BI-WEEKLY PROPAGANDA GUIDANCE
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Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
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Document Creation Date:
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Document Release Date:
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Sequence Number:
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Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 23, 1964
Content Type:
REPORT
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Significant Dates
DEC.
6
World Peace Council Presidential Committee Meeting, Berlin, 6-9 Dec 1964
8
Republic of China establishes seat of government at Taipei, Taiwan.
Fifteenth anniversary. 1949
8
Pres? Eisenhower advances "Atoms for Peace" proposal in address to UN
General Assembly. 1953
8
Yugoslav Communist Party 8th Congress
10
Soviet Bloc abstains as UN General Assembly adopts, 48-0, Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. 1948
12
Kew. a to become a republic
14
USSR expelled from League of Nations for unprovoked a gression; against.
Poland and Finland. Twenty-fifth anniversary. 1939
15
Preparatory Conference of Communist Parties in Moscow [??]
17
Simon Bolivar dies, 1830
17
Afro Asian Islamic Conference, Bandung, Indonesia [postponed to Feb]
21
Joseph V. Stalin born, 1879
26
Mao Tse-tung born, 1893
JAN.
2
Fidel Castro assumes power, 1959 (Sixth anniversary)
6
Pres. Roosevelt enunciates Four Freedoms: Freedom of speech and expres-
sion, of worship; from want and from fear, 1941
8
Charles de Gaulle inaugurated first President of the Fifth Republic
,
1959 Sixth anniversary)
10
UN General Assemb3zy opens first session, London, 1946
11
UNGA establishes 12-nation disarmament commission to consider regulation,
limitation and balanced reduction of all armaments and armed forces, 1952
12
US signs first trade agreement with European Economic Community (EEC), 1962
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GUIDE to COMMUNIST DISSENSIONS
#1
Commentary
28 Oct-10 Nov 1964
Principal Developments:
1. The CPSU has continued to affirm, in authoritative editorials and
in a major speech by Brezhnev on the 47th anniversary ofthe Soviet "October"
Revolution, 7 November, that it will follow the same basic policies, with
firm, though "unpolemical," support of all major positions opposed by the
Chinese, including that of the necessity for a world Communist conference
without further delay. Although specific plans for the December preparatory
meeting were not mentioned, the 2 November Tass communique on Moscow talks
with the Austrian CP delegation stressed agreement on the need to "continue
preparations" for a world meeting "and a meeting of the drafting committee."
2. Prevailing opinion among Moscow observers is that the December'
meeting will be postponed, particularly in view of the Chou En-tai talks
(see below), but one more highly appraised clandestine report (Noforn)
quotes a top-level Czech Party ideologist as asserting as late as 5 Novem-
ber that the 15 December meeting will definitely be held in Moscow. Also,
an authoritative 4 November clandestine report from Australia states that
a 3-man delegation from the CPA to the Moscow preparatory meeting has al-
ready booked passages
3. Most of the Soviet-oriented parties, including the 5 which had
sent "fact-finding" delegations to Moscow, have apparently decided to ac-
cept and support publicly the Soviet action in ousting Khrushchev and to
quash further expression of concern regarding his treatment and fate,
though sketchy reporting indicates that questions, doubts, misgivings and
resentment on this issue are far from settled among most party leaders and
rank-and-files The Italian delegation leader publicly admitted that the
Soviet explanations were "not sufficient" to make them abandon their "re-
servations," though the Party's subsequent resolution played down any lack
of harmony. At least one of the visiting Party chiefs, Jesperson of Denmark,
acknowledged that he had tried to see Krrushchev but was denied access on
grounds of K's severe illness.
4. The Soviet 47th anniversary celebration brought unusually impres-
sive high-level delegations to Moscow from most of the world's major CPs
-- all ruling parties except the Albanians, who were not invited. The CPSU
was admittedly using the occasion for secret political talks on problems
of the WCM -- on an individual rather than group basis -- but little reli-
able information has leaked out. Particular attention was focused on the
strong CCP delegation headed by Premier Chou En-lai, considered the most
"diplomatic" and "acceptable" to the CPSU of all top Chinese. Chou was ap-
parently endeavoring to persuade the CPSU to agree to another round of bi-
lateral talks, postponing further action on calling a world conference in
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(Commentary cont.)
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the interim: as we close, with Chou still in Moscow, the press reports
one "inside source" to the effect that the CPSU has agreed and another
to'the effect that he is not aware of any agreement. (No mention of K
by any of the many Party leaders in Moscow for the anniversary has been
reported.)
5. Although it can be said that the Chinese have refrained from
polemics since the fall of K, they were coming very close to polemicizing
as the period progressed. All Peking papers on the 3rd carried a full
page of comments by various other parties and leaders on the ouster, most
of them critical of one or more aspects of the action. On the 6th,
People's Daily published the full texts of the 17 October and 1 November
Pravda editorials, setting forth at length the Soviet intent to adhere to
the same policies. On the 7th PD followed with its own editorial which
confidently recapitulated its own opposed views, gloated over the histori-
cal vindication of its righteous struggle against K's revisionism demon-
strated by his downfall (credit Icr ihich was given first to the Soviet
people and only second to the Party), and made it clear that any reapproach--
ment with the CPSU would have to be on Chinese terms. Moreover, Chou in
Moscow demonstratively visited Stalin's grave.
6. The Albanians, as so often in the past, charged out ahead of the
Chinese, placing the blame on K and his group for a long list of betrayals;
saying that K's downfall was the result of the struggle of the CCP, the
Albanian Party, and their supporters; warning emphatically that K's ex-
pulsion does not mark the end of K's revisionism; and pledging that all
"Marxist-Leninists" will continue their struggle against "the perfidious
line of the 20th and 22nd Congresses" until the "complete defeat" of the
revisionists and liquidation of the deformations made in M-L." They de-
clare that "many steps must be made in this direction," the most important
of which is the proper rehabilitation of Stalin and his work.
7. Glorification of Stalin and demands for his rehabilitation were
features of sharp polemics by pro-Chinese dissident elements in various
countries: the Austrian Rote Fain went on to ask about the execution or
"shameful ouster" by Khrushchev of a host of other prominent Soviet Party
leaders, -- MolotovC'the most important living representative of Old
Bolshevism"), Malenkov, Kaganovich, Zhukov, Beriya, -- etc. on grounds
which have never been divulged.
8. The period brought further evidence of the growing trend toward
autonomy and independence among the parties. Various acts of non-conformity
have led to speculation that Czechoslovakia may be the next Communist state
to follow Rumania on the "independence" trail. The French CP announces that
talks with a Yugoslav Party delegation led to agreement on closer collabora-
tion, and the Norwegian CP announces that its delegation to Sofia reached
a "united viewpoint" with the Bulgarian Party on various questions, includ-
ing that of the situation in world comiun:Un,. Most striking of all, per-
haps, was the Swedish CP decision to reduce its money-losing daily papers
to weeklies and use the savings to set up its own school for party workers,
thus ending, its dependence on E. Germany and the USSR for such training.
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(Commentary Cont.)
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9. The disarray in the Communist cacao was sharply illuminated as the
Italian fellow-traveling Paese Sera published on 30 October a Moscow report
describing a 29-point Soviet document of the charges against K. (see Briefly
Noted item, with translation of text) -- and the PCI's official daily L'Unita
(printed in the same shop) on the next day denied the existence of the 29-
point document but listed 14 points of accusation which had been reported
from the USSR. On the following day, the Rome independent weekly Espresso
published a summary of "Suslov's report" indicting K, supposedly received
from E. Berlin -- and Vass on 3 November.denounced this report as a fabrica-
tion.
Significance:
The new CPSU leadership still has not settled down to a definite course:
Brezhnev's 7 November speech, trying "to be all things to all men", indicates
the uncertainty and vacillations of the new men. In the meantime, however,
they keep persuading friends and foes that they will pursue the old Khru-
shchevian course even without old K. At the same time, they are making
visible progress in whipping their foreign allies and followers back into
line, i.e. causing them., from Gomulka down, to make public obeisance to the
new regime and to accept the fact that K. has become an "cuzperson". However,
close under this smooth surface we perceive continuing disquiet and misgiv-
ings on all party levels; corrosive damage to the public image not only of
the CPSU but of all Soviet-oriented CPs; and new impetus towards fragmenta-
tion, "polycentrism" and autonomy for every national CP.
It is still too early to forecast reliably the immediate future of
the Sino-Soviet conflict:, Most observers believe that the CPSU has yielded
to Chou's persuasion (or heavy pressure from the Italians, Poles, Rumanians,
etc.) and agreed to postpone the 26-party preparatory meeting for a world
conference for a few months while they undertake another round of bilateral
talks with the Chinese, attempting once more (at least for the record) to
avoid the impending split in the world movement; there is, however, conflict-
ing evidence even on this.
It remains still very unlikely that even if a temporary modus vivendi
between Moscow and Peking should be reached (and we must not underestimate
the strong impact this would have on the Communist movement), this will lead
to a satisfying resolution of the basic conflicts between the two great Com-
munist powers. Despite the difficulties and pressures under which the new
Kremlin leaders are working, they have repeatedly reiterated their firm com-
mitment to support all of the major pre-Khrushchev CPSU positions which the
Cheese have opposed. On the other side, the Chinese have come very close
to resuming polemics in their arrogant reiteration of their "diametrically
opposed" (to use their own phr.?ase) positions, and they have practically
served notice that any rapprochement will have to be on their terms. The
Albanians may again have foreshadowed the Chinese line when they emphasized
that it was Khrushchev and his group who were to blame for all the betrayals
which they (and the Chinese) have denounced so vituperously in the past,
that the removal of K alone can be considered only the first step toward
an improvement, the most important single step being the full rehabilitation
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(Commentary Cont.)
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of Stalin and the "liquidation of the deformations made in M-L" by "the
perfidious line of the 20th and 22nd Congresses."
This call for the rehabilitation of Stalin also appears in the other pro-
Chinese comment which we have seen during this period -- the Austrian Rote
Fahne and the Belgian La Voix du Peuple -- and to the Chinese "non-polemical"
7 November statement., although the latter limited itself to crediting Stalin
along with Lenin for leading the Soviet people to their great achievements.
Treatment:
1. We continue along the lines suggested in Guide #1O, especially
a. we keep Khrushchev before world public opinion and prevent his
being turned into an "unperson";
b. we expose the Stalinist and Khrushchevist past of the "new men";
c. we contrast what Communist leaders and media said about K before
and after 15 October.
2. We chide (gray in Social Democratic or other left-of-center outlets;
or black) Soviet-.oriented leaders and parties (Gomuika, the French and Italian
CPs, etc.) who at first protested the circumstances of K's ouster and now
accept meekly the Kremlin's "line"; we press this line in interviews with Com-
munist leaders and other official travelers returning from Moscow. We encour-
age all personal acquaintances of K to seek to visit, or communicate with him.
We encourage questions about K's disappeared books and pictures (See also
Propaganda Note #75/C).
3. We confront the new CPSU leaders -- and Moscow-oriented Communists
everywhere -- with the new drive for the "rehabilitation" of Stalin, quoting
the Albanian, dissident Belgian and other materials mentioned above. We
add black output attributed to Stalinists within the CPSU (Molotov?) and
other pro Moscow CPs. We start rumors like construction work at Lenin's
mausoleum to restore Stalin?s corpse to its former place of honor. We use
cartoons showing Stalin's ghost appearing to Brezhnev & Co. reminding them
that they owe their entire careers and their very lives to him, and so forth.
4. We speculate about the role of the KGB in K's downfall, relating it
to the Schvirkmann incident, wondering about the future positions of Shelepin
and other KGB bigwigs in the new regime and emphasizing that the Soviet Union
remains under secret police control.
5. Contingency. If it should be confirmed that the preparatory 26-CP
meeting will actually be p o s t p o n e d, while Moscow attempts to ap-
pease Mao and stops polemics against the Chinese, we should redouble our
efforts to counter such rapprochement -- for instance by black re-distribution
of previously produced polemics, of the venomous output of the splinter groups
etc. In letters and manifestoes attributed to pro-Soviet and anti Stalinist
Communists (in the Bloc as well as in the free world), we should denounce any
such postponement as a futile attempt to conceal the real issues, a shameful
c a p i t u l a t i o n before Mao's dogmatism, jeopardizing the -_, al-
legedly continuing - policy of "peaceful co-existence."
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(Commentary)
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7f 41
28 October-10 November 1964
NOTE: The extensive developments related to the CPSU's ouster of
Khrushchev -- mostly focused on the 7 November anniversary of the
Soviet Revolution during this period -- make it desirable to handle
this issue in two parts like #40, i.e., the first presenting the
few other items chronologically and the second a round-up review.
October-November: Issue No. 12, October-November 1964, of the elaborately
published, Paris-based,pro-Chicom journal Revolution (we have the French
edition in hand) announces that during the month of October they are pre-
paring in Paris the first numbers of a new series in English and French
and in Bogota No. 1 of a Spanish edition for =tin America, representing
a total of 50,000 copies. It also announces the following changes:
a. D. will become a bimonthly (instead of a monthly), increasing
pages of the French edition by 33%, of the English by 50~j, and will
include a complete book (this issue prints Stalin's Principles of
Leninism);
b. The price of the French edition will be increased 15% in Europe
and decreased 35% in the countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
No increase in the price of the English edition.
October 30: In a press conference on his return from Peking, Tomomi
Narita, head of the Ja ese Socialist Party delegation which has Just
held two weeks of talks with the CCP Chrono, October 14), says that, al-
though the talks were deadlocked at times and they failed to reach agree-
ment on certain concepts and issues, such as the Chinese nuclear test,
they did find a number of "common points" on which they could agree and
decided to exchange missions "every other year."
November 2: Swedish CP Chairman Hermansson tells a press conference after
meeting of the Executive Committee that they will change their money-losing
central organ Ny Dag (and its Gothenburg filial Arbetar Tidningen) from a
daily to a weekly gazette. The money saved by this change would be used
to setup the party's own school for Party workers, thus ending its depend-
ence on E. Germany and the Soviet Union for such training.
November 3: Tokyo Kyodo agency reports that Yoshio Shiga, who leads a
group of other recently expelled pro-Soviet Japanese CP members, would
leave for Moscow on the 4th for a visit of a week to 10 days at the invi-
tation of "the director of the Marx-Lenin Research Institute." "He re-
portedly wants to see Soviet Government and Party leaders and seek their
reply to a request made at the end of October by his group ... for clari-
fication of reasons for the recent ouster of ... (10."
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November L : Norweaian CP daily Friheten publishes a joint communique on
an October visit of an IKP delegation to Sofia for talks with BCP leaders,
including First Secy Zhivkov, on matters of common interest -- including
"questions concerning the construction of socialism,... the situation in
the ICM and the workers movement ...." "The two parties had a united
viewpoint on the questions which were taken up.'?
November 5: French CP daily L'Humanit6 publishes under a 3-column heading
a joint communique -on a two-week visit of a Yugoslav Party delegation for
discussions with top FCP leaders which "underlined the necessity and re-
ciprocal utility of developing closer collaboration between the FCP and
the YLC, with a view to achieving better knowledge and a re-tightening of
fraternal ties between the two parties."
As our last period ended, delegates from 5 CP's were in Moscow for
more explanations about Khrushchev's ouster. The first, from the French
CP, had talks with the top figures of the CPSU, including Brezhnev, on
the 26th and 27th: the Tass commiunique on the 29th, the day they departed,
described "an atmosphere of fraternal friendship and frankness," and said
that "the delegations exchanged views and information on questions of in-
terest to both parties." They "confirmed the determination of both parties"
to pursue common policies of peaceful coexistence, etc., "and to continue
ire arations for another international conference of the Communist and
workers parties." It made no mention of Ihrushchev or his ouster.
Speaking after the delegation made its report to the FCP Central
Committee on 6 November, SecyGen Rochet said: "We neither approve nor
disapprove, since the resignation came as the result of a decision by the
CC of the CPSU." The FCP statement published on the 8th, however, backed
the ouster and emphasized opposition to "the leftist and nationalist line"
of the Chinese CP leadership. On the 9th, the Paris weekly Express pub-
lished a purportedly accurate account of the secret conversations of the
delegation with the CPSU leaders according to which the French were not
satisfied with the explanations. FCP delegate Leroy reportedly stated:
"The 'resignation' of K. means for the FCP the immediate loss of 15 per-
cent of its members and 20 percent of those who vote with it." Zxpress
said that the French asked 12 times to see K but were refused.
The Italian CP delegation met with the top CPSU leaders on 30 and
31 October and on 2 November. When they departed on 3 November, the Tass
communique' spoke of "a spirit of friendship and sincerity," said the par-
ticipants "confirmed the full resolution of both parties" on vague policy
statements, and avoided mention of an international conference or the
Khrushchev ouster. At home, however, delegation chief Berlinguer told
newsmen on arrival that "these explanations, which certainly deserve great
2 (Chronology Cont.)
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attention, did not appear to be sufficient to make us abandon the reser-
vations expressed by our Party." ':,uestioned as to whether he had asked
to see K, Berlinguer replied: "No. It is a practice of elementary cor-
rectness that when two delegations meet they are the delegations desig-
nated by the two parties." The resolution approved by the ICP on the 6th
accepts in effect the Soviet explanation, pays restrained tribute to the
"positive contribution" made by K to "the process of development opened up
by the 20th Congress," and "greets with satisfaction the signs of improve-
ment" in Sino-Soviet relations while reasserting the ICP's "reservations"
about calling a new international conference at this time.
Meanwhile, the fellow-travelling Paesa Sera (Rome) described on the
30th a 29-point Soviet document of the charges against K which it said
has been distributed to CPSU activists, while on the 31st, the ICP's
daily L'Unita, printed in the same shop, denied the existence of a 29-
point document, but listed 14 points of accusation which had been "reli-
ably" reported. Then the Italian weekly L'Espresso on 1 November pub-
lished a "summary of Suslov's report" at the plenum ousting K reportedly
received from E. Berlin -- which drew an official Tass denunciation of it
on 3 Nov. as "an anti-Soviet fabrication." And the pro-Chicom Nuova Units.
on 5 November warned that the removal of It is only "one initial step in
the fight against revisionism" and concluded that "the fundamental task
facing M-Ls today is to denounce the projected world. Communist conference
in Moscow."
The Indian, Austrian, and Danish delegates met only with Suslov and
Ponomarev, on 30 Oct., 31 Oct., and 1 Nov., respectively. Of particular
interest was the Tass coimnunique on 2 Nov. regarding the Austrian talks:
it added that both sides "stressed the need ... to continue preparations
for a new meeting of the Communist and workers parties and a meeting of
the draftinj committee." The few reports we have seen of comments by
these delegates after returning home indicate that they have publicly ac-
cepted and defended the CPSU action. Danish CP Chairman Jesperson even
added the story that K is suffering from sclerosis.
The ruling parties of Eastern Europe seemed to have fallen in step
with the CPSU, except for the hostile Albanians, the independent Ruman-
ians -- and the suddenly non-conforming Czechs. The Czechs' non-conform-
ity is not great as yet -- on the 27th Rude Pravo published a round-up
of demands for more info on the K ouster by the Austrian, Swiss and
Uruguayan CPs and announced that a Czech Party delegation had gone to
Paris to exchange views on the ICM with the FCP; Czech editorials con-
tinue to omit the 21st Congress from those determining the Leninist line;
and the Czech delegation to the 7 Nov. fete in Moscow was headed only by
second-rater Hendrych rather than by Novotny (see later) -- but, together
with recent radical domestic "liberalization" measures, it has led to
speculation that Czechoslovakia may be the next Communist state to follow
the Rumanians into "independence."
3 (Chronology Cont.)
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The "fact-finding" delegations had barely completed their talks in
Moscow when delegations from most parties of the world arrived for the
traditional anniversary celebration (47th this year) of the Soviet
"October" Revolution on 7 November. The Chinese made world headlines
by announcing on the 4th that Premier Chou En-lai would head a strong
CCP delegation. Delegations of four ruling parties were headed by their
chiefs -- Polish, Hungarian, E. German and Mongolian. Premier Maurer led
the Rumanian contingent, and CC Secretary Hendrych of the Czech was the
lowest-ranking of Soviet orbit delegates. Yugoslavia's leading ideolo-
gist, Vlahovic, headed his party's delegation. The North Korean and
North Vietnamese parties sent strong delegations, headed by a CC Vice
Chairman and Premier, respectively. Economic boss Guevara represented
Cuba. Albania was not invited. Tight secrecy has thus fax cloaked the
talks which the CPSU must have conducted with these delegations. However,
Chou, staying on after the others departed, was still there at the end of
our period, and the press carried unconfirmed "inside" reports that the
Chinese were pressing the Soviets to make another effort to avoid a split
by holding a new round of bilateral talks before going ahead with plans
for a world conference.
Overt CPSU statements throughout this period have followed rather
closely the 17 October Pravda editorial, i.e., commitment to the general
line of the 20th, 21st, and 22nd Congresses, with its emphasis on peace-
ful coexistence, support of the test-ban treaty, appeal for unity of the
Communist world, and call for an international party conference -- with
no mention of a specific time-table. The Soviet refusal to make funda-
mental concessions to the Chinese was particularly evident in the key
speech delivered by Brezhnev in the presence of Chou and the other leaders
of the Communist world at the Revolution anniversary, -- and a Pravda
editorial on 10 Nov. again emphasized that "the majority" of the world's
parties believe that the time is "ripe" for convening a world conference.
Peking papers on 3 November devoted a full page to statements by
various CPs and their leaders on the K ouster. On the 6th, People's
Dai carried full text of the key 17 October Pravda editorial and of
the 1 November Pravda editorial which expanded on it.
Then on the 7th, People's Daily carried an editorial devoted to the
anniversary, under the title "Unite Under the Banner of the Great October
Revolution," which arrogantly made it clear that an ra rochement would
have to be on China's terms. It starts with a bow to great Soviet
people taught and guided by Lenin and Stalin" who, "are successors to a
glorious revolutionary tradition, can be trusted, and will not disap-
point ...." It refers authoritatively to its "proposal concerning the
general line of the ICM" (the 14 June 1963 CCP letter which drew the
14 July 1963 CPSU "open letter" and thus played a key role in the recent
polemical war), and reiterates emphatically its stand on the principal
disputed issues, such as the necessity for smashing the bourgeois state
4 (Chronology Cont.)
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apparatus with revolutionary violence, for persisting in the dictatorship
of the proletariat and carrying the socialist revolution through to the
end, etc. Unity 'must be built entirely on the basis of independence ...
opposition to all forms of bourgeois nationalism, and of great-nation
chauvinism in particular." In order to safeguard unity, "an uncompromis-
ing struggle must be waged against all forms of opportunism which betray
M-L, especially modern revisionism which is the main danger to the ICM
today.
PD then gloats over its new victory:
"The course of development of the ICM in recent years has amply
roved the great historic significance of persevering in the struggle
against revisionism.
"Khrushchev is the chief representative of modern revisionism.
He has betrayed Leninism, betrayed proletarian internationalism,
betrayed the path of the October Revolution, and betrayed the in-
terests of the Soviet people. The Soviet people and the CPSU [note
that "the people" come first] recently removed K from the leading
posts he held in the party and state. This is a very good thing,
and it has the support of M-Ls and revolutionary people of all the
world.....
"The Chinese People, taught and guided by the CCP and Comrade
Mao Tse-tung, have always had the deepest respect for and confidence
in the long-tested Soviet people.... Through no fault of ours, nor
of the Soviet peoples, relations between the Chinese and Soviet par-
ties and the two countries have met with difficulties and suffered
impairment in the past period.... We are convinced that the diffi-
culties... are, after all, only a historical episode and can be
gradually resolved...."
(N.B.: Chou also visited Stalin's grave in Moscow.)
The Albanians., ans, as so often formerly, led the May in attacking the
CPSU. On 1 November, Zeri I Po -lit featured an editorial "The Fall of
Khrushchev Did Not Entail the Disappearance of Khrushchevian Revisionism."
It begins:
"The inglorious end of N. Khrushchev is the result of the in-
transigent-and principled combat waged by all M-Ls who courageously
struggled against modern revisionism [MR].... It is a great victory
of M-L over MR.
"All M-Ls and all revolutionaries regard K's ousting ... as the
failure of the political and ideolo ical course of MR, as formulated
by the 20th and 22nd Congresses....
5 (Chronology Cont.)
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After a detailed denunciation of K's betrayals, ZIP asserts:
"The political liquidation of N. Khruahrhev, although he was the
head of modern rev1e onism, does not mse*n liquidation of his ideological,
ececonomic, and organizational lticaleline, ?which cause so much harm
the USSR, M-L the amp (etc.).... expulsion... has
not entailed the death of Khrushchevian_revisionism: it has not liqui-
dated his ideology and policy, expressed in the line of the 20th CPSU
Congress...."
ZIP went even further in its editorial on the Nov. anniversary. In
this, the villain is N. Khrushchev and his group," who 'applied themselves
to denigrating the Soviet Union, to weakening it, to liquidating the victo-
ries of Great October, and to bringing back capitalism." K's ouster is
"the result of the firm strug a of the G P the Albanian Workers Party,
and other parties which adhere to the positions of M-L and all revolutionary
Communists. This is the result of the unmasking of Khrushchevite revision-
ists and the result of their profound crisis. This proves once again that
he who raises his hand against M-L will be eliminated as a traitor."
"But the liquidation of N. Khrushchev d9es not mark the definite
end of revisionism.... The M-LB will continue their high-principled
str to against Khrushchevite revisionists and a a inst the perfidious
line of the 20th and 22nd Congresses until the complete defeat of the
revisionists and until the liquidation of the deformations made in
M-L. Many steps must be made in this direction. And one of them,
incontestably the most important, is to put back in its place the per-
son and work of J. V. Stalin and to reject the calumnies of K. revi-
sionists against J. V. Stalin....
The pro-Chinese splinter groups in various countries have also carried
on bitter polemics against their pro-Soviet rivals. The 1 November issue
of Rote Fahne, organ of the Chinese wing of the Austrian Communists, blasted
the local Party leadership for its protests against the manner of K's ouster
and charged that "They do not speak from any democratic and humanistic con-
science, but from shaking fear that the ousting of the chief revisionist,
K, in the Soviet Union could also lead to the fall of his most compromised
instruments in Austria."
"They are those who did not find the smallest blemish when K on
his way to power, did not hesitate to execute a whole series of people
surrounding Stalin or to have them shot to death without any trial.
Has anybod ever demanded an explanation of the shooting of Beriya, or
the execution of Abakumov, Poskrebyshev, Bagirov, Rummin, and other
functionaries? These executions were carried out on the basis of evi-
dence which the public still does not know tod ."
6 (Chronology Cont.)
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"And where was this so-recently upset 'democratic feeling' of
Fuernberg, Marek, and others when K, so devotedly defended by them,
eliminated onr by_ono~Ma.!enl ovZ E.L.tg,
7.r; ., Mot otov, :aganovtch, She~nilov,
Zhukov, Fervukhhin., and many other leadj.n&fuii ct?onari.es? Has anyone
ever heard that they objected to ... how, for example, the most impor-
tant living representative of Old Bolshevism, who had organized and
carried out the October Revolution, Comrade Molotov, was declared an
'enemy emy of the Party' and ousted sh ; efu11. y?"
Rote Fahne attributed the recent"drift to the right" of the Austrian
Communists to the influence of the Togi1atti.n morn'1um."
The 6 November issue of La Voix du Peuple, weekly organ of the Belgian
pro-Chinese "party," also redoubled its attacks against the "Khrushchevian
traitors" leading the local official party and devoted a whole page to a
glorification of. Stalin. Interestingly, La Voix has not once mentioned the
names of Brezhnev, Kosygin, or any other leading CPSU figures. (Meanwhile,
Drapeau Roue, organ of the official Belgian CP, has gone so far as to advise
the Belgian fiscal authorities to investigate the sources of income of the
Grippa-led pro-Chinese group, saying that Grippa would have wound up in
prison for debt long ago if he had had to pay for his propaganda out of rev-
enues in Belgium.)
7 (Chronology)
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849. STATE OF TL SPACE RACE
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SITUATION: On 12 October, the Soviets launched the Voskhod (Sunrise)
space capsule with three men aboard, including a doctor (Boris Yegorov) and
a scientist (Konstantin Feoktistov) as well as the pilot, Col. Vladimir
Komarov. The space capsule was in the air for 24 hours and made 16 loops
around the earth before landing. Much was made of the claim that the as-
tronauts did not wear special space suits and that they moved freely about
the capsule while in orbit: this suggested that the capsule was very
spacious, even though three persons were in it. This was the first time
that either the Soviets or the US had sent more than one person into space
in one spaceship. Such a ship could be used as part of an orbiting space
station, and might in future flights make rendezvous with other capsules.
Whatever the scientific implications, the propaganda gain for the
Soviets was considerable. Their last manned space exploit had occurred
over a year before in June 1963 (twin flights of V. F. Bykovskiy and V.V.
Tereshkova, the latter the first woman In space), and even Sir Bernard
Lovell, usually prone to praise Soviet achievements, had published an
article (New Scientist, 9 July 1964; Press Comment,, 3 August he stated that there seems little doubt that the Russians are~fasstxlosingh
ground to the Americans." The world had become aware that the Soviets had
suffered failures in space shots to Mars, Venus, and the Moon, since Octo-
ber 1960, and that the US was building and successfully testing the Saturn
rocket system, much larger than anything the Soviets possessed. Now, how-
ever, the Soviets have leapfrogged the American space program, Due to
slippage, the US is not now expected to orbit a two-man (Gemini) capsule
until February 1965, and a three man (Apollo) vehicle will probably not
take off from Cape Kennedy until 1967, As the Gemini shots take place,
they will be compared unfavorably with Voskhod, so that the Soviets may
gain more glory from these forthcoming US events than the US will, NASA
plans that, during the second Gemini flight, the astronauts will rise in
their seats and open a spaceship hatch; here again the Soviets will have
forestalled and excelled the US, at least in regard to free movement.
It was at least fortunate for the US that Voskhod itself was pushed
off the front pages by the overthrow of Khrushchev, the first Chicom nu-
clear detonation, and the British election. Many noticed that while Khru-
shchev had wished the astronauts a safe return, it was he who needed good
wishes, and who failed to appear at the Kremlin reception. Some observers
pointed out that although an initial announcement indicated that there
would be a "prolonged flight," and although the crew asked permission to
stay aloft, the capsule was returned to earth after the shortest Soviet
flight since Gagarinfs; this suggested that something may have gone wrong
(Economist, 17 October 1964; Press Comment, 20 October'1964).
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Unfortunately--and this time unnecessarily--much of the world press was
taken in by Soviet language implying that a new, much stronger rocket was
used, and some publications even concluded that the Soviets had something
bigger than the US Saturn I, which used 1.5 million lbs. of thrust to orbit
36,700 lbs. on 18 September 1964. On 21 October, Soviet scientist M. V.
Keldysh stated at a news conference that the Voskhod rocket had developed
more thrust than "any other rocket in the world that had so far orbited pay-
loads, instrument packages, or people." By qualifying "any other rocket in
the world" in this way, Keldysh in effect admitted that the Soviet rocket was
less powerful than Saturn: so far, Saturn has only orbited test loads of bal-
last ("boilerplate"). As might have been expected, Pravda and Moscow News
omitted the qualifying clause when quoting Keldysh. More surprisingly, the
New York Times and the Baltimore Sun, while ultimately giving the full state-
ment, did not realize the meaning of the qualification, and in their lead
paragraphs they simply said that Keldysh claimed the mightiest rocket on
earth. Aviation Week and Space Technology (26 October) repeated the most
powerful' claim without any qualification, and European newspapers 'IikeVise
hailed Soviet primacy in rocket power.
The Washington Post (13 and 14 October 1964; Press Comment, 13 and 21
October 1964) quoted US officials as stating that the Soviets mated the upper
stage from their planetary exploration program to "the old, tried and true
first-stage Vostok booster." (FYI only: Classified analysis shows that the
basic Voskhod booster was an SS-6, which has been used in all major Soviet
space launches; for an upper stage, a Venik space rocket was employed, re-
placing the less powerful Lunik upper stage which had orbited previous manned
capsules. The SS-6/Venik combination had been tested in the launching of four
recoverable photographic satellites. The Voskhod capsule weighed about 14,000
lbs., as opposed to 10,1+00 for the earlier Soviet manned shots. End FYI.)
The Post also reported that these US officials maintain that the Soviets can-
not take men to the moon without something near the size of the monstrous
7.5 million lb. thrust of the Saturn V rockets, which will send Americans
to the moon, and which are now In production. The Soviets have given no
overt sign of building a big new booster, which would be very costly in terms
of valuable resources, and for which there is no military necessity. Very
likely, Khrushchev disregarded the long-term need for a bigger booster and
pushed for an immediate propaganda triumph now, just as he ordered the Virgin
Lands and fallow fields plowed up in an attempt to gain a short-term agri-
cultural surplus. The full publicity which attends the US space program
doubtless made it easy to calculate just what would be needed to take the
luster off the next three years of that program.
The policy of the new Soviet leaders may differ from Khrushchev's. K.
always hoped to overawe the world with space exploits, including their im-
plication of an ICBM capability. Between Sputnik I (1957) and the Cuban
missile crisis (1962) he seems to have thought that he could pull off a
tremendous bluff, using space exploits and rocket-rattling to frighten the
West into a surrender. This no longer appears possible today, and the new
leaders may not see much point in pouring further resources in trained men
and advanced equipment into the space program. But even if they do not
build new rockets and space capsules, there are probably items of equipment,
already finished, which they can use for a time for propaganda purposes.
We may expect further Voskhod-type flights, probably lasting for longer
perind.s
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851 WH,f. UNIVERSITY REFORM IN LATIN AMERICA
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SITUATION: In Latin America, the concept "university reform" is at
once an academic and administrative program, a political slogan, and a
vehicle for Communist penetration of the universities and control of all
important phases of higher education. For the students, it is also a
"mystique," with such vague and emotion-packed overtones that its devotees
do not respond to rational appeals on the subject.
The concept of university reform was first articulated in April 1918
at the University of Cordoba by a congress of the newly founded Federacion
Universitaria Argentina. This congress was composed of two delegates from
each of the five then existing universities in Argentina and is generally
regarded as the first National Student Congress. In essence, it was
called in rebellion against the apathy and corruption into which the Ar-
gentine university system had fallen during the successive dictatorships
and liberal regimes of the republic.
Ten "statutes" were adopted by the congress, the first two of which
have had far-reaching and revolutionary effect: co-gobierno, or student
participation in the management of the affairs of the university, and
university autonomy. The first statute specified that a university should
be governed, not by political appointees and a self-perpetuating staff,
but by those most concerned with it: the professors, the students, and the
graduates, in equal proportions. The sense of the term university auton-
omy, especially as it has been interpreted later, was that the only role
of the national government should be that of providing the necessary op-
erating funds. For all other activities -- the appointment of a rector
(president), the general orientation of the curriculum, the hiring, firing,
and promotion of teachers, the management of funds, discipline on the cam-
pus, etc. -- the university itself would be solely responsible. Other
statutes called for optional attendance on classes, doing away with aca-
demic tenure for professors, social (read financial) assistance to the
students, and the orientation of the university toward the social problems
that face the nation.
Latin American universities are patterned after the University of
Salamanca, which was an autonomous institution insofar as the relations be-
tween Church, state, and clergy allowed in the Middle Ages. But the big
difference between then and now is that the monks and lesser clerics (most
students were then considered lay clerics) who ran things wer impervious
to the penetration of subversive ideas emanating, for example, from the
Muslim pagans in Southern Spain. The early colonial universities, those
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of Peru ab1 Mexico, both founded a century before Harvard, were substan-
tially democratic organisms, and the students, according to chroniclers
of university reform, had the right to elect their own teachers. The. new
university, envisaged by the reform, was to be anti-clerical and adopt a
policy of laicismo, or secularism, not only for government-supported uni-
versities, but for education in general, which would come ultimately to
include Catholic universities and other Church-supported institutions in
Latin America.
Since the Cordoba congress of 1918, university reform has suffered
the ups and downs of many other liberal, leftist, and somewhat anti-
clerical movements: it has generally thrived under liberal regimes, only
to be suppressed under dictatorships. At the present time it has spread
to practically every secular institution of higher learning in Latin Amer-
ica, either as accepted practice or as a goal to be reached. From the be-
ginning, proponents of university reform have had a popular cause. No one
will dispute that the old universities needed reforming, and there is ev-
ery reason to assume that there was then just as much inefficiency and
corruption in managing a university as in handling affairs of state. Un-
fortunately, however, while university reform has undoubtedly eliminated
many old abuses, it has created new ones, some of a purely academic or
administrative nature, and others that constitute a potential danger in
the context of the free world struggle against Communism.
The fundamental fallacy of university reform, or rather of its two
major postulates -- autonomy.khdco-government -- is the assumption that,
just because a nation has adopted a democratic form of government, re-
sponsive to the will of the majority, one of its components might func-
tion under the same system. If one argues with a Latin American student
that a warship at sea, a government bureau, or an industrial corporation
are managed autocratically within the framework of a greater democracy,
he will be likely to reply that the university is a sort of cosmos in
itself, or a little world of its own that represents society-as a whole
and that the elite corps which composes it is alone qualified to run it.
Another fallacy is the assumption that young people are actuated by
purer motives than older people. The Cordoba manifesto even asserts that
youth ... "is disinterested, it is pure. It has not had time to contami-
nate itself. It can never be mistaken in the election of its own educa-
tors." Vis-a-vis the rest of the population, students have managed to
put themselves on the side of the angels. From arrogating to themselves
something of a monopoly of high ideals, it is not a very big jump for the
students to assume that superior judgment goes hand-in-hand with their
asserted incorruptibility. As a matter of fact, many Latin American stu-
dentleaders -- and their followers -- appear to believe sincerely that
they are possessed of both.
It is the opinion of impartial observers that the basic postulates
of university reform are wrong in both theory and practice. By voting
themselves voluntary attendance onlolasses, the students have de-empha-
sized the spontaneity of classroom'discussions and thereby avoided the
2
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healthy discipline of day-to-day preparation. By outlawing entrance ex-
aminations, they have contributed to overcrowding the universities with
unprepared students. By eliminating such tedious exercises as term papers
and insisting on easy, oral examinations, they have reduced the standards
of scholarly achievement. Professor K. H. Silvert, after lecturing two
years in the University of Buenos Aires and the University of Chile at
Santiago, answered a claim by an American colleague to the effect that the
Argentine university system was without peer in the rest of Latin America
in these words: "I am not competent to say whether the Argentine univers-
ity system was or was not the best in Latin America [from 1918 to the ac-
cession of Peron], although certainly the Chileans would dispute the claim.
In any event, this purely comparative statement does not tell us whether
the university was good or bad. It is my opinion that the University of
Buenos Aires never was truly a good institution of higher learning." The
whole sense of Professor Silvert's report, published by the American Uni-
versities Field Staff, is that the University of Buenos Aires, although
the largest and probably the best in Latin America, has standards of schol-
arship and accomplishment far below those of a mediocre U. S. university.
"The situation," he said, "is tragic."
Of all the changes brought about by university reform in Latin Amer-
ica, perhaps the most harmful has been the so-called c6tedra libre, usu-
ally translated as "free teaching,'.' but actually a euphemism for the abo-
lition of life tenure for professors. Like other elements of the reform,
it was intended to do away with an inveterate abuse: the continuance in
teaching positions of incompetent teachers. Under the new system, pro-
fessors are subject to periodic examinations and may be removed from
their posts, promoted or reduced by decision of the Consejo Universitario
(University Council), composed of teachers, students, and graduates in
equal proportions. In actual practice, cf,tedra libre has become a device
by which students, through their delegates on the council,-can maintain
constant pressure on their teachers, even to the point of blackmail. A
teacher who does not conduct his classes according to the whim of the stu-
dents, or who does not conform to the prevailing orthodoxy, may not be
promoted or may be discharged.
On the campuses of many Latin American universities, the Communists
occupy the controlling elective offices in the student organizations. In
all of them, except certain private, Catholic institutions, they are a
dynamic, influential element, prepared to assume control at any time.
Since university reform was, from its inception, a leftist and anti-cler-
ical movement, it was not only natural, but has been easy, for the Com-
munists to seize control of it and use it to"their own ends.
Therefore, student participation in university administration has not
only prevented Latin American universities from keeping pace with their
U. S. and European counterparts in purely academic matters, it has also
opened the door for Communist penetration and control of the whole univers-
ity system. Communist influence, exerted primarily at the university level,
is little by little being exerted, through the new generations of teachers,
in the primary and secondary levels of education as well. It is safe to
3
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(851 Cont.)
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say that the majority of Latin American students enter the university
with their minds already well filled with the usual Communist cliches,
and a fanatical minority are prepared to engage in active struggle as
militant Communists.
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CPYRGHT
Reprint of
Article in Paese sera
30 Oct 61., Rome
[owned by Italian C.P.1
The So vi?ct CoTmwnist Party is beCinning to reply to the innun,ra'ule
questions brought up by the more vigilant and attentive public opinion of
the country. There is beginning a heavy job of orientation among the masses
to parry certain dangers that could occur after the resignation of Khrush-
chev: the danger of a weakening of the impetus of youth, of the initiation
of a certain lack of political direction, and a certain ideological fatigue
among the intellectuals and vast strata of workers. The Soviet Coiiuuuzist
Party is beginning to reply, and it is doing it in a comprehensive manner,
circulating its orientations in all places of work, in party buildings, and
in the 300,000 so-called primary organizations (cells), so that its indi-
cations can reach out everywhere to all the members of the immense army of
11 and a half million Soviet communists and, through them, to all the pop-
ulation.
The ideological section of the central party apparatus has been issuing
certain explanatory documents during the past few days to all the peripheral
party bodies. These documents are like instructions for the use of acti-
vists, containing a series of indications which speakers at all factory and
cell meetings use as an aid to face the difficult and embarrassing topic of
the fall of Khrushchev.
These documents are of different types and sorts according to the cate-
gory of citizens to which they are addressed. Their circulation is strictly
internal, and they are not for publication in newspapers.
However, because of their widespread circulation -- there is talk of
a circulation of 750,000 copies -- we were able today to learn with suffi-
cient exactitude, on the basis of careful summaries, the contents of two of
these instructions: one for local propagandists of Komsomol in student
circles, and the other for party activists at the meetings that are in
progress these days for the election of officers in rank-and-file bodies.
Both contained a quantity of material to be used to answer questions that
Soviet public opinion is asking about the silent cataclysm of October 13
and 14. The fundamental part of these texts records the criticism made
against the ex-Premier, listed in 29-points. The charges are grouped in a
pamphlet for Komeoma1 propagandists. Komsomol is the communist youth or-
ganization of the Soviet Union. These pamphlets serve to provide a unified
and comprehensive reply to the question of why Khrushchev was deposed.
The (Italian) public already knows about a good many of these charges,
since we repeatedly published some of them during the first days after the
overthrow of the Premier. But there are about a dozen which are completely
unpublished, and for the first time a confidential publication of the party
groups all of them together in a comprehensive manner. They are grouped in
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CPYRGHT
four large parts: Domestic Affairs, Foreign Affairs, Communist Movement,
and Personal Behavior of Khrushchev. Here is a list of the points in order,
which was given to us by an excellent source, and added to them in some
cases are the specific arguments suggested to the activists to better ex-
plain every single point.
Domestic Affairs.
1. Errors and profound contradictions in agricultural management.
In 1957 Khrrushchev fought, against Molotov, for an extensive agriculture,
for the initiation of cultivation of the virgin lands. But in February
1961+, also following the disastrous harm done by erosion in those areas
that had just been put to the plow, he was forced to call for intensive
farming and suspend efforts in the virgin lands. In March 1962 he carried
on an all-out campaign against the system of rotation of forage crops and
sustained the necessity to grow maize instead of grasses. But in May 1961
he was forced to admit that not always and not everywhere -- for example,
in the Baltic countries -- is it advantageous to grow maize instead of grass.
2. Administrative and organizational confusion. In 1956 he fought
against Molotov, originator of a wide-scale administrative centralization
(plan), and came out in favor of de-centralization. But recently -- only
a few months ago -- he returned to positions that are identical to those
of Molotov. In November 1962 he launched a wide-scale general reorganiza-
tion of the forty-seven regional economies of the Soviet Union, widening
their scope and reducing their number to seventeen. In this way, there
were created entangled relations between one area and another which led to
conflicts of competence in the true sense of the word. Typical among these
was a long controversy between the Bratsk region and the Irkutsk region,
following the new reorganization, which led to delays in building roads and
other public works.
3. Errors in planning. He presented to the plenum, and had it ap-
proved unanimously, a complex project that placed the planning organization,
Gosplan, under the jurisdiction of a super-planning body, the Supreme Coun-
cil of the Economy. But confusion increased, as Khrushchev himself admitted
in December 1963 (Plenum on Big Chemistry).
1+. Incorrect policy on light industry. For the past few years,
Khrushchev had insisted on an excessive increase in allocations to produce
consumer goods and to make the business structure smoother, putting into
effect in September 1961+ certain changes that upset the work of technical
experts and economists.
5. Underestimation of the role of heavy industry. The allocations in
this sector are not, in proportion, satisfactory and adequate in terms of
the directives for the development of the Soviet Union as a world power of
the very first water. Grave defects occurred -- because of deficiencies
attributed to Khrushchev directives -- in the production of sheet steel,
to such an extent that it was necessary to import it from Italy and Germany.
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CPYRGHT
Isufficient pace characterizes the replacement of old machinery. Certain
errors were committed following the discovery of extremely rich deposits
of ferrous material near Kursk, because of the misplacement of the new steel
factories destined to process the ore, and because of the failure to oper-
ate with technical methods adequate for the exceptional quality of the new
deposits that were discovered.
6. Tax pressure. In 1960 there was an announcement of an imminent re-
duction of taxes. But these reductions were postponed indefinitely because
of intricate technico-financial reasons.
7. Mistaken building policy. At the end of the preceding state eco-
nomic plan (1958) he was vividly in opposition to the designers and tech-
nicians of the so-called reconstruction plan of Moscow. He declared him-
self to be strongly against the large low-cost buildings of nine, fourteen
and twenty stories suggested by the planners for reasons of economy, and
adopts on a very large scale the small building policy -- housing unit of
five or six stories at most.
But later -- in the spring of 1963 -- he returned to the previously
contested concept of the gigantic buildings, involving edifices of twenty-
two stories in the central Moscow zones of Arbad and Sokol.
8. Mistaken city planning policy. He fought against the projects of
the city planners who want to avoid in Moscow oil-slick expansion by creat-
ing sputnik cities or directional residential centers in the extreme periph-
ery. But he wound up by accepting their idea. He fought against the con-
cept of the foot-bridge of the American type, demanding instead underground
passages (which, it must be said, are technically more familiar to the So-
viets, because of the brilliant experience of the subway of Moscow, Lenin-
grad and Kicurt.
9. Inopportune and heavy-handed intervention into cultural matters.
e famous speeches of Khrushchev of December 1962 and March 1963 in re-
ard to socialist realism which has thus lost part of what little prestige
t once had.
10. Untimely literary intervention in the question of Sivan Denis-
ovic. In November 1962 the literary review Novy Mir, which for months
ad been fighting for the publication of the novel, A Day in the Life of
lexandr Solzhenitzvn (a. work based on " e theme of the terrible life in
he Stalinist concentration camps), received unhoped for help: it was
Pumshchev in person who asked for the publication of that work. This
ntervention is today reproved because Solzheniczynts novel brought to light
an ugly past. According to today's accusors, it should have been ignored
and, above all, been made to be ignored.
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CPYRGHT
Foreign Affairs:
11. Decline in prestige of the foreign ministry: Khrushchev, with
his policy of personal contacts, many times crudely went over the head of
the ministerial organs of government, without even informing them of what
he was doing, and reduced the complex, efficient, and well organized diplo-
matic network of the USSR to a simple information service, from which he
acquired this or that notion that was useful to him at a given moment.
12. Doubtful result of the trip made in June of this year to the
Scandinavian countries. A political result was awaited, whereas it pro-
duced only an economical result of reduced proportions (ship orders, pur-
chase of heads of cattle, etc.).
13. Danger of worsening relations with the Scandinavian countries.
It was caused by some arguments, if only of a friendly nature, between the
Soviet leader and the Swedish Premier Tage Erlander in regard to the asylum
given by Sweden to the Ukranian emigrant Stechko and to Swedish aggression
in the Ukrania, at the time of Charles XII.
14. Contradictory and only slightly firm attitude during the crisis
of Cuba (October 1962). At first he publicly declared that there are no
Soviet missiles in Cuba. Then he admitted their presence on the island.
The result was that he had to retreat before the overbearing and illegal
attitude of the United States, which loosed a sea blockade.
15. Dangerous thoughtlessness during the Suez crisis (October 1956).
With his threatening, and fortunately very effective, ultimatum, Khrushchev
involved the Soviet armed forces in the possibility of intervention, thus
carrying the country to the brink of war without having consulted with
sufficient clarity the high leadership bodies of the USSR.
16. Dark clouds over the relations with the member countries of the
Comecon. Khrushchev rejected the five-year Soviet Plan, 1966-1970, which
was the first one drawn up in collaboration with the countries of eastern
Europe and which also took into account the interests of these countries.
17. Worsening in relations with Rumania. In talks with the Rumanian
leaders in the past years, Khrushchev insisted on their abandoning some
branches of industrial production (above all, metalmechanics), seeking to
induce them to augment the production of vegetables and fruit, so as to
have Rumania limit her role to simply that of vegetable-grower for the Comecor
18. "Druzhba" oil pipe line. He had the project for the Druzhba oil
pipeline carried out and left aside Rumania, thus depriving this country as
a market outlet for her petroleum.
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CPYRGHT
Communist Movement.
19. Internal disorganization of the Soviet Communist Party. Khrush-
chev imposed in November 1962 a radical reform of the internal structure
of the party, which completely suppressed the District Committees (Raykom),
depriving automatically of authority a few thousand local leaders and re-
placing their jobs with a two fold organization (Directorate of Production
for Industry and Directorate of Production for Agriculture). Consequent
to this there was an extremely wide scale organizational bogging down and
decay.
20. Style of operation in the ideological dispute. The leader gave
in more than once to the temptation to descend to the level of personal,
episodic battle, far from the elevated terms of the political ideological
dispute.
21. Errors in the conduct of the anti-Chinese polemics. The policy
of the First Secretary led the Soviet Communist Party almost to the entrance
of a dead-end street, committing the prestige of the Soviet Communist Party
in the preparation of a conference that is opposed not only by the Chinese,
but also various western communist parties.
22. Personal behavior. Nepotism. The already known incidents
(Adzhubei, Director of Iszvestia,. Nina Petrovna, head of a cultural
association,. Rada Khrushcheova Adzhubei, assistant editor of a magazine.,
Sergei Khrushchev, head of an important bureau) are supplemented by Khrush-
chev's attempt to have Adzhubei made a member of the Central Committee and
the Secretariat.
23. Edginess, intractableness, in personal relations. Recently,
perhaps because of his advanced age, Khrushchev has had clashes with his
closest collaborators.
24. Steps taken without consulting the plenum of the Central Commit-
tee. An example is entrusting Adzhubei, who had been invited to West Ger-
many by a group of six German newspapers, with a special diplomatic mission.
Another example, retained inopportune, was the awarding to Egyptian Presi-
dent Nasser of the title, "Hero of the Soviet Union."
25. Acceptance of forms of the personality cult with himself as
object of the cult. The case history presents very frequent and rich ma-
terial in this regard.
26. Question of form and attitudes that endanger the decorum and
prestige of a leader of the Soviet Union. The shoe beaten on the desk at
the United Nations, and certain crude, peasant-like expressions both at
meetings with representatives of various communist parties and in public
(one can recall the famous speech to the peasants of central Russia devoured
by bedbugs "no less avid than the Ukrainian bedbugs"). Another example:
the plate of goulash in his speech to the Hungarian workers, in April of
this year, at Budapest.
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(Cont.)
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CPYRGHT
27. Uncontrolled outbursts which endangered and aggravated relations
with brother parties. At the reception at Dom Priomov in honor of the
Chinese delegation, in July 1963, Khrushchev allowed himself to be carried
away by anger and insulted the head of the delegation, Teng Shao-ping and
his co-workers, Pen-cen and Wu Hsiu-chaun. He said to them that they were
the bearers of the "policy of madmen."
28. Declarations made in public with a thoughtlessness such as to
give rise to long and violent anti-Soviet press campaigns. One of the most
frequent examples of phrases on his lips was the one, addressed to the cap-
italists, "We will bury you."
29. Rashness in decisions. An example is when he spoke to the Japa-
nese members of parliament of the Soviet "super weapon," about which he was
later forced to make contradictory and embarrassing corrections.
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Excerpts from
Algemeen Handelsblad
Amsterdam
30 Oct 64
Nibelungen in Paris
"Everything suggests that de Gaulle is disappointed with results of
his striving for 'independence from America.' In fact he has had little
success. His proposal for a NATO triumvirate was not accepted. The French-
German treaty has become a scrap of paper and does not prevent Bonn from
binding itself via the MGF still closer to Washington. French recognition
of Communist China has annoyed the U.S. but produced no other results.
De Gaulle's Latin American tour aroused popular enthusiasm., but the gov-
ernments know well that France has much less to offer than the U.S. and
West Germany does not intend to help the French take pot shots at the U.S.
The only 'success' of de Gaulle's self-willed posture is that the new
Russian leaders are playing up to him. He nevertheless threatens to car-
ry arbitrary actions so far as to let the EEC and NATO break up.
"De Gaulle's threats are unfortunately reminiscent of Nibelungen. If
the hero loses, he wants to drag everyone else with him in his downfall.
Is this a reason to let him succeed? By no means.
"First, other European nations can manage better without France than
France can without Europe. If angry Paris should walk out of EEC or NATO
it would be an important development but would not prevent these organiz-
ations from continuing their activities while keeping the door open for
France after it regains its senses.
"Second, the French are supposed to be a logical people and the
Nibelungen sort of heroism will not fascinate them long. The General him-
self has demonstrated that he can face setbacks with stoicism, but should
he this time prove wrong, the voters will intervene.
"Finally, it is clear that the majority of Europeans do not support
de Gaulle's policy and prefer partnership with the U.S. as envisaged in
Kennedy's grand design. Should the majority let itself be blackmailed by
the minority, even if the leader of the minority threatens with political
suicide? We believe the majority has the right and the duty to stick to
its guns. It is the thankless task of the Netherlands to stress this con-
stantly."
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25X1C10b
Fact Sheets
November 1964
COMPLETED
[Note: This is only an outline list of events, as shown, for
example, by the fact that as of the end of 1963 the US had
launched 138 earth satellites, and the Soviets had launched
33 such satellites. Dates given are those of launching.]
4 Oct 1957 - Soviets launch Sputnik I.
31 Jan 1958 - US sends Explorer I into orbit.
2 Jan 1959 - Soviets send Lunik I into orbit around the sun.
1 Apr 1960 - US launches Tiros I weather satellite.
12 Aug 1960 - US launches Echo I passive communications satellite.
L. Oct 1960 - US launches Courier I-B active communications satellite.
10 - 14 Oct 1960 Soviets fail in two attempts to send probes to Mars.
4 Feb 1961 - Soviets fail to eject Venus probe from orbit.
12 Feb 1961 - Soviets eject Venus probe from orbit, but radio fails.
12 Apr 1961 - Maj. Yuri Ga arin sent into orbit by Soviets, the first
cosmonaut. tone circuit of earth)
5 May 1961 - Cdr. Alan B. Shepard, Jr. makes sub-orbital space flight.
21 July 1961 - Capt. Virgil I. Grissom makes sub-orbital space flight.
6 Aug 1961 - Maj. Gherman Titov makes 17 orbit space flight.
26 Jan 1962 - US Ranger III moon probe :Inters space at too high velocity,
misses moon.
20 Feb 1962 - Col. John H. Glenn, Jr. orbits earth 3 times for US.
26 Apr 1962 - First international satellite, Ariel, uses US vehicle
to carry 6 British experiments.
24 May 1962 - Lt. Cdr. Scott Carpenter makes 3 orbit space flight.
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ont.
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11 - 12 Aug 1962 Maj. A. G. Nikolayev and Lt. Col. P. R. Popovich sent
25 Aug
1962
-
into orbit on successive days. Speculation that their
spaceships were intended to meet in space.
Soviet Venus probe fails to leave orbit.
27 Aug
1962
-
Successful US Venus probe (Mariner II). (Passed Venus in Dec
1 Sep
1962
-
Soviet Venus probe fails to leave orbit.
28 Sep
1962
-
First Canadian earth satellite, Alouette; first satellite
3 Oct
1962
--
not US or Soviet-built. (Launched with US rocket.)
Cdr. Walter M. Schirra orbits earth 6 time.
2 Apr
1963
-
Soviet moon probe (Lunik IV), misses moon by 5300 miles.
15 May
1963
-
Maj. Gordon Cooper orbits earth 22 times.
14+ -16 June 1963 Lt. Col. V. F. Bykovskiy orbits earth 81 times; after two
16 Oct
1963 -
25 Jan
196+ -
29 Jan
196+ -
25 Mar
19611. -
31 Mar
1964 -
2 Apr
196+ -
8 Apr
196+ -
29 Apr
1964 -
15 May
196+ -
6 July 1964 -
days, Jr. Lt. Valentina V. Tereshkova also orbited, first
woman in space.
US launches first nuclear detection satellites, to detect
test-ban treaty violations.
Echo II orbited.
Saturn rocket orbits 10 ton payload.
Italy's San Marco Project successfully testfires 230 lb.
capsule to 150 miles altitude off Kenya coast.
US spokesmen say Soviets failed in Venus probe attempts in
February and mid-March.
Soviets launch rocket from earth satellite to undisclosed
target.
1st US Gemini (two-man) capsule orbited empty in test.
NASA says Soviets failed in launching apparently aimed at
moon.
Soviet space scientist says Soviet astronauts suffered afte.r-
effects of weightlessness. (COSPAR meeting, Florence, Italy.;
European Space Research Organization (ESRO) successfully
launches first scientific payload, using British Skylark
rocket.
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2 (Cont. )
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28 - 31 July 1964 Ranger 7 launched successfully, carrying six TV cameras.
Transmits 4316 photos of moon, down to 1760 feet.
18 Sep 1964 - Saturn rocket lifts dummy Apollo (3-man) space capsule.
36,700 lb. capsule-2nd stage combination placed in orbit.
12 Oct 1964 - Soviets orbit 3-man Voskhod spaceship: Col. V. M. Komarov,
K. Feoktistov, Dr. B. B. Yegorov.
PLANNED
Jan - Feb 1965 Launching of Saturn SA-9 to orbit Pegasus meteoroid
detection satellite.
Feb 1965 Launching of US Gemini (two-man) spacecraft; crew: Maj.
Virgil Grissom and Lt. Cdr. John W. Young. (Backup crew:
Cdr. Walter M. Schirra and Maj. Thomas P. Stafford.)
Max 1965 Launching of Saturn SA-8.
June-July 1965 Launching of Saturn SA-10.
1967 Current target for first Apollo (3-man) space flights.
1970 Current target for US flight to the moon.
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