JPRS ID: 9633 WEST EUROPE REPORT

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APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONL1' ~ JF'RS L/9633 27 March 1981 ~i/est E u ro ~ Re o rt p p CFOUO 18/81) _ F~~$ FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORl~AATIO~1 SERVICE ~OR OFFICiAL USE ONLX _ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 NOTE JPRS publi~ations contain information primarily from foreign nev;spapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency = transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language sources are translated; those from English-Ianguage sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets - are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [TextJ or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or followir~g the last line of a brief, indicate how the original informa.tion was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- ~ tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the _ original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of an _ item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. ~ The contents ot this publication in no way represent the poli- ; cies, views or attitudes ot the U.S. Government. ; ~ - COPYRIGEiT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GGV~RNING OWNERSHIP OF ' MATERItiLS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONI,Y. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ~NLY JPRS L/9633 ~ ~ rta~ ui~ .t ~ t~ 1 WEST EUROPE REPORT ~ (FOUO 18/81) CONTENTS ECONOMIC - FRANCE Nation's Space Technology Export Policy Projected (Pierre Langereux; AIR & COSMOS, 7 Feb 81) ooo.,.,.,.o....o,. ITALY - - - . _ Concern Over EEC~s Agricultural Budget Cuts (IL SOLE-24 ORE, 23 Jan 81) 4 SPAIN Official Forecast: 0.5 Percent Growth, Two Million Unemployed (C.A,NIBIO 16, 2 Feb 81) o ........................~......o..o.o. $ Government Works on VAT, Last Obstacle to EEC Entry in 1983 (CA,MBIO, 16 Feb 81) o..........o.....~....o..o.......o...o.o. 11 POLITICAL FRANCE Commentary on U.S. Quest for Support Over E1 Salvador (Francois Schlosser; LE NOUVEL OBSERVATEUR, 2-8 Ma.r 81) ,,.o. 14 Purpose, Long-Range Imnlications of Recent P~F Actions (L'EXPRESS, 21-27 Feb 81; LE NOUVEL OBSERVATEUR, 23 Feb-1 Mar 81). .................a.....o...............o.o.. 17 Recent Events Summarized, by Robert Schneider Campaign Related Purposes, by Thierry Pfister 'Fascist' Tendencies, by Jean-Francois Revel - ' a- LIII - WE - 150 FOUO] FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY New PCF Tactics Vis-a-Vis Drugs, Imnigrants Noted (LE~ LETTRE DE L'EXPANSION, 16 Feb 81} ,a,,,,,,a,ooo,,,,,, 25 SPAIN Main Parties on Future RelaCions With Rea.gan Admi.nistration (CAMBIO, 19 Jan 81) ..........oooa,.ooo....eoaaaooo.o..oooo.0 26 GENERAL FRANCE Ariane Launch Schedule Projected to 1985 ~ (Pierre Langereux; AIR & COSMOS, 21 Feb 81) ,,,,..,,o � o0 28 -b- FOR OFFICIAL USE UNLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ ~CONOMIC FRAIvCE NATION'S SPACE TECHNOLOGY EXPORT POLICY PROJECTED ' Paris AIR & COSMOS in French 7 Feb 81 p 47 [Article by Pierre Langereux: "Atnbitions of National Space Export Policy"] [Text] The results of a recent CNES [National Space Studies Center] survey of about 15 public agencies and French manufacturing companies'~ concerning space exports ~ wer~ disclosed by Jean-Gerard Roussel, CNES director of international and industrial affairs, during the second meeting of the Space Club, which was held on 3 February 1981 in Paris under the chairmanship of Michel Bignier, ESA [European Space Agency] director of space transportation systems. French space exports for 1974-79 were relatively modest but encouraging Fr 50 million for space equipment sold to various countries, particularly with the help of Prospace; Fr 60 million for French equipment in Intelsat 5 satellites; Fr 70 million for the French portion of Ariane launchers sold to Intelsat by the ESA and Arianespace; and about Fr 150 million annually in the last few years from the market for tele- - communications ground stations marketed by Telspace--thus representing most of the French space exports in the seventies. A definite increase in space exports has been evident since 1980, particularly with the firm order for two more Ariane launchers by Intelsat and the options taken up by other customers (for a rotal of Fr 5 million). The market for ground stations for - receiving and processing data from observation satellites (SPOT [civilian observation satellite] and LANDSAT [Earth Resources Technology Satellite]) also opened up last year with SEP sales to Brazil and Bangladesh and two or three other. deals already well uncierway. French industry also appears to be in a good position for bidding on Arabsat telecommunications satellites. = The French space industry expects even much better things in the future. The report of the aeronautics and space group of the 8th Plan Industrial Commission (1981-85) anticipates: Fr 4 to 7 billion for launchers, with Fr 1 to 2 billion in exports; Fr 7 to 9 billion for satellites, with Fr 1.5 to 4 billion in exports; *CNES, Arianespace, Prospace, Telspace, Satel-Conseil, MATRA [Mechanics, Aviation and Traction Company], AEROSPATIALE ;National Industrial Aerospace Company], SEP [European Propellant Company], Thomson-CSF [Thomson-General Taireless CompanyJ, Sodern, EMD [Marcel Dassault Electronics], Crouzet, Souriau, ~ODETEG [Technical Studies and General Enterprises Company]. 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Fr 4 to 7 billion for ground stations, with Fr 3 to 6 billion in exports; or a total of Fr 15 to 23 billion, with about half from foreign markets. The CNES study for 1980-90 in turn notes "very likely" markets amounting to Fr 25 billion for satellites (out of a total of Fr 40 billion), with Fr 11 billion outaide the United States and Japan, between Fr 2 and 3 billion for various goods and ser- vices ar.~d Fr 0.7 billion for ground tracking equipment. The potential market for launchers is estimated at 25 launchings in Europe (with a potential of 46), 20 in the United States (out of 30) for civilian launchings only (1985-9~J) and 24 (out of 45) for other countries and Intelsat. Direct television represents 4 to 18 launch- ings (outside of Europe, the United States ar.d the USSR) and scientific sa.tellites 1 to 2 launchings per year. Relying on the captive intra-European market, the European space industry could, as a"relatively ambitious" but still accessible goal, be thinking of taking 25 to 30 percetit of the world market despite the already keen competition of the American industry, which will be followed by that of the Japanese space industry within 5 years. France's goai is to double its turnover for space operations through exportation. "The French space effort, which naw amounts to about Fr 3 billion annually, should ~ have great success with exports," CNES General Director Yves Sillard stated, in - the case of launchers (Ariane) and Satellites (SPOT, TDF 1, Telecom 1, etc.). This ambitious space exports policy rests on five "pillars": 1. Improvement of technical credibility by implementing the national plan for operational systems. 2. Increasing the competitiveness of products through innovative capabilities, appro- priate technical assistance (through Satel-Conseil), an "aggressive" financing policy and appropriate industrial organization (increasing the prime contractor's tasks, mass production, etc.). 3. An effort to promote French space technology among poten- tial users by every means possible (Prospace, companies and perhaps an "industrial trade structure suited to exportation") and through geographic, regional and national approaches (CNES experience in Africa). 4. Development of industrial capabilities through a research and development program in keeping with ambitions. The CNES has thus proposed that the French Government triple the research and developmEnt effort for space, which will probably increase from Fr 35 to 120 million in the next few ~ years. The completion of a new major space program such as SOLARIS would support such a move. 5. Dev~lopment of an "ind.ustrial marketing strategy" suited to poten- tial markets classified into five categories--Europe, the United States, major inter- national organizations (Intelsat, Inmarsat, NATO), new space powers (China, Japan, Canada, Tndia), and other countries. Such an effort obviously requires everyone's participation: publ~ic authorities, industrial and space organizaCions, prime contractors and subcontractors. Unfortunately, a certain amount of antagonism has been noted between prime contractors and out�itters of equipn?ent. In response to the appeal for "unity" made by prime contractors, who want to see their outfitters patticipate more actively in the com- mercial effort required by the competitian, subcontractors expressed "grave concern" about certain practices of leaders, which put them at a disadv,antage (competitive practices, etc.), ~ 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE aNLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 r,,,r.,, , FOR OFF(CIA I. USE ONLY In addition to these difficult relations between large and small companies, there are also industrial reorganization projects on the national or European level, recommended by some for thQ sake of efficiency, competitiveness, etc. _ J.-G. Roussel also pointed out the "relative industrial spread," which results in a European prime contractor accounting for only 25 to 30 percent of the turnover from satellites, whereas in the United States a"major firm" in the space industry, such as Hughes Aircraft, takes in 60 to 80 percent of the cost of a program tnrough its subsidiaries. _ The CNES, which has expressed its support for prime contractors, recommends a"reorgani- zation of operations" in favor of large manufacturers, w~iile confining outfitters to - "precise .slots." It is "necessary to combine and coordinate the positions and operations of induStrial prime contractors," according to Yves Sillard, who nevertheless does not believe that large "industrial reorganizations" are appropriate. _ On the other hand, we are seeing ne.w trarsatlantic partnerships being formed between - American and French firms, particularly in the area of telecommunications, such as MATFtA with Harris or AEROSPATIALE with Ford Aerospace. As AEROSPATIALE Director of Ballistic and Space Systems Pierre Usunier said: "There is only one kind of good cooperation, the kind that succeeds!" COPYRIGHT: A. & C. 1981 ii,si5 cso: sloo 3 FOR OEFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ ECONOMTC ITALY - CONCERN OVER EEC'S AGRICULTURAL BUDGET CUTS Milan IL SOLE-24 ORE in Italian 23 Jan 81 p 3 _ Competition Is the Unly Recipe [Text] A specialized Burssesl bulleta.n camments on the upcoming cuts which would be proposed ~n expenditures for the support of agricultural markets in order ' to reduce by approximately 1,000 billion lire the community's annual total expenses, of whicTi, it may be necessary to point out, the farmer's burden is about 70 percent.Tn the same article, it was emphasized that, among the products for which,reduct~ons or liznitations in subsidies were forecast, there were many of prevalent or even exclusive Italian interest, like wheat, tomatoes, olive oil, cattle (witi~ respect to the reward for cattle production), fruit products (with respect ta the reward for marketing), tobacco, and wine. Even if the possibility of reducing Common Ma.rket expenses sustained for various _ reasons in support of agricultural workers had already been suggested numerous times in the recent period, the news worried the representatives of national agricultural policies, especially in view of the delicate present e~onomic condition. As is well known, and has been stressed repeatedly from several parts for a ~ long time, the serious gap between the rate of increase in the prices of products sold by farmers (8 percent according to IRVAM for the period from November 1978 to November 1980 and for all products) and that, remarkably higher and more in - line with the general increase in the c~st of living, of the price of products purchased, has created and is creating considerable difficulties in numerous - - agr~cultural sectors. 'L'he net decline in real terms of agricultural prices (which, besides, turned - into a very modest advantage for the consumer, since, in the same period from _ November 1979 to November 1980 the consumer price index of food products increased ` by 16.6 percent namely at a rate not too different from that of the general , consumer price index, which was 21.5 percent) up to r.ow has oniy had ma.rgina.l effects on production and on foreign trade. Accordin~ to some recent, still preliminary, INEA [National Institute for Agrarian Studies] projections, the gross marketable agricultural production increas~d, in fact, approximately 2 percent in 1980, a not at all negligible result, particular?y in consideration of the exceptional increases which took place ir. the 2 previous years. i - 4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300094455-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY = TfLe agricultural :Eood products deficit Lhen, appears, on the basis of the Nove~mber figures, much less alarming (as we predicted, moreover, in a previous article ~n tfiis paper) tizan tfiat previously announced by several press agencies end our export problems are partially attributable to specif ic interrelated situations (wine, preserves, vegetable and fruit produts, etc.). Obviously, in the short term, it is essential to reduce or e"li~inate the differences between the rate of increase in prices received by farmers for the sale of tfieir products and that of the prices of goods purcha~ed, by raising the former or lowering the latter (not an easy task). Furthermore, it will be up to our delegation at Brussels, and in particular to the new minister of agriculture, "to win" the best possible conditions for the Italian products. But to be able to formulate, or even just to outline, a broad discussion, it is essential to try to understand the contingencies which will prevail in the coming years for Italian agriculture. It is our opinion that the situation ~f "great shargage" may continue for a rather long time. In the first place, it is probably that, at least during the next five-year period, for the ma~ority of food markets, outside of contingency situations which may - alwa.ys occure, conditions of excess supply over real deinand will prevail without, therefore, part~cular pressures on grices. This opinion (totally contrary to that whi.ch appea.red in Monday's CORRIERE DELLA SERA) is expressed also by FAO in _ its publication "FAO Agricultural Commodity Projections 1975-1980", issued in 1979, = which notes that the only products for which there may be structural conditions of shortage in the supply side are those of natural rubber and fish. A correctiona even quite sizable, in this state of affairs could occure, however, with the defusion of "energy crops" (destined for the production of alcohol or other fuel, as an alternativa to those derived from oil}. I This phenomenon, however, may materialize (and only under specific conditions of the oil market) in a substantial way, such as to reduce noticeab~y the supply of agricultural products destined to be used as foodstuff only in the distant future. Even if it is for a wide range of products, the EEC sets the levels of Common Market prices independently from those in effect in world markets, it is clear that, in the long run and for numerous reasons, the immobility in real terms of world prices will tend to halt the increase of those of the Common Market. Another consideration, more direct but in part connected to the previous one, concerns the total amount that the EEC will, in the coming years, be prepared to ~ allocate to support agricultural markets. It is probably that the tendency toward containment will go on; apart from Great Britain's position, which leans in this dirPCtion, there is also the conviction that, at this point, European farmers are no longer in a disadvantaged categary, needing, therefore, additiona.l � subsidies (and the same, luckily, can be said for a large part of Italian farmers). Furthermore, the recent entry of Greece i~to tb.e EEC and that of Spain, coming so,ner or later, will influence the level of support available for Mediterranean products (wheat, wine, olive oil, tomato~:s) presumably causing a reduction of unit - prices (it is inconceivable, for instance, that in the future such a heavy _ subsidy may be maintained for the transforrla.tion of tomatoes, when the Italian production will be augmented by that o~ Spain and Greece. 5 FOR OFFI~IAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850ROOQ3QOQ9Q055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ Finally, it muet be Laken into account that, for all those products for which the qual~ty factor plays a ralevant role ~and, in particular, for produce and wine), there w111 be increased campetiti.on from Mediterranean countries (Greece, Spain, Algeria, Morocco, etc.), as well as from importing countries (as is. the case of the United States for wine} wizici~ are gradually acquiring the necessary pro- duction and marketing capabilities. Therefore, there will still be ample room, both in the EEC and the world markets for our agricultural products, but the possibility of fighting the competition of foreign producers will depend, in growing measure, on the competitiveness of our products from the standpoints of quality and price, since th~ Common Market's protective conditions will diminish. - A possible reaction to the consequences of the scenario described above is to - limit ourselves to increasing the already high subsidies which, domestically, are ueing carried out in supnort of agriculture, in order to counterbalance the decrease in those of the Common Market. Tfii:s is not, in our opinion, the correct strategy (needs for containment will be ~elt, a~qong other things, also in the domestic budget of the Italian government). It is desirable, on the contrary, For public authorities to encourage, not to oppose, tite existing movements for the formation of a more competitive agri- cultural mark,et that is suhject to international competition. For a long time Italian agriculture has been, due to the existing legislation, a protected sector characterized by the si.multaneous nresence of efficient and technologically advanced enterprises and by marginal enterprises (not only in depressed areas), in which it is extremely difficult to introduce new productive forces. T~Te believe, therefore, that the time has come to begin favoring (in a fashion xequired by the situation, of course) a greater mobility of resources (for example, reducing the rigid conditions for farm leasings), in order to encourage the formation of new efficient enterprises, in addition to those already existing, - capa'ule of competing in international markets and of challenging fareign Froducers - in domestic markets. Greater attention should be given, in chosing enterprises worthy of receiving financial help, to considerations ef a productive nature, often unfortunate]_y not regarded as prime considerations by public administrators in charge of managing subsiaies to agriculture. _ A move in the opposite direction may succeed in freezing some marginal situations but could, in the not teo distant future, displace ample ~ector~ of Italian agriculture. 7n r_onclusion, we believe it is true that agriculture is still a different sector requiring special trea trnent, but just as true is *_ha .fact that it is becoming a less different sector, for which we would be i~clined to apply the rules wluch exist in the rest of the economic ~ystem. - 6 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300094455-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 1 ~18~1'Ibl~it1011@ ~1 f'~dlt0 ~ . delle far~nigiie nel~ 1g79 Y. Pos~zione nella professia~e del capofamigba 20 , 1e ~ 1. Distribution of family income ~6 ~ in 1979; by employment sector - 12 of head of household 2. Agriculture ; 3. Business and Craf ts 15 . ~o ; , 4. Source: Bank of Italy . g ~ 5. millions of lire : 8 ~.r 2 s Agncoltu~~ _ q 3 ..uu.. Industna e'Art~gianato 2 ~~t _ , 0 _ 0�2 2~4 4�6 6�8 B�10 10~12 12�15 oltre 4 Fonte~ Banca d' itaba , S mihorn c~ bre _ ~ Evoluzione della funzione di produziao~e dell'agricdtura ~ 2p Indice 1970 c 100 6 Investiment~ 3 ~ - t40 Consumi intermedi 4 Val. ass.lordo at conto de~ fatton~ .......Ptoduztone brda vaxfibtlefi _._Addett~7 Sup. agr~cota utdizzata 8 ~ ~Y. 120 = r--""y~ 1. Evolution of the production tto ~ .���'i~~ function of agriculture 2. Base year 1970 equals 100 = e,...~�/ ~o0 3 . Inves tments 4. Tntermediate consumptions 90 S. Reported gross value ~ 6. Gross marketable production 7. Labor - 80 8. Farm land utilized ~0 9. Source: ISTAT jCentral 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 7B 79 9 Fonte El~bor,~z~o~ dah ISTAT (i nu~nen ind~ce fanno nter~ - Statistics Institute] (index men~o all'evoiu~~or,~ de~ prezn 19i0) numbers refer to the evolution _ of 1970 prices) CO~YR~GIiT: 1981 Editrice Il Sole-24 Ore s.r .1. 4758 CSO: 31Q4 7 FOR OFFICIAL USE~ ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300094455-9 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ECONOMIC SPAIN OFFICIAL FORECAST: 0.5 PErtCENm GRdWTH, T(nTTO MILLION UNEMPLOYED - Madrid CAMBIO 16 in Spanish 2 Feb 81 pp 42,43 ~Text~ The relentless advance of unQmployment continues. During 1980, 438,100 jobs were lost in Spain, although unemployment increased by 364,00. The differ- ence is for the most~part accounted for by mandatory and voluntary retirements. - The figures are already nearing red alarm proportfons--by the end of 1981 we will be on the verge of 2 million unemployed--but what is even more worrisome is their rapid rate of growth. Since the start of the economic crisis in 1975, and of the start then of the major unemploymen~ trend, there has no* been as meteoric a rise in the latter a~ the one that took glace in the last quarter of 1980. All hopes , in this regard, such as the one the economic ministries had been trying to con- vey, have been dashed by the official figures. The attempt to disguise reality ~ by basing the figures on unemployed from the age of 16 up, instead of from that of 1~ as had been the norm until September 1980, will not succeed in covering up ~ problem that has gotten out of hand. Government sources have admitted to this magazine that the situation will be explosive by the time 2 million unemployed has became a reality. And this figure is just around the ~corner: Unless the economic situation changes radically and urgently, the 2-million-unemployed figure will be reached by February 1982, that is, within exactly 12 months. Far from showing any signs o� recovering, the economic situation continues at a standstill. According to the Banco de Bilbao, whose forecasts have characteris- tically been extremely accurate thus far, the Spanish economy is currently teetering at the ominous level of zero growth. More optimistically, the Ministry of Economy indicates that it may be growing at a rate sligh~ly above 0.5 percent. In ea.ther of these cases, and whatever happens between now and December 1981, there are certain to be no jobs for the 140,000 persons coming of employmPnt age--includinc; some 20,~00 women who will be seeking employment for the first - time, to cope with fam~ly problems--in addition to which close to 150,000 jobs will be lost. An idea of the seri.ousness of the problem may be gained from the fact that, to ' avoid further job losses and allow the unemployment figures to be swelled only by youths coming of employment age, the Spanish economy would have to grow at an average annual rate of 3 percent, whereas all agree today that in no case will it reach 1 percent. 8 FOR OFF7CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL U5E ONLY - ~ ~ven the government's most optimistic foreca~t~ indicate that the 1981 growth rate cannot reach Z percent. And to so much as approach that level, the govern- _ ment must hope that exp~rts, as occurred in 1980 with the century's record = - harvest,� will lead the economy out of its present predicament. How? Th~hks ~ to the sharp drop of the peseta, which in f months and in absolute silence has been devaluated aFproximately 15 percent. ~ The Ministry of Economy, concerned over the unemplo~ment outlook, has drawn up a rep~rt on "Projection to 1985 of Spanish Economy's Employment Demand," the results of whi ch have already been made known by the working group appointed to the task by Jose Luis Leal when he headed that ministry. The results are so - disappointing that tt;e entire issue of 3, 500 copies has been pigeonholed in the v basement of the ministry and will be circulated only after tl:~ 16 pages contain- ~ ing these forecasts have been removed. The report, to whi~h CAMBIO 16 has managed to have access, points out that even under the most optimistic of hypotheses, namely, that the 5panish economy might - grow at an average rate of 4 percent annually between 1980 and 1985--which is the figure submitted by Prime Minister Suarez to the Cortes for the vote of con- fidence--unemployment would not drop to less than some 1.5 million by the end of - that period. To this funding must be added that growth at that as~umed rate is seen today as absolutely utopian after the 19$0 setback and the 1981 forecast, ~ 1' EI ~aano q~e I lega - ~ 2 ~ 2000.000 ~w ~.~aoe (3) Key: wabbsis P~ t.s3a.0oo 1. Forthcoming Unemployment. , ~ 2. 2,000,000 unemployed. t3.34.000 ~tA4~.~ r,000 3. Pessimistic forecast. 4. Optimistic forecast. t. .000 83tA00 ~ 1.9T7 78 7'9 80 81 1.985 i 9 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY In sum: The government's hands and feet are tied with regard to preventing the I 2 million unemployed trom becoming a reality in the near Future. And if it is , going t~ prevent that figure--"whose psychological effects will already be disas~ trous," according to government sources--from growing beyond further containment, it will have to speed up measures to bring the GDP ~Gross Domestic Product~ _ growth rate up t~ 4 percent by 1982. This currently appears to be little better than impossible. What is being done to address the problem? Mere patchwork measures that do nothing beyond raising the scholastic age, lowering the retirement ag~, and minor _ ineffective aids to stimulate employmPnt. "Let us not hoodwink ourselves," says Jaime Garicano, deputy director general of the Nati.onal Employment Institute, "the only way to stimulate employment is through growth. The Ministry of Labor cannot generate job openings. It can favor the creation of some jobs with juvenile employment programs, in the forzn of subsidies and special aids to depressed zones, but the nation must be told that jop openings are created by public and private investments." _ In the vieW of officials of the Ministry of Economy and Commerce, there are bu t two realistic options for addressing the unemployment problem: develop part-time - work agreements, which is already provided for in the Workers Law but has not - - been developed by the Ministry of Labor, and, above all, reduce the pressure _ being generated by Social Security on the creation of new job openings. "Social Security, as it is currently being funded, is an infernal machine against employ- ment and is caus~.ng more damage to employment than the economic crisis itself." COPYRIGHT; 1979 Informacion y Revistas, S.A. 9399 CSO: 3110 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300094455-9 . FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ ~CONOMIC SPAIN _ GOVERNMENT WORKS ON VAT~ LAST OBSTACLE TO EEC ENTRY IN 1983 Madrid CAbffiIO 16 in Spanish 16 Feb81 pp 42, 43, 44 ~Excerpt~~ By March, the Council of Ministers expects to approve the new VAT kValue AddPd Tax~, to enable Parliament to complete its enactment between April and May. The VAT is the final part of the tax reform, and it was Fernandez Ordonez himself who d~ew up the initial draft. This was later adapted more to EEC norms, which required a second draft that is now being given its final touches by the different ministries and departments concerned. "The institution of the VAT is a European Community requirement. The EEC has insisted unequivocally that Spain must institute the VAT from the moment of its entry. For us, I must state clearly, it is an essential requirement," Robert - Goergen, the EEC's director of taxation, said recently. BesidES, however, the VAT can kill two birds with one stone. As of today, the manner of funding Social Security--basxcally, through contributions by the enterprises and the workers--has become a tax on employment, an obstacle to the _ creation of job openings. In other countries (and this is the objective here as well), the tendency is to fund the greater part of Social Security through direct allocations by the state and, in some countries, the VAT is used to generate these funds. Here, the Social Security funding authorities have already requES- - ted that part ~f the VAT be allocated to the funding of a nortion of Social Security. - The VAT i~ to replace three current taxes (General Tax on Business Transactions, Luxury Tax and Special Tax on Soft Drinks) as we11 as the Agrari.a.n Social Security contributions. The principal one of these, the General Tax on Business T:ansactions ~IGTE~, besides not being acceptable to the E~C, also has many disadvantages that the VAT will resolve. Since it is a cascading tax on consump- tion, its eftect increases with growth of the productive processes and the dis- tribution of good~. This distorts the market, discriminates against small and medium business, and fosters the concentration of enterprise. _ Moreover, the IGTE does not affect lar~e sectors of the petrochemical, farming, forestry, livestock, fishing and f~od industries, which distorts free competition _ and the allocation of resources. The VAT will affect all sectors equally. 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The major problem being posed by the IGTE, however, is its distorting effect on international competition, which is the reason the Europeans are making its abandon;nent a prior condition to our entry into the EEC. Currently, with the IGTE, Spain makes tax adjustments at the border, collecting lecies on imported products and paying tax rebates on export products. The IGTE being a cascading tax, the levies and rebates are closely tied to the magnitude of the goods- production process, making adjustments inequitable. And the EEC member countries accu se Spain of using this system to subsidize -�9panish exports while penalizing imports (the famous "dumping" process? . The insti tution of the VAT offers several advantages and has produced favorabZe results in almost all of Europe. In the first place, it is an eve?i-handed tax on foreign~trade and on employment. That is, it is not protectionist and does not penalize employment, since it is based on the difference in value at the various stages of consumption of produc ts, and not on whether much labor or much technology has been used in their production. The VAT moreover improves competition among enterprises by clarifying the tax picture: With the IGTE, many enterprises underpaid the tax and were able to undersell fraudulently. Now, each enterprise will declare, will compel others to declare, and will be compelled by others to declare, thus reducing the risk of fraud and facilitating market transparency, Thirdly, it will compel enterprises to become more competitive abroad, and may well even operate to improve substantially our balance of payments, as a result of an increase in exports. The implementation of the VAT nevertheless requires careful advance preparation. Our entry into the EEC is not in vain, in that, with the VAT, protectionist tariff s disappear and competition becomes more open. "This is our most impartant decision of the 1980's," Luis Fernando Alemany, deputy director general of _ Indi rect Taxation and one of the authors of the VAT project, has told CAMBIO 16. "The stakes involved in the institution of this tax are high, and it therefore requires much preparation, explanation and close monitoring," he adds. Serious Difficulties Busin essmen have for years been fearing the "tax storm" that is about to strike them. "The implementation oi the VAT in Spain will raise very serious difficul- ties in the current situation of enterprises and of the Spanish economy; hence, the need for a transition period in which to adapt to EEC guidelines in this - regard is absolute and must be taken into account to minimize the possible traumatic effects on our productive apparatus," says a private CEOE ~Spanish Confedera tion of Business Orqanizations~ document on integration into the EEC. The Minis try of Finance is aware of this issue and is preparing, with the cooper- ati.on of various economic specialists, a study on the effects the institution of the VAT could have in each sector, with the intent of presenting a kind of 12 FOR OFFICIAL USE Q?NLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OF~ICIAL USE ONLY . White Paper or Book within 2 or 3 months. "The VAT will affect our future ec~nomy tremendously," says Luis Fernando Alemany. "It will have a decisiva impact on the production and distribution of goods, and on the entry of foreign products as well as our exports." . Furthermore, the tax authorities also favor the establishment of a transition , period. Alemany thinks that after approval of the VAT by the Cortes, 3 years will be needed to apply it fully. The first of these would be needed to develop its norms and plan it; the second, to prepare the tax administration structure; and the third, to e~cplain the tax to the taxpayers. This takes its implementa- tion beyond 1 January 1983, the date planned for 5pain's entry into the EEC; but an extension of the date for implementation of the VAT could be requested, as Greece has just done. COPYRIGHT: 1979 Informacion y Revistas, S.A. 9399 CSO: 3110 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY POLITICAL FRANCE = CONA'IENTARY ON U.S. QUEST FOR SUPPORT OVER EL SALVADOR LD051525 Paris LE NOUVEL OBSERVATEUR in French 2-8 Mar 81 p 36 [Article by Francois SctiZosser: "Sedatives for Reagan"] [Text] A dangerous honor will probably be bestowed on the wretched Salvadoran - peasants. Deeming that they are the target of "flagrant soviet adventurism," Reagan - will take advantage of the situation to make :.nem pay for 5 years of American frus- trations in Saigon, Luanda, Theran and Kabul. The Salvadoran peasant has not been chosen by mere chance. Reagan's experts were seeking an "excuse for a showdown" [suuet de crise] to very rapidly demonstrate - their viril.ity. According to certain leaks, the National Security Council estab- - lished precise criteria for the choice of victims. Everything had to take place at spot where America enjoyed definite superiority, would run no major risk and could _ produce adequate proof of "communist interference." Living not far from Cuba and Nicaragua, the Salvadoran peasant was an ideal customer. In order to convince the allies General Haig, the new Secretary of State, has skill- fully organized a publicity.blitz over Europe. Waves of official delegations, groups of high officials, experts and--confidentially--intelligence agents have followed one another, some of them via the front doors, others via the back doors of European chancelleries. Their attache cases overflowed with documents proving that sizable arms supplies from communist countries have been reachin~ the Salva- doran rebels via Cuba. Haig even insisted tihat the EEC stop sending humanitarian aid--food and medical supplies--which could further the war objectives of "Marxists" in the Salvadoran hills. And, above all, the White House envoys demanded that - European governments deliver one by one a ritual statement of allegiance acknowleding the existence of foreign interference in E1 Salvador and supporting the American ~ crusade. The Intermediaries The Europeans were embarrased, even annoyed. And, most of all, they were concerned about other things--in Poland, a truce has been achieved--just--but it is fragile: in the USSR, the 26th Congress, which will determine the guidelines of an economic policy and the framework of Soviet diplomacy for the next 5 years has been taking place. And since Monday, when Brezhnev admitted for the first time that the world economic crisis has affected the socialist countries and simultaneously offered a ~ 14 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFIC'IAL USE ONLY - number of unexpected strategic and military concessions, the Europeans have found it difficult to get worked up in addition about some skirmish--alteit a bloody = one--between rebel guerrillas and an overly repressive army somewhere in Central ` - America. However, it has been realized in Paris and also London and Bonn that American feel- _ ings should not be hurt at this precise moment. Tribute has been paid. Jean Francois-Poncet opened up first and said what Washing~on wanted him to say. France has nothing to lose in E1 Salvador and Giscard has everything to gain by covering himself with a part of Reagan's mantle of anticommunist toughness at a minimal price, since he has been very strongly criticized on the eve of the presiden tial election of his "softness" on the Soviets. On the following day it was Mrs Thatcher's turn to submit but she did it less cynically and more honorably. She condemned communist ~ intervention but, largely following in the footsteps of the British press, expressed digust with the butchering regime which Washington supports in E1 Salvador. As for the Germans, they have been the most embarrassed. The Salvadoran guerrillas are known in Bonn, where it is realized that not all of them are bloodthirsty com- munist and, more particularly, that there are some staunch social democrats, members of the socialist international, among them. Obviously, Reagan's wishes will be _ complied with so far as condemnation of foreign intervention is concerned but, at _ the same time, the Germans will offer to act as intermediaries between the rebels and those members of the Salvadoran government who are willing to accept such media- tion. A11 this means that the Europeans have gone through the motions of condemning arms suppliers. They believe that they had to do this to calm the Reagan, team down. They now hope that more serious problems will be tackled. Brezhnev's proposals, which were made under the solemn auspices of the 26th Congress, cannot be dismissed out of hand. Obviously, they could well divide Europeans and aggravate the existing crisis between Europe and America. But it would be dangerously simplistic to assert that this is their only objective. Even Reagan and Haig have taken note of them. Hence the hesitation and embarrassed and contradictory commentaries, f or Brezhnev - has simply offered to renegotiate the strategic arms agreement, which the Americans have signed but not ratified, and extend military "confidence-building measures"-- information about troop movements, observation of military maneuvers on the spot and so forth--to European Russia as far as the Ural Mountains. This is a plan which the French have advocated for the past 2 years but whic:h the Soviet have hitherto rejected forcefully and almost indignantly. Systematic Arrogance Brezhnev's proposal to freeze medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe is even more significant. Of course it is unacceptable in literal terms~since it would confirm the deployment of some 150 Soviet SS-20 missiles without any reciprocal concessions. But talks based on Brezhnev's proposal could lead to an acknowledgemen t of parity, which Helmut Schmidt would like to see accepted by both sides, through either the dismantling of certain Soviet systems or the deployment of an equivalent number of _ American devices in West Europe. All these subjects are politically explosive not only in Germany, where the "antinuclear revolt" is in full swing, but also in the rest of Europe. 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 ~ FOR OFFIC'IA1. USF. ONI,Y Prior to their vis~ts to Washington, the most important European foreign ministers-- French, German and British--met secretly in Bonn. Europe fears that the White House could step up the arms race in order to reestablish American strategic superiority over the USSR. Z'he French and Germans have quite openly urged Washington not to yield to this temgtation, which would lead to an even deeper and more lasting deterioration of East-West relations. At Boston Fletcher School, Francois-Poncet emphasized that it was no longer possible to imagine "a situation in which the consequences of a rift in Europe would be accepted with a light heart." Further- ' _ more, the Europeans repudiate systematic arrogance--whether verbal or military-- . toward Third World countries in which the West has strategic or commercial interests. As far as the immediate future is concerned, the question is how far the new Wash- ington administration will go to appease the American rights's most exaggerated phantasms--it is known that many of Reagan's followers dream about "bringing" Castro "to heel." Will the present incursion into E1 Salvador be sufficient to calm them down? Will Reagan go so Far as to subject Cuba to a military blockade? This would be tantamount to risking a resumption of cold war in Berlin, in the heart of i:urope, at a time when Brezhnev's undoubtedly self-seeking but not insubstantial proposals could make it possible to explore some paths less dangerous to all con- cerned. COPYRIGHT: 1981 "Le Nouvel Observateur" CSO: 3100 16 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~'OLITICAL FRANCE PURPOSE, LONG-RANGE IMPLICATIONS OF RECENT PCF ACTIONS Recent Events Summarized Paris L'EXPRESS in French 21-27 Feb 81 pp 71,72,74 ~Article by Robert Schneider: "P C F: The Fascist Offensive"~ ~Text~ Suddenly, from ihe balcony of the Palace, the Parisian dance hall in vogue, on Rue Faubourg-Montmartre, CGT ~General Confederation of Labor~ stickers and Marchais badges are flung upon the stage and a chant arises: "Cho-cho-cho, chomage, ras-le-bol!" ~Down with unemployment, we have had it up to herel~. There is confusion under the multicolored laser beams. A broadcast is interrupted. The program "20 Years-To What Use?", being broadcast live over Antenna 2 and Europe 1 on Monday 16 February, ciedicated to 7,617,000 ~French peogle between the ages of 17 and 25, and having hardly begun, was terminated--censored by 150 - communist and CGT militants. After cries of "Racism to the bulldozer!" and calls to the denouncement of drug users, abrupt censorship. After Poujadiste demagoguery, provocation. Has the PCF CFrench Communist Party~ lost its head? Or could it be the ~victim of tact- less zeal on the part of some restless local elected officia3.s? No. These power bids are planned bids. A general, systematic offensive has been r3ecided at the highest party level. Vitry-sur-Seine, communist electoral stronghold in Val-du-Marne, on Christmas Eve night: In a matter of minutes, in the presence of the mayor, Paul Mercieca, some 50-odd PCF militants ransacked an immigrant workers center into which 318 Malians had just--temporarily--moved. The attackers had been divided up into specialized coxnmando units. One unit seized the director of the center and stole 600 keys, another ripped down the telephone lines, another sabotaged the electric power panel,and still another destroyed the boiler burners, while a bulldozer demol- iahed stairways and walled up doorways. Montigny-les-Cormeilles, in Val-d'Oise, another communist stronghold, on 7 Feb- ruary: The mayor, Robert Hue, girded by his tricolor municipal sash,c~emonstrated at the head of a delegation beneath the windows of an alleged drug trafficker, 17 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFI~IAL USE ONLY _ ~ demanding his denouncement in the name of public morality. A big-time traffic-~ - ker7 lVo, a Moroccan laborer. The evidence? An accusing letter which the mayor had been carrying in his pocket for 10 days. It had been "written" by a woman - neighbor of the Moroccans, Hassa Benachour, a member of the PCF... who does not know how to write~.. and at whose home police later found, on 18 February, a large quantity of dreigs, though they had~not found any at the Moroccan worker's home. Hue, who had suddenly labeled the quiet nearby town of Patte d'Oie _ d'Herblay "a triangle of death by overdose" and called upan the population to form watchdog committees to report traffickers and addicts, had never before - indicated having the least problem in his township. These "revelations" preceded _ by a few days a meeting that was held in Val-d'Oise by the PCF secretary general. Paris, 16 February: The perturbers entered the premises of the Palace using . false invitations. A woman of around 40 years of age led the operation. From the balcony, she negotiated with the organizers of the show. If they would agree - to the presence of a CGT representative on stage, the broadcast could resume. The response by Jean-Pierre Elkabbach, manager of public relations of Antenna 2: - "I refuse to negotiate under duress." The broadcast did not resume. Most of the 33 youths who had been selecte:i to take part in the program's debate - are furious against the demonstrators. Even though they shared the same ideas. The first questions, in any case, showed that the sampling had not been "rigged" to please the Government. They dealt essentially with unemployment--half of these youths were unemployed--and with the attitude of adults in their regard. "We had spent the entire afternoon Sunday preparing our questions," one of them explains. We had a lot of things we were going to address. The program's . quiz masters tried hard to have us talk of politics and sexuality. But non~ of us were interested in those issues." Another says: "After the occurrence, I remembered that our "colleagues" who belonged to the CGT, the Communist Youth, and Communist Students--they were six in all--had not opened their mouths throughout our preparation. Of course not,~becausp they knew the broadcast would not take place. We were well had by them." Little Fears and Big Cowardices While the program organizers drew the guests, which included Minister Monique Pelletier, toward the buffet that had been laid out in the Privilege, the fancy nightclub located in the basement of the Palace, Edmond Maire, another guest _ participant in the debate, who had remained behind in the program hall, tried to dialog with the youthful perturbers. Which did not prevent the leader of the CFDT ~French Democratic Confederation of Labor~ from being accused the next mornic~g by Georges Seguy "of having let himself be duped to the point of appear- ing before the youths to side with the Government and management." The CGT leader was more adroit when, addressing tt~e substance of the occurrence, he said: _ "Suppose the Polish television network had organized a debate on youth in Poland - - from which it had tried to exclude the most representative Polish union: Soli- darity. We would have heard in France a concert of imprecations... But when 18 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY , APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFF~CIAL iJSE OPJLY it is donQ by the French television netwurk again~t the most representative _ union federation, they find ~t normal. And when the CGT protests and demands the right to speak, it is sabotaging the broadcast." ~ A good argument, except for the fact that the CGT and the PCF had not been excluded: Their members were among those invited to debate. Vitry, Montigny, the Palace: Tfiree sensatio:ial "hits" approved publicly "without - reservations" by Marchais. But not isolated actions: The mayors of Aulnay-sous- Bois and Champiqny have announced they will accept no more immigrant workers. ~ The mayor of Dammarie-les-Lys is demanding--vainly--the expulsion of immigrants from one center; the mayor of Ivey, the estab].ishment ot a foreign infants quota _ in vacation camps. Worse, at Saint-Denis and at Nanterre, IiI1~1 ~Low Cost Housing Program~ housing is being denied to Antilleans, hence to Frenchmen guilty of being Blacks. At Villeurbaine, Communist Youth has requested its members to furnish the organization's leadership the names of lycee students who take _ drugs. (See subsequent article herein by Jacques Derogy and Jacques Roure). And thus we have: the "party of the working class and of the international prole- tariat" attacking the weakest of workers: the immigrant workers; the "party of freedoms" calling for false denunciations; the "party ot revolution" positing - itself as the champion of the moral order, the spAkesman of racist France, the France of little fears and big cowardices. Who will their next victims be? This is certainly not the first time the PCF attacks the values it claims to defend. Its history is filled with acts that contradict its doctrine. This same cynical and violent PCF had so diligently tried to appear reassuring during the pe~iod of the joint platform as to have almost succeeded in making itself forgotten. It is not all that long since the time of ".democratic socialism in the colors of France," of the friendly hand extended to the Christians, of the friendly hand on the shoulder o� the small businessman and the merchants. At that time, only "Big Capital" occupied the bench of the accused. It is not . all that long since the time when the MRAP ~Movement Against Racism, Anti- Semitism and for Peace~, close to the P~F, attacked Jean-Marie Le Pen, president of the National Front, because one of its posters affirmed: "One Million Unem- ployed Is One Million Immigrants Too Manyl" Today, perhaps ingenuously, we are rediscovering the PCF's true nature. TY~e parties are unanirnous in the~r con- demnation. The socialists, unaoubtedly because they are the most disappointed, are among the most merciless: L'UNIT~, the PS ~Socialist Party~ weekly, carried the headline: "PCF: Its Hands Dirtied"; the party's executive board flatly accuses its ex-partner of "behaving like a little extreme rightist group." The noncommunist left no longer hesitates to speak of "Red Fascism." Fascism is the bringing together of authoritarianism, corporatism and nationalism. Its methods: coarse attacks, hodgepodge, calls for false incrimination, contempt for - the adversary... The portrait shows resemblance. Charles Fiterman, the party's number two leader, said in reqard to the Antenna 2 broadcast: "Once again it is the thieves who are yelling 'Thief!'." Actually, the PCF behaves continually as the aggressor who cries "Ag~ressort." It rejects 19 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300094455-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY immigrant workers, in order, it says to better struggle agai~st ghettos. It calls upon its youth to in�orm against drug addicts, in order to save the addicts themselves, even where these are imaginary ones. It prevents a television broad- Cast from con tinuinq, in order to defend freedom of information~ These are the truths as we read them in L'HUMANITE, as they are being taught in the cells. Apparently, the French people are not being taken in by communist semantics. Ac- - cording to a Public S.A, poll published by PARIS-MATCH, 42 percent of those polled disapprove of the Montigny occurrence, 15 percent approve; 19 percent of the communists expressed themselves against it, and only 14 percent for it. At Villeurbanne, in the Rhone, the accusations against the Lycee Pierre- Brossolette will not gain a single vote for the PCF'. Oii the contrary. The PCF isolated, rejected, misunderstoodl This pleases it. It is being attacked, it tells its militants, because it is right. Alone against all the rest. And the more it is isolated, the more it will assert it is right. Marchais _ thinks this is the best way to close the party ranks again. The fact that the party's image is being damaged in the opinion of the mass public is unimportant, because it is no longer a question of rising to power. Marchais, unlike his Italian and Spanish counterparts, views the policy of the Soviet Union's Communist Party as being on the whole positive. Leonid Brezhnev undoubtedly convinced him, during his recent trip tc Moscow, that, for the future of international communism, - ~t were better tnat the PCF not rise to power with an Atlanticist socialist ally. Marchais is pursuing two complementary objectives: bring about the defeat of Mitterand and, exploiting the consequences of the latter's new defeat, recover the number one position on the left. - Nine weeks away from the presid2ntial election, the situa~tion looks rather bad - for the communist candidate. Aftex 4 months of campaigning, he has not gained an inch of terrain: The L'EXPRESS-Louis Harris TABLEAU DE BORD still shows him at 17 percent of the expressed voting preferences, while Mitterand's percen~age is steadily increasing. Voters must therefore be won over from the PS or from among the malcont~nts on ' all sides, from "the popular strata." Hence the chosen targets: the masses in ~ outlying urban areas, in areas where the.masses rub shoulders with the imm~tgrant = workers, in areas where there is fear, in areas where unemployed youths may be taking to drugs. Will this communist demagogy pay off electorally? Is the PCF likely to win the votes of the "little Whites" who are seduced by the simplici.ty of Marchais' idea~ and by the fo rce of the communist machine? "Yes," responds a Giscardian minister _ elected from a popular circumscription. "PCF slogans are carrying. I kx~ow that if I were to fight them in my newspaper, I would not be supported by my consti- tuents." "No," says a PCF official. "Those to whom Marchais' arguments can appeal are rightists, and these," he says, "will never vote for him." ' 20 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 I FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY ~ Within the PCF and the CGT, some voices are making themselves heard. At Montigny, some teachers have distributed a tract "against denouncement," accusing the PCF of using the methods "of another side." At Nl~ontfermeil, in Seine-Saint-Denis, the CGT calls "scandalous" the communist mayor's ref~sal of positian-au~horixec~ housinq to a municipal employee b~cause he is an immigrant. At Marseille, CGT militants deplore their union's call to vote for Marchais. At the Renault plant in Boulogne-Billancourt, the CGT members are demonstrating together with the - Moroccan workers "against the PCF's racist policy." The pursuit of presidential votes being carried out by Marchais for a near-term ~ objective is thus generating disapproval on t~e part of many teachers and union leaders, the PCF's traditional intermediaries. Is the PCF's future being - sacrificed by its secretary general for his own personal. score? COPYRIGHT: 1981 S.A. Groupe Express Campaign Related Purposes ~ Paris LE NOUVEL OBSERVATEUR in French 23 Feb-1 Mar 81 pp 27-28 - ~Article by Thierry Pfister: "Communists: Reasons for the Escalation"~ ~ ~Excerpts By waging a conventional electoral campaign, the PCF ~French Commun- ist Party~ would have run the risk of being sidelined. Through its sensational initiatives, it is re-centering attention on itself. Although the PCF's balance sheet is far from being "positive on the whole," it _ cannot on the other hand be said that the Vitry bulldozer, the Montigny denounce- = ment and the TV commando have generated a unanimous reproof. Even the PCF's most traditional adversaries feel compelled to distinguish between its unaccept- able methods and the substance of the problems it has raised. To hear ~ean Cau on Antenna 2, on Thursday, justify the issues of the new communist crusades was an experience. Attacked on methods, the communists are responding on substance. They are by no means being naive: In the battle they are waging, the immigrant workers, drugs and youth unemployment are mere pretexts. The row is classically political and allows everyone to take up again his traditional role. This is why the PCF leaders are not fearful of pursuing the escalation. They are in fact not as disappointed as they say they are over the general mobilization that has taken place against them. It is a situation with which theX are familiar and which _ they know how to exploit. The militants actually find it easier to close ranks when the party takes the position of the victim of an "aggression." And it is especially necessary tc~ generate such a reflex as the day of voting approaches, in view of the lack of dynamism being shown for some months now by the party cells. Moreover, the unanimous c~iticism of the methods being used by the PCF enables Georges Marchais to justify his claim of a"three-way consensus," that is, of an alleged agreement 21 FOR OFFICIAL USE UNLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFF(CIAL USE ONLY among Giscard, Chirac and Mitterand. Furthermore, the current activism of the cor.ununists is enablin.g him to affirm tli~at his party is avoiding an "unprinci- pled political game" the unpopularity of which has been evidenced by the success of Coluche's candidacy. = True, the most politicized of the PCF's membership, especially among the working - class, rejects this oversimplification. ~he style it imparts to Georges Marchais' campaign cannot therefore be expected to stop the erosion of the communist posi- - tions within the "workers aristocracy." Howevzr, the PCF leadership expects to compensate, and in fact to more than compensate, this loss by the mobilization of the most disadvantaged strata of the proletariat, those that are especially feel- - ing the effects of the competition from immigrant workers and that are seeking - security. A conventional electoral campaign would clearly have exposed the PCF _ to the risk of being put out of the running. This risk was intensified particu- = larly after the en~.ry of Francais Mitterand then that of Jacques Chirac into the - campaign. The PCF's spectacul,ar actions have indeed focused attention dgain on its positions. = The undemocratic nature of the communist initiatives has not been, for the PCF, the most difficult of things to come to terms with politically. It has had long - experience in this regard. In actual fact, the socialists risk, indirectly, at least as much~finding themselves out on a limb, since they will have to explain why only yesterday t'.:ey were proposing to entrust ministerial responsi- _ bilities to men having such little respect for pluralism. To its fellow-travelers, the PCF leadership evokes for support the historic and ideological traditions of the communist movement. It recalls, for example, that the Chinese communists demolished the opium dens during their Revolution. It can also play on the moralistic attitudes of militants who, because they believe in the possibility of the birth of a"new human being,� ascribe human weaknesses --alcoholism, drug addiction...--to the structures of capitalist society. The ex�~rience of the socialist countries has shown that the institution of new productional relationships is not in itself sufficient to resolve these issues. But the days are long gone when the PCF undertook to comment on this point. L'HUMANITE just barely permitted Francis Cohen to recall discreetly, on the eve . of the 26th congress of the Soviet Union's Communist Party, some of the essential economic problems that arise in the coun tries of "real socialism": too highly - centralized and imperat.ive planning; too low productivity; confusion between the right to work and the right to a uniform wage... The genre of article tha~ will make it gassible to affirm in 1 year or in 10, should the circumstances so require it, that the party has always remained true to itself has not changed and has proven itself clairvoyant. COPYRIGAT: 1981 "le Nouvel Observateur" 22 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 'Fascist' Tendencies Paris L'EXPRESS in French 21-27 Feb 81 p 73 ~Article by Jean-Francois Revel: "Toward a Society of Stool Pigeons"~ _ ~Text~ Since the start of the PCF ~French Communist Party~ commando actions, how many political leaders have fallen into the trap and gone on the defensive! "But no, we are not for drugsl," they have cried out in chorus, as if drugs were - the real problem, as if the PCF were attaching the least i.mportance to drugs! Tomorrow, the communi:~ts cou'~d just as well declare inadequate the fight against cancer and organize the lyncliing of a family of Senegalese street sweepers, accusing tnem of knowingly thwarting basic research in molecular biology, with the complicity; of the socialists, of course. Would we then see the minister of public health or the socialist deputy from the locality involved pour forth with - pious, justificative explanations? When we see the fear the PCF inspires without even being in power, we can well imagine what it would be if one day they should take power. = This pusillanimity is being compounded by golitical error. P.nd yet, it is not a matter of a remote and complex problem of international policy. It is a matter - of local occurrences that are taking place under our very eyes and and wnich a every citizen can understand. After the Palace expedition of the Marcha isian youths, who prevented by force a television debate from taking place, Pau 1~uiles, national secretary of the PS ~Socialist Party~~ declared that, t~ avoi d exposing themselves to this sabotage, ~ thP organizers of the debate should have ~.ncluded in the broadcast "all the political elements," r~ead: the PCF' as wel l. Which boils down to advising an ~ advance capitulation to intimidation. As if one could rightfully ignore that no sooner would that capitulation have been in place than the intimida~- tion upped another notch! Even when the communists are invited to take part in debates, tr.ey continue to claim they have been excluded. Did not Jean-Marie Cavada furnish proof, figures in hand, in the "Big Debate" of 3 Feb~ruary on TF 1, that Georges Marchais' hours of presence on the TV screen had not prevented him from claiming he was being banned? Censorship, for the ~communists~, is when . others talk. How many times have they no t succeeded in having eliminated from - debate telecasts the interlocutors they di d not like? Did they not claim they - had been kept out of an "Apostrophes" in te rview with Solzhenitsyn, in 1976, when in fact they had been invited to take par t? Th2ir re~l objective, however, was to hav~ prevented entirely the taking Qla~ e of that program. After the intervention by the PCF assaul t units against the Moroccan "drug traffickers," the editorialist of an even i ng newspaper wrote: "We must credit the PCF with being consummate in the art of r a ising--thouyh badly=-real.issues." This is a gift one must also recognize in T.3enito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler and Augusto Pinochet. In pointing up the fai 1 ure of the economy and the existence of anarchy in their respective countries, th e se three men "raised real issues," 23 FOR OFF[CIAL ~JSE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 - FOR ~FFICIAL USE ONLY - "badly," no doubt, yet with "a consummate art..." This is the kind of "faulty liaisons" that, coming from the pens of otherwise knowledgeable commentators, can - give rise to the frenzied desire to disregard the evidence that there is a - Fascist party, an only one, in France today among its major parties: the PCF'. - There are periods in which the Fascism of the PCF is veiled, and ot5ers in which it flaunts itself, with deliberate intent, and with an aggressiveness that borders on provocation. Why and to what political end? An initial explanation that is rather widely accepted is that the communists are panicked�by:a drop in the polls which, if confirmed by the 26 April vote, would mean a collapse of a seriousness and swiftness wholly unique in their history. As a result, they are Qut to get votes by resorting to the most sordid racist demagogy. By now com- pletely sterile intellectually, incapab]:e of ptoducing a single new thought of their own, the communists are now constantly pirating the thoughts of others: in this case, they have resorted to kindly philosophical help from Jean-Marie F,e Pen, - who was dog-paddling around alone in its 0.5-percent extreme right wing. They have also borrowed the theme of security and that of the fight against drugs, old favor.ites of Alain Peyrefitte and of the majority, just as they have borrowed from this same majority the issues of participation, civil and military nuclear development, and human rights, and from the socialists that of self-management by the workers. According to a second explanation, also compatible with the first, the communists, in their desire above all to bring about the defeat of Mitterand, are behaving intentionally as h~s more and more unacceptable allies. Thus many voters might - in fact reason: "I would vote for Mitterand, but he could not govern without the communists; and the communists are decidedly too wild and too dangerous to be the least bit dependable." Furthermore, to clearly demonstrate that an alliance would be politically not feasible and a catastrophe, the communists are attacking the most violently those socialists nearest to them. Thus, the PCF is seeking to raise its own score with the voters while mortally wounding the socialist candidacy. Lastly, there is the historical explanation, which must never be forgotten, the , unchanging fact which LE NOUVEL OBSERVATEUR kindly recalled in its 16 February headline ("The Communist Police"). The PCF is a police party which seeks to establish a police state. The "Letter on Expansion," for its part, cites communist draft law 2213, which says among other things; "Prevention is the rule in regard to security. It theretore appears to us,necessary to associate the different peoples' categories involved (the police, but also the associations of parents of students, tenants; the professions, etc.) in forms that can embody these preventive activities, and specifically the block-patrol method, which must be expanded." This is the well-known~technique of grid-control and constant espionnage of the population, as it~is exercised in Moscow, Prague and Havana. The PCF is the vanguard, on a small scale, of the society to which it Ieads: a society of stool pigeons. COPYRIGHT: 1981 S.A. Groupe Express 9399 CSO: 3100 24 FOR OFFICIAL US~ ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 _ FOR UFFICIAI. USE ONLY � ~ POLITICAL FRANCE NEW PCF TACTICS VIS-A-VIS DRUGS, IMMIGRANTS NOTED Paris LA LETTRE DE L'EXF'ANSION in French 16 Feb 81 p 2 [Article: "Why the PCF Is Going to Step Up Its Campaign On Drugs, Immigrants and Safety"] ~ [Text] By exposing a family to public prosecution, a family which he suspected (on the strength of someone's accusation) of engaging in drug trafficlc3.ng, all that Robert Hue, the communist mayor of Montigny-les-Cormeilles (Val d'Oise) was doing (by direction) was putting PCF legislative proposal ~~2213 into practice, a document which has gone completely unnoticed and nevertheless reveals the communists' new tactics. In particular it reads: "Prevention 3s the rule in the area of safety. That is why it seems necessary to us to involve the various interested categories of the population (policemen, but also associations of parents of school-children, tenants' associations, professional organizations, etc.) in the forms thati these preventive activities can take, particularly the technique of - black patrolling which should be more widespread." This text, which secondarily - recommends incorporating the PJ [Criminal Investigation Police] into the Ministry of J'ustice, stresses the nead to grant mayors more extensive authorities in the safety area. Comment: The PCF is going ~o keep going along these lines with an intensive poster campaigr~ which will touch on the problems of immigrants, drugs, morality and safety in jumbled f ashion, thereby responding to the anxieties of the "silent _ ma~ority" and taking away votes from the RPR [Rally for the Republic] in particular. (Involving the population in crime prevention is faithfully copied from what goes on in this regard in the USSR. At the Matignon the observation is also made that up to now the PCF has attacked immigrants only from countries which are on bad - terms with Moscow, including Mali.) COPYRIGHT: 1981. Groupe Expansion S.A. 9631 - CSO: 3100 - � 25 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300094455-9 I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY POLITICAL SPATN NiATN PARTTES ON FUTURE R~I~ATTONS WTTH REAGAN ADMTN~57.'RATxON Madrid CAMBTO 16 in Spanish 19 Jan 81 pp 53, 54 [Text] The co~un~sts and social~,sfis th~nk that now that Ronald Reagan 3.s in the White House the European countries, including Spain, wi11 l.ose autonomy, and that Spain's wobbly democracy wi11 perhaps not be able to completely absorb the impact. Qn the other hand, the Democrat3c Center Union believes that with the fo~+tn~r Ho11y- - wood cowboy as ~ts President the United States is going to strengthen the framework of its economie and political cooperation with Spa3n; and the Popular A17,iance party believes that with the new U.S. President a decade of conservatism is probabl}~ _ beginning, which could extend to Spain for the 1983 eleet3ons. The country's four majoxity parties with parliamentary representation can also not agree among themselves as to how fio face the problems for the nation wh~.ch they anticipate from the neur Ameri.can President. Whi1e Ramon Tamames, PCE [Spanish Communist Party] deputy and town counci,l7.or of the Madr:td municipal3.ty warns that we must be on our guard w~th Reagan, because i~ w~e are not very careful he will get us in~o NATO, Fernando Moran, ~,n~ernat3,ona1 affairs advisor of the PSOE [Spanish Socialist Party] th~nks that he would not dare to go so far, "much as he would like to," and that whether Spa~,ri wi11 ~oin the Western defense bloc or not w~11 depend more "on Spain~s attitude than on foreign pressux~~s." Moran states: "What the new Aiuer~.can admin3stration does have is a tendency to discipline allied and friendly countries and to take away their capacity for intervening in local conflicts ~etween countries favoring the United States or the USSR. Tn this sense it is very probable that both Spain and Europe in coming years ar.e going to lose a large part of their autonomy to the leader of the bloc, that is, to the United States." Guillermo Medina, UCD [Democratic Center Union] deputy from S~.ville, also takes note of th3.s sense of leadership and d~scipl3ne, though he does not~express it in such harsh words. "It 3.s evident--he told CAMBTO ~6--that we are entering ~,nto difficult times, hard times, and that the United States, w~,fih or without Reagan, in a crisis period, is going to want to know if we are its friends, and to what degree." According to Guillermo Medina, it wi11 nofi be worthwhile to take amb~guous . positions in the comi.ng years, although th~ ~mer~,~a~s axe not go~ng to so much as _ 26 FOR OFFICIAI. USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY lift a finger to make us enter NATO. "'The decision--he comments--is going to come ~ from t.he Spanish people, but the pos3tion which we adopt will determine hc,w we will be treated afterward by the American administration." .Torge Verstringe, speaking fer Popular Alliance, is of essentially the ~ame opinion. "The Americans--he ~ays--are not going to so lve our problems for us, and Spain wi11 only jo~.n NATO and the EEC when we have a stable coherent government which approaches these topics backed by a broad, stable and ~natural' ma~ority.'r Something that concerns the pol3tical parties almoat as much as ~oining NATO is - what the attitude of the new Amer3can administration is going to be regard~ng the signing of the ~reaty on Amer~can basea in Spain, which must be renegotiated this _ year. - "My personal opin3on, wh3.ch agrees with that of a large group of inembers of my party--says Ramon Tama~nes--3s that with Haig as secretary of atate the Americans are going to try to make the new treaty a k3nd of conduit 1ead~ng directly to NATO. If a maneuver of this type 3s detected, the PCE wi11 start a campaign to - prevent the agreements from being signed." Fernando Moran of the PSOE, in his turn, thialcs it unlike7.p that the United States wi11 try to introduce new ~tems into the bases questions, and that Spa3n, if i�t ~egotiates seriously, should forget economic and armament compensat~ons and insist that the treaty contatn a guarantee to defend thYs country in case of a border conflict--with the North African countriea, for example. Guillermo Medina of the UCD believes that at p~esent the Un3.ted States ~.s not going to try for a stronger m3.13tary treaty, but that it e~.11 tr}* to reta3n certa3.n facillties that it already pos~ess at the Ro~a, Torrej on and Zaragoza bases. The - UCD deputy from SEVille also thinks that under Reagan the framework of commerc~al, industria7. and pol3tical cooperation 4rith the United States wi11 probably be expanded, since Republ3can adm~.nistrat3ons s3nce Eisenhower have trad~t~.onally been favorably predisposed toward Spain. On the other hand, the PSOE th3,nks that condit~ons r~1,at~,ng to commerce and i.ndustxy are probably going to continue as befare. "The Americans--says Fexnando Moran-- usually h~ve been much less sensitive regard~ng import t ariffs on Spanish shoes or on the topic of granting licenses Co our fishermen than on issues of a mi.litary and strategic type." Thi~s is not the belief of conmtunist Ramon Tamames, who thinks that we should be _ a bit wary with Reagan, since his government is bef~ng formed with persons from the extreme right, and that h3s econo~ic policy, with it s emphasis on reducing public spending, cutt~ng back on social services and lowering salaries is going to htave serious repercussions on our country. According to Tamames, the usual mechanism for ~nfluencing economic pci.licy 'tas we already know, is the Trilateral _ Comm~.ss~on, wh~.ch has Span~sh memDers~" xn any~ case, Tamames doe,s not s~~ Rona~,d Reagan as compl~te~y bad. He sa}~s, '~T da not th~,nk that he ~s go~,ng to ~k~ up - a governmen~ of 7,unat~cs." COPXR~GHT: 1979, Informac~on y Rsv~,stas, S.A. 8131, CSO: 317.0 27 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY GENERAL FRANCE ARIANE LAUNCH SCHEDULE PROJECTED TO 1985 Paris AIR & COSMOS in French 21 Feb S1 p 33 ~Article by Pierre Langereux~ ~Text~ The new Ariane launch schedule projected to 1985 has just been set - jointly by the ESA ~European Space Agency~, the CNES ~National Center for Space Studies~ and the Arianespace Company for the production and marketing of European launchers. According to the agreement signed last year between the ESA and Arianespace, the Ariane launchings will be carried out as follows: Flight test launchings (LO1 through L04) under the launcher development program and the first six operational launchings (L5 through L10) of the "promotional series," which is sched~led to end in 1982, will be carried out under the respon- sibility of the ESA. The first five operational launchings (LS through L9) will be carried out by the CNES for the account of the ESA, while the last of the "promot~onAi. seri~s" Iaunchings (L10) will be by Arianespac~ for the account of the ESA. The CNES launching team will actually have been transferred to Arianespace. The succeeding operational and commercial launchings, beginning with L11., which is scheduled for the beginning of 1983, will from then on be under the responsi- bility of Arianespace. The Ariane launcher's new mission-timetable to 1985 currently involves 30 pay- loads, 17 of which are on firm Iaunch-orders, 10 on tentative orders (some with $100,000-deposits) and 3 potential orders (for European clients). In addition to these, potential launch-orders are being negotiated with INTELSAT for the Intelsat 5 and Intelsat 6 satellites, with INTELSAT (Canada), with Austral~.a for the Domsat sai~ellites, and with the American companies: GTE, ATT, HCI and Southern Pacific Company. - 28 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ARIANE LAUNCH SCHEDULE TO 1985 _ (Source: Arianespace - February 1981) . ~ D~te Tir Fusi~ Sablllt~~ Et~t - ` (1) (2) (3) (7) 1979 2q d8cembre L01 ARt ~4~1�~ eessi en vol (pss ds eatellite) Succle 1980 23 m~t L02 AR1 Plrewheel (ESA) + OSCAR 9(AMSAn Echec 1981 luin�Juillet L03 ARt Meteo~et 2(ESA) t APPLE (Inde) F Octobre L04 AR1 MARECS�A (ESA) F - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - DBc~mbro LS ARt Exotat (ESA) F 1962 Flvrier L6 AR1 MARECS-B (ESA) + Sirlo 2(ESA) F Avrll U AR1 ECS-1 (ESA) ou Intalsat 5/FB F lwn LB AR1 ECS-1 (ESA) ou Inteleet ~F8 F Octobre 19 AA1 Inrolset 5/F7 F Dicembre Lf0 AR1 InMlsat 5/FB F 1983 Fdvner Ltt ,4R?J3 (5) Llbro - Avrll ECS-2 (ESA) F luln Telecom-1A (France) + MARECS-C (ESA) F+ R AoGt ~~y~ Oetobro Teleeom-1B (Frence) + RCA�H (USA) F t R - DBcsmbre Arabeet�1 (Llpue Anbe) + We~t~r 6(USA) R+ R 1981 FAvrler Librk Avril Spot (Frence) + Viking (Subde) F{~ F luin ou SATCOL-1 (Colombla) + Areb~at-2 R+ R AoOt N�SAT (Aliemagne) F - Octobre SATCOL-2 (Colombi�) + TELSAT (Suisa~) R+ R Deeembre TDF-1 (Fnnce) F 1985 FBvrier ( 5~l.ibn ou L-SAT (ESA) p Avrll�mal RTL (Luxembourp + TELSAT 2 ou ECS-3 R+ P luillet GI~1T0 (ESA) R Septembre AR4 e~6~~~^ ( 5; Lfb~e ~ dspul~ ELA�2 F Ocrobre D~esmbre Libre Key: 1. Launch. 2. Rocket. 3. Satellites. 4. First flight test (no satellite). 5. Free. 6. Fxrst Ariane 4 flight test since ELA-2. 7. Status: Succes =Successful Echec = Failed F = Firm R = Tentative P = Potential 29 FOR OFFTCIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9 F'OR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY Military satellite launchings are also planned for the Ariane launcher: military telecommunications satellites for the United Kingdom (BMS) an~3 for NATO (NATO-3 D and E). . In addition, several other launchings for the ESA are now being planned, dates _ for which have not yet been set: the ECS-3, Meteosat and Hipparcos satellites. This, however, does not take into account the future European satellites, the building of which has already been decided (ECS 4 and 5), or very probable ones (ERS 1 and 2, Spot 2, etc.). For the 1981-1985 period alone, some 20 firm launchings are expected as of now, - auguring well for the future of the launcher..., provided the flight tests end up successful! COPYRIGHT; A.& C. 1981 9238 CSO: 3100 END 30 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300090055-9