CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
T
Document Page Count: 
8
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 14, 2004
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 22, 1951
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0.pdf288.61 KB
Body: 
Approved For Rels T 41 M, P :S D R 5A00Q&00510001-0 25X1 22 November 1951 25X1 Copy No. 47 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN DOCUM TN0. -- - (. UO CF ANC,f_ tN,CLA . DECLASS IEa CLASS- CHANGE TO. IS 5 C ?4EXtS;- Vtr.Nt)ATE: - WWI t3A~ Office of Current Intelligence CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY 25X1 25X1 25X1 DIA and DOS review(s) completed. TOP SECRET 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 Approved Ford 25X1A SUMMARY 25X1 FAR EAST 25X1 3. New Communist tactics used in Malaya page 4). 5. Tension heightening over West New Guinea (page 5). 6. Dutch would be sensitive to US pressure in dispute with Indonesia (page 5). NEAR EAST 25X1 Egyptian King sees cur on extremist "Eb era T.on Battalions" (page 7). Greek Army officers fear trend to left (page 7). WESTERN EUROPE 10. France again rejects US Austrian treaty strategy (page 8). 25X1A 25X1A 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 25X1A Approved For 25X1 ]'PAR EAST 25X1A New Communist tactics used in Malaya., kill any tapper who defies a non-work order. The US Consul General ex- presses alarm at the apparent inability of the authorities to counter this new and eminently successful technique. meoft is a approac ing labor crisis on large rubber plantations, where 10, 000 rubber tappers are already idle as a result of Communist threats to The activity of Communist-led bandits has been s ibsta.rntially higher during the past: week than in any similar period since the "emergency" was proclaimed in 1948. The most ominous develop- Comment. This tactic has not been employed before by the Communists, probably because it would, iri.the long run, create hostility among the workers. It has apparently been reserved, therefore, for use at some critical juncture like the present, when new appointments to the top posts in the Malayan admirnfstration are being made and new vigor is promised in the British guerrilla suppression campaign. 25X1A 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 25X1A Approved Fo 25X1 25X1A 25X1A Tension heightening over West New Guinea: that the present Indonesian cabinet might fall if it opposes such a move. The US Ambassador comments that Australian and Dutch cooperation over the! New Guinea dispute places the US in the center between those countries and Indonesia. He points out the set-back to long-term : imerican policies which would be suffered if the present crisis develops along the threatened lines. The Indonesian Foreign Minister complained to the United States Ambassador to Indonesia that the "unfriendly" Dutch and Australian attitudes on the West New Guinea issue would force Indonesia into a neutral ist coalition with India and Burma and its government into the "growing anti-Western camp" in Indonesia. He warned that the Indonesian Parliament might denounce the relationship with the Dutch and 6. Dutch would be sensitive to US pressure in dispute with Indonesia: In commenting on the crisis in Dutch-Indonesian relations, the US Ambassador in The Hague has stated that any US action favoring Indonesia 25X1A Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 25X1A Approved Ford in the dispute over West New Guinea's sovereignty would be regarded by the Netherlands as undue pressure and would be "most unfortunate" in its- reper- cussions on the Dutch rearmament program. The Dutch resentment against the US role in the achievement of Indonesian independence has only recently begun to diminish, and any approach to the Dutch on New Guinea would re- vive this sentiment and tend to confirm the Netherlands' "worst suspicions. " The Dutch Foreign Minister, who appeared quite pessimistic on the whole subject of Dutch-Indonesian relations;, has stated that he "would not be surprised" if Indonesia denounced the union statute next week, in which case he did not know ; what steps either side could then take. CCr.W1 nt: The,DutchGovernment, ..whi;4h:Leli last.. January as a result of domestic controversy over policy on New Guinea, has consistently suggested a postponement of action on Dutch-Indonesian problems until after the 1952 parliamentary elections. 25X1 25X1A Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 Approved F 25X1A 8. Egyptian King seeks curb on extremist "Liberation Battalions": 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A King Farouk has directed the Egyptian Govern- ment to restrain the activities of the so-called "Liberation Battalions. " The Egyptian Minister of Interior accordingly issued a public statement o h e e ec a s Liberation Battalions would be put under governmental control. The US Ambassador in Cairo reports, however, that subsequent violent opposition to this announcement on the part of extremist elements has apparently caused the Minister of Interior to waver in taking any further action. Comment: These battalions are being formed by violently nationalistic Egyptians, including the Moslem Brotherhood, for possible use against the British. While the battalions are militarily insig- nificant, the leaders throughout the Arab world fear that unless these ex- tremists are controlled, there is a real danger that similar groups will spring up in other Arab states to threaten the existing order. Greek Army officers fear trend to left: Greek Army officers see in recent internal evelopments a government trend to the left. 25X1A Defense Battalions are taken as evidence of the leftist trend. The US Military. Attache in Athens adds that the Greek officers fear that the present trend will create conditions favorable to the return of Communism. seating of seven parliamentary deputies who had een exiled as Communists, the withdrawal of he British police mission, the Greek Govern- 25X1A 25X1A rime Minister Plastiras' amnesty program for litical prisoners, including Communists, the nt's pressure for abolition of the United Nations a an Commission, and the contemplated disbandment of the civilian Armed Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0 Approved For 25X1A Comment., Greek officers, as a group, are strongly rightist in sympathy, and to them these developments probably appear more alarming than they are in fact. However, the Greek Foreign Office has information that bands' of Greek Communists are preparing once again to infiltrate into Greece, and the suspension of UN border observation could increase their chances for success. The amnesty program `may be greatly modified or abandoned if the ailing Plastiras disappears from the political scene. 25X1A 25X1A WESTERN EUROPE 10. France again rejects US Austrian treaty strategy: y ves will have to be made to obtain French agreement and suggests some concessions uggests as a possible compromise strategy (1) resumption of negotiations on the old draft treaty, (2) -public announcement in the event of failure that the West is considering a new proposal, and (3) an attempt by the Western delegates to negotiate some instrument equivalent to the abbreviated treaty for. presentation to Moscow. In an aide-memoire to the American Embassy, the French Foreign Office has once more re- jected the strategy proposed by the United States on the Austrian treaty question. This new state- repeats previous objections to the abbreviated treaty draft and reverses recent indications of a more receptive French attitude. The Embass belie th Comment.' While the French have previously stated their position in categories ms, it is not certain that their ob- jections to the abbreviated treaty as such are fundamental. Aside from their professed concern for preserving the mechanism of treaty negotiation, the French Government appears to desire only that the West shall. move cautiously in its efforts to reach a settlement. The French thus desire to protect the measure of agreement achieved on the old draft treaty, to offer further concessions to the Soviet Union, and if the Russians remain adamant, to denounce publicly Soviet obstructionism and to withdraw the concessions made previously. -. 8 - 25X1A Approved For Release 2004/03/11 : CIA-RDP79T00975A000400510001-0