THREAT OF TOUGH ECONOMIC WAR SEEN IN RUSSIA'S GREAT INDUSTRIAL STRIDES

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP70-00058R000100130078-1
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 17, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 3, 2000
Sequence Number: 
78
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 22, 1956
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP70-00058R000100130078-1.pdf120.25 KB
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WASHINGTON STAR JUL 2 2 1956 FOIAb3b Approved For Release 2000/08/24: CIA-RDP70-00058R00010013 Threat of Tough Economic War Seen In Russia's Great Industrial Strides , C PR.1T A. REICHHMANN I Russia's tremendous .,_ industrial development since the end of World War II is causing some of President Eisenhower's top policy adviso/s to consider the possibility that the cold war of threats and propa- sanda is becoming history's most :spectacular economic war. Information being received here through both open and secret channels indicates that Ic emlin leaders are now ready to pursue that , phase of the Marxist revolu- tion designed to establish Russia as the world's greatest economic power. Since the death of Stalin, the Iron Curtain has parted enough to The displays from Ole United States have been big drawing cards wnereverk they have appeargd., In New Delhi, India, they far$utshone the Russidn exhibits, These d'eih- oi strationS of the fr~lts of Ameri- d can industry have been displaye in. 34 countries around the word establish that the Soviet Union is The probl of Soviet expa*on no longer an agricultural nation is increased y the fact that 'the but an industrial one. Soviet Union Is using {',tt s expanding The nature of information being power to produce capital goods received here was disclosed by rather than concentrating on con- Allen W.-, Dulles, director ,off, t4 Sumer goods. Central Intelli&ence 'Agency, in a The Soviet's extensTbn of a loan speech carried in part by the Sun- of $100 million to Afghanistan and day Star several mopth5 ago. the building of an airport there In that speech, yylles~ ?_ re M_-, are examples of the new economic ported that Russia has become the offensive and. no doubi$ a deep im- second greatest industrial power in pression was "created in India when the world, with gross national pro- Moscow offered a steel mill and duction slightly more thak one- third that' of the United States and production of capital goods alone about 45 per cent of 61ws. Therefore- the Question is not so much whether but when the Com- munist world will be able to chal- lenge the West for industrial lead- ership. Some observers think it will come in 10 or 15 years,,within the lifetime of present Kremlin leaders. Business Is Not Concerned Representatives of business 'ors ganizations with,W)IQm this subject was discussed expressed the view that the present high rate of Amer- ican industrial expansion will, prove sufficient to meet the Soviet threat, The trade fair9 which arie be- coming increasingly common abroad are becoming arenas in which the products of American and Rusian industrialism can compete. Ameri- can industry had been reluctant to take part in the fairs, Writing them off as a waste of tirze But Com- merce Secretary Sinclair Weeks set up an office of International Trade Fairs in his department in Febru- ary, 1955, and since then many American industries have sent samples and exhibits, the development of United States industry. Rely.on Industry iii' accordance with the American system of free enterprise, private industry must be relied on to supply the heavy industrial capacity under the impetus of consumer demand and the competitive system. Plans have already been an- nounced by Ford,: General Motors, American Teleph6ne & P91egraph and other companies 'for multi- billion dollar plant expansion. Steel, plastics, fiber gla.0, Dulp and paper, aluminum, and a1-host of other industries plan expansion. F. W. Dodge & Co. reports that in the first six months of 1956 new con- struction contracts reached a new high of $13.2 billion. Undoubtedly the Federal Govern- m.ent's interest in the country's in- dustrial growth Will expand against the day then the economic struggle begins in earnest between the Com- munist world and the world of free enterprise. For that will be a struggle to determine whether the profit system can hold its own against a collective economy. i?t r'ated that textile,' eaving ma- efilies were available, In the last cast there was little note of the fact that nssian credit terms for the sale of he steel mill were far more stringent than is exacted by the Unit d mates for such aid. Nor was he feet Men- tiorled that this ind strio,l e" ufp- m$Cit was outrrroded n Russia due tq. the plannet adop4 ion of auto- mation. Nonetheless , these tl'lbves had. propaganda value. , The United States has, confined itself largely to a wait-and-see re- onse to the Red offgnsiye. "Our approach," one official said, "is not to compete with the Soviet Union on particular projects. Such 'victories' are `only temporary. "In the end, yr believq the rda'ss of tienple of ese cotntries will appreciate the more the assistance we have given them in building themselves up through technical assistance, education and health programs." Long-Range Plans Not Feasible The problem of long-range planning in this canntry to keep ahead of Russia is a complex one. No blueprint can be laid out for Approved For RPIPagp 2000/OR/24 - (IA-RfP70-0005RR00010013007R4I