DAILY LOG OFFICE OF THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP80B01676R001300090027-2
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
T
Document Page Count:
2
Document Creation Date:
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date:
August 26, 2002
Sequence Number:
27
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 13, 1962
Content Type:
NOTES
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP80B01676R001300090027-2.pdf | 93.31 KB |
Body:
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Office of the Deputy Director
Date 13 November 1962
1. The DDP Operations Center was abolished yesterday. A
DD/P Senior Officer watch was established at the same time in
IWOG. (ER 62-8300)
2. WH Division advises in a memorandum to the DCI that the
Embassy in Guatemala considers thatyif Juan Jose Arevalo again
assumes the Presidency of Guatemala, it will likely open the way to
a Communist regime. The Byroade survey group support this
appraisal. (ER 62-8242)
3. A DD/I TS memorandum deals with Soviet attitudes toward
war; Soviet management of political and military crises; and the
Soviet reappraisal of the strategic situation of the USSR. It has been
prepared in support of NIE 11-4. (TS#186353)
4. Hilsman Reports: 04"a41,S aW40ebl,ti~
a. "Our Major European Allies and the Cuban Crisis"
Different reactions in the several countries reemphasize the
fact that Germans, French, Italians and British still hold
distinctly individual views of their respective national interests.
(ER 62-8208)
b. "Yugoslav Trade Unions Gain in Rivalry With Bloc Oriented
Communists to Convene a Neutralist Labor Meeting'.'
The Yugoslav Trade Union Federation is conducting a success-
ful campaign for convening a world labor conference of "unaligned"
unions, primarily from underdeveloped countries. (ER 62-8209)
c. "Global Alert List for November 1962" (ER 62-8268)
d. "Brazil and the Cuban Missile Crisis"
Brazilian response to the Soviet missile buildup in Cuba was
erratic and unpredictable. Despite Goulart's assurances of
full support for the US position, he also favored avoidance of
forceful action against the Castro regime. (ER 62-8267)
e. "Effects of Mattei's Death on Italian Oil Policies"
The death of the president of the Italian state -owned petroleum
monopoly, the National Hydrocarbons
been covered
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f. "Implications of the Cuban Crisis for the Soviet Internal Scene"
It is not clear how much the Soviet leadership was shaken by the
Cuban crisis. There is no evidence of gains or losses in status.
(ER 62-8270)
g. "Western-Soviet Antithesis in the Yemen Conflict"
Possibilities have increased for a military confrontation of
Saudi Arabia and Jordan with the UAR. (ER 62-8287)
h. "Asian Reactions to the Cuban Crisis: October 27 - November 2, 1962
Most significant Asian reaction to the dismantling operations came,
obviously, from the Chicoms. Free Asian reactions predictably
favor the US-UN stand. Once the crisis is resolved, neutral
attitudes may reflect more sympathy for Cuba and respect for
Khrushchev than praise for Kennedy. (ER 62-8281)
i. "Sihanouk's Threat to Bring in Peiping"
Sihanouk has almost maneuvered himself into a position obliging
him to ask for Chicom military aid, if the West fails to meet his
demands for territorial integrity and neutrality guarantees.
(ER 62-8297)
"Mutual Concessions: An Old Soviet Theme"
Although the idea of compromise has long been articulated as
part of the doctrine of peaceful coexistence, it is worth noting
that the recent Soviet "concession to peace" in Cuba occurred
under the one condition that Moscow has always claimed would
never produce Soviet concessions: a US threat to employ force
against the USSR. (ER 62-8296)
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