ANGOLA

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CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2
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RIPPUB
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S
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14
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December 9, 2016
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March 16, 2001
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1
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July 24, 1961
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IM
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Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 SECRET Copy No 2C GEOGRAPHIC INTELLIGENCE MEMORANDUM CIA/RR GM 61-4 24 July 1961 ANGOLA CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND REPORTS WARNING This material contains information affecting the National Defense of the United States within the meaning of the espionage laws, Title 18, USC, Secs. 793 and 794, the transmission or revelation of which in any manner to an unauthorized person is prohibited by law. *ARMY Declass/Release Instructions On File SECRET Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 SECRET Angola consists of half a million square miles of plateau and coastal plain in which a few Portuguese control more than four million Africans. Development over the centuries was designed almost exclusively for the benefit of the Portuguese economy, and every effort was made to prevent outside influences from dis- turbing this relationship. Few Africans were permitted to acquire even an elementary edu- cation or to prepare themselves for the com- plexities of life in the 20th century. Today, under Portuguese direction, some Africans participate in the economy by growing export crops and by mining, but derive little material benefit from their labor. Roads and waterways have been neglected and railroads have been built chiefly to permit the movement of commodities between coast and hinterland -- not to introduce Western civilization. Recently, Portugal has also attempted to isolate Angola from its African neighbors by sealing its borders, but nowhere do the physical features of the country provide adequate natural barriers. Fur- thermore, in several sectors a single ethnic group lives on both sides of the border and people cross at will. Portugal is thus at a tremendous disadvantage in trying to stop the penetration of potent new ideas and, with them, the means of revolt. Physical Characteristics Most of Angola is part of the great plateau of Central Africa, and has ele- vations averaging 3,000 to 5,000 feet above sea level. The highest area, in west- central Angola, is 5,000 to 6,000 feet above sea level and is a drainage center from which rivers flow in all directions. The rivers in the north, of Which the Cuanza and Cassai are the most important, flow into the Congo Basin. Those of the east drain into the Zambezi River system, which empties into the Indian Ocean. The Cubango and other smaller south-flowing rivers disappear at the edge of the Kalahari Desert; and several short streams flow westward from the plateau to the coast. Toward the east and south the plateau slopes gently and continues, with little change, into Northern Rhodesia and South-West Africa. On the north, where the plateau has been highly dissected by streams, elevations decrease more rapidly to the Congo Basin. On the west the plateau drops sharply to a coastal plain only 30 to 50 miles wide. In climate, Angola is transitional between the rainy Congo Basin and arid southwestern Africa. The rainy season is from October through April. The amount of rainfall diminishes from north to south and from east to west. Most of the plateau -- some two-thirds of the area of Angola -- receives 40 to 60 inches. A narrow strip along the southern border and the coastal plain as well as adjacent lower slopes receive less than 20 inches of rain. Offshore, the cool Benguela current flows northward and causes considerable fog aad humidity on the coastal plain. The annual range of temperature is not large nor do average annual temperatures differ much from one part of the country to another. The coastal strip generally averages, for the year, about 8 Fahrenheit degrees hotter than the highest parts of the plateau, but many inland areas at altitudes below 3,000 feet are as hot as the coast. Luanda and Lobito on the coast, and Sao Salvador at 1,850 feet on the plateau, all have averages of about 740F for the year, but SA de Bandeira at 5,800 feet has an average of 650F. In the south and on the dry coast, daily ranges (20 to 40 degrees) are close to those of a desert. December through March are the warmest months; the coolest months are June through August, when frosts are fre- quent on the southern plateau. Lower temperatures and greater temperature ranges make the plateau somewhat more desirable climatically for white habitation than the coast, particularly in areas above 3,000 feet. Despite this advantage and government pressure to settle in the central and southwestern highlands, however, Portuguese immigrants have been influenced largely by economic and cultural factors and have settled chiefly in the urban areas along the coastal plain, particularly in and around Luanda. From what little is known of Angolan soils it is assumed that they are charac- teristically poor aznd sandy, although interspersed with occasional pockets of fertile soil. The productivity of the land has been further reduced by acceler- ated soil erosion induced by deforestation, burning, and poor agricultural prac- tices. The chdracteristic vegetation is savanna. From Lobito northward, the coastal strip has a combination of dry open grassland and grassland with scattered Scrub or trees, whereas most of the coastal desert south of Lobito has only a scant growth of desert grasses and plants, with some woodland near the foot of the plateau. Across southern Angola runs a narrow dry strip of short grass and open woodland. In the remaining three-fourths of the country, vegetation varies from wooded savanna to open savanna interrupted by large treeless areas. True forest is found only in small areas of the northwest, generally well inland at high alti- tudes and interspersed with open savanna. Most of these areas are in a strip about 30 to 50 miles wide that extends through the coffee-growing area from the lower Cuanza River northward toward the Congo River. Despite Potuguese attempts to seal off Angola, the geographical position and characteristics of the country make complete and permanent isolation impossible. Along much of Angola's 2,900-mile land frontier, infiltration and cross-border communication is relatively easy. The border areas include no major physical barriers, with the possible exception of rougher terrain in the north. Economic development and transportation facilities are primitive, and the white population is sparse. The coffee-growing area of the northwest is even more vulnerable to infiltration than other parts of the country because the Quicongo 1/ live on both sides of the border and because the vegetation in the northwest provides good concealment. The population of the coastal plain is sparse, except for urban concentrations near the major ports, and the 1,100-mile coastline is as easy to penetrate as the land frontiers. Population African The African population of Angola consists of two major groups, the Bantu and the non-Bantu Khoisan. a/ Over the centuries successive waves of conquering Bantu have killed or assimilated Khoisan peoples or dispersed them southward. Accord- ing to the latest available census (1950) the Bantu number more than 4,000,000, whereas the Khoisan consist of only 45,000 Hottentots and 5,000 Bushmen. A 1955 estimate suggests that the total population of Angola is more than 4,360,000. The Bantu belong to a family of tribes that engulfed the Congo 3/ and Angola long before colonial administration deposed native rulers. In Angola today the Bantu include four main linguistic groups -- Unbundo, Quimbundo, Quicongo, and Ganguela -- and a few minor groups such as the Quioco, Haneca-Humbe, Ambo, Kindonga, and Herero (see map). The 1950 census tabulates approximately 1,440,000 Umbundo, 1,083,321 Quimbundo, 480,000 Quicongo, and 328,000 Ganguela. Both major and minor linguistic groups include many tribes, 74 of which are listed on the accompanying map. Relatively little information about them has reached the out- side world. Almost no information is available on the extent to which tribalism can be expected to affect the pattern of expanding African nationalism as it spreads into Angola. The number of distinct tribes, however, and the diversity of native languages may indicate a lack of unity among the Bantu themselves and little or no cohesion among the entire African population. Because the Portuguese have encouraged the use of their own language by the Bantu, hoping it would be a civilizing and unifying force, and because the more educated Africans came to detest their Bantu languages as being a sign of inferior status, the use of Bantu among the relatively urbanized Africans has been nearly eliminated. In an effort to force their Children to learn Portuguese, some Afri- can parents have even prohibited the use of their native tongue at home. At least four of the Bantu linguistic groups live on both sides of interna- tional boundaries: the Quicongo along the Congo border; the Qpioco (Tschioco) along the Congo and Rhodesian borders in the east; and the Herero and Ambo along the South-West Africa border. Of these the Quicongo, numbering 1/2 million in Angola and approximately 1 million (Bakongo) in the Congo, are by far the most significant cross-border ethnic group. Their ancestors have lived in northwestern Angola and the western Congo for many centuries, and present ethnic ties are close. II/ Theoretically the Africans have been given the opportunity to achieve Portu- guese citizenship through assimilado status, but actually most of them have re- mained indigenes -- natives having no political rights and subject to lower wage rates and obligatory labor for 6 months of the year. Although assimilation of the native population is a legal premise of Portuguese colonial law, it is more of a concept than a functioning policy. No more than 10,000 and possibly as few as 5,000 African males in Angola have achieved assimilado status. The remainder of the 30,000 assimilados -- the term used for natives who are Portuguese citizens -- listed in the 1950 census are wives and Children, who acquired derivative citizen- ship through the husband or father, or are legitimate mulattoes, who automatically Approved For Release 2001/09/04: =- received Portuguese citizenship at birth. To become an assimilado, a male African must (1) be more than 18 years old, (2) have an income sufficient to sustain him not a deserter, 4) speak Portuguese correctly, and (5) have acquired the demeanor and his family, p) have completed military service or possess proof that he is FNante Nor& and habits of a Portuguese citizen and have no police record. In exceptional cases the restrictions have been modified or waived in part, but almost exclusively for the few Africans who are government employees. The assimilados do not have an effective voice in Lisbon nor in the local affairs of Angola, nor have they had the opportunity -- either in Angola or Por- tugal -- for the kind of education that might prepare them for political and administrative responsibilities. The 1950 census showed that more than 19,000 of the total number of 30,000 assimilados were illiterate. Presumably most of these illiterates were women and children. Although, according to the sante census, some 5,000 assimilados had had some school education, few had finished the primary course; and none had completed secondary school. Educational facilities have been provided chiefly for the Portuguese rather than the African population of Angola, and all school systems are closely control- led by the government. The basic African schools are run largely by the Roman Catholic Church and offer a 3-year subprimary course. European children are re- quired by law to attend the 4-year government-operated primary schools, where they are in a slight majority over the Africans. Secondary schools are attended almost exclusively by Europeans. The cost of education is an important factor in limit- ing African attendance at all levels, and without proof of school attendance the African child is subject to being drafted for manual labor. Portuguese The non-native population of Angola is overwhelmingly Portuguese. Many Portu- guese in Angola today were born there and consider themselves Angolan; they have a primary loyalty to Angola rather than to European Portugal. Since 1950 the Portuguese population has increased from 79,000 to about 180,000. This rapid buildup of the white population may be the result not only of a Portuguese desire to strengthen the Angolan economy and retain a firm hold on the province but also of a need to relieve the pressure of population in Portugal. Throughout the years the stimulus for Portuguese emigration to Angola has come mostly from private interests and effort, chiefly through connections with earlier settlers in the colony. Official schemes have been tried from time to time since 1928, when the Portuguese Government made the first step toward planned coloni- zation. These early schemes were unsuccessful, however, in part because of inef- ficient government supervision and in part because of lack of cooperation among the colonists themselves. Not until the past decade have the Portuguese tried seriously to colonize Angola through both private and government-sponsored plans. Some of the recent attempts have been moderately successful; others have failed, largely because they did not follow sound planning principles. For example, con- siderable sums of money have been wasted on a project at Cele. -- the largest government-sponsored project in Angola although it was to include only 300 families -- and prospects for its future are dim. Villages were built without benefit of soils studies or the necessary research on possible crops, and transportation facilities were poor. Settlers assigned to the project, many of whom had come from Portuguese cities, bad little understanding of African farm management and they even less about how to care for animals and machinery. Some of the Portuguese in Angola live on farms and plantations, but most of them are concentrated in the cities. Even so, they constitute a relatively small proportion of the total population in six of the eight largest cities in Angola (see map). Of the approximately 56,000 Portuguese employed in Angola in 1960, SOMR 33,000 were in industry, business, trades, or professions; 14,000 in govern- mental occupations; 7,000 in agriculture; and about 1,000 each in fishing and mining. Emigrants from Portugal have included few skilled workers, professional people, or other educated persons because it was not to their financial advantage to leave their homeland. Instead, Angola has attracted the unskilled and semi- skilled workers who could earn higher wages there than in Portugal. This advan- tage has been gradually offset, however, by a rise in living costs at a time when salaries have remained constant and also by the fact that these unskilled immi- grants had to compete with even cheaper African labor. Unemployment during the economic recession of 1960 was acute enough to cause concern over the growth of the "poor white" class in Angola. During 1960, more white people left Angola than entered it, thus reversing the trend of former years. Transportation The construction of railroads leading eastward from the Atlantic coast ports provided the basic transportation for opening up the interior of Angola. Four of the six separate lines start at a port and run roughly eastward to a terminal on or beyond the plateau; the Congo and the Cuio cross only the coastal plain. Although the railroad companies have been plagued by vacillating and costly gov- ernment policies for both construction and operation, they have promoted increased cultivation of export crops as well as the building of towns in the interior. Th. Benguela Railroad, owned by Tanganyika Concessions Limited and serving the port of Lobito, is the most important. It is the western link of the only railroad that crosses Africa in any direction and has been linked with southern and eastern African lines since 1931. The Luanda and Mocgmedes Railroads are domestic lines owned by the Angolan government. The construction of a third government-owned line -- the Congo, extending northeastward from Luanda -- was started in 1955 to tap the coffee-growing area. Short lines, owned by plantation companies, also run inland from the small ports of Amboim and Cuio. The two main ports, Lobito and Luanda, differ considerably. Largely because of minerals shipments from the copper areas of Katanga and Northern Rhodesia, Lobito has developed faster and has led all Angolan ports in the volume and value of total transit trade and in volume of foreign trade. The bulky corn crop pro- vides the highest single tonnage of domestic products leaving Lobito. Luanda, however, has consistently led in the total value of foreign trade. Luanda has the advantage of being the capital of Angola as well as a trading center serving about half of the white and assimilado population and close to 40 percent of the unassimilated African population. The hinterland of Luanda includes 80 percent of the coffee area, over 33 percent of the sugar area, and virtually all of the cotton area. Road building has been largely neglected or kept to a minimum, and a greatly expanded program of road construction is necessary for further development of the Angolan economy. Of a total mileage of 22,000, less than 500 miles are asphalted. The existing dirt roads are often impassable in the rainy season, particularly in March; and, even in the dry season, they are so poorly maintained that movement is difficult. Nearly 10,000 miles of the road network consist of unclassified roads, many of which are merely tracks. To an American, even some of the primary roads resemble tracks. Although several rivers in Angola are navigable, nothing approaching a network of inland waterways has been developed. The only service known to be currently available is on the Cubango River, in the southern part of the province. Angola has a rapidly developing domestic air transportation network linking most of the urban centers with Luanda, where international connections can be made. The administration, operation, and maintenance services of Divisgo de Exploracgo dos Transportes Aeros (DTA), the government-owned airline, are said to be among the best and least expensive in Africa. DTA operates DC 3's, Beechcraft D 18 S's, and Dragon Rapides; it is planning to replace the DC 3's with Fokker Friendship aircraft. The Portuguese national airline, Transportes Aeros Portuguese (TAP), and Air France also use the Luanda airport, which can handle Boeing 707's. Altogether the air transportation picture is one of the better accomplishments of the Portuguese Government in Angola. Economy The economy of Angola is primarily agricultural and remains so despite gov- ernmental attempts at economic diversification. According to recent estimates, only 2 percent or less of the total area of Angola is used for cultivated field and tree crops, but this small agricultural area provides nearly Bo percent, by value, of Angola's exports. Coffee is the largest single item, representing approximately 40 percent of the exports in 1960. Favorable rains in 1959 and 1960 helped to produce record crops, and the production outlook for 1961 was goad before the northwestern growing areas began to feel the effects of the rebellion. Sisal contributes 12 percent of the value of all exports; corn, cotton, sugar, and fish account for lower percentages. Although diamonds are the second ranking export -- accounting for 15 percent of the value of total exports in 1960 when other minerals accounted for but 5 percent -- only small areas of Angola have been thoroughly investigated for min- eral resources. The diamonds are mined in the northeast, near Portugalia. Iron ore is mined in west-central Angola, north and south of Nova Lisboa, and is the only mineral other than diamonds that now makes a significant contribution to the economy. Most of it is exported. Although its exports are of no basic importance on the world market, Angola is of considerable economic value to Portugal -- chiefly because Portugal is able to alleviate its foreign trade deficit with Angolan exports. Portugal is not obliged to spend its own foreign exchange to obtain the agricultural produce that is available in Angola, and Angola provides a protected market for some Portuguese 2 Oohs. ? ? faLy7..; BRAZZAVIL 8259 OPOLDVHLE Tshela adirniaa Thysville 1-UICONC-0- GAB NDA I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Gooe'es. ff3a11(to Antonio - At +=CONGO ) y I Ban Mated Et- Andarmete (_?,c, 4'7 ?4, 0 ' ' . 0,7. . 4, 31 de . _,..,_ Locunge ?S1)-----..?,atotcelat . .7-?,..." ? la do Land. 1,4 S 0 \-1- / 1 / Senn omboi . 0 Nis ) CAR NO!' 0 ??(;_ -e nee Lunde REP BLIC OF THE CONGO . . . . . . . Portugalie LUNDOS I o c os ? ADMINISTRATIVE DISTRICTS JULY 1961 6.`.Pmf LUANDAIEdN MAUNA.) LUNDA 'CUANZA' B UNG OX,C0URAVI,_ CLIAND0 MOCAM9ES \ CUBAN,. Napange 011! A N Porto Amboim NOVO REDON001 =oso eeela Q ---teoeFgre% 0 -+ A n), 9 Vila Nova do SM. SELS9 Qutiele Nova Cho, o Ga 'Atte. /Bea l'osenTI V. a"L slivA PORTO O. '1 NOVA USTI A m SW. Lara BENGUatA UN, (soma.) HA Nt14 AS A &Iam v. oVaa de Alto Orel B U N AXES Lornbeie/ ( C \ '6= FEDERAJTION OF RHODESIA AND NYASALAND It/ORTHERN RHODESIA MOGAMEDES Ce ? ?.;r \CU0E:,,, ES 7 Pn n Ts, L LA s\ cA M A x\., ,.felavIntga 6/0aaput, AMEOLAND ?Rehoboth I M A ai\E a\ ?\> C. xiND S S 0 o c MANEE R R V C E TERRITORY ye.ere, BECHUANALAND stc-Gsp. of S. Al.) r OKA v Ondang. SOUTH WEST AFRICA A. _NT G 0 I i seeezna,54. \\\ . , ? STRIP A/11,10.y, iv L. ETHNIC GROUPS? BANTU '72III7.1'2!",7II a a ANGOLA ? ? District boundary P0=1010 Distr. Metal Principal road NMve Secondary toed le(M Railroad. 3'6" (1.067 rot gauge sup.?? afs(s. Railroad, 2LEA" (615 m.) gauge eons?. Reieo., IN lee' (AO .4 gauge 1110.- 1" Airport seMduled serves Mieml Es 21rm.rn re. de Esp.-A-Gr.. INDEX TO POPULATED PLACES (18 products that cannot be sold on the world market. Only 5 percent of Portugal's total imports come from Angola, whereas more than 15 percent of its exports are sent there. Angola also provides an opportunity for the private Portuguese in- vestor to make large profits. Eighty percent of the coffee and all the sisal, sugar, and wheat are produced on European farms and plantations. Most of the corn, cotton, cassava, beans, peanuts, oil palm, rice, beeswax, sesame, and hides and skins are produced on small African farms. The marketing of all commodities is monopolized by register- ed white traders and merchants, who are members of officially recognized trade associations. With the exception of the government-sponsored colonization project at Cela, which was designed specifically for Portuguese workers, the entire agri- cultural system is dependent on African labor. Although African skills are rudi- mentary, they are adequate for the kind of work required. Often it is the African farm laborer who helps his newly arrived Portuguese overseer adapt to local conditions. On the basis of 1960 statistics, it is estimated that approximately 330,000 Africans are employed in the modern economy, controlled entirely by the Portuguese; 1,285,000 are "self-employed" in agriculture, raising enough to feed their families and have a small surplus to sell; and 475,000 are in the subsistence economy, rais- ing barely enough to feed themselves and their families. These Portuguese Govern- ment figures, however, may be misleading. Considering the low annual income and the prevalent standard of living of the "self-employed" Angolans, it is Likely that they also are close to the subsistence level. Most of the Africans employed in the modern economy work as contract labor in Benguela, Huanbo, Luanda, Bi4-Cuando Cubango, Cuanza Sul, Zaire, and Urge Districts. The industrial sector of the Angolan economy was insignificant until recently and even today consists primarily of small agricultural processing plants located in the major cities. In 1955, however, the Belgian firm Compagnie Financiere de Petroles (Petrofina) found oil in the Luanda area and constructed a refinery which now has a capacity of 180,000 metric tons. The refinery imports oil because the wells do not meet its capacity requirements. Petrofina united with Portuguese interests to found the Companhia de Petroleos de Angola (Petrangol), which has taken over the operation of the wells and the refinery. The Gulf Oil Company began exploring for oil in the Cabinda Exclave in 1958, but ceased operations after the outbreak of the rebellion in the spring of 1961. A rather imposing and varied list of new industrial plants was under consideration by the government earlier in the year. 3 Alitiggd For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-0082513000400300001-2 During the past 3 decades while the Belgians were speeding up the development of the mineral wealth of the Congo and the British were exploiting the Rhodesian copper deposits, the Portuguese displayed a singular lack of interest in assessing and tapping the mineral resources of Angola. The Portuguese Government has spent very Little on development of any kind in Angola, spending only about $39 million between 1939 and 1959; and, because the Portuguese planned to develop Angola es- sentially without outside capital, little foreign capital has flowed into Angola. Perhaps to make up for lost time, Portugal's current development plans are much more ambitious. The Six-year Plan (1959-64) that was drawn up by the Angolan leg- islature to cost $254 million has been scaled down by Portugal to $165 million, of which 70 percent is to be contributed by Portugal in the form of loans to Angola. The plan is being implemented, but slowly. 1. A Bantu linguistic group. Its traditional territory includes part of what is now the Republic of the Congo and part of Angola. In Angola, it is called "Quicongo;" and, in the Congo, "Bakongo." 2. Khoisan is a Portuguese term that lumps together the two main elements of the non-Bantu -- the Hottentot and the Bushman (Bochimane) -- whose words for man are, respectively, khoi and san. 3. The term Congo is used for the Republic of the Congo, formerly the Belgian Congo. 4. This ethnic affinity between the Bakongo of the Congo and the Quicongo of Angola was apparent in the early support of the Angolan nationalist party, Union des Populations de l'Angola (UPA), by the Congo Government. The Congolese party Associations des Bakongo (ARANO) furnishes tribal support to Joseph Kasavubu, President of the Congo, who is a Bakongo. Recently, however, the UPA has been losing the support of ABAKO. Reportedly, one reason for diminished support may be the latent ambition of AB/UM to create a Bakongo state that would unite all of the tribal group who now live in the two Congo states (formerly French and Belgian) and Angola, whereas the UPA apparently wants to establish an independent Angola within its present boundaries. Another reason may be that ABAKO wants to annex Angolan tribal territory to the Congo in order to strengthen its position against pressures from neighboring Congo tribes. 4 SECRET Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 SECRET Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 Tota1.6 Approved For Release 2001/09/04 : CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 R.i.f.:ord of Man Hours for Report No., 6:?.1 rn /- Project No /9/7 Analat. Editor Coordinator c:1 erical Period during which man hours charged From: tt) 4:4/ / Thru: Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 25X1C 4,6t: Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825 MEMORANDUM FOR THE RECORD SUBJECT: 11 March 1977 25X1A 25X1C stopped by 8 March to pick up two copies OT 24 July 1961, Angola. His major interest is in tribes of Angola and the map in this publication is one of the better presentations of tribal groups in Angola. DD/GCR downgraded the study from SECRET to CONFIDENTIAL to ease 25X1C carrying of the document. 25X1C 2. We also provided with copies := the PRC Administrative Atlas and tre tIas of Maps of --_-e a fan of maps and enjoyed the Indian 0111,111111.0 said Western Hemisphere. He recounted that is 25X1C we would try to round up copies of other atlases to send on 25X1C Ch/GD suggested that and 25X1C 251(1C perriaps would like to tour trie computer IM plotter in the Cartography 25X1C it first and perhaps later. Division. will try 25X1C 25X1C OGCR Foreign Liaison Cr:c Officer Distribution: 1 - Tack Swan, Ch/FLG/DDI 1 - Ch/GD/M via Ch/GD 1 - Ch/CD 1 - Ch/MLD 2 - FLCO/OGCR 25X1A FLCO/OGCR de:3092(11Mar77) Approved For Release 2001/09/0.4 .:-CIA-1413P8,4-00825-lita001003000012- : 25X1A Approved Fociloyease,399AR0061,p .7RpP84-0082000100300001-2 t1eof :Report CIA/RR GM 61-4 vatiiiranch . , 14-Yrsv. 0o, 83 DiG0 File 85 202-203 204 205 206 207 303 304 305 306 STATINTL GVN St/P/G STATINTL ODD/I STATINTL _AC:4 see attached . .? for Interdepartmental Seminar Library, FSI, pr conversation with 27Feb64 a- Date. 14 Aug 64 9Jan63 STATINTL STATINTL 15Aug61. Asked to send copy to 1512 Eye Bldg. Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 25X1C Approved Fogrlifielease 2001/01044q*A4R1DP84-0082C1000100300001-2 14 August 1964 25X1A MEMORANDUM FOR: SUBJECT: ATSWS-DI Request for fublications REFERENCE: Memorandum dated 28 July 1964 from DI, USASWS, Lt, Co]. Evans 1. Two copies each of the following Geography Division publications, specifically requested by title and number in the first paragraph of the referenc memorandum, are transmitted herewith: CIA/RR Title Report No. Copy Nos. Minority Groups for Potential Para- military Exploitation in Specified Critical Areas GP 62-186:L 76, 77 GP 62-357L 148, 149 OP 63-115:L 17, 13 GP 63-3:L 134, 135 OS 63-7 120, 121 OP 62-390L 145, 146 OP 63-150sL 97, 98 2. The following WOG publicatioJs are Bent in partial answer to the further request for studies on areas and group 3 named in subsequent paragraphs of the reference memorandums Laos GM 59-2 378, 379 Oversees Chinese in Southeast Asia OM 60-2 192, 193 South Vietnam om 60-4 247, 248 egueTh lialuded , Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100 S-E-C Approved Foiliatlease 2001/0164-MWRDP84-0082V00100300001-2 Subjects ATSVS-DI Request for Publication CIAAR Reort No. Copy NOS 0 os, Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand Zone of Conflict in Southeast Asia 01v1 61-2 153? 236 GM 6144 202, 203 GR-55 625 3. Other areas and groups have not been included in the work of this angoLa 'Evasion Ceography 25X1A x ueogriy sion, Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 ? .r.; P Approved Faiablease 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-008W00100300001-2 DispotAtiovi Form U.R 340-15) 28 July 64 OVFICE SMOL OR FILE REFERENCE 2 ATSWS -DI caRJECT2 Request for Publications 25X1A TO2 25X1C 25X1C 25X1C 25X1C 25X1C From: USASWS Lr. Col Evans/ksh/66286 1. Request two copies each of the following publications be made available to the USASWS for permanent retention: a. (g "Minority "Minority Groups for Potential Paramilitary Exploitation in Specified Critical Areas," CIA/RR GP 62-186:1,, July 1962, Central Intelligence Agency, Office of Research and Reports, SECRET. b. gt9011:011S.-gu.Palt. A2dgil CIA RR GP 2- ovem er e? Central 11 e igence Ajency, Office of Research and Reports, SECRET,, c. ieo a uteiligence Agency, d GeoranI ntelligence Agency, gratt?itAtext: CIA/RR GP 63-11):, April 1963, Central ffice of Research and Reports, SECRET. CIA/RR GP 6 - :J, January 1963, Central Office of Research and Reports, SECRET, e Geo r hi u n rIAppligtu CIA/RR GS 63't, Central Intelligence gency, Urriec of Research and Reports, SECRET. f. :eogrhi S fIct pralegto CIA/RR GP 62-3iu, J.ecenrner 19b2, Centra 25X1C Irtelligeuce Agency, Office of Research and Reports, SECRET, a6 Geoaranhic -FrAiggt.,1 CIA/RR GP 63-u:i, May l9b3, Central iteij.igence Agency, Ohce of Research and Reports, SECRET, 2. Further request two copies of each of Geographic Support Projects completed on: a., b. C, do The Arabs of Khuzistan The Shans The Karens of Burma The Kachin (Chingpaw) e. The Lisu Approvti6FtfitaelgatRA001/09/04 : CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 25X1C 25X1C 25X1C 25X1C 25X1C 25X1C Approved Folease 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-0082W00100300001-2 ATSWS-DI SUBJECT: Request for Publications g. The Tribal People of Cambodia h. The Chinese and Vietnamese of Cambodia i. Cameroon j. Laos k. South Vietnam 1. Colombia m. Ecuador Guatamala o. Venezuela Po Angola The USASWS has not previously received distribution of these publications and is presently engaged in a survey of language requirements, world-wide in areas wherein Special Forces may become committed. These particular .publications contain the latest available information as to prevalent languages and predominant dialects. 4. If any other Geographic Support Projects or Linguistic and Ethnic Surveys have been completed, it is highly desirous that these publications also be made available, if possible. DWIGHT B. DICKSON Colonel, Infantry Dir. of Instruction Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 Approved Zucg Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00,55R000100300001-2 STATINTL 24 July 1961 300 copies of GM 61-4 to be ordered. ? #7`C k4:t`2'4) C '212 ?A: # Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 Approved For ReleaseellORTAW dERC15114-00825R000100300001-2 V. PmJect No. _44.144_ Report No. 6'11/.. - VP, Editing and Review Editor Editor/Analyst- Typist (final) ? , Reviewed and. Approved by Analyst Branch Chief Special Asst, Division Chief Date Analyst te Released Instructions for Final Tulla / For Photolith Compilation Branch EM_Eag.qa Subject For,MUltilith For Ditto On Bond with carbons In! f9 Other Alt aieV Other Instructions and Comments STATINTL None Final Editorial Approval Before Reproduction and Distribution All changes, on Final copy Dittoed dopy ,.assembled) Proof copy (from Repro) CIA INTERNAL USE ONLY Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825R000100300001-2 A 6) Afe 25X1A Approved Formaelease 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00824200100300001-2 C-0-N-F-I-D-E-N-T-I-A-L CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Geography Division, CRR Project Initiation Memorandum Project No.: 62.1917 9 March 1961 1. Subject of Proposed Project: Angola 2. Statement of Problem: African nationalism and Portugeae repressive measures are meeting head-on in Angola. This report will provide basic background information concerning the physical environment, population, economy, and transportation as an aid to understanding the problems of Angola. 3. Requester: Self-initiated, 25X1A 4, Responsible Analyst, Branch: Go/N 5. Kind and Extent of Cooperation Desired from: a. Other Divisions of the G Area: D/DC to prepare GM-type map. b. Other parts of CIA: Routine search for material in IR, ORR, DD/P. c. Outside CIA: Routine search in Departments of Commerce, Agriculture, Interior. 6. Estimated Man Fours in DAG: 150 in OWN 7, Probable Form of Final Publication: CIA/RR GM. 8. Probable Completion Date: June 1961 9, Recommendations Regarding Distribution of Finished Report: Standard GM distribution, 25X1A Date az14, Date 25X1A ie eograp y ivis on Approved For Release 2001/09/04: CIA-RDP84-00825MOdy10801,1i - - -T -I -A -L Approved For Release 20 25X1A Approved For Release 2 , ND BOTTOM N UI01 (NW FIDENTIAL SECRET CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP TO NAME AND ADDRESS INITIALS DATE 1 Ch/G/7 IP 4')/(04 . 2 AD/RR CV is-lila/Li 3 ()ChM .. 'sr-4'. A na,s, 4 D/004111111111 5 6 ACTION DIRECT REPLY PREPARE REPLY X APPROVAL DISPATCH RECOMMENDATION COMMENT FILE RETURN CONCURRENCE INFORMATION SIGNATURE Remarks: FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER FROM: NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NO. DATE D/GG/RR 206 Building 11 3791 9Mar61 101/99/q4stuARille$4-010&21RMVINWA-2 1 SECRET FORM NO. e) Q 7 Replaces Form 30-4 I APR 55 L which may be used. (40) U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1955-0-342531