban Reaction to President's Speech Cuba's reaction to the US moves of 22 October has been- SECRET 26 Oct 69 TATVTTIT V UTTTTV[AT O f 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 *000 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY cautious. The high level of mili- tary alert continues, but Castro's public response to the crisis has been relatively restrained. His speech on 23 October--unusual in that it was not the occasion for a mass public demonstration--was comparatively mild, full of stereo- typed references to "the inevitable triumph' of the Cuban revolution over "Yankee imperialism." The speech explicitly rejected any in- spection of Cuban territory by foreign nationals. The subdued tone of the Castro speech and the lack of significant comment by other Cuban leaders since may be a result of close consultation with Soviet authorities. Non-Cuban press represent- atives in Cuba report the city to be calm and relatively normal, with none of the confusion and disorganization that accompanied the mobilization prior to the in- vasion of 1961. Official and unofficial ex- pressions of support, sympathy, or understanding for the US position on Cuba-- either overtly or privately expressed by govern- ment leaders--have reached an impressive volume from all parts of the world. Nations from which such expressions have recetitly been received are Italy, Portugal, Luxembourg, Belgium, Switzerland, Iran, India, Thailand, Congo (Brazzaville), Sudan, Jamaica, and Panama. Among the very few nations or groups expressing open opposition to the US stand was the Algerian National Liberation Front, which terms the quarantine of Cuba an intolerable.inter- ference in the internal affairs of that country." An official Iraqi statement also says the US quarantine is a "flagrant vio- lation of the principle of freedom of the international seas" and a "regression for the organiza- tion of international society."' An Air Cubana plane com- ing from Prague made a technical stop at Goose Bay, Labrador, on 23 October and was searched by Canadian authorities before being allowed to continue to Havana. Two East German missile technicians and five Czech technicians were on board. In Latin America, military support for the quarantine action has been offered by Argentina, Guatemala, Peru, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, and Honduras. Enthusiastic backing for the US position is reported arnnong the Chilean armed forces, particularly on the part of air force officers. The Argentine Government has offered two destroyers on three days'.notice, with a submarine, a marine bat- taalion with transport, and other units if required later. The Argentine Air Force commander has sent messages to General LeMay and other hemisphere air force commanders pledging read- iness to participate in any joint measures required by the Cuban crisis. The Peruvian offer is qualified by a requirement of unanimous approval of the GAS resolution. The Uruguayan Gov- ernment, according to press re- ports, has now decided to sup- port the OAS resolution, but with certain reservations on the use of armed force. President Duvalier of Haiti and President Rivera of El Salvador have announced support for the quarantine policy. Presi- dent Goulart of Brazil, however, apparently seeks a mediatory role. Demonstrations of opposition in Latin America remain scattered and ineffective. The Communists appear reluctant to commit them- selves to a major effort in the face of widespread official and public acceptance of the US position. SECRET 26 Oct 62 WEEKLY RFVTFW Daoe 5 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 *fto~ Vow SECRET SINO-INDIAN BORDER FIGHTING After a week of heavy fight- ing at at least seven points along the Indo-Tibetan frontier, Chinese military action against India appears to be taking on some of the characteristics of a large-scale "punitive expedi- tion." In addition to clearing away Indian outposts in areas at both ends of the border where the Indians have been particu- CHEN LIAI Y Boundary shown on most US and Western maps -..- Demarcated x - Delimited only Indefinite Boundary shown on, recent Chinese and Indian maps (where differing from US and Western maps) Chinese Indian Arrows indicate Chinese advances --I-- Railroad Airfield Road Pass - - - Major caravan route :5645 Spot height f itnatl \ SECRET angi Dawan . 61ao cAH14%i1R~ y (5tatu cf u e larly active during the past four months, the Chinese have moved well beyond their previous ad- vance positions. The key local headquarters town of Towang in the northeast fell on 24 October and the Chinese have surrounded the :Indian strongpoint and re- supply base of Chushul in Ladakh. The Chinese offensive seems designed to discourage New Delhi's hopes and weaken its capabilities 21571 7#pUOt 1 N , . hankot 2g5Uo Jullundur _ Mandl PAN Rudog or trail (in feet) STATUTE MILES 150 26 Oct Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 ;e 6 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 lk~ SECRET to make any gains along the border by force and to bring the Indians to the negotiating table on Chinese terms. The Chinese have been suc- cessful on all military fronts, largely by employing numerically superior forces, better supplied and more heavily armed than their Indian adversaries. Casualties on both sides have been heavy, running to more than 2,000 on the Indian side in the first four days of fighting. SECRET 26 Oct 62 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 7 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 %Wiv %W01 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY In an effort to consolidate its gains and emphasize its "reasonableness" Peiping on 23 October called for an end to the border warfare and for both sides to draw back 12 miles from the positions as of that date along the whole border. The Chinese also proposed a further Chinese pull-back in the northeast and a renewal of negotiations between Nehru and Chou En-lai in either New Delhi or Peiping. On 25 October, a Pravda editorial called for a nego- tiated settlement of the border dispute on the basis of the Chinese proposals. This editorial is the first Soviet statement on the border issue since the recent outbreak of fighting. It indicates some shift from the careful neutral- ity which Moscow has heretofore maintained in dealing with the issue. The editorial, adverting to the "notorious" McMahon Line, indirectly characterizes the Indian position as chauvinistic. The Chinese proposals, on the other hand, are regarded as "constructive," taking "due account" of the interests of both parties. On 20 October the Soviet ambassador delivered a letter from Khrushchev to Nehru urging a peaceful settlement of the dispute. Recent Soviet moves indicate that the delicate balance Moscow has sought to maintain in rela- tions with both parties has been disturbed by the Cuban situation, which has made bloc solidarity paramount for the USSR, as well as by the latest fighting on the border. The Indians, who have cul- tivated Moscow's "neutrality" on the border question, have termed Peiping's repetition at this time of its mutual with- drawal proposal "hypocrisy." India has also rejected media- tion offers by the UAR and Liberia. According to Foreign Secre- tary Desai, Indian policy at the present time will be to hold on, to make the Chinese pay dearly for every advance until winter hampers operations, and then to prepare for fighting in the spring. The Indians are probably counting also on the fact that as the Chinese pene- trate deeper into the northern area, poor communications and rough -terrain will impair Chi- nese logistics as they have Indian., New Delhi may hope that reinforced Indian troops, being pushed closer to their own sources of supply, will be able to stop the Chinese even before winter. SECRET 26 Oct 62 WEEKT.Y RF.VTi w Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 VAW VOW SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY The forces of the Yemeni revolutionary government remain in control of the greater part of the country. Additional ar- rivals have brought the total strength of Egyptian ground forces--largely "blitz" troops and paratroops--to an estimated 2,500-3,000 men. Nasir apparently hopes that he can take advantage of the mo- mentum generated by the Yemeni revolution to undermine the Saudi monarchy. Cairo's "Voice of the Arabs" broadcasts, as well as its clandestine radio output, are sharply attacking Crown Prince Faysal, who re- turned home this week to assume leadership of the Saudi Govern- ment. The Egyptian radio has urged the Saudi Army to rise against Faysal and has called. him "a treacherous fox," "an agent of the foreigners," and. a man "as evil as Saud." especially between Prime Minister Sallal and Cairo's hand-picked man, Deputy Prime Minister Baydani. In a conversation with the US chargd on 19 October, Sallal said that the US should not believe statements made by certain ministers, particularly Baydani, which might give the impression of UAR domination over Yemen. Yemeni policy will be made, he claimed, by "Yemenis who stayed home and created the revolution, not by returning exiles."' It seems clear, despite mutual distrust between him and the UAR Government, that Sal:Lal is likely to remain re- sponsive to Cairo's wishes as long as he needs Egyptian mili- tary assistance to protect the revolution and as long as large numbers of Egyptian troops re- main in the Yemen. If and when the Egyptians pull out, there will probably be an extensive 25X1 shake-Up of the Yemeni Government. In Yemen itself, there con- tinues to be friction among top- level revolutionary leaders, and Premier Souvanna Phouma has returned to Vientiane after a trip to Hanoi to urge the complete withdrawal from Laos of North Vietnamese military elements. kok to confer with Marshal Sarit, his dealings with the rightist-con- Souvanna's apparent deter- mination to chart an independent course has drawn strong criti- cism from left-wing elements in Laos. His recent trip to Bang- trolled National Assembly, and his efforts to remove the North Vietnamese military presence from Laos have combined to al- ienate the Pathet Lao at least temporarily. SECRET 26 Oct Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 ' of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 SECRET CONGO DEVELOPMENTS No progress has been made on the UN reconciliation plan for the Congo since Adoula repudiated the cease-fire and financial agreements on 17 October, despite his expression of full support for the UN plan and the statement in his com- muniqu6 with Under Secretary McGhee that the "bridges are not cut." He has ordered a halt to any reactivation of joint commission talks in Elisabethville pending talks with UN Under Secretary Bunche, who arrived in Leopoldville on 22 October. Adoula told Ambassador Gullion that his action did not mean a rupture of the talks, but rather a suspension. The tone of his 18 October press conference, however, indicates that Adoula's position has considerably stiffened. Stress- ing the 27-month delay in at- taining a Katanga settlement, Adoula said again that the UN plan could not be negotiated, that it constituted a whole which must be accepted or re- jected by Tshombe, and that he would not enter into any talks with Tshomb6. Tshomb6 has reacted slowly, but on 22 October he informed UN officials in Elisabethville that any attempt by Adoula to renegotiate the cease-fire signed on 16 October would raise new problems and result in long delay. The Katangan leader has not yet commented on the UN-drafted constitution. Two railroad cars con- taining 70 tons of copper crossed the reopened Lubilash bridge on 17 October, but Union Miniere officials say that no other shipments are planned. The route remains open UN air reconnaissance supports previous reports that Tshomb6 has added Vampire jets to his air force. One such aircraft was sighted at Kolwezi airport, and there may be a total of four. Re- ports on the fighting between Katangan and Congolese forces which occurred in northern Katanga just prior to the cease-fire indicated that the Katangans were using their re- cently acquired Harvard piston trainers to strafe and possibly bomb Congolese positions. In Brussels, Adoula's recent moves have produced a highly adverse reaction. For- eign Minister Spaak's chances of obtaining domestic support for economic pressiirPG on Tshomb6 have been further re- duced. Spaak has indicated, more- over, that any Belgian decision to increase economic assistance to Leopoldville would have to await a more constructive atti- tude on Adoula's part. SECRET 26 Oct Fig WRVKT.V RF.VTVIN naare TO of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 I ? Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY NORTHERN RHODESIAN ELECTIONS FAVOR AFRICAN NATIONALISTS Elections in Northern Rho- desia on 30 October are ex- pected to give African national- ists a decisive role in the pro- tectorate's legislature for the first time. Kenneth Kaunda's United National Independence Party (UNIP), the principal African party, will hold prob- ably the largest single bloc of seats and possibly an absolute majority. The new legislature has 45 seats. Fifteen members will be chosen by an "upper voters' roll," which is predominantly European but also contains a significant number of Africans. Another fifteen will be elected by a largely African "lower roll." One member will be chosen by the protectorate's Asians and mulattoes. Fourteen so-called "national members" will be chosen under a complicated pro- cedure designed to ensure the election of moderates. UNIP has been waging a vigorous campaign. Since the only other African party is discredited and demoralized, Kaunda and his followers hope to take all but one or two of the "lower roll" seats. They also hope that their efforts to present their party as moderate and responsible will lead to the election of UNIP Africans or UNIP-sympathizing whites in some "upper roll" and many "national" seats. The only other large bloc is likely to be Sir Roy Welensky's United Federal Party, which expects to take most of the upper roll seats. Kaunda, like Nyasaland's Hastings Banda, has been cam- paigning for the breakup of the present Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, which joins Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland to the white-dominated colony of Southern Rhodesia. Banda's party is already the predominant one in Nyasaland. With Africans in a strong position in both northern territories, drastic revision to loosen the federation's structure, especially these territories' ties with southern Rhodesia, may get under way as early as mid-1963. There- after, African pressure for early independence for Northern Rhodesia will probably increase rapidly. SECRET ` Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 1 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 SECRET De Gaulle has threatened to resign if he does not get a solid majority in the 28 Oc- tober referendum on his pro- posal to have the next presi- dent of France elected. by pop- ular vote. The Cuban crisis will incline many voters to cling to a strong leader, but will not deter the opposition political parties in their at- tempt. to win control of the National Assembly in the late November elections. The five parties responsi- ble for the downfall of the Pompidou government have urged defeat of De Gaulle's proposal, and the French press is almost unanimously opposed. Other than the National Assembly, opposition has also been ex- pressed by the Senate, the Council of State, the Constitu- tional Council, and the Law Faculty of the University of Paris. It is generally recognized that De Gaulle has the easier proposition to defend when he argues that all French voters should have a direct voice in electing a president. The nice- ties of the argument about the relative advantages of one con- stitutional article over another are too abstract for the average voter, who is inured to charges that De Gaulle is violating the constitution. The more sophis- ticated remember that some of De Gaulle's severest critics today were not overly con- scientious themselves about the constitutional limitations under the Fourth Republic when they seized opposition news- papers or ordered the Suez attack. In his public statements De Gaulle has avoided any dis- tinction between majorities of eligible and actual voters A cabi- net 'Minister told the American Embassy that support in the range of 48 to 52 percent of the eligible voters would be sat- isfactory. A public opinion poll of early October favored De Gaulle. A high abstention rate in the referendum would probably work to De Gaulle's disadvan- tage. The vehemence of his opponents' attacks may make many voters hesitate to approve the proposal, but rather than vote against De Gaulle they will tend to abstain. This tendency may be countered, how- ever, by concern over the possi- bil-1ty of a leaderless France in the midst of an international crisis over Cuba and Berlin. Despite their public con- centration on the referendum, the party machines are really preoccupied with the elections of 1.8 and 25 November. Maurice- Ren& Simmonet, secretary general of the Popular Republican Movement (MRP), told an American Embassy official tnat, while the idea SECRET 26 Oct Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 0 12 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY of unified opposition with a single anti-Gaullist campaign is appealing to political theorists, it is not practical because the four non-Communist opposition parties have dif- ferent electorates. With few exceptions, each party will run its own candidates on the first round. In the runoff however, only the strongest Socialist, Radical, Popular Republican or Independent candidate will con- tinue. Simmonet admitted that national headquarters had little means of enforcing this policy on the local federations, but he expects it to be followed in most constituencies. The Socialists are touchy about the competition of the small Unified Socialist Party, which quickly rejected the possibility of joining the So- cialists in cooperating with the rightist Independent Party. Its campaign may weaken Socialist candidates decisively in some districts. Socialist Secretary General Guy Mollet also fears popular front tendencies may develop because he is convinced the Communists will assure the election of some Socialist candi- dates in the runoff round. Simmonet admits that the MRP will have a difficult time in the elections if De Gaulle campaigns actively for the Union for the New Republic (UNR) 25X1 --the only party committed to back him in the referendum and electoral campaigns. Cultural Affairs Minister ndr Malraux, however, is organizing an Association for the Fifth Republic as a Gaullist electoral machine to approve candidates who agree to support De Gaulle. This move would permit the President to back individual candidates without openly committing him to a specific party SECRET 26 Oct 62 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 13 of 13 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 %%WW S001 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY SPECIAL ARTICLES SOUTH KOREAN MILITARY FACTIONALISM The military coup in South Korea in May 1961 placed the political future of the country directly in the hands of its armed forces. While officers who led the coup denounced the infighting and corruption of the civilian politicians, they have brought into the govern- ment their own personal quar- rels and long-standing factional struggles. As the present re- gime tries to find a solid base on which to erect a new civil government structure, the attitudes and ambitions of a variety of military groups will play a prominent role. Development of Military Factionalism Intense factional feeling is characteristic of Koreans. Ambitious men have relied almost exclusively on creating a group of personally loyal henchmen rather than on at- tracting support for a cause. Fierce competition among domi- nantpersonalities rather than ideological division has been the rule. Before the 1961 coup, factionalism in the military related largely to purely military affairs--such as promotions, assignments, and. control of the various services. These matters were the concern of competing groups of senior generals, whose associations were largely determined by their regional origins and the place and character of their early military training while Korea was under Japanese rule. With the coup, however, a new group emerged--the "colo- nels;" whose distinctive char- acteristic is that their early professional training consisted of a very rapid course in South Korea's own Officer Candidate School. Since the coup, a third major group has gradually become apparent. This consists of those officers, still junior for the most part, who have re- ceivedfull four-year professional training at the South Korean Military Academy. Identification of any of- ficer's factional attachment is complicated by the fact that some have ties with more than one group. Moreover, a number of senior generals have joined with the "colonels" be- cause the latter were the.driv- ing force behind. the 1961 coup. Conflicts between the "colonels" and the senior gen- erals have been the principal cause of friction within the government leadership. Assisted by his reputation for personal honesty,,junta leader General. Pak Chong-hui has managed to keep himself above the factional struggles and has maintained a balance among the factions. Even he, however, may be unable to keep the situation in check during the coming months as individuals and factions scram- ble for political advantage in the civilian government which has been promised for mid-1963. The Senior Generals Among the senior generals, probably the two strongest fac- tions consist of officers who have a common provincial origin --eLther the Hamgyong or Pyongan provinces of what is now North Korea. The pre-eminence of men from this area in the South Korean Army after World War II was due partly to a martial tradition in these provinces but mainly to the fact that many came from careers in Japan's SECRET 26 Oct 6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927A003800060001-6 1 of 3 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY Kwantung Army. Not only did they find that opportunity for advancement was limited in North Korea, but many had been strongly indoctrinated with anti-Communism. With the dissolution of the Japanese armies and the division of Korea, these offi- cers found their way south and entered the South Korean mil- itary establishment. Having no local or family ties in the South, they formed tight fac- tions on the basis of their origin in order to protect and advance their careers. The Hamgyong faction is led by retired General Chong Il-kwon, the South Korean am- bassador in Washington. Chong served as army chief of staff longer than any other officer and is still influential in the military. His influence is not confined to senior of- ficers, as his adherents hold important positions throughout the army and the bureaucracy. Two Hamgyong generals, Lt. Gen. Yi Chu-il, the vice chairman of the ruling Supreme Council for National Reconstruction, and Marine Maj. Gen. Kim Tong- ha lead opposition to the "colo- nels" from within the junta. A purge soon after the military coup greatly reduced the influence of the Pyongan faction. Pyongan officers nevertheless still hold impor- tant economic and. government positions, and the group could. probably obtain the support of their provincial compatriots, now in South Korea, including several thousand civilian refu- gees. A "Manchurian" faction, consisting of officers who re- ceived their education at the Japanese military academies in Manchuria, cuts across both the provincial groups, being espe- cially heavily represented in the Hamgyong faction. The Kwantung Army experi- ence of these senior officers has some ideological importance beyond anti-Communism. An un- usually intense distaste for civilian politics and politicians was typical of that army's out- look. Moreover, the Kwantung vision of economic growth under "efficient" military auspices may well have influenced Pak Chong-huff's ideas on the infusion by the military of a spirit of dynamism into South Korea. The senior officers group now farthest in the background seems nevertheless to have the best; chance of making a come- back under civilian rule. This is the "Japan" group, consisting of men of great prestige who were educated at the imperial military academies or the more prestigious universities in Japan. These officers are mostly of South Korean origin and are linked by educational background and family ties to some of the country's most prominent civilian political and financial figures. Other lesser factions are unlikely to regain prominence. Members of the once important "Chinese" faction, made up of officers who began their careers with the Chinese Nationalists, are generally too old to be active political leaders. One of them, however, is retired Lt. Gen. Yi Pom-sek, an early lieutenant of former president Rhee. His Racial Youth Corps might possibly provide a base for a political comeback. During the past two years, the senior generals' principal opponents have come from the so-called "eighth class"--field- grade officers who were the real moving spirits behind the 1961 coup. The group has been des- ignated as the eighth class to graduate from the Korean Military Academy, but it actually SECRET 26 Oct r" --- --- -- e 2 of 3 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 N.011 S.4 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY is a composite of short-term OCS graduates. It is led by security chief Colonel Kim Chong-pil, the second man in the ruling junta and the chief lieutenant of General Pak Chong-hui. This eighth class has a number of unique characteris- tics. It was the first to be- gin training after the founding of the republic, and was the first to begin train.ing under native leadership. It was exceptionally large, in part, because of the need to replace officers purged for Communism in 1948. Between January and May 1949 a total of 1,801 of- ficers were graduated. Al- though the bonds of loyalty are strongest within the individual sections, the heavy casualties suffered by the class as a whole during the Korean War and the leadership of a few exceptional officers gave it a sense of cohesion. After the war the eighth class along with surviving members of some other OCS groups felt frustrated because they had to serve in the middle ranks under generals little older than themselves. An at- tempt was made in 1960 by "colonels" from the eighth and two earlier classes to have the general-officer ranks thinned out. Although this effort was not immediately successful, it served to focus sentiment within the ranks of the field-grade officers and thereby strenghtened their position. Since then, however, mem- bers of the eighth class have gradually maneuvered members of the earlier classes out of position, so that the general accrual of influence to the "colonels" has more and more been an accrual to the eighth class. This maneuvering is only one of the factors working to divide the "colonels." There continue to be rivalries within the class itself. Eighth-class members close to Kim Chong-pil, for example, enjoy select posi- tions in his security organiza- tion, while other members of the class are on active army duty far removed from the prestige and pleasures of Seoul. Eighth- class members who serve on the ruling Supreme Council for National Reconstruction are special objects of resentment. Such schisms are likely to become increasingly acute. "Four-Year" Men The break between these field-grade officers and the four-year Military Academy graduates is far sharper than that between the "colonels" and the generals. Not only do the four-year graduates--now mostly company-grade officers--share the common experience of an extended period together in one institution, but they have established distinct traditions of their own. Better trained than the short-term graduates, they regard themselves as an elite corps and tend to look down on all their predecessors as corrupt and unprofessional. The four-year graduates have been strongly indoctrinated against involvement of the mili- tary in politics and presently restrict themselves to their pro- fessional duties. However, should the ;present regime continue too long in power and become corrupted, the chances of a reaction from this group would seem good. Attitudes Toward US Regardless of factional af- filiations, the officer corps gen- erally tends to identify the coun- try's future with continued close ties with the United States. The "colonels," however, have had the least exposure to American influence and tend to be antagonistic toward what they regard as intervention in South Korea's internal affairs. Thus as long as Kim Chong-pills eighth class retains a pervasive in- fluence in the government, US - 25X1 South Korean relations are likely to be bumpy. SECRET 26 Oct 69 Q'nV OT AT AnmT..T r,n 3 of 3 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 ' Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6 Approved For Release 2007/11/08: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03800060001-6