Afro-Asian Solidarity Conference, Cairo 26 December 1957 - 1 January 1958

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4
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RIPPUB
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C
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47
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 2, 1997
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13
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Publication Date: 
December 10, 1957
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DISP
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Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt 25X1X7 25X1A9a 25X1A2d2 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Rele,e 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009+14000700150013-4 THE ASIAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE ROM FILE D , it Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Relse 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009t8R000700150013-4 .CONTENTS I. Origin. A. Historical Background, 1. World Conference for the Relaxation of International Tension, June 1954. Page 1 2. Plenary Session of the Worl_d.Peace Council (WPC), November 1954. 4 3. The Conference of Asian Countries, 6-10 April 1955, New Delhi, India, 5 B, C. Sponsorship. Aims and Purposes. II, Organizational Structure and Officers, A. B. Headquarters Organization. National Committees. 1. Japan 16 2. China 19 3. India 21 4. The Soviet Union 27 5. North Korea 29 6. North Vietnam 29 7. Burma 30 8. Indonesia 30 9, Ceylon 30 C. Relations With Other Communist Fronts and With National Communist Parties. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0045R000700150013-4 III. Action Program and Implementation. 34 A, Activities of the Indian Committee. 34 B. Activities of the .Japanese Committee. 37 C. Activities of Other National Committees. 37 D. The Asia-Africa Review. 38 IV. :Potential Effectiveness of the Asian Solidarity Committee. 40 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Releasre 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009'Y4000700150013-4 THE ASIAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE (ASC) 1.. The Asian Solidarity Committee (ASC) is a new, major Com- munist front organization, conceived and created by the World Peace Council (WPC). It is the first front to be organized on a regional basis, rather than on the basis of a profession, class, group or issue, In a sense it might be termed a front for a front, since it seemed originally destined to replace the WPC in Asia and Africa., As it has developed, however, its work appears rather to be supplemental to that of the WPC, or perhaps it is the first step in the reorganization of the "peace" move- ment on a regional basis. 2. The ASC has endeavored, with considerable success, to bring into its ranks numbers of non-Communists, although Communist control is ensured by the presence of party members and fellow-travellers in key positions, The fact that participation by members of legislative bodies of Asian governments has been sought and in some cases achieved may indicate plans to win for the ASC a quasL officiar status in these countries, to exert the influence of the ASC upon the formulation of government policies, and even to appear to speak for such governments. 3. The purposes of the ASC are to provide an environment in which Communists can win acceptance by non-Communist nationalist forces, to exploit the issues of independence, neutralism and anti-colonialism in support of Sino-Soviet foreign policy goals, and to aid in the elimi- nation of Western influence in Asia and Africa. The targets are non- Communist nationalist intellectuals, political leaders, and workers who may be vulnerable to the appeals of an ostensibly non-Communist organization based on traditional themes of racial. pride and unity, neutralism, and hostility to the West, Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Rel%,se 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00944R000700150013-4 THE ASIAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE 1, ORIGIN The Asian Solidarity Committee (ASC) originated in April 1955 in New Delhi, India, at a conference which originally was called the Asian Conference for Relaxation of International Tension., a title later changed to the Conference of Asian Countries, in order to dis- sociate it from its actual sponsor, the Communist World Peace Coun- cil (WPC), The first suggestion of such an Asian meeting, to be convened by the Asian delegates to the earlier meeting, was made at the World Conference for the Relaxation of International Tension, held in Stockholm in June 1954. An Asian meeting was discussed again at a WPC meeting in November of that year in the same city. A, Historical Background (1) World Conference for the Relaxation. of International Tension, June 1954 This conference was reportedly first proposed by WPC Vice Presi- dent Pietro Nenni at a WPC session in Vienna in. November 1953, but the first organizational steps for the gathering were taken at a meeting of representatives of various French political parties in May 1954, The project was then taken up by representatives of pacifist forces in many countries. The World Conference for the Relaxation of International Tension was a noticeable departure from previous "peace" meetings which openly fulfilled their role as propaganda events, It was obvious that the Communist policy for this conference was to make no direct propaganda out of it, and to conceal the WPC sponsor- ship, although care was taken to insure WPC control. * Invitees were Of the twenty individuals chosen to act as the official committee for the event, five were from Communist-controlled countries, and seven more had connections with Communist front organizations. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009 5R000700150013-4 p _ o zli.sed nothing would be published concerning the meeting except by unanimous consent of the delegates. Headquarters, set up in Stockholm prior to the meeting, Issued no statements. Mr. Duncan Jones, former secretary of the British peace committee but.at the time of the meeting a full-time WPC employee serving in the tem- porary Stockholm office, answ :.d no phone calls, received no visitors, and made none of the usual strident Communist propaganda statements. Speeches at the conference were much more restrained than at previous "peace" meetings.. Although nothing was said in any way critical of the Soviet Union, an attempt was made to appear impartial and to avoid blatant abuse of the West, except in a. few cases. Ac- tually, the proceedings seemed to be the first reflection of a warning Pierre Cot, editor of the WPC publication Horizons, had given con:. cerning the near-failure of the Vienna Peoples for Peace Congress in. December 1952--that the organization would have to adopt new methods and speak a new language if it was to be successful in attract- ing new audiences. The general resolutions of the Relaxation Con- ference repeated the main Communist themes: peaceful. coexistence, admission of Communist China to the UN, a ban on tests and use of atomic weapons, limitation and control of armaments, expansion of East-West trade, cultural exchange, "free" elections for Korea,. and resumption of negotiations on Germany. In addition, appeals were addressed to the UN on Guatemala (much in the headlines at the time), and to the Summit Conference demanding a cease-fire in Indochina. This World Conference for the Relaxation of International Ten- sion marked a high point in Communist efforts to enlist non-Com-- munist.support for a program whose hidden purpose is to further Soviet international designs. It succeeded to a greater extent than such meetings had for several years, although, surrounded with secrecy as it was, it is difficult to determine the full extent of non- Communist participation. Among the 200 delegates claimed by the Communists (150 is probably nearer the truth) were many prominent persons not generally associated with the WPC or the Communist. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Reluse 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0091'8R000700150013-4 movement. For instance, there were sixteen Diet members in the Japanese delegation of forty persons. Nevertheless, the attendance was a disappointment to the organizers, as is revealed in one of the, resolutions which stated: It. , . the participants of this Meeting:.... regret that the invitation sent out by the organizers has not been more widely followed in certain circles of certain countries. They agree to make known in their respective countries the conclusions to which they have been led and they decide to instigate at the beginning of the year 1955 a new Meeting which should be still larger than this one. The Meeting charges its Bureau and Secretariat to make all useful arrangements, " As yet this new meeting has not materialized. Instead of focusing attention on the dissemination of mass pro- paganda after the usual pattern of peace meetings, this conference was both experimental and organizational in nature--trying out a new form of camouflage, and laying down a different approach to future activities, particularly in Asia. Asians and their problems were prominently featured both in person and in discussions. Although it was not an official resolution, a "communique" issued by the conferees announced the plan for an Asian. Conference to Relax International Tension. Tass reported, as early after the conference as 28 June, a statement of Professor YOICHI Fukushima, leader of the Japanese delegation, that the Indian, Chinese, and Japanese delegations had met separately and discussed in principle the proposal. for an All-Asian conference at which measures aimed at the alleviation of tension in. Asia could be cons idered. On Z4 August, Akahata, the official organ of the JCP, announced that Asian delegates to the Stockholm conference were calling an "Asian Peace Congress" in India in November. The leader of the Indian delegation, Mrs. Rameshwari Nehru (relative by marriage of the Prime Minis- ter), upon her return to New Delhi confirmed that "on the initiative Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Releese 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009,,R000700150013-4 R-11.1 1_1 1PR" of the Indian delegation" the conference had decided to explore the possibilities of holding a conference of Asian countries in order to create a climate of peace based on the?Panch Shi.i.a -the five prin- ciples agreed upon by Nehru and CHOU En~~lai. She stated that the Stockholm meeting "was not sponsored by Communists. (2) Plenary Session of the World Peace Council (WPC), November 1954 Perhaps partially to maintain the fiction that the June meeting was not a WPC activity, a month later invitations were issued by the WPC for a plenary session in November, also to take place in Stockholm. Again, Asian problems were prominent, as these items of the agenda indicate: (a) The situation in various parts of As La as. a result of foreign pressure and the establishment of a system of blocs and war coalitions; and, (b) A resolution on the situation arising in the dependent and semi.-dependent countries as a result of foreign pressure and the system of military blocs and coali- tions, In addition, the agenda suggested by this session of the council for a "Great World Assembly of the Forces for Peace" to. be held in May 1955 (actually held in Helsinki in June 1955) devoted three of its four items to. Asian subjects: (a) US intervention in Southeast Asia; (b) The struggle against colonial regimes,; (c) Peaceful coexistence; and the "five principles" governing relations between China, on the one hand, and India and Burma, on the others Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Relapse 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00944R000700150013-4 This important WPC session made no offic!al, announcement of an Asian conference, but Romesh Chandra (member of the Indian CP Central Committee, member of the WPC Bureau, and former editor of Crossroads, Indian Communist publication.), revealed at a dinner party given for the Indian delegation during the Conference by the Chinese mission in Stockholm that an "Asian Conference for the Relaxation of International Tension" would be held in New Delhi in February or March 1955. Arrangements for it were in the hands of an Indian Preparatory Committee and "other Asian people. (3) The Conference of Asian Countries, 6.10 Aril 1955, New Delhi, India After some preliminary national appointments, a preparatory group met in New De].hi 9-10 February 1.955 to set up a Secretariat, a date and venue, and to outline the aims and. objectives for the Conference of Asian Countries, as this projected meeting was now becoming known. This group, which named Mrs. Rameshwari Nehru as chairman, consisted of representatives from Burma, Ceylon, India, Japan, North Korea, and Syria. New Zealand reportedly was represented by an "observer". Two Israeli delegates who came were "persuaded" not to attend lest their presence dissuade Arab delegates from participating in the conference. Messages of support were received from the Chi se People's Republic, Indonesia, Israel, North Vietnam, and the Soviet Union, From the origin the project, the composition of the committee, the agenda drawn up, the state- ments. issued, and especially the timing, it soon became evident that the Conference was designed as a Communist propaganda device to exploit the theme of Asian unity and to do what it could to produce an atmosphere favorable to Communist aims at the Afro-Asian Con- ference (held in Bandung the following week) as an. immediate target, while also creating a permanent organizational unit for future Com- munist campaigns. It was decided that the aim of the Conference would be to afford an opportunity for an. exchange of views on the common problems affecting Asia. Such an exchange of views would assist in securing Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Rel a 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00946t000700150013-4 greater common undexsta!ding and close contact in all. fields among the people of Asia, and would thus help in lessening present world tension. It would assist in. creating that climate of peace for which we all yearn. 11 The Conference would aim, a. ove all, to help in bringing about a greater understanding of the problems of Asia and. to further a peaceful and cooperative effort, in common with other countries of the world, in solving these Asian problems. To this end, the Conference would place at the Head of its. agenda a discussion of 'Panch Shila, the Five Principles of the joint declaration of the Prime Ministers of India and China, namely. (1) (2) (3) Mutual respect for each otherts territorial integrity and sovereignty;. Non--aggression; Non-interference in each otherts internal affairs; ,(4) Equality and mutual. benefit; (5) Peaceful. coexistence. The Conference "'would plan concrete steps to secure an intelli- gent understanding and appreciation of these principles among the peoples of Asia, with a view to securing their acceptance by all countries of Asia and the' world, so that they may form a solid foundation for peace and security. to Political questions to be. considered were. Colonialism and foreign interference in the internal affairs of Asian countries; The admission of the People's Republic of China to its rightful place in the UN; Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0091-*Ft000700150013-4 The prohibition a;.Id control of weapons of mass destruction; The danger to Asia from military alliances and pacts which divide the countries of Asia; Racial discrimination; Discrimination against Asians in the matter of immigration, etc. , and the problems of equal rights for immigrant citizens. CulL'ral questions: The study of the common cultural heritage of Asian coun- tries with a view to reviving and strengthening old cultural ties; The preservation of national cuLures; The development of cultural exchanges between the countries of Asia, Economic and social questions:. The development of trade relations between Asian coun- tries, on the basis of equality and mutual benefit; The economic development of Asian countries and the raising of living standards; The status of wo--en and the protection of children. The Stockholm conference had decided that "all delegates will pay for their board and lodging in Delhi and also make a small contribution towards the general expenses of the Conference,. " Mrs. Nehru was able to get some contri- butions of this sort, but a relatively large deficit was fi- nanced from some unknown source. 7 m T A T Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 MISSING PAGE ORIGINAL DOCUMENT MISSING PAGE(S): Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Relc a 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00946R000700150013-4 that it had the approval of the Prime Minister. Part of the Japanese delegation publicly expressed their disappointment that the confer ence was not handled as t ey had been led to believe it would be. It was clear that although the gathering was termed a "Con.ference of Asian Countries, " only delegates from Communist states were officially appointed and entitled to speak for their countries; the others had no official status and could only profess to do so. This latter group consisted chiefly of rank-and-file Communists or pro- minent fellow-travellers. Leading figures of the Indian CP came to New Delhi but stayed in the background. One Indian paper reported that "the Conference irritated the Government, disappointed its spon- sors, and embarrassed the people associated with it" because of the increasingly obvious Communist domination. and guidance. After this inauspicious start, the Conference, with Mrs,, Nehru presiding, launched into effusions of praise for Panch Shila, Asian solidarity, and peace; denounced aggression, foreign, interv. en.tion . and the "bellicose French and intervent:ionis.t Americans'", and military alliances formed "under the aegis of Western Powers", It also declared the Asian people's desire to be saved from their "self-styled friends'". Statements made by members of the Conference covered many favorite Communist themes. Rene Capitant, a French "!guest", pro- posed that the headquarters of the United Nations be moved to Geneva to: escape US domination. Dr. Dawalibi of Syria, speaking for the combined Arab delegatio.n.s, marked the conference as the unification of Arab and Asian efforts in the struggle against imperialism. The Arabs felt that they had gained tangible success at the conference. As-Salah, member of the Jordanian Parliament, and a known Com- munist, upon his return home spoke enthusiastically of their having forced the expulsion of an Israeli delegation which had already reached New Delhi. '(This referred to the Preparatory Committee. Four Israelis attended the Conference itself, two of them members of MALI, the Communist Party of Israel.) As-Sa.l.ah declared that the Arab governments should encourage such conferences as. affording an opportunity to propagate the Arab cause on a world-wide scale. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Reease 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00R000700150013-4 In fact, it was intimated that if the delegates returned from Ban- dung with less to show for the Arab cause, the Communists would. have stolen their thunder. Dr. Anup Singh (India), former pro- fessor at Catholic and American Universities in Washington, for- mer Public Relations Officer of the Indian Embassy in Washington, D. C., and the chief Indian delegate to the UN Commission on Korea, listed eight world problems affecting Asia and called for their solution in terms consistent with Communist objectives: banning and control of atomic weapons, end of colonialism and foreign interference (citing Indochina, West Irian, Taiwan, Goa, Mala.-a, Kenya, Morocco, Tunisia, and "other parts of Africa"), abolition of military pacts, removal of foreign troops (claiming there are seven hundred bases in Japan), admission of Red China to the UN and to the Security Council, normalization of diplomatic relations, unification of Korea, and the end of racial discrimination (particularly in South Africa) KUO Mo-jo, the most prominent delegate (President, Chinese Academy of Science; Vice Chairman, Standing Committee of the National Peoplegs Congress.; Vice Presi- dent, WPC), concentrated on Taiwan as the greatest threat to peace and made many allegations of American aggression. Japanese speeches called for mobilization of public opinion against atomic bombs and were strongly critical of the West, especially the US, whose aid program was allegedly designed to increase the econo- mic dependency of Asia. Mikhail Nesterov, USSR, declared that unrestricted trade would serve the cause of peace. These sentiments were embodied in resolutions presented under six headings political, economic, scientific, social, cultural, anal religious--the last being cast in the form of an appeal. One of these resolutions supported by the two Israeli Communists expressed support for the Arab people against "the aggressive policy of the ruling circles in Israel. " Another announced the creation of the Asian Solidarity Committee. B. Sponsorship Thus the Conference of Asian Countries at New Delhi, from 6 to 10 April 1955, was the apparent (at least the immediate) Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Rele.e 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009168000700150013-4 sponsor of the Asian Solidarity Committee, although. It is. seen from the preceding account that the original initiative came from the WPC. After definite preparations for the conference were under way, no public mention. was ever made of any WPC connections:; indeed, there had been very little officially from. the beginning. However, WPC affiliates in. the area were instructed to send representatives to the conference. C. Aims and Purposes The aims and purposes officially outlined for the Asian Solidarity Committee were contained in a resolution passed by the Conference of Asian Countries as follows. ".The members of the Presiding Committee and Secretariat of the. Conference constitute themselves into a committee to maintain liaison between the various national. committees in Asian, countries, formed to support the conference and its. decisions. The members of the committee will be responsible for ensuring the popularization of the resolutions. of the conference in their own countries, through national. committees. to be set up for the purpose by the preparatory committee in each country. The Indian members. of the Secretariat of the conference are entrusted with the respon- sibility for the time being of coordinating the work of the committee and exploring the possibility of setting up a permanent Asian Secretariat at some suitable time within. three months, consisting of representatives of Burma, Ceylon, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, the Soviet Union, and the Arab countries. The Communist press outlined the aims of the national. Com- mittees. in the participating countries to be (1) to solve common problems of As Lan nations through collective action based on the Five Principles of Peace; (2) to strengthen friendship and inter- course among these nations.; and (3) to contribute to world peace by abolishing colonialism in Asia and establishing a free, inde- pendent, and peaceful Asia and Africa. 11 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Re' ease 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00ftR000700150013-4 These are the words which could be said to be sung to a current Communist tune. The real Communist purpose in setting up an Asian Solidarity Committee was to organize a ready channel to popularize Communist propaganda throughout Asia and Africa and to create an organizational unit for the Communist campaign to destroy Western power and influence in Asia. Soviet representation in the Secre- tariat was intended to keep the Soviet foot in the Asian door (espe- Tally at the time when the USSR was excluded from the Bandung Conference) and, at the same time, . to place the USSR in the fore.- front as a promoter of unity and cooperation among Asian nations. "Asian solidarity" is a concept with which. the Communists hope to supplement and reinforce the "peace" theme -which, long equated with the defense of the Soviet Union, had lost much of its appeal. Asian solidarity:- -against the West and in support of liberation move- ments as.well as other forms of anti- colonialism-?-is a rallying cry which International Communism has clearly stated it would here- after exploit at every opportunity. II. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE AND OFFICERS A. Headquarters Organization The Headquarters of the Asian Solidarity Committee is in New Delhi, India, and its liaison work is entrusted to the Indians, This was announced as. a permanent location by LIU lying-L, one of the Chinese Communist members of the World Peace Council, on 7 February 1956. Since no roster of the Asian Solidarity Committee has been officially issued, at least in the West, it is necessary to identify its membership from available information about the Preparatory Com- mittee, which became the Presiding Committee, for the Conference of Asian Countries. It had been announced that representatives sent by national preparatory committees to the February 1.955 gathering of this group in New Delhi would serve as the Conference Committee. These representatives presumably spent much of the intervening _ K t Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009168000700150013-4 time in..New Delhi working for the Ap ?'l Conference, and several of them presided at various sessions of the Conference. As listed by the New Delhi press, these :: Pp.? .sentatives were: Mrs. Rame.shwa.ri Nehru - :telative by marriage of the Prime (India) Minister; President and. adviser of the Rehabilitation Board of the Ministry of Rehabilitation; social worker; delegate to WPC; former president of the All.-India Women's Conference. Dr. Choithram Gidwani President .of the All-India Refugee (India) Association; former president of the Sind Congress Party Committee; Praja Socialist Party member of Parliament. Gurmukh Singh Mussafir -? Congress Party representative from (India) Amritsar in the House of the People; social worker and journalist. Dr. Anup Singh Member of Indian National Congress; (India) former professor at the Catholic and American Universities in, Washington, D. C.; former Public Relations Officer of th.e Indian Embassy there; former chairman of the UN Com- mission to Korea. Ramesh Chandra Member of the Central Committee of (India) the Communist Party of India (CPI); editor of Crossroads; member of the WPC Bureaus Pandit Sunderlal (India) Editor of pro-Communist Naya Hind; led Goodwill Mission. to China in 1951; WPC Bureau member. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Re ease 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00f5R000700150013-4 Syed Nausher All (India) Gurrnukh N ikal Singh. (India) Violet Alva (India.) H. C. Mathur (India) Mr. Youren (New Zealand) Thak in Lay Maung (Burma) Theja Gunewardene (Ceylon) LEE Mong-gee (North Korea) Mme. PAX Chong 4ae (North Korea) Former president of the Indian Sea- men's Union; former member and speaker of West Bengal Legislative Assembly; former Minister of the West Bengal Government; Congress Party member of Parliament. Principal of Sri Ram;College of Com- merce; speaker of De.hl State Legis- lative Assembly. Member of Parliament, Congress Party; Vice President of the. Inter - national, Women Lawyers Associab tion; farmer editor o f Be gum. Democratic Party leader in the Upper House of Indian Parliament; former minister in Jodhpur State. Farmer; designated as an "observer". - Secretary General. of Burmese Peace Committee; visited WPC Headquarters and USSR. - Chief organizer and Vice President of th.eAssociation of Women's Institutes; visited the US on State Department grant. Top-level Korean Communist leader; born Asiatic Russia; Deputy Chairman, Korean Labor Party (CP); Chairman of Korean Democratic League of Women (WIDE affiliate); WPC Bureau; Stalin Peace Prize winner. 14 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Rele a 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009W000700150013-4 Dr. Mustafa Amin (Syria) HAN Sol-ya - Chairman, Korea National Peace (North Korea) Committee. A later report named LIU Ning-i of China and Mrs. KORA Tomi, IKEDA Masanosuke, and MATSUMOTO Jiichiro of Japan as also serving on the "presiding" committee. Other prominent presiding chairmen were KUO Mo-jo (later selected as chairman of the Asian Solidarity Committee of China), K. S. Kalelkar (member of the Indian National Congress), and Marouf el-Dawalibi (former Prime Minister of Syria). The actual composition of the Preparatory Com- mittee (whi:h presumably became the Asian Solidarity Committee) was further confused by the arrival in New Delhi of the Chinese and Soviets after the close of the meeting, They remained there to work for the conference. These included CHEN Shen-yu (Chinese writer), Colonel Nikolai Semeno.vich Tikhonov (chairman of the Soviet Pre- paratory Committee, member of the Union of Soviet Writers and of the WPC Bureau), A V. Sofronov (former editor of Ogonek), and Oleg Skalkin (Pravda representative in New Delhi). There was a reliable report that the WPC had asked its branches to see that their representatives were in New Delhi for the Preparatory meeting and that they remain to assist in the work of the Conference, The branches agreed on the condition that the Preparatory Committee bear the expense of the delegates' prolonged stay. Their names were not published; they probably served on the various "staffs". The Secretariat for the Conference, as announced from New Delhi, consisted of representatives from six countries- India, Burma, Communist China, Japan, Pakistan, and the USSR, F Note-. The Stockholm "suggestion" for this body had listed Indonesia instead of Burma, which was probably changed due to the absence of Indonesia .rorn the Preparatory meeting. However, Indonesia was added to the list of the Permanent Asian Secretariat. / Later, it was announced that an Arab representative would be "co-opted" into the Secretariat. So far, the known Secretariat members are Aa V. Sofronov, USSR, Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-005R000700150013-4 Rameshwari Nehru, India, HATANAKA Masaharu, Japan, and CHEN Shen-yu, Chf a. This leaves Burma, Pakistan, and Indo- nesia to be accounted for. According to the resolution establishing this Secretariat, the names of the Indian Secretariat "entrusted" with the liaison work with the parent body should be added to the above list. They are: President, Mrs. Rameshwari`lqehru, General Secretary, Syed Nausher Ali; Secretaries, Dr. Anup Singh, Dr. Choithram Gidwani, and Mrs. Violet Alva; and Treasurer, H. C. Mathur. B. National Committees National preparatory committees for the Conference of Asian Countries were established generally throughout'the area. The Con- ference resolved that the original preparatory committees should be responsible for setting up the national Asian Solidarity Committees. It is probable that the preparatory committees themselves will form at least the nucleus of the national Solidarity Committees, as hap- pened in the cases of the seven such Committees officially formed so far: Japan, Communist China, India, USSR., North Korea, North Vietnam, and Burma. 1. Japan The Asian Solidarity Committee of Japan (.ASCJ) was established on 31 October 1955 in accordance with the resolution passed at the Conference of Asian Countries. Preparations to organize a soli- darity committee in Japan started in July 1955 at a meeting of 114 representatives from various circles, but the matter was deferred because of the World Rally for Banning Atomic and Hydrogen Borribs, held in August 1955 in Horoshima, Japan, on the tenth anniversary of the dropping of the bomb. The Rally, "suggested" by the Asian. Conference, has become an annual event. However, with the assis- tance of Anup Singh (India), Gidwani (India), LIU Ning-i and HSIE]H Ping-hsin (China), and Eugene Zhukov (USSR), all of whom attended the aforesaid Rally, the ASCJ was finally formed on 31 October 1955 at a meeting held at the Josui Kaikan in Kanda, Tokyo. In line with Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009'R000700150013-4 the aims outlined in the resolution made in New Delhi, the ASCJ.pro- posed (a) to promote friendship, good will and normalization of dip- lomatic relations with nations of Asia and Africa; and (b) to help solve mutual problems of Asian and African nations, particularly their liberation from American and British colonialism. Co-Chairmen- NAGANO K un i suke IIYAMA Tahe i Business Bureau Chief- Lawyer; member, International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL). Chief of International Committee of Dal. Nippon Marine Industry Associa- tion (Dai Nippon Suisan Kai). DAN Tokusaburo member, Japan Peace Protection Committee; WPC member. Advisers- KUHARA Fusanosuke Chairman, People's Council for Restoration of Diplomatic Relations with China and the USSR (Nitchu Nisso Kokko Kaifuku Kokumin Kaigi). KATAYAMA Tetsu MATS UNAGA Yasuzaemon Supreme adviser of Japan Socialist Party (JSP); WPC member; adviser to Japan-China Friendship Associa- tion. Chairman of the Board of Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tokyo Denryoku K. K.). Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 0.Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-004R000700150013-4 HOSOKAWA Karoku Committee Representatives: MATSUMOTO Jiichiro KAZAMI Akira YAMAGUCHI Kikuichiro OTANI Eijnn AKI Koichi NAKABE Kenkichi YAMAMOTO Kumaichi - Japan Communist Party (JCP) member. - Liberal Democrat Party (LDP) member. - JSP member; WPC member; Presi- dent, Japan-China Friendship Associa- tion. - JSP member, WPC member; adviser to Japan-China Friendship Associa- tion. - LDP member; World Federation of Scientific Workers (WFSW) member. - LDP member. - Hitotsubashi University professor. - President of Taiyo Fishery Company. Secretary General of the International Trade Promotion .Association (Kokusai Boeki Sokushin Kyokai), Japanese affiliate of the International Committee for the Promotion of Trade (ICPT); adviser to Japan-China Friendship Association. - Secretary General of the Japan Peace Protection Committee; member, WPC, WFSW, and IADL. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Rele0e 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009*R000700150013-4 KAWASAKI Natsu Adviser of the Japanese Society, for the Protection of Children (Nippon. Kodomo wo Ma :~-i Kai), Women's International Democratic Federation (WIDF) affiliate; WFSW member; vice president of Japan-China Friend- ship Association. LIU Ding-i, member of the WPC Bureau, Vice President of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU), and member of the China Peace Committee, made a lengthy speech to the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) (instrumentality of the organized united front in Communist China) on 7 February 1956, in which he proposed the formation of the Asian Solidarity Committee of China "as commissioned by the China Preparatory Committee for the Asian Countries Conference. " The Committee, of which he was the Secretary General, was thus sponsored by the CPPCC. rather than by the Communist Party or Peace Committee. Present at the meeting which set up the permanent committee were CHQU E-i--lai; the vice chairmen, and delegates to the Second Plenary session of the CPPCC, totaling over a thousand persons. KUO Mo-jo presided. It was declared that, in order to enhance further the friendly soli- darity and peaceful coexistence among all Asian people; it had been considered necessary to set up an organization of a permanent nature.. The meeting' unanimously adopted a resolution to establish the Asian Solidarity Committee of China and approved a list of officers and a committee of eighty-one persons ',from all. walks of life. " The list of committee members and officers, which includes several CCP Central Committee members (e. g., LIAO Cheng-chih and LIU Ning- i) and most of the prominent front personalities in China, is evidence of the importance which Peking attaches to the ASC. The Chinese Communists can be expected to utilize the ASC- to promote further their claims to leadership in Asia. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00f5R000700150013-4 Chairman: KUO Mo-jo - WPC member. Vice Chairmen: MAO Tun (true `hame: SHEN Yen-ping) - Minister of Culture; WPC member. LI Te-ch'lian LIAO Chreng-chih - WPC member. LIU Ning-i - WPC and WFTU member. HU Kto-ping Secretary General: LIU Ning- i Committee Members: TING Hsi-l in; TAO Ching-pan; HSIEN Hstieh-wen; WANG Ytin- sheng; WANG YLtan-hsing; T'IEN Fu-ta; PAX Lang; Y*EH Sung- sheng; SUN Hsiao-tslun; TA P'u-sheng; CH'X Pai-shih; LIU Ning-i; LIU Kto-ping; LIU Lin-jul; CH'ENG Fang-wu;'.LI Chu--ch'en; LI Wei-kuang; LI Te-ch'ttan (WPC); LI Fu-jen; TU Kuo-hsiang; YANG Han-sheng; CHOU Shu-chia; CHOU Kang-ming; CHI H.sien lin; La-min i-hsi chu-ch.en (4-ic); CHIN Ytieh--lin; CH'EN Wen.-kuei; CH'EN Pai-shen; CH'EN Chfi-yu; CH'EN Ching -yi CH'EN Han- sheng (WPC);SU Pu-ch'ing,?- OU Te-pang (WPC); YU Pting-po; NAN Han-ch' en (ICPT) ; SHIH Ju-chang; Cha kan ko ken (sic) ; HU Tzu-ang; MAO I-sheng; MAO Tun (WPC); CHAO P'u-chu; CHAO I-m in (WPC) ; CHENG Chen-to; C HENG.. S en-yti; NI F e i ?- chtin; Hsia-au... -mo-tse-aen-to-chi (sic); KAO Chtung-min; JUNG. I-jen; Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For ReIe a 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0091*R000700150013-4 CHANG Kuang -tou CHANG Chili-jang; CHANG Yen; CHANG Jui fang; CHANG Ytteh-hs is CHANG Chin-hsiang; LIANG Hsi; MEI Lan-fang; MEI Kung=pin;. CHANG Tz'u-kung; CHUANG Ming-li; HStT Kuang-ping; HSU Pao-chti; HSe Te-heng KUO Mo=jo; FU Lien-kaun; Hsi-jao-chia-tslo (sic); TANG Hstao-tan; FENG Yu-lan; HUANG Chang-shui; HUANG Chi-h.s tang; YANG Hsien-tung; WEN Chi-tse; LIAO Ch?eng-chih (WPC); NING Wu; HSIUNG Fu; PAO Erh-han; HSIEH Ping-hsin; HSIEH Min-kuang; SAI Fu-ting; TAI Ai-lien.; LAN Ling; I Mei-hou. Letters on official s'ta.tionary were emanating from a well-set-up Indian Preparatory Committee by October 1,955, A permanent Asian Solidarity Committee was formed for India in February 1956, which includes some members of the Indian Preparatory Committee for the Asian Countries: Conference. It consisted of the following persons: Officers (Secretariat)- Mrs. R ameshwar i Nehru - President Syed Nausher All - General Secretary Dr. Anup Singh - Secretary Mrs. Violet Alva Dr. Choithram Gidwani " R omesh Chandra Harish. Chandra Mathur Treasurer These names are as given by NCNA in a broadcast on 7 February 1956. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-005R000700150013-4 Committee Members: Dr. Zakir Hussain - Member (nominated), Council of States; Vice-Chancellor, Aligarh University; respected educator; has in past praised Red China. Dr. G. Mahajani - Vice-Chancellor, Delhi University. R. N. Aggarwal President, Delhi Municipal Com?_ mittee; at time of election attacked by Communists as "big business" stooge. Gurmukh Nihal Singh - Chief Minister, Delhi State. Mrs. Ammu Swaminadhan Congress MP, Madras; returned from visit to Red China in 1954 with praise for regime and conviction West exaggerating Communist peril. S. V. Ramaswamy - Congress. MP, Madras. P. S. Rajgopala Naidu - Member, Council of States,. Inde- pendent, Andhra. Uma Charan Patnaik - Independent MP, Orissa. V. Parameswaran Nayar - MP, United Front of Leftists, Travancore-Cochin. J. V. K. Val.labhrao - Member, Council of States, Andhra. Ramananda Das Congress MP, West; Bengal; mem- ber, General Council Congress- sponsored Indian National Trade Union Congress; attended Interna.- tional Labor Organization Conferences at San Francisco (1948), Geneva (1951). Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Relee 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009148000700150013-4 Balwant Sinha Mehta - Congress MP, Rajasthan; welfare worker. Dr. Saifuddin Kitchlew - Long-time Congress Party Muslim stalwart; active peace-fronter. Pandit Sundexlal - WPC member, Bhupesh Gupta Member, Council of States, West Bengal.; Communist; member, C om- munist Party of India Central Com- mittee, Pandit Chatur Narain Malviya - Congress MP, Bhopal; All-India Peace Council official; general secretary, India-China Friendship Association. Amarnath Vidyalankar - Congress MP, Punjab; State Presi- dent, Indian National Trade Union Congress; member, trade union delegation to Red Cf.ina, 1954. Chandhary Hyder Husein - Congress MP, Utt;a.r Pradesh. B egum Qudsia Zaidi Major General S. S. Sokhey Mrs. Hannah Sen Well-known education and social welfare imorker; well inclined toward West; has expressed resentment at being pres.su.red into the Conference by her friend, Mrs. Nehru, Mrs. Manmohini Sehgal Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00vR000700150013-4 Dr. Joseph C, Kumarappa Dr. Mulk Raj Anand Hira Singh Chinaria Mrs. Gyan (Anasuyabai) Chand Communist labor leader in Delhi State; elected to Legislative Assembly on Socialist ticket, later expelled. from Party. Social worker; Gandhian; attended Moscow Economic Conference, 1952, and Berlin Peace Conference, 1952. - Well-known Communist-line author; Vice President, All-India Peace Council; attended WPC at Berlin, 1954. - General Secretary, Lalit Kala Academy. - MP, Assam. Congress MP, Patiala and East Punjab - Congress MP, Uttar Pradesh, Attended Women's International Democratic Federation Congress; Committee member, All-India Cultural Conference,, Satyendra Narayan Mazumdar - Member, Council of States; Com- munist Party of India member; West B engal. Mrs. Sushima Sen (Gupta) - Congress MP, Bihar. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Relea+e'e 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0091*R000700150013-4 Radha Raman Congress MP, Delhi; Vice President, Delhi Congress Committee; member, India-China Friendship Association. Fakruddin Ali Ahmen - Member, Council of States, Assam. B. Da.s Congress MP, Orissa, Prof. Satyen Bose Member (nominated); Council. of States; outstanding theoretical physi- cist; Dean of Faculty of Science, University of Calcutta; active In India-China Friendship Association; attended WPC at Budapest, 1.953. Mrs, Bonily Khongmen Congress MP, Assam. C. Krishnan Nair P. G. Shah Congress MP, Delhi. Anthropologist, Kakasaheb Kalelkar Member (nominated), Council of States; long-time social worker; Chairman, Backward Classes Coma mission; attended World Pacifist Conference in Tokyo, 1954. Bheeka Bhai - Congress MP, Rajasthan. Narayan Sadoba Kajrolkar - Congress MP, Bombay; scheduled caste leader. Barkat Ullah Khan - Member, Council of States; Congress, Rajasthan. Drs M. Mujeeb - Vice-Chancellor, Jamia Millia (Muslim school); visited Red China as member, goodwill mission. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Ark Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00vR000700150013-4 Nettur P. Damodaran - Congress (former KMP) MP, Madras; Vice President, Tellicherry Branch of India-China Friendship Association. B. Sanyal Shankar Lal Jain H. K. L. Bhagat Principal, Art Section, Delhi Polytechnic. Member, provincial Legislative Assembly. - Congress member, provincial Legislative Assembly, Delhi; self-styled progressive with "leftist" leanings. Dr. Rishi Member, provincial Legislative Assembly. D. R. Mahajan Principal., Law College, Jullundur. Braje.shwar Prasad Shiv Charan Gupta Congress MP, Bihar; long-time advocate of Delhi-Moscow-Peking axis. Congress member, provincial Legislative Assembly, Delhi; Vice President, State Congress Committee; executive of New Delhi Branch, India-China Friendship Association. Onkar Nath - Member, Council of States; Con- gress, Delhi (resigned). Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009'11000700150013-4 Member, Council of States; Congress, Punjab; former Indian Ambassador to Turkey; defended Jomo Kenyatta. Journalist, one-time editor of Times of India; holds strong anti-American views, Free-lance journalist. - Commonweal Party MP, Madras. 4. The Soviet Union This committee was set up in May 1956-ma delay possibly to allow non-Communist countries to set up committees before the organization became too openly associated with the Sino:g'Soviet bloc. Its headquarters is in Moscow, although it is staffed principally by individuals from Soviet Asia. Chairman: Mirza Tursun-lade Secretary: A. Sofronov Members: P. Az imov Writer of the Tadzhik Safi. - Chief editor of the newspaper Ogoneke - Rector of the University of the Turk- men SSR, Writer of the Kazakh SSR. - A deputy chairman of an organization of the Moslems of Kazakhstan. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00vR000700150013-4 T. Berdeyev B. Bultrikova A. Guber K. Konduchalov M. Nesterov K. Satpayev S. Sevunts. M. U. Topchibashev D. Hodzhayyev A. U. Khorava K. Yulvashev B. Yunysalyev President of the Turkmen Academy of Science. - Minister of Social Insurance of the Kazakh SSR. Director of the Institute of Oriental Studies. of the USSR Academy of Science. Kirgiz SSR. - Chairman of the presidium of the All-Union Chamber of Commerce. President of the Academy of Sciences of the Kazakh SSR. Writer of the Armenian SSR.. Writer. Vice President of the Academy of Sciences of the Azerbaijan SSR. - Chairman of the Trade Union Council of the Uzbek SSR. People's Artist of the USSR; Georgian SSR. Architect; member of the Academy of Sciences of the Tadzhik SSR. - Rector of the University of the Kirgiz SSR. 28 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Releae 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00946R000700150013-4 5. North Korea Vice President of the Academy of Sciences of the Uzbek SSR. Formed in May 1956, this Committee is comprised of thirty- five members, "including cadres of various political parties, social organizations, and workers of science, culture and art.'' Chairman: HAN Sol-ya Chairman of the Korean National Peace Committee. Vice Chairmen: PAEK Na-un PAE Tong-kun General. Secretary: President of the Academy of Sciences of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Vice Chairman of the Central Com- mittee of the Korean Red Cross Society. 6, North Vietnam Vice Chairman of the Korean Demo- cratic Youth League. Founded in October 1956, this Committee has forty-nine with the following officers- Chairman. Ton Quang Phiet Vice Chairman of the National Assembly Standing Committee. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00MR000700150013-4 Vice Chairmen: Dr. Nguyen Van Huong - Head of the Vietnamese delegation to the Conference of Asian Countries in New Delhi. Dr. Nguyen Viem Hai Xuan Thuy - Member of the Politburo of the Lao Dong (Communist) Party. Mme. Nguyen Thi Thuc Vien 7. Burma An "organizational committee" for this group was reported in the newspaper Burman in March 1957. The only officer named was: U H1a Djo - Attorney; Secretary General of the Organizational Committee. 8. Indonesia During a visit to Indonesia in September 1956, Isabelle Blume, a Belgian national and active member of the WPC, urged the for- mation of an Indonesia Committee for Asian Solidarity. 9. C eylon An Asian Solidarity Committee of Ceylon is also reported to exist. C. Relations with other Communist Fronts and With National Communist Parties. The Asian Solidarity Committee aspires to be considered non- political and makes claims of being representative of all walks of life and of all shades of opinion. It especially seeks, non-Communists Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Relsape 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009' 6R000700150013-4 (prominent ones) to exploit as members. However, it is thoroughly under the control of active Comrn.u.n.ists and fellow-travellers con- nected with the Communist front organizations. Members of all the major Communist fronts (World Peace Council., International Union of Students, World Federation of Democratic Youth, Women's Inter- national Democratic Federation,. International Association of Demo- cratic Lawyers, International Organization of Journalists, Inter- national Committee for Promotion of Trade, World Federation of Scientific Workers, and the 1'friendship" societies) can be found on the lists of the various Asian Committees. The ASC relationship with the WPC has been pointed out in the historical account of the origin of ASC, Al]. Asian members of the WPC are also on. the Solidarity Committees. To the dozen Asian Solidarity Committee members already serving on the WPC Bureau, the WPC meeting in Colombo in 1957 added five more, Three of these joined the two previously serving as members of the WPC Secretariat. Addi- tional ASC members are active in. the national peace committees. News of the Solidarity Committees is reported regularly in the WPC Bulletin. To illustrate the interrelati.onshi.p of the Asian. Committees and other Communist fronts, the following specific examples are cited' LIU Ning-i, Vice President of the WFTU, member of both the WPC and ICPT Bureaus, Secretary General of the WPC Liaison Bureau for Asia.and the Pacific Regions, is concurrently General Secretary of the Asian Solidarity Committee for China. Further involvement with the WFTU was evident when S. A. Dange, an Indian Vice Presi- dent of the WFTU, entertained labor delegates to the Asian con- ference in the name of the New Delhi. Trade Union. Council. Persons with dual, membership in other fronts include-, Nguyen Cong Hoa Member of Vietnamese Labor Con- (North Vietnam) federation. LIU Chang-sheng 4 Member of the All-China Federation (China) of Trade Unions and a former Secre- tary of the WFTU, Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Re ease 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00R000700150013-4 Dr. Cryan. Chand Sahib Singh Sokhey Ngu',,1 Thi Thuc Vien (North Vietnam). Nguyen Xran Thuy (North Vietnam) Hoang Minh Chinh (North Vietnam) Kha Van Can (South Vietnam) KORA Tomi (Japan) Diwan Chaman Lal (India) KAORU Yasui (Japan) TOZAWA Tetsuhiko (Japan) India-China Friendship Association. Stalin Peace Prize winner, 1953; member, World Congress of Docto.rs.- World Federation of Scientific Workers (retired Indian. Army doctor); Chair- man, International Student Relief Committee of I.US; WPC Bureau member. Vice President of the Union of Viet- namese Women (WIDF affiliate). Chairman of the Association of Viet- namese Journalists (IC.J); active in Vietnam-China and Vietnam-Soviet Friendship Associations; member of WPC. - Executive Committee of WFDY. Active in Chinese and Soviet Friend- ship Associations. - Vice President of the All-Japan Women~s Federation (WIDE affiliate). - IADL member. - IADL and WPC member. - IADL member. - IADL, WPC, and WFSW member,. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Rele a 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0091*R000700150013-4 HIRANO Yosh.itaro - 1ADL and WPC member. Nettur P. Damodaran Officer of the India-China Friend- ship Associationo Satyen Bose Officer of the India-China Friend- ship Association. B. N. Gangul i - President, Friends of Soviet Union. FTTKUSHIMA Yaichi m WSFW member. The close relationship of the ASC with the Communist Party is shown in the same manner. Communist Party members are present in all the Solidarity Committee lists. Most of the Chinese and Soviet members are Communist Party members, many of high level. A few are claimed not to be Party members, as in the case'of Colonel NLkolai Semenovich Tikhonov. He was an officer in the Imperial. Russian Army, but supported the Bolsheviks during the Revolution and has represented Soviet peace and cultural causes abroad since the 1930Ts, Examples of active Party members in other Asian Com- mittees are: Bhupesh Gupta Ramesh Chandra Dr. Mulk Anand Mme. PAK Chong-ae (North Korea) Member of the Central. Committee of the Communist Party of India (CPI) Member of the Central Committee of the CPI. Member of the CPL Nguyen Xuan Thuy Member of the Politburo of the Lao (North Vietnam) Dong Party (CP) a Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00f'SR000700150013-4 Hoai Thanh (North Vietnam) Hoang Minh Chinh (North Vietnam) Le Dinh Tham (North Vietnam) LIAO Ch'eng-chih - Member of the Permanent Com- mittee of the Lien Viet front. - Member of the Permanent Com- mittee of the Lien Viet front. - Vice Chairman of the Lien Viet front. Deputy Director, United Front Department, CCP; member, CCP Central Committee. III. ACTION PROGRAM AND IMPLEMENTATION Although a main function of these Asian Solidarity Committees will be the popularizing of Soviet projects and bringing all levels of the various populations into contact with Sino-Soviet propaganda, specific events have taken place which offer an indication of how the programs will be implemented. The Indian Committee held an All-India Conference for Asian. Solidarity in Hyderabad, 21-23 October 1955 on the eve of the Foreign Ministers' Conference in Geneva, providing a propaganda platform for Communist views on the Conference. Because of her illness, Mrs. Nehru's presidential address was read by Dr. Anup Singh, In it she pointed out the standing issues in Asia, such as alleged attempts to sabotage the cease-fire agreements in Indochina and Korea, mount- ing tension in the Middle East, instances of colonialism and racialism in Africa, continued Portuguese occupation of Indian territories, the question of the restoration of Taiwan to the Chinese People's Republic, Communist China's rightful place in the United Nations, and restoration of sovereign rights to Japan. She declared that a "Geneva-style con- ference" such as proposed by Prime Minister Nehru to discuss Far Eastern questions "would go a long way towards solving the pressing Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Releae 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0091*R000700150013-4 problems of Asia and would put an end to foreign domination and inter- ference in the internal. affairs of Asia... '`' / Note; A summit, or at least foreign minister level, conference on Asia is certain to be. pressed for by all the Solidarity Committees. / A letter signed by some twenty "eminent" writers read as, follows- gab ..An All-India Conference of Asian Solidarity is being convened by Mrs, Rameshwari Nehru and the Indian Solidarity Committee to. consider ways and means to implement the program outlined by the Asian Conference in New Delhi, It has been suggested that a number of Indian writers meet on this occasion in Hydera- bad in order to discuss the possibility of calling a conference of Asian writers, for which much feeling exists i t only among the various sections of opinion in our country but also among the intelligentsia. of the different countries of Asia, , o o For hundreds of years the peoples of Asia have been. subjected to foreign ruler. our ties with our brothers. of Asia have just begun to be renewed after having been severed u.n.der imperialist domination.. (we must) pool, our energies so that we can outline a program for immediate action and call a. conference of Asian, writers; such a conference is necessarily intended also to enable our many European. friends to participate in our deliberations, " /-Note, This Conference of Asian Writers was. convened in New Delhi / In December 1956. A "Workers Midnight Rally for Asian So:l_idari.ty" for workers who could not attend the daytime sessions of the Conference was held 25 October 19550 The Asian Solidarity Committee for India also participated in a "Peace Fortnight", 1.6-30 November 1955, in con- junction with the All-India Peace Council.. The purpose was to popularize the Nehru -Dulgani.n declaration. On behalf of the Soli- darity Committee, Chaudhary Hyder Hussain (Congress Party mem- ber of the Indian Parliament) sent a telegram to the Foreign. Minis- ters in Geneva, demanding that negotiations result in. agreement. Members of the Indian ASC were active in, promoting the All- India Peace Conference for Disarmament, 23-26 December 1,955, Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00ftR000700150013-4 in New Delhi. The meeting was held during a big industrial fair and while Parliament was in session in order that Communist-slanted. discussions on economic and technical exchanges might have the best effect. In the following February (1956), Mrs. Nehru, ASC President, addressed a letter to the various branches inviting them to "an emergency meeting, since the situation in Asia has taken a serious turn. " She outlined this situation as consisting of moves to destroy the spirit of Bandung and Geneva, the "maneuver" of a SEATO Foreign Ministers' meeting in Karachi, efforts to expand the Baghdad Treaty, hydrogen bomb tests in the Pacific, and aggravations of issues in Indochina and Korea. April or early May was the date suggested tentatively for this emergency meeting in. one of four countries-- Syria, Lebanon, Japan, or China--at which time the ASC hoped to begin preparations for the second Asian Nations Conference. The ASC of Japan met immediately upon receipt: of the letter and signified their concurrence with the plan, but stated their preference that the meeting should be held in India. No information is available that this meeting was ever held. On the domestic front, the Indian ASC has recommended to the Lalita Akademy that it follow its International Exhibition. of Buddhist Art with an annual traveling exhibition of ancient and modern art of the various Asian countries. To the Sahitya Akademy and the National Book Trust it recommei:ded the translation of ancient and modern classics of Asian countries for publication in India, and likewise translations of the best Indian works into the various Asian. languages. The ASC request to the Ministry of Education was that i.t g' ' ve .special attention to the writing of Indian history in the light of India's rela- tionship with other Asian countries "to bring out the inter-Asian cultural ties established in the past, against the imperialist misin.- terpretations.''" The Committee also asked that schools for Asian and African studies be established in all universities, that there be an exchange of teachers, facilities for research :scholars, and inclu- sion of Indian scholars in Government delegations to other Asian countries. Finally, the ASC recomme:-..ded that a Permanent Cultural Section be set up in the Committee for implementation of these aims.. Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Relesie 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009'MR000700150013-4 B. Activities of the Japanese Committee. The AS.C of Japan, early in 1956, organized an. Asian Solidarity Delegation to make a two-month tour of Asian and African. countries "for the promotion of solidarity between the Japanese people and other people in Asia and Africa." This Delegation was entertained extensively. The Committee also sent Japanese experts to the geo- graphical .seminar held in India in. January 1956 under the auspices of the IUS. The Committee has cooperated with other organizations {both Communist and non-Communist) to create a movement against US bases on Okinawa and to protest atomic tests. in the Pacific. The Asian Countries Conference organized the first conference in Hiro- shima on 6 August 1955, in commemoration of the tenth. anniversary of the dropping of the bomb in 1.945. This event was repeated in August of 1.956 and 1957, and it. is clear that the day will be perpe- tuated as a Communist date. Other announced plans of the Japanese ASC include a two-week conference of Asian architects in Tokyo; an. Asian youth conference organized by the Japanese Council of Youth Organizations; invitations to Nehru, Mme Pandi.t., and I UO Mo-jo to visit Japan; and meetings to promote the exchange of culture, organized by fisheries, scientific, and cultural circles in Japan, C. Activities of Other National. Committees. Throughout 1.956 Asian Solidarity Committees busied themselves in activities, such as vigorous support of Egypt in the Suez conflict, continued stress on "insidious and vicious new colonialism of the United States, " through military and economic aid to SEATO coun- tries; meetings and declarations. against atomic tests; denunciation, of the "Eisenhower Doctrine"; an Asian Writers Conference, which failed to end in the new front; envisaged by its originators 5a second Asian writers conference, however, is now scheduled for. the Soviet Union where control will be easier/ ; and much "cultural exchange" and talk of the "Bandung spirit". In the labor field., an effort was made, after attracting some two hundred Asian labor leaders to the May Day celebration in Peking Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00vR000700150013-4 in 1955, to organize a Confederation of Asian Trade Unions. How- ever, some of there--the Indians especially -were affronted at the obvious ruse to organize them and refused to cooperate. The Con- federation is still only a "friendly association. " Some of the other targets for these committees will be: 1. A "Geneva-type" conference on Asian. problems, 2. An Asian collective security pact. 3. An Asian teachers meeting. 4. Opposition to SEATO and the Baghdad Pact. 5. An Asian Economic Conference, 6. More economic and political. agreements between all Asian countries. (The Sino-Soviet bloc is conducting a determined and increasing drive to extend their influence by economic means in the non-Communist countries of the Middle East and Southeast Asia. Special emphasis has been laid on. countries. where the economic drive will have the most useful political effect, such as Egypt, India, Burma, Afghanistan.. This is largely accomplished by offers of trade oppor- tuniti..es and technical and financial assistance. ) 7, Winning over the uncommitted states to neutralism, at least. The Bloc is clearly trying to set up India, the foremost of the neutral states, as the "sixth great. power" in world affairs, wA:i.ch could be pursuant to Lenin's idea that a Moscow-New Delhi-Peking bloc would be invincible on the Eurasian. continent. D. The Asia-Africa Review The first issue of '.:11- Asia-Africa Review, A Quarterly Magazine 38 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Releave 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-0090,000700150013-4 Devoted to Afro-Asian Resurgence and Solidarity, the official organ of the Asian Solidarity Committee, appeared in January 1957, pub- lished from the Asian Solidarity Committee office at 14 Janpath Barracks, New Delhi. The staff was. listed as follows: Editorial Advisor Board: Mrs. Ram.eshwari Nehru Chairman (New Delhi) Kaka Kalelkar. - Member (MP, New Delhi) Prof. M. Habib (Aligarh) Dr. Gyan Chand (New Delhi) Maj. Gen, S. S. Sokhey (New Delhi) Feroz Chand (New Delhi) SATO Shigeo (Japan) LIN Sung-hak (Korea) CH'EN Han- sheng (China) Munir Suleiman (Syria) P. A. Vishnyakov (USSR) - Executive Editor - Contributing Editor Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00f5R000700150013-4 The Review contained "News of Our Movement, " a, summary of the movement's progress in various countries, some forecasts of future issues, an editorial by Mrs. Nehru regarding the Committee, an Asian Commentary, Notes for Discussion. on the Cultural Prob- lems of Asia and Africa, an. editorial "About Ourselves, " and articles on Asian questions. "About Ourselves" stated that the original name for the review had been New Asia, but delegates who had met while attending the Asian Writers' Conference, in December 1.956, found the consensus of opinion to be that the Asian Solidarity Movement must extend its scope to become an Afro-Asian movement. The first issue of the Review had already been written at that time; therefore, the next number would have a more truly Afro-Asian character, emphasizing the theme currently engrossing both areas--the fight against colonial- ism and racialism. IV. POTENTIAL EFFECTIVENESS OF THE ASIAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE The establishment of the Asian Solidarity Committee accentuates a trend already evident in Sino-Soviet treatment of Asia and Africa. Coming at a time when both Moscow and Peking are making new, elaborate approaches to the area, especially to India. and the Arab countries, this propaganda organization may be expected to cultivate all sorts of manifestations ofu.:,iity and historic friendship between them and the Communist blocs This will. be done through various devices, such as: (1) Exchanges and visits at all levels of society, to propa- gate the notion that Asian countries do in fact have a common tradition and "shared experience" (without mentioning the traditional conflicts), especially with Communist China and the USSR. (Z) To shift attention s~:.:;tly from war, as emphasized in the "peace" campaigns, to this "shared experience" Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Releue 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-009'IR000700150013-4 (3) and thus to make the Solidarity Committee appear as quasi-official spokesman for the new "concert" in Asia. To create a sort of Asian Security Pact if agitation for a Far Ea stern Conference of the Geneva type is s ',c `ess 7ul (and through the ASC to plant delegates friendly to the Communist cause in such a Conference, as was done in New Delhi). (4) To call for Asian conferences of all types, high on the list of which is an Asian economic conference (one has already been unsuccessfully attempted) and a teachers' conference. (5) (6) To reorient the influential Socialist parties of Asia to- wards philosophical acceptance of Sino-Soviet foreign policy and Soviet internal economic practices. (7) To identify the Solidarity Committees increasingly with parliamentary democracy in Asia, as a means. of in- fluencing and penetrating governments of the area, and to draw into membership representatives of all social and political elements from the Asian countries. To identify the USSR in the minds of Asians as an Asian country and through cultural exchange and publicizing economic aid to make the Sino-Soviet orbit countries appear as the true proponents of Asian freedom and progress. With its able leadership among all types of persons capable of farreaching contacts and influence, the Asian Solidarity Committee has launched a propaganda campaign that could prove as deadly to the cause of the Free World as open warfare. It is already evident that the West has lost some of its former friends in the area in Thailand, Pakistan, Cambodia, and Syria, a loss not due entirely to the Solidarity Committees, of course, but certainly aided and Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-00915R000700150013-4 Approved For Release 1999/08/24: CIA-RDP78-OOR000700150013-4 abetted by their activities to an increasing extent. The disruptive potentialities of the organization are therefore very great. "Asian= ism" is used by the Communists. to keep alive old animosities and to exclude and humiliate the West. Lenin used the concept of a unified Asia in his thesis on "enslavement" by colonialism. The present Communist twist of this thesis into "new colonialism" helps to create credibility for Communist propaganda and to hinder the efforts of former Western colonial powers to assist in the development of viable, democratic governments in former colonial areas. To this end Communist propaganda may be expected to invoke such. themes as attacks upon "remaining enclaves of Western colonial- ism", such as. Goa and Irian, and upon American bases in Asia; the "threats" to peace in Korea, Taiwan, and Vietnam; the "menace" of Western economic penetration to the independence and develop- ment of the new Asian states; the "re-entry" of Japan into the Asian community; and the "loss" of Asian culture and traditions. The Asian Solidarity Committee, with its national counterparts, is designed by the Communists as a new front organization to sup:ple_ ment the Peace movement, which seems to be losing some of its appeal, and the anti-colonial, national liberation themes which. will decline in importance as the last remnants of old-style Western imperialism disappear. The immediate objective of International. Communism in Asia being the elimination of Western influence and the alignment of Asian governments with the Communist bloc, rather than the immediate establishment of Communist governments, the issues of common race and geographical origins which the Solidarity movement exploits to unify Asians against the West are particularly useful for Communist purposes. The issues are especially well- suited to bridge the ideological and political gaps between Communist, neutralist, and anti-Communist Asian nations, thus implementing; the Communist unity-of -action tactics on the international level. 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