CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY

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CIA-RDP79-00927A002800040001-9
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S
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50
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December 21, 2016
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May 13, 2008
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1
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Publication Date: 
July 7, 1960
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SUMMARY
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Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 CC/ COPY NO. 71 DIA review(s) OCI NO.3334/60 completed. 7 July 1960 'CURRENT State Dept. review completed INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY I DE:1_.._ CLAS. NE. T T 4':E E-. AU H:,.OWri 1 V DATE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY I I I OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE STAT Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 T H E W E E K I N B R I E F OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST DEVELOPMENTS IN SOVIET FOREIGN RELATIONS . . . . . . . . . Page 1 Khrushchev has used his visit to Austria to affirm once again that the main lines of his policies will remain unchanged at least until a new administration takes office in the United States. His reception has been notably cool, and his attacks on West Germany and the United States have drawn sharp criticism from the Austrian press. Moscow con- tinues to move toward a position in the nuclear test ban talks from which it could break off the discussions at any time and charge the West with responsibility for the lack of progress. CUBA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 2 Cuba will probably suffer shortages in petroleum prod- ucts for about a month, after which the Soviet bloc can, if it wishes, satisfy all Cuban petroleum requirements. The Castro regime's reactions to the reduction of its sugar quota have been angry, as predicted, and the expro- priation of more American-owned firms appears certain. There are indications that Communists will soon increase their influence in the Cuban Foreign Ministry. VENEZUELA'S EFFORT TO FORCE TRUJILLO'S OVERTHROW . . . . . Page 4 Venezuela has launched an all-out effort in the Organ- ization of American States to force the downfall of Domin- ican dictator Trujillo, who was involved in the 24 June attempt to assassinate President Betancourt. Venezuelan armed forces are on an alert status and may act unilater- ally in the event the OAS fails to take prompt and effec- tive measures or Trujillo engages in any further interven- tlonlst ac;LLVLLLW=. ALGERIA-FRANCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 5 The announcement by the Algerian rebels on 4 July that substantive negotiations on an Algerian cease-fire are "not opportune" at present stemmed from dissatisfac- tion at the treatment accorded a rebel delegation in pre- liminary contacts with French representatives at Melun. The reb- el communiqud was conciliatory in tone, and the rebels are probably prepared to resume negotiations if the French CONFIDENTIAL THE WEEK IN BRIEF -"- Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 PART I (continued) make certain procedural concessions. European settlers in Algeria view the stalemate in the talks without ela- tion, and continue to fear a French "sellout" to the rebels. REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 6 Public order in the Republic of the Congo has been seriously threatened by a mutiny among units of the 24,000-man Force Publique which began on 6 July. Even if the mutiny is brought under control, concessions made to the mutineers--which include across-the-board promo- tions for enlisted personnel and the removal of the Force Publique's Belgian commander--may nullify its effective- ness as the major force for internal stability in the new state. NOTES AND COMMENTS STRUGGLE OVER LEADERSHIP OF JAPANESE CONSERVATIVES . . . . Page 1 Leaders of Japan's ruling Liberal-Democratic party (LDP), still unable to resolve their bitter factional struggle to name a successor to Prime Minister Kishi, may be forced to submit the issue to a floor vote at a part convention on 13 Jul . Japanese leftists plan a series of rallies and demonstrations between 10 and 15 July, beginning at the US naval air station at Atsugi, near Tokyo. UNCODED SHAKE-UP IN AGRICULTURAL LEADERSHIP IN THE RUSSIAN REPUBLIC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 2 Several agricultural leaders in the Russian Republic of the Soviet Union have been fired or reassigned during the past month amid complaints of serious deficiencies in agricultural administration--primarily failures to correct errors which last year were blamed for the mediocre har- vest. The timing and pattern of the shifts, however, sug- gest that they may reflect political maneuvering among the top Kremlin leaders, p ly involving differences over agricultural policy. 25X1 SECRET ii THE WEEK IN BRIEF -- Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 PART II (continued) POLAND REVISES 1961-65 ECONOMIC PLAN . . . . . . . . . . . Page 4 Revisions of Poland's Second Five-Year Plan (1961-65) made at the recent plenum of the party central committee reflect a shift in economic priorities which seems to be at least a partial victory for the more orthodox faction of the party that has pressed for more rapid'expansion of heavy industry, even if it means slowing the growth of personal consumption. The Polish plan now bears a closer resemblance than before to those of other Soviet bloc countries. SOVIET RELATIONS WITH THE NEW TURKISH REGIME . . . . . . . Page 4 Moscow has made several overtures to the provisional Turkish Government for improving relations has offered Ankara economic assistance in an effort to take advantage of Turkey's financial plight. Soviet lead- ers, while disappointed with the provisional government's decision to maintain close ties with the West, may hope their overtures will strengthen any elements in the new CYPRUS SETTLEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 5 Agreements reached by British, Turkish- and Greek- Cypriot negotiators appear to have removed the last ob- stacles to independence, now expected to be proclaimed in August. Despite general relief by the majority of Cypriots, Archbishop Makarios'can expect continued sniping from the die-hard supporters of union with Greece and possibly also from the Communists. Among the Turkish Cypriots, opposi- tion to Kuchuk's moderate leadership has increased in re- cent weep w . MIDDLE EAST DEVELOPMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 7 Rumors of internal troubles are increasing in Iraq as the 14 July anniversary of the 1958 revolution approaches, but there is no firm evidence that an uprising is being planned. The Lebanese elections have ended in a compara- tively peaceful atmosphere, and a new cabinet is expected soon. Nasir's perennial propaganda war with Jordan's King Husayn has warmed up again. Israeli patrolling in the de- militarized zone between Israel and Syria has been resumed and has increased border tension there. The Yemeni inter- nal situation remains shaky as the Soviet bloc continues Orlvi SECRET iii THE WEEK IN BRIEF -- Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 PART II (continued) UNREST REPORTED IN MOZAMBIQUE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page African unrest has been reported in remote areas of northern Mozambique, where natives have apparently come under the influence of nationalist agitators from Tangan- yika. Some arms may have been smuggled in, and Portuguese troops have been flown into the disturbed area. ternal pressure on Mozambique will probably increase Tanganyika and Nyasaland move toward self-government NEPAL AND COMMUNIST CHINA AT ODDS OVER BORDER INCIDENT . . Page 9 Relations between Nepal and Communist China received a sharp jolt as a result of the clash in late June in the isolated Mustang border area. Peiping's formal apology has eased tension somewhat, but each government still dis- putes the other's claim that its territory was violated. Both Katmandu and Peiping apparently still wish to pro- ceed with the arrangements for border demarcation agreed on in March, but the Napalese Government's ability to ne- gotiate a final settlement may be limited by the growing had a similar impact in India. 25X1 CAMBODIA THREATENS TO ACCEPT BLOC ARMS . . . . . . . . . . Page 11 Prince Sihanouk has warned that he will accept prof- fered Communist bloc arms unless the United States moves promptly to satisfy his complaint that it is giving more and better arms to South Vietnam, Thailand, and Laos than to Cambodia. Sihanouk's attitude is conditioned not only by concern over his neighbors' armaments, but also appar- ently by a belief munist China is the "wave of the future" in Asia. SECRET iv THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 25X6 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 PART II (continued) BRITAIN, SPAIN, AND NATO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 13 Spanish Foreign Minister Castiella's official visit to London from 11 to 13 July follows a gradual increase in economic and military contacts between Britain and Spain. While Britain itself now favors Spain's admission to NATO, it does not vet appear ready to try to overcome Norwegian, Lanisn, De.L .L 1, a11N "W l.vla vt.j.vv+.r-.. WEST GERMAN CRACKDOWN ON NAZIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 14 The Eichmann dispute between Argentina and Israel has stimulated the West German Government to arrest a number of former Nazis suspected of war crimes. In moves against neo-Nazi groups, the Hesse state government has seized periodical subscription lists and other records, while Bonn has adopted a law banning the wearing of Nazi emblems and stiffening the punishments for racial and neo-Nazi _- agitatlull . PARAGUAYAN REVOLUTIONARY ACTIVITY . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 15 The several Paraguayan revolutionary groups seeking to oust the Stroessner dictatorship are planning to expand their military operations. Their as-yet-uncoordinated activities have hitherto seemed mainly designed to promote a revolutionary atmosphere of heightened tensions, to in- filtrate rebels, and to elicit material support outside Paraguay. The military at present appears to be loyal to Stroessner. PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES THE ROLE OF THE MILITARY IN SOVIET POLITICS . . . . . . . Page 1 The presence of Marshal Malinovsky at the abortive summit meeting in Paris in May led to considerable specu- lation about the role of the military in Soviet political life. The key questions which arise are: Is "the mili- tary" a cohesive element in the leadership? Are the mili- tary leaders in a position where they could exert pressure on Khrushchev? Are there indications that they have wanted to exert such pressure? These questions are discussed in the first portion of this article; the last half covers the effects and implications of recent events--including the Soviet demobilization program, the U-2 incident, and the summit conference--on the military-political relation- ship. 25X1 SECRET V THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 PART III (continued) SOVIET TECHNOLOGY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 15 The Soviet Union, which launched an ambitious indus- trial modernization program in June 1959, has scheduled a central committee plenum for 13 July to review progress and give additional guidance for promoting technological advances. The meeting will probably praise the satisfac- tory production record of Soviet industry, the general overfulfillment to date of the Seven-Year Plan industrial and productivity goals, and the determination to complete the plan ahead of schedule. There will probably be severe criticism of accomplishments to date, however, as few of the specific tasks assigned a year ago appear to have been fulfilled. The USSR is more advanced in some cases than the West in theoretical knowledge of automation, but lags appreciably behind in the application of automatic con- trols to industry. 25X1 SECRET vi THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST DEVELOPMENTS IN SOVIET FOREIGN RELATIONS Khrushchev has used his visit to Austria--his first trip outside the bloc since the summit collapse--to affirm once again that the main lines of his policies will remain un- changed, at least until a new American administration takes office. In a major speech on 1 July in Vienna, the Soviet premier listed the main goals of his post-summit policy as disarmament, a peace treaty with Germany, and a solution of in- ternational issues by negotia- tion. Following this broad declaration, he concentrated his other speeches on the dan- gers of "revanchism" in West Germany and warned that the Soviet Union cannot remain in- different to statements by Ade- nauer which resemble some of Hitler's. In the private talks with Austrian officials, Khrushchev apparently reaffirmed his pub- lic commitment to uphold until after a change in administra- tion in Washington the status quo in Berlin, provided there were no "provocations." Austrian Foreign Minister Kreisky con- firmed this to the press fol- lowing the private discussions on 1 July. In an attempt to utilize the close relations among Vienna,, Bonn, and Berlin, Khrushchev told Austrian offi- cials that if Bonn attempted to hold a Bundestag meeting in Berlin, Moscow "just might" con- sider that as the occasion for signing a separate peace treaty with East Germany, and then Adenauer and the West German Bundestag would have to request "exit permits" from Ulbricht. Khrushchev's departure for Austria and the West Ger- man foreign policy debate pro- vided the occasion for drawing increased attention to the German and Berlin questions. On 30 June Moscow protested formally to the three Western powers against alleged West German recruitment of West Berliners for the German armed forces. The Soviet notes charged that Bonn was pursuing such activities with the inten- tion of bringing the situation in Berlin and Germany to "dan- gerous conflicts." In his public statements in Austria, Khrushchev resorted to his familiar attempts to SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 1 of 6 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 differentiate between the US Government and the American peo- ple. Austrian Reactions The Austrian press has criticized the government for allowing Khrushchev to abuse Austrian hospitality with his hostile remarks about countries friendly to Austria, and news- papers have specifically criti- cized Chancellor Raab, partic- ularly for his "uncalled-for" attendance at the 2 July rally of the Austro-Soviet Society. The press has noted the general- ly cool public reaction to the whole visit, commenting that "enthusiastic crowds" claimed by the Soviet delegation were either tourists or, in one case, Austrians dressed for church. Bonn, especially irked that the speeches attacking Adenauer were made in the presence of Raab, has sent a sharp protest to the Austrian Government. Kreisky and other top Austrian officials have welcomed this move as supporting their view that Raab should not have ac- companied Khrushchev on his tour of the country. Moscow is apparently mov- ing toward a position in the nu- clear test ban talks from which it could break off the discus- sions at any time and charge the West with responsibility for the lack of progress. Both Foreign Minister Gromyko and chief So- viet delegate Tsarapkin have pub- licly indicated that the USSR's continued participation is de- FTsarapkin in an in- terview with the East German news service, pointed out that the talks closely par- alleled the disarmament negotia- tions in that the West was plac- ing obstacles in the way of progress, but was careful to make a distinction between the two negotiations. He implied that Moscow would await Western proposals on the outstanding issues listed by him. In the conference sessions, the Soviet delegation has at- tempted to build a record of willingness to continue negotia- tions in a serious vein. On 1 July Tsarapkin formally intro- duced draft-treaty language on the composition of the control commission, without altering the substance of the Soviet posi- tion. In addition, he accepted Western proposals on secondary issues and accepted a British compromise proposal on the method of selecting deputies for the con- trol commission's administrator. The Soviet leaders may pre- fer to withhold any move to break off the talks until after the United States begins the first l of its series of conventiona and nuclear explosions to im- prove the capabilities of detecting underground tests. Moscow may seek to distort the purposes of a chemical ,explosion, scheduled for 12 July as part of the US pro- gram for peaceful uses of nuclear energy, as indicat- ing: an American intention to proceed with nuclear pendent on evidence of the West's weapons development, and as willingness to clarify its posi- justifying Soviet refusal tion on the main issues under to negotiate under such debate. Both left the impres- conditions. sion, however, that the Soviet (Concurred in by 031) delegation would probably not break off the talks immediately. I. SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 2 of 6 25X1 - Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 The Castro regime will probably be faced with petroleum shortages during the next month. By then, the Soviet bloc can, if it wishes, satisfy all Cuban petroleum requirements. Soviet petroleum products already con- tracted for amount to only about a quarter of Cuba's annual needs. The Soviet Union has been chartering free-world tankers to carry Soviet oil on runs to Western Europe and the Far East in order to free more of its own tankers for service to Cuba. The regime's reactions to the cut in its sugar quota were bitter and provocative, as pre- dicted. Late on 5 July the cabinet authorized the seizure of all American-owned properties in Cuba, "when deemed necessary in the national interest." This is consistent with Castro's earlier threat to take every- thing "down to the nails in their shoes" from Americans in Cuba if Cuba's sugar quota in the US market were cut. In his 6 July speech,. Castro called the cut in Cuba's sugar quota a "stupid and decadent" act and said the US is taking advantage of Cuba's backward- ness, "for which it is responsi- ble." The Communist-controlled Cuban Labor Confederation has called for a rally of "a mil- lion and a half" on 10 July to protest the "aggression of the imperialist and pro-Nazi US Government." Castro may well use a scheduled speech on 8 July or the rally to announce the seizure of further Ameri- =-n properties. Conrado Becquer, leader of the powerful sugar workers' federation, has ordered union members to prepare to seize the 31 sugar mills owned by Americans. Anti-US fervor is being whipped up to such a pitch that there is danger of violence against Americans and their properties. Raul Castro told the Czech press that it no longer would be a disaster for Cuba if the United States stops buying Cuban sugar, since now "we have the help of the Soviet Union and other socialist countries. We have learned who our real friends are." He has been in Czechoslo- vakia since 26 June on a mission that probably involves efforts to obtain military equipment. The regime's moves to obtain arms in Western Europe also con- tinue. Foreign Minister Raul Roa may shortly be replaced by pro-Communist Carlos Olivares. Roa has re- mained out of the limelight in recent weeks,while Olivares, ap- pointed under secretary on 17 June, has been assuming an in- creasing share of responsibility in the ministry. SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 3 of 6 - Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 Olivares, a member of Raul Castro's clique, has been a lead- ing organizer for the Castro- sponsored Latin American Youth Congress which is scheduled to open in Havana on 26 July and which appears certain to be dominated by the Communists. Olivares' appointment as foreign minister would mean increased Communist influence over Cuba's foreign policy. VENEZUELA'S EFFORT TO FORCE TRUJILLO'S OVERTHROW Venezuela has launched an all-out effort in the Organiza- tion of American States (OAS) to force the downfall of Domini- can dictator Trujillo, who was involved in the attempted as- sassination of President Betan- court on 24 June. At a meeting of the OAS Council on 6 July, the Venezuelan representative demanded an early meeting of American foreign ministers to consider Trujillo's aggressive action and apply sanctions against his regime. The Venezuelan Gov- ernment, whose armed forces are on alert status, may act uni- laterally against the Dominican Republic in the event the OAS fails to take prompt and effec- tive measures or Trujillo en- gages in any further interven- tionist activities. Betancourt, who has long insisted that the OAS give prior- ity to the problem of Trujillo over that of Castro, apparently intends to assist in a hemis- phefe solution for the Cuban situation after Trujillo's elim- ination. Colombian President Lleras strongly supports Betan- court's position on Trujillo, although he recognizes that Castro is a greater threat to peace in the hemisphere. He would probably cooperate in Betan- court's approach to the two Caribbean problems. Trujillo's stability, which is already threatened by grow- ing internal opposition and dip- lomatic isolation, will be further eroded by Venezuela's charges in the OAS. Trujillo also apparently 25X1 ears that the US will play an important role in possible OAS action against him. Article 8 of the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance, which Venezuela plans to invoke, pro- vides for sanctions ranging from recall of ambassadors to armed action. In the present tension, Vene- zuela's public and its armed forces would probably approve a direct attack on the Dominican Republic. Any rash act--or pos- sibly even an erroneous report that such a step was being pre- pared by either country--might touch off military hostilities. 25X1 SECRET OF' IMMEDIATE IN'T'EREST Pacra 4 of 6 _^ Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET 7 July 1960 The announcement by the Algerian rebels on 4 July that substantive negotiations con- cerning an Algerian cease-fire are "not opportune" at present stemmed from dissatisfaction at the treatment accorded a rebel delegation in preliminary con- tacts with French representatives at Melun, outside Paris. While their communique was conciliatory in tone, the Algerians are un- likely to resume negotiations in the absence of procedural concessions by the French. The rebels reportedly did not expect France to recognize their pro- visional government as repre- sentative of the Algerian people, but expected a voice in deter- mining the conditions under which substantive negotiations would be held. According to the communique, French officials indicated they would not permit rebel negotia- tors to travel freely in France, or to contact Algerian ministers --such as Mohamed Ben Bella-- presently held prisoner in France. The rebels' statement, in an attempt to blame France for the stalemate, made no mention of their pre-conditions In Algeria, the suspension of the talks has been received without elation by European rightists, who generally expect them to be resumed and who still fear a "sellout" to the rebels. They are continuing their efforts to create a broadly based organ- ization, the Front for a French Algeria (FAF). The rebels' suspension of cease-fire talks has been warmly endorsed by the Tunisian Gov- ernment and editorially sup- ported elsewhere in the Arab world. The Algerians, however, can be expected to maintain communications channels to Paris through the use of intermedi- aries or possibly through French embassies. Meanwhile, they will make every effort to sustain and to step up terrorism within Algeria. ress reports from Cairo that the Algerians will shortly open a diplomatic mission in Peiping designed to encourage 25X1 Western intercession with France on behalf of the rebels. Com- munist China agreed in May to the establishment of a rebel mission in Peiping at some future data. In a series of talks in Normandy on 6 July, De Gaulle spoke in his usual vein about moving toward an Algeria linked to France, with its future to be decided by the Algerians them- selves. Appealing to the rebels to end the war, he said they were wrong in imposing delays "for reasons which are theirs and not ours." SECRET Page 5 of 6 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 Public order in the Repub- lic of the Congo has been seri- ously threatened by a mutiny among units of the 24,000-man Force Publique which began on 6 July. Even if the mutiny is brought under control, conces- sions made to the mutineers may nullify. the force's effectiveness as the major agencyfor internal stability in the new state. Since its independence on 30 June, the Congo has been the scene of renewed tribal out- breaks in Leopoldville and Kasai provinces. Although the Force Publique--still under the command of Belgian officers-- was instrumental in containing the disturbances in Leopold- ville, its discipline appears to have been undermined by contact with tribesmen who re- gard "independence" as synony- mous with the removal of all restraints. The mutiny of 6 July began in Force Publique barracks on the outskirts of Leopoldville and in the town of Thysville, 80 miles south. The mutineers' immediate demands were for more pay and for the "Africanization" of the officer corps--that is, the removal of Belgian officers. Premier Lumumba, after appealing for order, dismissed General Emile Janssens, the Belgian commander of the Force Publique, and stated that all enlisted personnel would be promoted one grade. By nightfall, mutineers who had demonstrated in front of the assembly building in Leopold- ville had returned to their barracks. In Thysville, however, the mutineers remain in control, and continue to hold their offi- cers in confinement. Although the mutiny has thus far been confined to Leopold- ville Province, it appears likely to have ramifications in units elsewhere. Lumumba's concessions to the mutineers probably fore- shadow the accelerated Africaniza- tion of the Force Publique at the further expense of its effec- tiveness as a security force. Any such weakening, in turn, is likely to be reflected in re- newed tribal outbreaks, partic- ularly in Kasai Province, where the Force Publique has been a major factor in maintaining order during the past year. SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE !NTEREST Page 6 of 6 - Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 NOTES AND COMMENTS STRUGGLE OVER LEADERSHIP OF JAPANESE CONSERVATIVES Leaders of Japan's ruling Liberal-Democratic party (LDP), still unable to resolve their bitter factional struggle to name a successor to Prime Min- ister Kishi, may be forced to submit the issue to a floor vote at a party convention scheduled for 13 July. Hayato Ikeda re- mains the leading contender, but his candidacy has been set back by a tactical coalition between Mitsujiro Ishii and Bamboku Ono, the other major candidates, and by a threat on the part of anti- Ikeda die-hards to form a new conservative party. Thus far, the only course apparently acceptable to Kishi and his hard-core LDP support- ers--Ikeda, Finance Minister Sato, and former Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida--is a simple transfer of leadership to Ikeda. Ishii and Ono, both of whom may see the present changeover as their last opportunity to become prime minister, are insisting that an interim successor be chosen to serve at least through general elections, which are expected in the fall. A third group is led by party dissidents Kenzo Matsumura, Ichiro Kono, and Tanzan Ishibashi. The Kishi team wants to disci- pline these dissidents for party disloyalty add for encouraging leftist efforts to block rati- fication of the US-Japanese 25X6 security treaty and bring about Kishi's downfall. The dissidents are threatening to withdraw from the LDP and, with Socialist sup- port, to elect Matsumura prime minister unless they are granted a strong voice in party leader- ship. The three leading candi- dates have agreed to allow a six-man committee of government and party officials, headed by Kishi, to attempt to resolve the succession question. The LDP rivalry may be settled be- fore 13 July, in which case the party convention wil merel en- dorse the decision. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET 7 July 1960 now is directing v other conservatives, In Sai- tama, the new Democratic Social- 25X6 ist party, which campaigned for the first time, took support away from the Socialist party but not from the LDP. perative criticism at the con- servative wrangling on the suc- cession issue. Asahi Shimbun, the country's largest and prob- ably most influential daily, has likened the LDP deadlock over Kishi's successor to "three vultures dividing rotten meat among themselves." Meanwhile, incumbent con- servative governors have scored victories in gubernatorial con- tests in Aomori and Saitama pre- fectures in early July. Although the Socialist campaign in both areas concentrated on the secu- rity treaty issue, local issues and the popularity of the in- cumbents were of greater im- portance. The voting--especially that in Saitama Prefecture, which is near Tokyo--did indi- cate, however, that widespread antipathy toward Kishi is not necessarily directed toward Japanese leftists are at- tempting to reinvigorate their campaign against the security treaty. They have scheduled a series of demonstrations and rallies throughout Japan from 10 to 15 July. As part of their effort to make it difficult for the US to maintain bases in Japan, they have scheduled a demonstration for 10 July at the US naval air station at Atsu i near Tokyo 25X6 25X6 Several agricultural lead- ers in the Russian Republic (RSFSR) of the Soviet Union have been fired or reassigned during the past month amid com- plaints of serious deficiencies in agricultural administration-- primarily failure to correct ,errors which last year were blamed for the mediocre harvest. On 9 June, Dmitry Matyushkin, party first secretary in Kras- nodar Kray, an agriculturally important province in the Rus- sian Republic, was fired for alleged deficiencies in his administration of agriculture. He was succeeded by Georgy SECRET Page 2 of 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927A002800040001-9 SECRET 7 July 1960 Vorobyev, who had been head of the agriculture department for the RSFSR in the party's cen- tral staff. Four days later Stepan Kalchenko, the RSFSR minister of agriculture, was "transferred to other work" and replaced by Grigory Smirnov, deputy head of the party's RSFSR agriculture department until January 1960, when he became RSFSR deputy premier. Kalchenko's new job is not known,but he has not been publicly criticized. On 25 June, Fedor Kulakov, RSFSR minister of grain products, was named party first secretary of the Stavro- pol Kray, another important agricultural area. He replaced Nikolay Belyayev, the former party boss in Kazakhstan who was expelled from the party presidium on 4 May. Belyayev had earlier been blamed for the poor harvest in Kazakhstan and was transferred in disgrace to the Stavropol Kray in Janu- ary of this year. Although these changes may be designed primarily to improve direction of agricul- ture in the field by shifting managerial experts from Moscow, there is an apparent connection between the nearly simultaneous shift of the RSFSR's three top agricultural officials and the fortunes of party presidium member Nikolay Ignatov. All three had been appointed to their former jobs in April 1959, the same month in which Ignatov, who had been central party secretary in charge of agriculture since December 1957, was mysteriously shunted into the largely ceremonial post of chairman of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet Presidium. In November, Ignatov returned to his former work in the party secretariat, regaining the status he had ap- parently lost in April. There is some evidence that Ignatov was relieved of his ag- SECRET ricultural responsibilities shortly after the bloc agricul- tural conference in early Feb- ruary 1960, inasmuch as he did not participate in an im- portant inter-republic party conference on agriculture held in Moscow in mid-March, although he was apparently in Moscow at the same time. On 4 May he lost his job as party secretary and was appointed deputy premier of the USSR, ranking below First Deputy Pre- miers Kosygin and Mikoyan. Ignatov was probably deep- ly involved in the disputes over agricultural policy which have taken place since the abolition of the Machine Tractor Stations (MTS) in early 1958. Although the issues were debated in the press and appeared to be ripe for solution by the fall of 1959, the party central committee in December temporized on most of the major issues and referred them to the party presidium for further study. So far there is no evidence that final de- cisions have been made, but the twists and turns in Ignatov's career during the past year and a half may be a reflection of those policy disputes. The suggestion that the shift of the RSFSR agricultural leaders is related to Ignatov's transfer from the party secre- tariat and may reflect a new stage in the policy controversy is buttressed by the fact that Georgy Denisov, head of the agriculture department "for the union republics"--counter- part to the agriculture depart- ment for the RSFSR--was also transferred recently. On 21 May he was appointed Soviet ambassador to Sofia. The names of new heads of the two party agriculture de- partments have not been made public. Their identities may clarify the issues involved in the recent shifts. Page 3 of 1& - Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927A002800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 Extensive revisions of Po- land's Second Five-Year Plan (1961-65)made by the party cen- tral committee on 21 and 22 June reflect a significant shift in economic priorities. Production of producer goods and increased investments are emphasized at the expense of consumer goods and housing. As a result of these changes, the Polish plan bears a closer resemblance to those of other Soviet bloc countries, although it still favors the consumer to a greater extent. Under the new version of the plan, the share of national income for capital investments is higher and that for personal consumption lower than in the preliminary version adopted in April 1959. Capital invest- ments now are scheduled to in- crease by 51 percent over the previous five-year level. Ag- riculture and some sectors of heavy industry have been al- located considerably larger shares of investment funds, largely at the expense of in- vestments for housing. The rate of growth for over-all industrial production has been raised slightly. The production of producer goods is to expand at a considerably faster rate. Per capita per- sonal consumption during 1961- 65 now is planned to increase only 20-23 percent, as com- pared with the originally pro- posed 23-25 percent. Some of these revisions were necessitated by the pro- gram for accelerated mechani- zation of agriculture, which was adopted several months after the preliminary version of the plan had been approved. Re- visions also take into account the interim performance of the economy: the negative devel- opments in agriculture and foreign trade, and the positive ones which have improved pros- pects for industrial production. However, the revisions as a whole reflect a general shift in economic priorities which probably is at least a partial victory for the more orthodox faction of the party which has been pressing for more, rapid growth of heavy industry, even if it entails a cut in the con- sumption program. This change in economic policy should add to the anxiety and discontent of the Polish eo le . SOVIET RELATIONS WITH THE NEW TURKISH REGIME The USSR has made a number of overtures and offers of economic aid through diplomatic channels to the provisional Turkish Government in a bid to promote friendlier relations. Moscow is disappointed with the new regime's decision to maintain close political and military ties with the West, but may hope that Ankara's economic plight will open the door to Soviet aid and that its overtures will strengthen any elements in the new gov- ernment inclined toward neu- tralism. Immediately after the coup in late May, Khrushchev on several occasions publicly ex- pressed hope that the new SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 4 of 16 ___ Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 .SECRET. ' 7 July 1960 government would "make the nec- essary efforts" to improve re- lations, and that Turkey would return to the neutralist pol- icies of the Ataturk government during the 1920s. However, the Soviet press and radio, while affirming this line, have re- peated Moscow's standard warn- ing of the "dangers" to Turkey from Western bases on its ter- ritory and were especially critical of Foreign Minister Sarper's statement in early June in which he confirmed An- kara's continued adherence to NATO and CENTO. Soviet officials in An- kara have also voiced concern over recent Turkish events. One Soviet diplomat in mid-June said that the new regime is more "nationalistically in- clined" than its predecessor, but that Moscow would find it more difficult to deal with. Soviet Ambassador Ryzhov, ex- plaining that military inter- vention in Turkish politics is "not a favorable omen" for bet- ter relations with the USSR, expressed strong disappointment that the "revolution" in Turkey had been brought about by the army. At the same time, Moscow has continued efforts to en- courage the provisional govern- ment to establish closer rela- tions. Moscow's latest move isr off er ng o prow e Turkey with economic aid. The offer--described by Foreign Minister Sarper as "you say how much"--probably repeats in large part an aid offer made through Ryzhov in mid-June to extend funds, technical assist- ance, and industrial plants to Turkey. Sarper informed American Ambassador Warren that the Na- tional Unity Committee (NUC), General Gursel, and the cabinet all wish to refuse Khrushchev's latest overture as Turkey did the earlier offer. However, Sarper asserted that Ankara's financial situation is desperate, and claimed that there is "heavy pressure" from Moscow to accept the Soviet offer. Ambassador Warren has warned that, because the general phi- losophy of the NUC remains rel- atively unknown, these "pressures" should not be underestimated. 25X1 The last obstacles appear to have been removed, and Cypriot independence now is expected to be proclaimed in August. British and Cypriot officials who resumed negotia- tions on 23 June made rapid progress in resolving differ- ences, and announced on 1 July that "full agreement" had been reached. Three days later, Arch- bishop Makarios and Fazil Kuchuk, leaders of the Greek and Turkish communities on Cyprus, announced SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 5 of 16 25X1 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMM Ry 7 July 1960 settlement of the long dispute over im- plementation of con- stitutional provi- sions specifying the percentage of Greek and Turkish Cypriots, 70 and 30 percent respectively, in the future civil serv- ice. The British Parliament is ex- pected to pass ena- bling legislation prior to its summer recess. Elections for the Cypriot House of Rep- resentatives are scheduled for 31 July and elections for the Com- munal Chambers will follow a week later. The agreement with Britain followed 16 months of efforts to draft the documents neces- sary to implement the Cyprus ac- cords drawn up in February 1959 by representatives of Britain, Greece, Turkey, and the two communities on Cyprus. London and the Cypriots--primarily the Greek Cypriots--were in dis- pute over the future and size of the two military bases to be retained by Britain and the extent of future British finan- cial aid to Cyprus. A six-week deadlock was broken in May when the Greek and Turkish governments proposed a compromise formula. Under the terms of the final settle- ment, agreement was reached on the size (99 square miles), exact boundaries, and extent of Cypriot civil administration of the two bases retained by Brit- ain. London gave assurance' that the bases will be turned over to the Cypriot Government if they are ever abandoned. Britain will grant the new gov- ernment nearly $40,000,000 in financial aid during the next five years. The settlement has prob- ably been received with consid- erable relief by the majority of Cypriots, many of whom feared continuing economic deteriora- tion and a possible recurrence of violence between the Greek and Turkish communities if the deadlock had continued. Makarios, however, can expect continued sniping from the die-hard sup- porters of "enosis" on"Cyprus, from ex-EOKA leader George Grivas in Athens, and probably from the Communists, who have begun agitating for complete demilitarization of the island. Among the Turkish Cypriots, there may be considerable criti- cism of Kuchuk for agreeing to the compromise regarding the civil service. Opposition to his moderate leadership has increased in recent weeks, and anti-Kuchuk leaflets have ap- peared in Nicosia. His long identification with the ousted Menderes regime in Turkey has been used against him by his more nationalistic critics. Should Kuchuk lose his position as head of the Turkish Cypriots, he would probably be replaced by his more demagogic subordinate, Rauf Denktash. This would complicate relations between Greek and Turkish Cypriots at a time when Cyprus faces serious problems as a new state. SECRET , Page 6 of 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 Iraq On the eve of the 14 July celebration of the second an- niversary of the Iraqi revolu- tion, rumors of troubles are increasing as they did last year. There is no firm evidence, however, that incidents are be- ing planned by either the Com- munists or nationalist elements. Many of the rumors appear to stem from memories of last July's Kirkuk massacres by Communist- instigated Kurds. Premier Qasim's prestige is low at present, and increas- ing numbers of senior military officers and civilian officials criticize him openly. It would appear untimely for the Communists to attempt an all-out struggle with Iraqi nationalists when Communists in the provinces and the army are being continually rebuffed; they have lost control of the trade unions and peasant asso- ciations and seem to face dis- lodgment from high positions in the government. Several Communists in the Education Ministry, a Communist strong- hold, were ousted last week. While there is much dis- satisfaction with the present situation, all elements prob- ably fear the consequences of an upheaval. The fourth and last round of Lebanese parliamentary elec- tions was marked by surprises. The heavy cross--voting indicates that a minor revolt was staged against the traditional feudal leaders of the Biqa Valley, and a number of their candidates lost out to local aspirants. Prices: for votes dropped to a new low with the introduction of the secret ballot, and many vote buyers were arrested by the security forces. Pro-UAR extremists seem to have suffered further re- buffs, and the election of Kazim Sulh, former ambassador to Iraq, raises the possibility that Beirut Moslem leader Saib Salam, who has had the edge up to now, may be passed over for the premiership in favor of either former Prime Minister Rashid Karami or possibly Sulh. The new parliament is sched- uled to meet in mid-July. The propaganda warfare be- tween the UAR and Jordan flared up again during the last two weeks. Nasir, in a speech on 24 June in Alexandria, attacked King Husayn, implying, without mentioning him by name, that the Jordanian monarch would ''meet the same fate as Nuri Said." Husayn's rebuttal was followed on 27 June by a barrage of invective in Cairo papers which referred to the King as "traitor," ";Judas," and "shame- less slave to imperialists" and to Jordanian Prime Minister Majalli as "chief eunuch of the traitorous King." Husayn, in his speeches, has called Nasir a dictator and has accused him of leniency toward Communism. Amman radio SECRET Page 7 of 16 - Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY July 1960 has called on the Syrian people "not to despair" and has assured them that the day will come when the "sufferings" they have endured under Nasir's yoke will be ended. On 4 July Amman broad- cast a recorded interview with a defected Iraqi pilot who af- firmed that, while in the Syrian region, he discovered a new plot by Nasir to inspire "in- ternal revolt" in Iraq. The UAR has warned Jordan that "serious consequences" would follow continued Jordanian at- tacks against the UAR. The propaganda battle is .a not unusual prelude to the forth-- coming Arab League meeting in August, when Arab foreign min- isters are scheduled to make new attempts to reconcile an- tra-Arab differences. Majalli has indicated Jordan will bring up for consideration the UAR's "aggression." Israel-Syria Several Israeli newspapers have attempted to link the Jor- danian-UAR dispute with recent incidents along the Israeli- Syrian border; one paper said Nasir's speech at Alexandria "marked the resumption of the UAR campaign of incitement." However, General Von Horn, chief of staff on the U( Truce Super- visory Organizati n (UNTSO), blames Israeli patrolling in the sensitive Tawafiq area of the demilitarized zone for the increased border tension. Von Horn said such patrolling was suspended on his urging after the clash at Tawafiq last Jan- uary and he considers its re- newal provocative. The Syrians had stated their intention to open fire if Israelis entered this area, and on 28 June a member of an Israeli armored patrol which did enter it was killed. Von Horn believes recurring inci- dents are likely unless the Israelis are disposed to co- operate with UNTSO in the de- militarized zone. A ten-minute exchange of fire occurred on 3 July. Numerous reports of native unrest in northern Mozambique have reached the American Con- sulate General in Lourenco Marques. African tribesmen in the Mocimboa da Praia and Porto Amelia areas, probably influ- enced by agitators from neigh- boring Tanganyika, reportedly have created disturbances at local administrative posts. Some natives have apparently been killed, and wounded Af- ricans have crossed the border into Tanganyika. Portuguese officials in Lisbon and Lourenco Marques have played down the significance of the outbreaks; elements of the Portuguese garrison have been flown to the area, however, and the northern Mozambique border is':being patrolled by air- craft. IN MOZAMBIQUE The security situation is complicated by evidence of arms smuggling. Some of the natives in the disturbed area apparent- ly are armed, The reports of unrest con- cern a relatively remote part of Mozambique, where poor com- munications and the sparseness of the European population have hampered Portuguese control. More than half the natives in the area are Moslems and have SECRET PART II -NOTES AND COMK_XTS Page 8 of 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SRy 7 July 1960 close ties with their co-religionists to the north. As Tanganyika becomes self-govern- ing, radical Tangan- yikan nationalists are likely to exploit these ties to an even greater extent. Mo- zambique is likely to be exposed to further agitation as the na- tives of the Nyasa- land protectorate gain greater control over their own affairs. Portuguese offi- cials are becoming alarmed over develop- ments in territories which adjoin their African overseas prov- inces. To date their prime concern has been Angola and its relations with newly independent Congo, REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO I.LAGA Y EPUB G NEPAL AND COMMUNIST CHINA AT ODDS OVER BORDER INCIDENT Previously cordial rela- tions between Nepal and Commu- nist China received a sharp, jolt as a result of the border inci- dent in central Nepal in late June in the isolated Mustang area, a semiautonomous salient into Tibet. Peiping"s formal apology for the incident, in which a Nepalese checkpost of- ficer was killed and 10 Nepa- lese nationals detained, has eased the tension somewhat, but reaction in Nepal to the Chi- nese "attack" will hamper fur- ther progress toward a final Sino-Nepalese border agreement. Katmandu protested the Chinese action as a violation of the agreement reached last March demilitarizing the frontier zone and setting up procedures for border demarcation. Prime Minister Koirala had sought this to clarify the actual boundary and to forestall incidents simi- lar to those last fall along the Sino-Indian border. Arrange- ments for joint commissions to survey areas in dispute and to demarcate the boundary on the basis of "actual jurisdiction" were agreed on during Koirala's visit to Peiping and ratified when Chou En-lai went to Katmandu in late April. Nepal, stressing its neu- trality, has generally minimized its own disagreement with Peipin': over border demarcation and taken SECRET PART II NOTES AND COkIENTS 7 JULY 1060 MIL Page 9 of 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 Demarcated boundary -*-x- Undemarcated bcundary --- Indefinite boundary Nevi Delhi Backha a detached view toward India's dispute. Katmandu, like New Delhi, now has been placed in the position of an injured party. Railroad Road - - - Trail R? ., .. P ~ , v rno~e .Frog, zed by rte U.S G-er-ear Although Koirala on 4 July expressed his "satisfac- tion" with Peiping's reply and probably will proceed with the border negotiations, his ability to reach a final settle- ment with Peiping will be limited by the hostile reac- tion within Nepal against the Chinese. Rightist opposition groups are demanding a stronger policy, and the ruling Nepali Congress party itself apparent- ly is exploiting popular indig- nation to bolster the govern- ment's position. Various de- fensive measures, including army reinforcements for the border posts, are being widely publicized, and six prominent Communists have been arrested on security grounds. The incident has had con- siderable impact in India, where it has heightened anti- Chinese sentiment and strengthened the hand of those demanding a more aggressive Indian border policy. Pressure on Nehru's government to help bolster Ne- pal's defenses is likely to increase in view of the Indian Dxong alam .Dzon Katmandu *Nam e L B it Sik phkhganj e. y 1Biju1pura ~Daneehng lr1 prime minister's previous statements that any attack on Nepal would be regarded as an attack on India. Speedy Chinese action ac- knowledging responsibility for the clash indicates that Peiping hopes to minimize the unfavorable impact and head off a new series of Asian charges of Chinese ag- gression such as followed Pei- ping's refusal to accept blame for the Sino-Indian border clashes of 1959. In his 2 July letter apologizing for the in- cident, Chou avoided stating that Chinese forces had trans- gressed on Nepalese territory and, contrary to assertions by Katmandu, placed the locale of the incident north of the Kore Pass in Chinese territory. Koirala, however, continues to assert that the clash occurred inside Nepal. In an effort to lessen the possibility of further incidents, Chou stated in a subsequent letter that Chinese troops had been ordered to withdraw six miles to the north of the Nep- alese-Tibetan border. Peiping SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 10 bf 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 thus was probably attempting to reduce the seriousness of its 27 June admission to Kat- mandu that Chinese troops were operating within the demili- mission. tarized zone. Peiping also notified Katmandu on 5 July that it had appointed five Chi- nese representatives to the joint boundary demarcation com- CAMBODIA THREATENS TO ACCEPT BLOC ARMS Cambodian Chief of State Sihanouk has warned that he will accept Communist bloc mili- tary aid unless the United States moves promptly to satis- fy his complaint that it is giving more and better arms to South Vietnam, Thailand, and Laos than to Cambodia. In recent editorials and inter- views Sihanouk has stressed that Cambodia urgently needs means to stand up to its "over- armed" neighbors, which he accuses of having aggressive designs and acting in league with dissident Cambodian ele- ments. Sihanouk would prefer to accomplish this through an increase in American military aid to Cambodia combined with a cutback in such aid to the neighboring states; he has also suggested regional disarmament through international action. Sihanouk's threats to turn to the Communist bloc if these other approaches prove unpro- ductive are probably not all bluff, even though such a step would virtually end Cambodia's ever-dwindling area for maneuver- ing as a neutral. Sihanouk's thinking is heavily conditioned by his apparent conviction that Communist China is the "wave of the future." Sihanouk may have in mind a stand-by arrangement with Czechoslovakia, pending Ameri- can reaction to Cambodia's request for more and newer arms for the Cambodian armed forces. The Cambodian Government is believed to have a contin- gency plan under which the armed forces and police would turn over their American-supplied arms to Cambodian irregular forces and would be resupplied with Communist bloc arms. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 11 of 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 BRITAIN, SPAIN, AND NATO The official visit to Lon- don of Spanish Foreign Minister Castiella from 11 to 13 July-- the first high-level Spanish mission to Britain since Franco attained power--marks a major improvement in Spanish-British relations. Until now, the grad- ual improvement in Anglo-Spanish relations has been mainly non- political, marked by increased commercial ties. In early June a British carrier, a cruiser, and lesser ships stopped in Bar- celona on "British Day" at the city's trade fair. Some informal discussions on military collab- oration may have occurred in the past year to two Regarding political prob- lems, Spain's claims to Gibral- tar and restrictions on the move- ment of workers into the naval base have irked London. Madrid's relaxation of these was a pre- condition for Castiella's visit. More basic are the authoritarian character of the Franco regime and lingering wartime and prewar animosities still voiced by the British Labor party. The Mac- likely soon, a more favorable London's attitude on pos- sible Spanish admission to NATO seems also to be shifting since a year ago, when the government side-stepped inquiries on the question. Castiella's visit will provide the British Govern- ment with an opportunity to in- dicate that it has no objection to discussion of this controver- sial topic. This would set the stage for a further British shift to open support of Spain's entry. The gradual change may be part of Macmillan's effort to culti- vate President de Gaulle, who is on record as advocating Spain:'s admission. London,i also would like to see Spain affiliate with the European Free Trade Associaz tion. British officials are never- theless aware that strong oppo- sition in Norway, Denmark, Bel- gium, and the Netherlands must be overcome before the required unanimous approval for NATO ad- mission is in sight. Although active persuasive efforts are not millan government apparently now British attitude may contribute 25X1 feels strong enough, however, to the gradual erosion of active to afford some criticism on this hostility in those countries. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 13 of 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUM ARY 7 July 1960 The recent capture in Ar- gentina of former SS General Adolf Eichmann has stimulated the West German Government to arrest a number of former Nazis suspected of war crimes on the assumption that additional evi- dence necessary for convictions may become available during the trial of Eichmann in Israel. Those arrested include former SS General Wilhelm Koppe, charged with complicity in the death of some 300,000 inmates of the Chel- mo concentration camp in Poland; Hermann Krumey, an Eichmann as- sistant; and Adolf Heinz Beckerle, Hitler's wartime representative in Sofia. but are firmly supported by the major political parties and the press. In recent moves against neo- Nazi groups, the Socialist-con- trolled state government of Hesse has seized records, including membership and periodical sub- scription lists, from a major neo-Nazi center in Germany, the publishing house of the late extreme-rightist organizer, Karl Heinz Priester. The Hes- sian Interior Ministry prevented a meeting of the "Congress of West German and European Fas- cists," planned for 5 June in Wiesbaden, at which the numerous extreme rightist splinter groups reportedly planned to merge. In another move, the federal Bundestag in early June approved a law banning the wear- ing of Nazi emblems and stiffening punish- .ments for racial and neo-Nazi agitation. Wearing Nazi emblems, showing Nazi flags, or using Nazi slogans in public now can bring a sentence of up to three years, and racial or neo-Nazi agitation can be punished by Bonn inherited,. from the- Allies responsibility for the prosecution of war criminals with the assumption of sovereign- ty in 1955. In 1958 the West German states set up a central office for tracking down war criminals, mainly through an examination of Nazi records. Approximately 1,200 persons are under investigation or have been arrested. The process has been speeded up since 1958 because the statute of limitations runs out during 1960 for all crimes except murder. The arrests have evoked bitter protests in na- tionalist and neo-Nazi quarters three months to five years in prison. Bonn is probably motivated by a desire to counter criticism abroad of laxity toward former Nazis, as well as by a sincere desire to bring serious offenders to justice. West Germans have generally viewed Eichmann's cap- ture as evidence that "crime doesn't pay," and the press has welcomed the opportunity as an- other object lesson for German youths to learn of the horrors of the Nazi era. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COM1ENTS Page 14 of '16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 The several Paraguayan revolutionary groups seeking to oust the Stroessner military dictatorship plan to expand their operations beyond the guerrilla activities and small invasions of the past few months. Their as-yet-uncoordi- nated activities have hitherto seemed mainly designed to pro- mote a revolutionary atmosphere of heightened tensions, to in- filtrate rebels, and to elicit material support outside Para- guay. The most active of the four revolutionary groups has been the 14th of May Movement, which carried out the revolu- tionary attacks last December and the more recent series of raids beginning on 29 April. It has no formal tie with any political party but is composed mainly of Febreris- tas, Liberals, some Communists, and a few foreign advisers. The 14th of May group may be gaining strength as a result of its harassing activity. Until now it has been considered third' in impor- tance to the Popular Colorado Movement-- dissidents from Stroessner's Colorado party-- and to the National Para- guayan Union (UNP), led by exiles of the major opposition Liberal and Febrerista parties. A UNP leader recently cited the "growing influence" of the 14th of May Movement as a reason for hastening UNP rebel action "at least by August." 7 JULY 1S 0 & %* M" A SECRET Villarrica' 4Vbai Carlos Antonio Lopez Page 15 of IN Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET 7 July 1960 The Argentine, Brazilian, and Uruguayan governments re- cently tightened controls over border points, but full patrol of the border is impossible. The rebels, however, have had some success in soliciting do- nations in these countries, and the indicated step-up in rebel activities may prompt more substantial foreign aid. SECRET The military at present re- mains loyal to Stroessner Page 16 of 16 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES THE ROLE OF THE MILITARY IN SOVIET POLITICS The presence of Defense Minister Marshal Malinovsky at the abortive summit meeting in Paris in May led to consider- able speculation about the role of the military in Soviet polit- ical life. The key questions which arise are: Is "the mil- itary" a cohesive element in the leadership? Are the mil- itary leaders in a position where they could exert pressure on Khrushchev? Are there indi- cations that they have wanted to exert such pressure? These are discussed in the first por- tion of this article; the last half covers the effects and im- plications of recent events-- including the U-2 incident--on the military-political relation- ship. The Military Soviet military leaders, as the directors, planners, and administrators of the military establishment, reflect the view- point and the views of a large and powerful institution. They reflect too the career interests of the officer corps, and rep- resent the professional judg- ment of the military arm of gov- ernment and party on matters of state policy in which that arm has a role. In this sense and in these matters they often have a relatively unified attitude. The military leaders at the same time form a bureauc- racy made up of individuals of differing and sometimes con- flicting views, associations, and interests. Moreover, these associations of friendship or rivalry extend beyond the bounds of the military insti- tution into the party and a- mong political leaders. In this sense, "the military" does not speak with one voice, and sometimes it subordinates com- mon professional views to per- sonal differences. World War II Developments The "Malinovsky adminis- tration" came into being pre- cisely as a result of such a division among the military leaders under former Defense Minister Zhukov, and the sub- sequent and present situation cannot be fully understood with- out due attention to this fact. Indeed, it is necessary to turn to the days of World War II in order to understand it. The war brought a new re- lationship between the polit- ical and military leaders, one in which the military command- ers came into unusual intimacy with senior party officials. Both between military and polit- ical leaders and among the mil- itary leaders themselves, new and sometimes deep relations of personal acquaintanceship, and even lasting friendship or hos- tility, developed. In a few cases, whole groups of military leaders developed ties or antip- athies to a political figure with whom they served in the field or dealt in the capital. While there was, of course, a shifting of senior commanders during the war, two main cat- egories developed: the army group and army commanders at the front, and the Supreme Head- quarters staff in Moscow, which sometimes sent one or more of its members to the field to as- sume temporary over-all command of major operations. A prime example, because of its long- run effect on personal relation- ships, was Stalingrad. As will be seen, this historical case is relevant to current alignments. SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 1 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 In the field, the Army Group direct- ly involved in the de- fense of Stalingrad was the Stalingrad Front, under Colonel General Yeremenko. Under this command were four armies, commanded by Gener- als Chuykov, Mali- novsky, Shumilov, and Moskalenko. Gen- eral G. Zakharov was chief of staff of the Front, General Krylov was chief of staff of the 62nd Army under Chuykov, and General M. Zakharov was chief of staff of the 64th Army under Malinov- sky. Generals Bag- ramyan and Popov also served in this Front. The senior political adviser and member of the Military Council of the Front was Lieutenant General Nikita Khrushchev. N.S. KHRUSHCHEV 1st Secretary, Soviet Communist Party. Premier of the USSR. M. V. ZAKHAROV Minister of Defense. As the battle of Stalin- grad reached a climax and the crucial counteroffensive phase drew near, Stalin sent down not only the plans for the opera- tion, but also an echelon of senior commanders and advisers to carry it out. Army General Zhukov, deputy supreme command- er, and Colonel General Vasi- levsky, deputy chief of the General Staff, were given over- all command. Colonel General of Aviation Novikov was placed over all air forces, and Colonel Gen- eral of Artillery Voronov was later put in charge of elim- inating the encirclement. Moreover, Malenkov was dispatched as the representa- tive of the State Defense Com- mittee to oversee the whole operation. Not unnaturally, a certain resentment and rivalry was felt by the senior field commanders there. Moreover, Zhukov, Vasilevsky, Novikov, and Voronov were all soon -ref-Deputy Minister of Defense. Commander in Chief, Soviet Ground Forces. 1st Deputy Minister of Defense. Commander in Chief, Warsaw Pact Forces. Commander, Moscow Military District. Chief, Moscow Garrison, promoted to marshal's rank for their services at Stalingrad, while none of the field com- manders were. During the following two years, the generals who formed the core of the field command in the Stalingrad battle gen- erally assumed commands in the four Ukrainian fronts and their component armies, which swept across the southern part of cen- tral Europe. The Moscow mar- shals frequently assumed com- mand of the various northern Belorussian and Baltic fronts. Thus was perpetuated, to a con- siderable extent, a rivalry which arose in the Stalingrad campaign. Moreover, it so hap- pened that a disproportion of the commanders and the political figures whose wartime service was centered in the Ukraine were themselves by birth or political career associated with that region. During the postwar Stalin period, some of the "southern" SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PEkSPECTIVES Pave 2 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET 7 July 1960 political and military leaders returned to that area, includ- ing Khrushchev. The military district command in Kiev was first under General Grechko, and later Chuykov; Popov was in the Crimea. Moskalenko not only served with Khrushchev in the Ukraine from 1945 to 1949 but also made a parallel trans- fer to Moscow in 1949. Many other generals from this clique came to serve in Siberia: Malinovsky commanded the Maritime District, and lat- er a broader Far Eastern area command; Krylov, the Far East- ern Military District; and G. Zakharov and Yeremenko, the East and West Siberian Military Districts, respectively. To be sure, Zhukov was himself for many years in distant and minor commands, but the heart of Stalin's senior military com- mand was the Supreme Headquar- ters leadership on which he had learned to rely during the war years: Bulganin, Vasilevsky, Kuznetsov, Antonov, and Shtemen- ko. Even the field commanders and staff officers in favor-- Konev and Govorov, Sokolovsky and Malinin--were men who were not part of the "southern clique" which developed from Stalingrad to the end of the war. ("Clique" is not intended to indicate that this group consciously formed a faction or that it agreed on all issues.) Khrushchev-Zhukov Axis By early 1955, the initial period of the struggle for the succession to Stalin had Premier of the USSR, Relieved February 1955. Member, Party Presidium, Expelled June 1957. CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY N. A. BULGANIN Premier of the USSR, Relieved March 1958. Member, Party Presidium, Expelled September 1958. 1st Deputy Minister of Defense for General Affairs, Retired April 1960. Commander in Chief Warsaw Pact Forces, Retired April 1960. Minister of Defense, Fired October 1957. Member, Party Presidium, Expelled October 1957. 1st Deputy Minister of Defense, Retired April 1960. Chief of the General Staff, Retired April 1960. 1st Deputy Minister of Defense for General Affairs, Relieved June 1956. 1st Deputy Chief of the General Staff, Died January 1960. SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 3 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 closed. The military had, with all other institutions in the USSR, increased in importance on the death of the autocrat. By 1955 it seemed to have won its place in the new post- Stalin order and, with the re- versal of Malenkov's tentative programs, to have gained ac- ceptance of its requirements. At the,, same time that Mal- enkov fell and Khrushchev and Bulganin triumphed, Marshal Zhukov became minister of de- fense. A month later, 12 gen- erals and marshals were pro- moted, including six to the highest rank--marshal of the Soviet Union. Soon after, six more generals were promoted to general of the army. Among those promoted in 1955 were several former close associates of Zhukov and of Konev; but al- so among them were a conspicu- ously large number of members of the "southern clique," pos- sibly included at the instance of Khrushchev. Thus, in 1953 and 1955, Moskalenko was twice raised, to become a marshal of the Soviet Union; Grechko--not at Stalin- grad, but a Ukrainian and long- time close associate of Khru- shchev--was also twice promoted; Chuykov, Yeremenko, and Bargram- yan became marshals; and Krylov, Popov, Kazakov, and G. Zakharov were among the new generals of the army. Also in 1955 Admiral Kuznetsov was relieved and re- placed as naval chief by Admiral Gorshkov, a "southerner" both by wartime and postwar service, and long acquainted with Khru- shchev. The period from February 1955 to October 1957 may be de- scribed as representing an axis between Khrushchev and Zhukov, since each found cooperation with the other useful--until,' toward the end, Khrushchev con- cluded that Zhukov was usurping more than his due role. It was never, of course, a question of equal or shared power--Khru- shchev was always the more pow- erful--but it was an alliance of mutual convenience, born in the early post-Stalin period, in which each enjoyed the sup- port of the other in consol- idating his hold on matters of his own direct concern. Khrushchev was building his personal power within the party, and the power of the party within the state; Zhukov was exercising his authority in developing Soviet military thought and training, and in building a modern military es- tablishment. Ultimately they came to clash over the very is- sue of defining the dividing line between the party authority of the one, and the authority with- in the military sphere of the other. When a new central com- mittee was selected by the 20th party congress in February 1956, the number of military members was reduced--but remarkable fa- vor was shown in the selection of officers from the southern clique. Both Malinovsky and Moskalenko were raised to full membership, although the latter had not even been a candidate member of the previous (1952) central committee, which had included 30 senior military men as members or candidates. Bagramyan, Chuykov, and Yeremen- ko were chosen as candidates. However, there still prevailed a three-way balance among the Moscow headquarters officers, Zhukov's personal rival Konev,.and the southern group; Zhukov be- came the first professional of- ficer to acquire candidate status on the presidium of the party. Both before and after the party congress, the authority of the professional commanders, and of professional military think- ing, had been largely freed from political interference. In late 1955 the position of political officer at company level was SECRET PATTERNS AND PFISPECTIVES Page 4 of 19 -- Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 abolished. Senior officers were permitted to meet their compulsory political education by what was euphemistically termed "self-study." The re- lationship between the party organizations and the profes- sional commanders was, however, in need of clarification. Accordingly, in April 1957, by decree of the central com- mittee, "Instructions to the Soviet Communist Party Organi- zations in the Soviet Army and Navy" were issued, replacing those issued ten years before. This decree, and an accompany- ing order of the minister of defense, marked a compromise between conflicting army and party views on the division of authority. The compromise did not, however, settle the issue; various published articles still emphasized either the restric- tions on the political organs or on the officers, depending on the point of view of the author. At all times, of course, the four lines of command--the professional military, the po- litical administration, the party organization, and the secret police counterintelli- gence--have extended from the ministry itself into every battalion of the armed forces. By 1957 the last three had all declined in influence both ab- solutely and in relation to the professional command cadres. In June 1957 the various opponents of Khrushchev among the party leaders joined in an effort to depose him. Khru- shchev has admitted that the "antiparty group" obtained a majority in the presidium. Khru- shchev refused to accept the decision of this majority, and insisted on carrying the matter to the central committee, which is always heavy with men of the party machine, and which more- over he had "packed" with his supporters at the 20th party congress. It was a critical time for Khrushchev, and although he had the support of many key party officials, it was without ques- tion of great--and conceivably crucial--importance that he also found Marshal Zhukov and the military fully behind him.F_ TZhu- kov, then a full member of the presidium, subsequently spoke- "on behalf of the armed forces" in pledging continued support to the party leaders under Khru- shchev. The Zhukov Ouster This was the high point of the Khrushchev-Zhukov relation- ship. Indeed, these two ap- peared to many to be the most powerful men in the Soviet Un- ion. For this very reason though, could the newly successful party chief permit Zhukov such a posi- tion? In particular, while Zhu- kov had on this occasion extra- legally pledged the army to Khru- shchev's support, could he not on some future occasion attempt to range this power against him? Could party presidium mem- ber Zhukov be permitted to make charged political statements "on behalf of the armed forces"? Khrushchev's wariness of Zhukov's rising power and popularity was one facet of the new situation from June to October 1957. There were two other facets in addi- tion which also affected deeply the civil-military relationship. The flux in internal power relations following the death of Stalin has been alluded to. The professional party apparatus under Khrushchev ultimately came to be dominant, but this was not the case in 1953 or 1955 or indeed 1957. The police had been drastically reduced in power with the purge of Beria. The governmental and managerial bureaucracy was greatly weakened as ;potential .political force by SECRET PATTERNS AND PERKPECTIVES Page 5 of 19 - Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 the two defeats of Malenkov and his associates, and by decen- tralization. However, the party leaders were divided. The mil- itary was affected by these changes by receiving increased relative importance. In particular, under Mar- shal Zhukov, the military was also able to acquire a substan- tial degree of autonomy. The whole trend of his administra- tion was, while not antiparty, nonparty.' "Military science" itself was redefined in terms stressing purely professional military competence. This tendency clashed with the party not because it sought to usurp the political power of the party, but because it sought to make of the military a pro- fessional and self-contained instrument of the state. Khrushchev and the party could not accept this, since their whole aim was to revital- ize the party as the driving force in all activities of society and the state. Pre- cisely the growing tendency toward an autonomous, pro- fessional governmental and eco- nomic bureaucracy, a would-be independent intelligentsia, and a professionally autonomous military establishment was con- sidered by the party a main in- ternal concern. The removal of Marshal Zhukov was accomplished with no overt signs of difficulty, although by a devious strate- gem. Zhukov was sent on a visit to Yugoslavia in October 1957, and, while he was in Bel- grade, a previously unplanned week-long extension of his trip to Albania was announced. Thus Zhukov was kept out of Moscow for a three-week period during which Khrushchev lined up Mal- inovsky and others among the military and political leaders for his removal. On 26 October Zhukov arrived back at Moscow to be met by a military and political delegation which in- formed him of his dismissal from the post of defense minister, a move immediately made public. During the next several days, the public was in the dark on the meaning of this measure, while an apparently extended discussion of the whole matter of military-political re- lations took place in the cen- tral committee. At the end, it was announced on 2 November that Zhukov had also been re- moved from the presidium and the central committee, and he was castigated for fostering a personal cult around himself, and for attempting to "abolish the leadership and control of the party" over the armed forces. Apparently the initial plan had been to shift Zhukov quietly to a post of no real authority, but when he fought the issue there could be no compromise short of his capitulation, disgrace, and complete retirement. The Southerners "Arrive" With the selection of Mar- shal Malinovsky as minister of defense in 1957, the southern- ers "arrived." Khrushchev's old friend Marshal Grechko be- came first deputy minister and commander in chief of ground forces, with General Popov as chief of staff of the ground forces. Marshal (then General) M. Zakharov was at that time transferred to replace Grechko as commander of the Soviet forces in Germany--the prize field; command in the Soviet Army. Marshal Bagramyan was made deputy minister and chief of the rear services for the whole mil- itary establishment, and Marshal Yeremenko was brought to Moscow to head the Higher Military Academy of the General Staff. Moskalenko and Krylov were in command of the key Moscow and Leningrad Military Districts. Admiral Gorshkov remained naval chief. Konev, however, was still SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PEFSPEGTIVES Page 6 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 the senior first deputy minis- ter for general affairs and head of the Warsaw Pact command, and Marshal Sokolovsky remained as first deputy minister and chief of the general staff of the So- viet armed forces. The most recent act of the drama occurred in April 1960, in the wake of dissatisfactions among the military with Khru- shchev's plan for substantial reductions in the armed forces and alterations in force struc- ture, announced in a speech on 14 January. Although others too had reservations, the two leading military men who failed to speak publicly in support of this speech by Khrushchev have developed illnesses leading to their retirement: the senior first deputy ministers, Mar- shals Sokolovsky and Konev. Thus these two remaining "holdovers" from the previous adiniliistration now have been removed. Today; virtually all of the key places in the Soviet mil- itary high command are filled by members of the southern clique. Marshal Grechko as- sumed Konev's post, Marshal M. Zakharov moved into Sokolovsky's place, and Marshal Chuykov moved up from Kiev to Grechko's old position, fourth in the hierarchy, as commander in chief of ground forces. Based on recent listings and their positions, the stand- ing of the top eight military leaders is approximately as follows: Malinovsky, Grechko,; M:. Zakharov, Chuyk ov, Biriu;ov, Bagramyan, Yeremenko, and Mos- kalenko--all members of the southern group. And what of the Moscow group.?' Zhukov, Vasilevsky, Sokolovsky, Antonov, Kuznetsov, Novikov, and Voronov now are all in retirement. Al- though various considerations enter into command appointments, the contrast between the fate of these two major groups has been dramatically and drasti cally.demonstrated. Current Relations The military leaders at present form a more cohesive group of men than in any other recent period, although there probably are personal and serv- ice differences which may give rise to differing attitudes. However, all owe their present status largely to Khrushchev's favor, and presumably he has reason, based now on more than his personal association and ac- quaintanceship, to believe that they are responsive to his trust. While the fortunes of in- dividuals are of interest when they are as persistent and as politically relevant as in the case of Khrushchev's association with the "southern" clique of marshals, the main question re- mains the institutional one. Malinovsky, after all, is a marshal much absorbed with mil- itary interests and charged with defining, advocating, and fulfilling military require- ments. The evolution of the institutional autonomy of the military establishment was not, in fact, basically altered by Zhukov's fall. Inasmuch as one of the key charges against Zhukov was his attempt, to avoid party-polit- ical interference in the sphere of the military--not, of course, expressed in these terms--the regime set out to restore party control at all levels. In what has seemed to many to be a paradoxical move, a few months after Zhukov's ouster- the chief of the Main Political Adminis- tration since 1953, Colonel Gen- eral Zheltov, was replaced by a professional officer, Colonel General (now 'Army ..General) Filip Golikov. In terms of what the regime has attempted to do, however, this move is readily understandable. In the post-Zhukov era, considerable stress has been placed on creating a closer rela- tionship between professional SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PEI:SPECTIVES Page 7 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 and party-political interests. This has been neither easy, nor altogether successful. Nonethe- less, an effort is being made to make professional commanders and staff officers more inter- ested in party-political work, and at the same time to make the political officers and party units better grounded in mil- itary affairs, and their work thus more responsive to real in- terests and needs of the pro- fessionals. A model, if not a goal, of interchangeability has been men- tioned--and indeed personified-- by Golikov, and leading command- ers at lower levels are being urged to assume leadership of local party units. There have been many indications, even in Soviet military newspapers, of a persistent failure to achieve a real rapport between party- political work and professional interests. While the auton- omous interests of the military career officers have not been eliminated, the further prog- ress of their independent de- velopment has been arrested from the strides of early 1955 to late 1957. The "Instructions of the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party to Party Organ- izations in the Soviet Army and Navy" were revised and supple- mented in late 1958 to remove some of the ambiguous allow- ances made in the compromise of early 1957. The main and novel aspect, however, has been the attempt to create, rather than merely to promul- gate, a higher party-political consciousness throughout the armed forces. The higher levels of com- mand have also been affected by the pervasive efforts to estab- lish a closer rapport between the professional commanders and the political and party organs. The institution of the Military Council, with the senior of- ficer of the political adminis- tration in each Military Dis- trict or Army Group as a member along with the two or three senior commanders, has been resurrected since the fall of Zhukov. A new tie of the Mil- itary District to the correspond- ing regional, republic, or oblast party organs has recently been cultivated. Both these developments tend to make the officer corps paral- lel to the local governmental, agricultural, and managerial bu- reaucracies, and less of an auton- omous and self-contained system apart from the surrounding en- vironment and tied only to its own high command in Moscow. The most recent step in the never-ending campaign of polit- ical indoctrination was the "All- Army Conference of Secretaries of Basic Party Units" held in Moscow from 11 to 14 May., Its proceed- ings reveal that the same prob- lems remain--most basically, po- litical apathy in the armed forces--and also that the gen- eral course of counteraction fol- lowed since 1957 continues. In particular, the emphasis on the party organizations is used to bring the professional officers more into the activities of po- litical indoctrination. The present military lead- ers have shown no inclination to resume open "Zhukovism" in party- military relations. The military is called on for its counsel in discussion of appropriate major policy issues, preceding final decision by the presidium and submission to the central com- mittee of the party. Thus its leaders contribute their advice as technical specialists--but not as full-fledged partici- pants in national and foreign policy strategy-making. The military may be given in- creased public prominence in times of tension, when the leaders want to demonstrate military power-- as with Malinovsky's presence at the abortive summit meeting. Such moves should not, however, be tak- en as marking significant fluctua- tions in the situation of the mil- itary within Soviet political coun- cils. SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PER'~;PECTIVES Page 8 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 Reappraisal of Armed Forces From the standpoint of the military leaders, the most sensitive issue since Zhukov's ouster is the party and gov- ernment decision in late 1959 to reduce the size of the armed forces drastically--at a time when their strength was such that only an alteration of their structure would per- mit a major reduction. As since revealed, Khrushchev ob- tained in December 1959 the ap- proval of the central committee of the party--the widest base of policy consultation and sanc- tion in the USSR--for this deci- sion. This program was announced by Khrushchev on 14 January 1960, and it clearly had many internal and external, propa- ganda, economic, and military purposes and implications. It stands out as the first major issue of political-military discord in the post-Zhukov period, and it is significant that even in a matter of such central professional concern to the military leaders, and indeed to the whole career of- ficer corps, the preferences of the political leaders pre- vailed. In the wake of this decision some senior military men, notably Marshals Sokolovsky and Konev, were retired, but the military leaders generally --who must have shared concern over the measure--accepted, endorsed, and implemented the decision. It is pertinent to note, in connection with this deci- sion, that contrary to some Western commentary, Khrushchev did not impose a new military doctrine. The military leaders still remain masters within their domain, and they were ap- parently given the deciding voice in allocating the military reductions and changing the force structure under the polit- ically imposed manpower ceiling. The military undoubtedly did not take the initiative in proposing a severe slash in armed strength. Over the last seven or eight months of 1959, Khrushchev had hinted, especially in private talks with prominent Westerners, that he was planning a: reorganization and reduction in the armed forces and greater emphasis on nuclear-armed mis- siles. Khrushchev has publicly and defensively said that his plan--the military leaders all publicly note that it is his plan--was carefully considered and approved by the General Staff and the military leaders, and this is doubtless so. Still, the terms--an even one-third cut, to a shade under the 2,500,000-troop level of the US armed forces and of cur- rent Western,.~disarmament pro- posals--suggest strongly a politically determined scale of reduction. Khrushchev him- self has privately admitted that there was stiff military opposition to the program. Khrushchev probably called in Malinovsky and his senior deputies and explained the reasons, and the necessity, for a substantial reduction. He presumably would have argued in general terms that the nature of modern weapons, particularly rockets, made such a reduction feasible, and he may well have pointed to the prior US example. In addition, he probably would have argued that war was quite unlikely in the fore- seeable future, and that even granting the premises of cur- rent Soviet military doctrine on extended campaigns in a nu- clear war, the maintenance of a strengthened reserve sys- tem would meet future contin- gencies adequately without the drain of very large standing ground armies, especially in view of the relatively small size of the Western standing SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PE4..,PECTIVES Page 9 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 forces directly confronting them. Khrushchev may well have agreed in principle to the need for a large army, but may have argued that if the prin- ciple were carried to the ex- treme, there would be no civil- ian workers to build tanks or rockets, no young scientists to discover new weapons, no economic and scientific advances to create the necessary politi- cal and ideological trends which give the capitalists pause and give world socialism momen- tum. He may have asked the marshals just how great a su- periority in divisions they needed over the Western powers. Whether or not Khrushchev presented the matter in this way, the arguments which the military finally accepted were presumably (a) that technolog- ical advances permitted or would shortly permit a greater reliance on missiles to perform the missions formerly served by manned bombers, manned fight- ers, fleet heavy-fire-support units, and certain categories of artillery, and (b) that other forces not supplanted by mis- siles could be reduced because the missile deterrent made war less likely and because provi- sion would be made to maintain a superiority in standing forces plus large reserves. Thus the military leaders were able reluctantly to reconcile themselves to support of Khru- shchev's reductions. The circumstance of the retirement of Marshals Sokolov- sky and Konev, following their silence on the new military plan, suggests strongly that they were reluctant in support, even perhaps adamant in opposi- tion, to the Khrushchev program. It may be that the occasion was used to dispose quietly of these remaining exceptions to the dominant clique. Indeed, the recognition of the futility of opposition may well have led Malinovsky and his close col- leagues to decide very early in the game that they should let Sokolovsky and Konev bear the brunt of presenting the military's case, and then move in to support Khrushchev, thus prompting him to remove those who were out of step. In this manner, Khrushchev could be induced to do what he ordinarily might have been re- luctant to do: destroy an in- ternal balance and place the High Command in the hands of one clique. At the same time, Khrushchev was probably ready to permit Malinovsky and his associates in the military leadership to determine the way in which the reductions would be applied. There are no indications that "service rivalries" have entered the military-political relationship, although in a sense they are bound to play a part in the apportionment of reductions. Interservice ri- valries may have existed, and may now exist, within the Soviet military establishment on a wider scale than appears, but such rivalries cannot be ex- pected to reach a major scope and intensity. One reason is historical tradition, the land-oriented, continental horizon of the Russian military and the long dominance of the ground soldiers. A second is political, the severe limitations on the de- velopment of any point of view, almost anywhere in Soviet society, which has not been sanctioned by the party leaders,. More- over, the nature of the politi- cal system does not encourage the belief that such an en- deavor, even in private and still less in public, would be in the national interest. Third is a sociological and psychological phenomenon-- SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PER aPECTIVES Page 10 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 the difficulty of developing new ideas in the absence of their expression, debate, and refinement, and the further difficulty in the unofficial adoption of these ideas by some service minority. Finally, the ideological-political founda- tion of Soviet military thought is based on conviction of the need and value of a balanced and varied military capability, thus not inducing interest in theories proclaiming the superi- ority or self-sufficiency of any service. In any case, the only "serv- ice" to have its fortunes ad- vanced was the long-range rock- et command. Khrushchev pub- icly disclosed on 9 May that Chief Marshal of Artillery Nedelin had been named com- mander in chief of the Rocket Troops, and from a variety of sources it now is fairly clear that Nedelin's command is roughly coequal with the ground, air, air defense, and naval com- ponents of the Soviet armed forces. While the implication is that Nedelin's appointment is recent, this may or may not be so. In May 1959 he was promoted to chief marshal of Artillery, and ever since 1955 he has been a deputy min- ister of defense with unknown responsibilities in the missile field. In the most recent list- ings of military chiefs, the changed precedence of names of deputy ministers suggests that the rocket force--and the political administration--have advanced over, and at the ex- pense of, the navy and air forces. The dominance of ground force generals is, if anything, strengthened. Many officers of all major branches of service are af- fected directly by their impend- ing release from service. Malin- ovsky's indication that in all a quarter of a million officers will be released reflects the scale of the problem and sug- gests the scope of concern in the officer corps. The regime has shown its awareness of the problem in several ways, chief- ly by promulgating a series of laws which will grant those relieved extended severance pay and preferential treatment in education, housing, and employ- ment. Still, the prospects are not encouraging to middle-age, middle-rank professional of- ficers too young to retire and too old to start a new career. This is without doubt a con- tributory consideration in the lack of enthusiasm of the mili- tary leaders for the new look. A second measure that the regime has taken to mute this dissatisfaction is the publicly announced promotion on 7 May of about 300 generals and ad- mirals. The promotion lists included 19 new three-star colonel generalcies, of which 13 were ground force, 4 were air force, and 2 were political administration. As additional compensa- tion, it is possible that certain functions of the dissolved Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) may have been transferred to the Ministry of Defense, in particular general authority over the local civil defense organizations and perhaps over some of the Internal Troops. Also, while the Border Guards are under the Committee of State Security (KGB), they now may have a close relation to the armed forces as well. Finally, the party set out in a major internal propaganda campaign, especially within the military establishment, to justify the reductions in mili- tary terms, to show solicitude for the released veterans, and above all to remind everyone of the infallible wisdom and SECRET PATTERNS AND PEF-PECTIVES Page 11 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 irreversible resolve of the par- ty in military as in all other walks of Soviet life. As in the previous case of a possibly delicate reaction, after Zhu- kov's removal, senior party leaders--Suslov, Brezhnev, Ignatov, and others--were sent to address troop meetings called to demonstrate solidarity in support of the party's decision. This brief sketch of devel- opments suggests that Khru- shchev proposed a major reduc- tion in the armed forces, that the military was generally not in:favor, but with a few impor- tant exceptions accepted the new policy; that a few key personnel shifts, internal propaganda, and appropriate material com- pensations were provided to deal with lingering dissatisfac- tions; and that there was no crisis in military-political relations. The U-2 Affair Into this situation plunged the ill-fated U-2 reconnaissance plane on 1 May. It is diffi- cult in the tangle of assorted debris left from its crash to extricate the military influ- ences on Soviet policy, but several considerations probably have played a part, According- ly, this discussion will at- tempt to infer the role of the military in influencing Soviet policy from 1 May to 15 May,. the period of the initial sharp reaction to the U-2 incident and to its aftermath. The four days preceding Khrushchev's public disclosure of the incident on 5 May doubt- less saw extended discussion among both military and polit- ical leaders on how to treat the affair. Regardless of precise events, the military leaders probably held a "hard" position, at least on exploiting the incident it- self; they may or may not have spoken on the broader issue of the general line of foreign policy. There have been no hints that, say, Mikoyan, or indeed anyone, favored any course of action other than that adopted. At this stage, the Soviet leaders probably did not expect the United States to acknowledge the overflights, and in addi- tion let the world know that they had been going on for four years. This disclosure, plus the boomerang effect of exces- sive Soviet boasting, doctored accounts, and an apparently false photograph of the wreck- age, instead of boosting the image of Soviet air defense capabilities as the Soviet mili- tary and political' .eaders prob- ably had expected, on the con- trary cast widespread doubts and aspersions on Soviet military prowess and ability. One small indication of possible initial inclinations of the military in this period was a Ministry of Defense re- quest on 2 May to General White for a postponement of the planned announcement of Chief Air Marshal Vershinin's scheduled visit to the United States. By 3 May it was back "on" again. Clearly the authorities had decided at that stage not to let the U-2 incident disrupt the visit. On 7 May the composition of the Vershinin group was given, and on 9 May Khrushchev told Ambassador Thompson that Ver- shinin's trip would proceed as planned. As late as 11 May word was sent announcing the new ranks of three of the men in the delegation, who had been among those promoted on 7 May. Sud- denly, on 13 May, the visit was canceled. The events from 2 25X1 to 13 May doubtless reflected the developing political decision on the summit and general policy posture. SECRET PATTERNS AND PER< PECTIVES Page. 12' of, 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 It is not known whether the military exerted any par- ticular "pressure" for the adoption of a "hard line" to- ward the US prior to 11 May, when the statements of US re- sponsibility by Secretary Herter and the President evidently led to a change in Khrushchev's own position on current policy tactics. There are two indi- cations in Khrushchev's im- promptu remarks at the Czech Embassy reception on the eve- ning of 9 May which suggest either that such pressure was being exerted or that Khru- shchev wanted to head off any possible pressure before it arose. First, he went out of his way to castigate the military for failing to shoot down an intruding airplane on 9 April. According to Pravda, Khrushchev said: "On 9 April the recon- naissance plane should have been shot down. But our military, speaking softly, let the chance slip by. And we had, so to speak, to lecture them over that." Second., he gratuitously raised an issue when he asserted --as he had on 7 May--that the American "provocations" had not and would not make any change in the Soviet plan for a reduc- tion in the armed forces, and that in fact the USSR would probably make still further re- ductions in the more distant future. He noted in a patroniz- ing public aside that General of the Army Zhadov--first deputy commander in chief of the ground forces--was scratching his head in wonderment at this indica- tion of still more reductions. Pravda reported Khrushchev's remarks as follows: "We not only insist on the necessity for re- ducing the armed forces, but. even now--without waiting for such decisions by the Western powers-- we are unilaterally re- ducing the armed forces of the Soviet Union by one third. When we have reduced the armed forces to 2,400,000 men, after a bit, we will think it over and probably will re- duce our army still fur- ther. There, Comrade Zhadov is scratching the back of his head--'Again,' he says, 'reductions:' (Gay animation in the audience)No, that won't happen yet, Com- rade General, but later. (Gay animation, laughter)." In sum, any pressure the military may have sought or been tempted to exert up to 10 May would appear to have been ineffectual. Apparently, from 10 to 12 May the Soviet position was fluid and open, as Moscow awaited and assessed the unfold- ing American publicity on the theme of officially sanctioned and justified intelligence col- lection. There is no indication that the military was even in- volved, much less instrumental, in the decision to torpedo the summit, apparently reached sometime between 12 and 14 May. It is likely that Khrushchev himself--taking account among other things of the attitudes of his political and military colleagues--made the decision. There is no indication that the military leaders were in a position to exert pressure, beyond such indirect influence as occurred in the weighing of their preferences by Khru- shchev himself. On the other hand, there is no evidence that they have not had opportunity in high councils to lend their voices to the deliberations of the political leaders. The military has not, however, shown signs of a SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PER:3PECT IVES Page 13 of, 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 consistently hard position to- ward the US. On 17 May Marshal Bagramyan and Marshal of Avia- tion Rudenko, in talking with a US Embassy officer at a recep- tion, were most friendly, re- laxed, and moderate in comments on the U-2 incident and Soviet- American relations. Also, Chief Air Marshal Vershinin's letter of 13 May "postponing" his trip to the US was moderate. At a lat= 4r? reception, on 25 May, the US air and army attaches were singled out by Soviet officers with friendly comments and a strong hint that Vershinin might soon be ready to come as a symbolic step ending the tem- porary breach caused by the re- cent incidents. These and other remarks indicate a readiness on the part of the military to avoid tensions in East-West relations, but probably are not inconsist- ent with their opposition to large force cuts, to real dis- armament agreements, and to pos- sible Soviet experiments in al- tering the status quo of the military occupation in Eastern Europe. The fact that Marshal Mal- inovsky accompanied Khrushchev to Paris raises the question of his role there. Based on infer- ence and on what is known of Malinovsky's behavior, it would appear that his chief function was as a visible symbol of So- viet military might, and perhaps additionally as a witness to Khrushchev's dealings. If this latter function was performed, there is strong reason to as- sume Khrushchev himself so wished it. It is possible, al- though less likely, that a ma- jority of the political leaders wanted such a witness. Least likely of all is the possibility that the military would have monitored Khrushchev's behavior on its own behalf. Malinovsky's relative prom- inence in giving several recent public or published addresses may indicate some increased voice in speaking for the So- viet leaders, but this is also quite explicable in terms of the need for creating both in the West and in the USSR itself the impression of Soviet mil- itary strength, ability, and resolution. Malinovsky has firmly reiterated support for the general coexistence line, and has said nothing which suggests reservations or re- versals on such issues as the reduction in the armed forces. He has spoken, most re- cently and most emphatically on 29 May, in lyrical terms of Khrushchev's marvelous qual- ities as a leader, and crediting him personally with all major policies--at the same time he announced the policy of rocket retaliation against reconnais- sance overflight bases. Future Prospects There is no reason to be- lieve that the role of the mil- itary in Soviet decision-making has changed, or is likely to change, in any significant way. At times of increased tension, it is not surprising that they should be given greater prom- inence, and also that on certain issues their advice should carry greater weight. It does not ap- pear, however, that they are exerting any significant influ- ence on the determination of the general line, or even on the key current questions most directly affecting military pol- icy: a ban on nuclear weapons tests, and the scheduled unilat- eral reduction of the armed forces. All the reasons which led Khrushchev and the party, after evidently extended considera- tion and coordinated examination with the military, to decide on a major unilateral cut still pre- vail. Even if the general prop- aganda line is somewhat harder, there is neither an indication nor evident reason for a change SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND P&.SPECT IVES Pare 14 of ' 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 in plans to stimulate the growth of the economy, keep down ris- ing military costs, reduce an excessively large standing army, and dispense with obsolescent air and naval weapons. It is possible that recent and future events may affect some intended reductions (e.g., in possible partial withdrawals from Eastern Europe), but it is not likely that events to date have affected even such plans; reductions are; in fact, `.being'., made... Finally, in the unlikely event that a major change of line--which would probably in- volve the replacement of Khru- shchev--were to occur, it is likely that military leaders would get an increased voice on issues directly affecting mil- itary policy. It is most unlike- ly, however, that they would be the:: chief motive force in securing the change of line, or that they would emerge as the dominant element in a new re- gime. SOVIET TECHNOLOGY The Soviet Union, which launched an ambitious industrial modernization program in June 1959, has scheduled a central committee plenum for 13 July to review progress and give addi- tional guidance for promoting technological advances. This year's plenum will probably Difficulties in introducing advanced machinery as seen by Krokodil. praise the satisfactory produc- tion record of Soviet industry, the general overfulfillment to date of Seven-Year Plan indus- trial and productivity goals, and the determination to com- plete the plan ahead of schedule. Fifteen- and 20-year plan goals, said by Khrushchev last fall to ,be in preparation, may be discussed in more detail. However, the plenum will probably criticize accomplish- ments to date, for few of the specific tasks assigned a year ago appear to have been fulfilled. While the USSR is more advanced in some cases than the West in theoretical knowl- edge of automation, it lags behind appre- ciably in the appli- cation of automatic controls to industry. On 31 May, at the Com- munist Labor Brigade Conference, Khrushchev warned, "While we are solving tasks concern- ing the growth of pro- duction... serious SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 15 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 problems still exist as regards quality... including questions of production costs, cost ac- counting, and reduction of pro- duction waste..., and new gains of science and technology." This is virtually the same list of problems which were singled out by the plenum for remedial action last year. Progress in these fields is especially important if the ambitious gains in industrial productivity envisaged during the Seven-Year Plan period are to be achieved. Such gains are necessary to compensate for smaller additions to the labor force--a result of the low World War II and postwar birth rates-- and to permit fulfillment of the program to reduce the workweek. Level of Industrial Technology Soviet industry has demon- strated a capability to incor- porate advanced techniques in- to the rapidly expanding indus- trial base of the USSR. In many areas of heavy industry, which long has been accorded the high- est priority, technological im- provements on a par with the best in the West have been in- troduced. In some cases, as in blast furnaces, petroleum ex- traction, machine building, and pre-stressed concrete, the Soviet Union has made notable pioneer- ing adaptations and developments. The food-processing, textile, and other light industries, how- ever, are far behind. Certain types of transport, civil tele- communications, and some aspects of construction have been ac- corded only grudging attention, and many technological practices in these areas are similar to those followed in the West 25 years ago. Within certain industries, technological development has also been uneven. In the Donets coal basin, large sums have been spent on automating operations on the surface, but the under- ground transport of coal is so poor that one Soviet official complained that more workers are needed to extract 1,000 tons of coal now than in prewar years. A Soviet economist stated early this year that Soviet plants em- ploy 2.8 times as many auxiliary workers to produce a ton of steel --in transportation, maintenance, and inspection--as do their Amer- ican counterparts. Plants op- erating the most up-to-date machinery must frequently fab- ricate spare parts themselves, and material often must be moved from one point in the production process to the next by hand or by cart. Generally speaking, the USSR has sufficient scientific knowledge, but its ability to apply it to industry is dependent on favorable circumstances. Many factors peculiar to the Soviet economic system have led to the uneven application of technology. Technological improvements, for example, are sometimes directed toward political objectives, and progress in modernization is gauged by a scale of values different from that of the West. Central directives hereto- fore have emphasized increased output rather than increased quality and efficiency, and thus they have tended to discourage the introduction of new tech- niques which might temporarily disrupt production. The direc- tives have also inspired a con- servatism in plant management which often has resulted in a considerable lag between devel- opment and practical application. These factors have frequently led to the retention of existing capacity and the operation of technologically outmoded plants much longer than is the case in the West. Furthermore, research planning and experimental work have often been poorly coordi- nated with the requirements of production. Soviet industry has tradi- tionally used relatively more labor and less capital than com- parable industries in the US. SECRET PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 16 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 In the aggregate, for example, the USSR's industrial output is less than half that of the US, although its industrial labor force is about 20 percent larg- er. Tasks Assigned by 1959,Plenum To combat these problems, a plenum of the party central committee in June 1959 outlined a comprehensive program to im- prove the economic and adminis- trative environment which was hampering modernization. A number of tasks were assigned to various government and party agencies, and about one third of these were to be completed by specified times ranging from the end of August last year to 1 January 1960. Gosplan and the minister of finance were to submit to the USSR Council of Ministers by 1 September proposals for im- proving conditions for financ- ing the introduction of new ma- chinery--including the improve- ment of bank credit, the allo- cation of material resources, and the establishment of correct prices--an especially complex problem in the USSR. Economic stimuli to encourage enterprises and construction organizations to introduce new technology, and workers to adopt new technology, were to be drawn up by 1 Novem- ber. Branches of industry and construction were ordered to draft standardized regulations for bringing experimental models USSR AGENCIES CONCERNED WITH INDUSTRIAL MODERNIZATION AND TECHNICAL PROGRESS State Planning Committee (Gosplan) State Scientific - Technical Council State Scientific - Economic Council State Committee on Problems of Labor and Wages Ministry of Higher and Secondary Specialized Education State Committees for... Machine - building and Automation Defense Technology Radio Electronics Aviation Technology Chemistry Shipbuilding SECRET Planning staff of the USSR Council of lsinisters. Responsible for developing state economic plans--including all investment programs necessary for technical innovation --and for monitoring their implementation. Rust also provide for shifts in plan relationships which arise from technical progress and promote such progress through its planning. Responsible for developing and administering programs for "basic" scientific re- search; these may result in practical applications involving technological innovation. Its institutes are responsible upon request for research and development in direct support of technical innovation. Responsible for working out and coordinating programs for developing, storing, and disseminating scientific and technical information for which it exploits foreign and domestic literature. Acts as an advisory body to the USSR Council of Ministers on scientific and technical problems. Now reported to be handling long-term economic planning. has been responsible for coordinating economic research, especially for providing theoretical support to planning organs in technical economic matters. Develops methods for planning to take account of technical progress and to promote it. Responsible for developing and coordinating programs of wage incentives which take adequate account of technical advance and which foster it; works with planning, administrative, and trade union organs on matters of norms, working conditions, working hours, and wages. Responsible for controlling wage payments and authorizations; through operations of of the State Bank (Cosbank),audits most expenditures for materials, labor, machinery and equipment, research contracts, etc., in support of technical innovation and in- vestment programs. Responsible for training scientific and technical cadres; its network of scientific research institutes--often adminstered jointly with industrial enterprises--is a valuable asset promoting Soviet technical progress. In their respective fields, these state committees are responsible for promoting the adoption of new techniques, supporting the planning bodies with technical advice On investment and innovation programs, and coordinating training programs and career development. PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 17 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 of new machines into series pro- duction and to establish the priorities and time limits for carrying out work on integrated automation. Proposals for re- lating scientific research to industrial problems--a recur- ring demand--were to be sub- mitted by the end of 1959. Technical Committee reported that 50 percent more measures for the introduction of new technology were carried out in 1959 than in 1958 and that, throughout the national econ- omy, series production of more than 400 new types of machines had been started. The deadlines have all passed with few announcements of progress, possibly because many of the deadlines were not met. Only two specific meas- ures are known to have been adopted. One of these was the passage of new bonus regula- tions for industrial managers, supervisors, and technicians in most branches of heavy industry and state agriculture which re- ward those who reduce production costs and, in certain industries, improve product quality. Bonuses for cost reduction are contingent on simultaneous fulfillment of the production plan, the labor productivity plan, and the plan for deliv- eries. The new system probably will succeed in making Soviet managers and supervisors more cost-conscious and thereby should also encourage a more receptive attitude toward new production techniques. A second major step in the implementation of the decisions of the June 1959 plenum appears to have occurred with the pub- lication on 2 July of a decree providing for a new system of bonuses to be paid to managerial and technical personnel taking a direct part in the creation and introduction of new produc- tion equipment and to the work- ers operating such equipment. A less direct influence of the June 1959 plenum, although probably of minor significance with only local application, is apparent in decrees reportedly issued by numerous sovnarkhozy to implement last year's plenum decisions. In April the chair- man of the :State Scientific- Since last year's plenum, there have also been a number of conferences devoted to the tasks set forth at that time. The Siberian branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences held an all-union conference on the automation of control and meas- uring technology in industry last September. Early this April, the State Scientific- Technical Committee convened a meeting to consider the prob- lems of introducing new tech- nology and of correcting short- comings in the application of technology already adopted. A conference to consider wage and bonus legislation to promote new technology was con- vened in Moscow the same month, and in June an All-Union Con- ference of Agricultural special- ists considered the problems of improving the mechanization of farm operations. At the First International Congress for Auto- matic Control which opened in Moscow on 27 June, Soviet tech- nologists put on an impressive show for Western delegates, un- derscoring the excellence of their theoretical knowledge, which in some cases is more ad- vanced than that of the West. The main emphasis of the meeting, however, is on the in- dustrial applications of auto- matic controls; in practical application, the USSR Is appar- ently appreciably behind the West. The signs of progress are accompanied by many de- ficiencies which troubled the regime on the eve of the June 1959 plenum and have not been appreciably reduced. In March a sovnarkhoz chair- man complained of extraordinary SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 18 of 19 - Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 7 July 1960 slowness in putting new tech- nology into practice. "It is no secret ... that/plant managers7 concerned with fulfillment of the production plan avoid in- novations...the introduction of which entails some loss of working time and cutting of production output at the out- set...." In the May issue of the Soviet journal Problems of Economics, an economist noted that despite last year's admo- nitions by the plenum "it is a frequent fact that when an en- terprise introduces new tech- nology, payments for labor wor- sen,. in comparison with work- ers in enterprises still under the old technology.." 60. According to the chairman of the State Scientific-Techni- cal Committee at an automation conference in April, many Union republics and ministries failed to fulfill plans for producing new machines during 1959. It was pointed out that out of 76 major technological improvements planned in the iron and steel industry of the RSFSR during 1959, only some 40 were implemented, and work was not even begun on 16. At the same meeting, one delegate com- plained that it was almost im- possible to exercise control over the great number of modernization projects the RSFSR's sovnarkhozy had been expected to introduce in SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 19 of 19 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 25X1 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9 Approved For Release 2008/05/13: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02800040001-9