FILES ON COMMUNIST BLOC PROPAGANDA

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
26
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 4, 2013
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 3, 1962
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1.pdf1.15 MB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Radio Propaganda Branch FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE FILES ON COMMUNIST BLOC PROPAGANDA A description of the files and records of ? Soviet, Chinese Communist, and satellite radio and press propaganda maintained in the Research Support Section of FBIS' Radio Propaganda Branch 3 December 1962 CONFIDENTIAL Group 1 - Excluded from automatic downgrading and declassification .t:= Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 50X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL 3 DECEMBER 1962 FILES ON COMMUNIST BLOC PROPAGANDA. Contents INTRODUCTION 0 0 0 0 .0 0 0 00000000000000 I, QUANTITATIVE 'DATA A, Moscow and Peking Commentaries0 . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .0 .0 2 Comment About Countries and Areas Comment on Topic4 Comment on Event4 Comment ,Beamed To Particular Areas B, Moscow and Peking Newscasts 0 000000000 0 00000 9 Moscow Domestic Service Newscasts Peking Domestic Service Newscasts Moscow and Peking Newscasts to Other Audiences II? TEXTS AND EXTRACTS OF OFFICIAL PRONOUNCEMENTS A, Files of Texts 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 , ? 0 0000000 0p lo pssR East European Satellites CoMmunist Chinao North Koreao North Vietnamo Mongolia Blocwide Other Communist Pronouncements 130 Files of Extracts Leadership Statements on Key Themes? 0 12 War Themes CPSU Congress Speeches Khrushchev on Some Key International Issues Ad Hoc Projects 1110 OTHER COLLATIONS A0 Soviet Leaders 9 Activities and Status 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ,, 00 20 B, Khrushchevisms 0 0 000000 000000000000000 20 C, Biographic Information on Bloc Propagandists 00000,00 20 D, Indexes of Bloc Press Articles 000000 000000000 21 E, Tables of Contents of FBIS Publications 0 0 o 00o0o 21 IVO AREA AND TOPIC FILES 0 0 0 0 ? 0 0 0 22 CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL 3 DECEMBER 1962 RADIO PROPAGANDA BRANCH FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE' - FILES ON'COMMUNIST BLOC-PkWAGANDA This catalogue lists the materials on file in the Radio Propaganda Branch (RPB) of the Foreign Broadcast Information Service that are drawn upon in response to requests for reports and information on Soviet, Chinese Communist, European and Far Eastern satellite, and Cuban propaganda, RPB?s systematic analysis of the output of Sino-Soviet bloc media is both qualitative (what the media say and how they say it) and quantitative (how much they say, and to whom), As studied in the branch, "propaganda" is defined to include all public utterances from bloc countries that are carried by the radios, news agencies, newspapers, and journals of those countries, (The definition excludes statements made by bloc spokesmen that are not publicized by the bloc's own media, although such statements are taken into consideration by branch analysts,) RPB reports its findings weekly in the TRENDS AND HIGHLIGHTS OF COM.. MUNIST BLOC BROADCASTS and every other week, more extensively, in the SURVEY OF COMMUNIST BLOC BROADCASTS. RADIO PROPAGANDA REPORTS, issued irregularly in a Current Developments Serfs and a Research Series, range from spot reports on propaganda about current world developments to studies of propaganda bearing on such intelligence problems as Sino Soviet relations and the Soviet leadership situation. A new monthly series of PROPAGANDA REPORTS covering salient aspects of Havana propa- ganda was instituted on 6 November l962, Indexes of the PROPAGANDA REPORTS are issued periodically. Propaganda developments of immediate interest are also reported on the FBIS Wire in items headed "Comment on Bloc Propaganda." The files described below are maintained in support of this activity, as a cumulative record of the content and quantity of bloc propaganda on selected subjects, Questions concerning these files, requests to use them, or requests for information from them may be directed to the Assistant for Reports, RPB, CONFIDENTIAL page 1 ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL I. QUANTITATIVE DATA A. Moscow and Peking Commentaries RPB bases its quantitative analysis on a cumulative record of the commen-, tary items broadcast by the Moscow and Peking radios. Other communist bloc radio, press, and journal materials are studied systematically as to content, but not quantitatively, The term "commentary" is defined to include radio talks and features, press articles and editorials broadcast by the radio? lengthy radio reportage such as accounts of meetings, parades or celebrations? official (govern- ment or party) statements, diplomatic notes, official letters or teler grams, and speeches. Radio Mo4courbroadcastimore than 3,000 commentaries a week to its domestic and foreign audiences. Radio Peking broadcasts more than 1,400 commen- taries a week to listeners in China and abroad. As much as 40 percent of the commentary output from Moscow and Peking is devoted, respectively, to Soviet and CPR internal affairs. FBIS maintains 80 to 90 percent coverage of the commentary output of the Moscow and Peking radios for all audiences, foreign and domestic. Infor- mation on all monitored comment is supplied daily by the FBIS field, categorized in RPB by subject area, topic, and/or event, and tallied on a weekly, quarterly, and yearly basis. RPB's counting week is the seven-day period Monday through Sunday. Some commentaries are broadcast only once, to a single audience. Others may be rebroadcast two, five, 109,209 or 40 or more times to many audi- ences, and some speeches by top Soviet leaders have been broadcast by Moscow more than 100 times; Khrushchev's report to the 22d CPSU Congress was broadcast a massive 600 times. The same commentary broadcast, say, 70 times is counted as 70 commentaries. No count of these commentary items on a given subject in a given period (volume) or analysis of target audiences (beaming) can be meaningful un- less it is viewed in perspective--compared with other statistics. Fifty Moscow commentaries in one week on, say, Icelandic affairs (a subject seldom discussed in Soviet propaganda) would be a huge volume; but 50 in one week on a Soviet party congress (normally publicized in many hundreds of broadcasts) would be a very small volume. Moscow's volume of comment on a given event may therefore be interpreted as emphasis, deemphasis, or routine treatment depending on how it stacks up against past volume on like events. CONFIDENTIAL page 2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL The cumulative records of the volume and target audiences of Moscow and Peking comment On areas, topics, and events are drawn upon as a continu- ing base for such comparison, enabling analysts to spot the gradual long term trends as well as the Immediate shifts in propaganda behavior that are reported in the branch's publications.. Statistics on the volume and beaming of Moscow Or Peking comment within any of the following categories can be supplied for any day, week, quar- ter, or year (dating, for Moscow, from 1949 and for Peking. from 1955), 1. Comment About Countries and Areas Statistics are available on the number of Moscow or Peking commen- taries devoted to any single country and to major geographical areas. All monitored Moscow or Peking commentaries are categorized by coun- try or area discussed. Commentaries discussing a number of countries in a single geographical area are counted in a broad area category A commentary discussing Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, and Venezuela in about equal measure would be given a "Latin America" code. A commen- tary largely devoted to Argentina, however, would be given the coun- try code "Argentina," A total statistic on Moscow's comment on Latin American affairs would include all comment given the area code "Latin America" plus all comment given individual Latin American country codes. A "Global Affairs" code is used for commentaries on general East-West issues, such as disarmament and nuclear testing. 2. Comment on Topic4 At the same time, records are kept on the number of commentaries (about all areas and countries) that give substantial attention to particular topics, A commentary on the Cuban crisis that is largely devoted to the theme of "coexistence" between East and West would be given the area code "Cuba" and the topic code "Peaceful Coexistence." A pass- ing mention of the theme, however, in a commentary basically devoted to another topic, would not be included in the count on coexistence. Major topic codes include: East-West Relations Disarmament Nuclear Testing Negotiations Peaceful Coexistence East-West Trade Amity (scientific, cultural and other contacts and exchanges) CONFIDENTIAL page 3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL b. World Problems Economic Aid (Bloc and Western) "National Liberation Movements" and Colonialism, Nuclear Energy for Peaceful Uses co Western Actions Against the Sino-Soviet Bloc Western Aggression '(charges of atomic, bacterial, chemical warfare preparations, military pacts., bases, remilitarization, war propaganda, military budgets) Hostility Subversion d. Image of the West ? Deprivation of Workers , ? Persecution of "Progressives" Racism eo Image of the Communist World Sino-Soviet Differences Revisionism Bloc Unity Communist World Unity 3. Comment on Event6 In addition to area and topic codes, commentaries are given event codes when they are linked to specific events or developments--an anniversary, a special celebration, a leader's or delegation's visit, an East-West meeting, a speech by a Western or bloc leader, an outer space probe. The event code is applied when the commentary is substantially devoted to the evento Passing mentions of certain events are recorded, but the cumulative statistics on commentaries devoted to events include only those commentaries given event codes. Thus a reference in an RPB publication to "50 Moscow commentaries on Vice President Johnson's tour of the eastern Mediterranean area" means 50 commentaries substan- tially devoted to the trip; it does not mean that only 50 commentaries mentioned the trip. CONFIDENTIAL page 4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL 4. Comment Beamed To Particular Areas The regularly compiled statistics discussed in sections 1$ 2$ and 3 above refer to volume of comment about given areas, topics, and evlints in att tanguageso taken together. Statistics can also be collated on the volume of comment about an area, topic, or event that is beamed to a single audience or audience grouping. a. Soviet Comment Radio Moscow broadcasts in Russian to the Soviet domestic audi- ence. Regional radios relay' Moscow programs and originate their own programs in the languages of the various Soviet republics. Statistics are available on the volume of Moscow domestic service cOmmento Soviet regional radio comment is monitored selectively but not computed statistically. (The regional comment essentially repeats the central domestic service with regard to international affairs.) The Soviet radio broadcasts in its International Service in the languages listed below. Most of the broadcasts emanate from Moscow; a few, however, are broadcast from such cities as Baku and Tashkent. Statistics can be 'compiled on the volume of Soviet comment to any of the following foreign audience groups or in any individual languages within those groups, except as noted: The European "people's democracies" (except the GDR*) Albanian ? Bulgarian Czech Hungarian Polish Rumanian Slovak Yugoslavia Macedonian Serbocroat Slovene Western Europe Danish Dutch 44,66, * Moscow broadcasts German to East and West Germany, not exclusively to the GDR. For statistical purposes., German-language comment is counted under Western Europe. CONFIDENTIAL page 5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONF I DENT I AL Western Europe (continued) Finnish French Getman German to Austria Italian Norwegian Portuguese Russian Spanish (and sometimes the Catalan dialect) Swedish English to the United Kingdom North America English Latin America ' Portuguese to Brazil Spanish to Cuba Spanish to Mexico and Central America Spanish to South America.- ? French to the West Indies (twice weekly) The Near and Middle East Arabic Armenian Azerbaijani Greek Kurdish* Persian Tadzhik* Turkish Africa Amharic English French. Hausa Italian Portuguese Somali Swahili * Not monitored by FBIS at present. CONFIDENTIAL page 6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Communist Asia Korean Mandarin Mongolian Tonkinese '(or Vietnamese) Noncommunist Asia Burmese Bengali English to Southeast Asia Hindi Indonesian Japanese Pushtu Urdu h. CPR Comment Statistics can be made available on Peking comment to the CPR domestic audience via the domestic service. They' are also available on com- ment to any' of the following audience groups or in languages within those groupso except as notedg Southeast Asia Burmese Cambodian English to Australia English to India and Pakistan English to Southeast Asia Hindi Indonesian Laotian Malayan Thai Tonkinese (or Vietnamese) Northeast Asia Japanese Korean North America English CONFIDENTIAL page Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Latin America Portuguese to Brazil Spanish to Mexico and Central Spanish to South America Western Europe English French* German Italian* Portuguese Spanish USSR and East Europe Russian Serbocroat Overseas Chinese Mandarin to Mandarin to Mandarin to Mandarin to Cantonese Amoy* Chaochow* Hikka* Taishan* America the Americas* Europe t Africao and West Asia* Southeast Asia Taiwan The Near and Middle East Arabic Persian Turkish Africa English French , Portuguese Swahili * Moni ored irregularly. CONFIDENTIAL' page 8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL BO Moscow and Peking Newscasts 10 Moscow Domestic,Service Newscasts Immediate information is available about the content of the foreign affairs and military-affairs portions of Soviet domestic service . newscasts'. Items about foreign and military affairs from five of the eleven daily Soviet domestic service news programs are reported by the FB1S field and collated in RPB on a weekly basis. Signi ficant items or trends are reported in the branchys publications, The cumulative files on these items date from 1953. Domestic service newscast content is one gauge of the relative moderation or bellicosity of Soviet propaganda, For example, an abnormal incidence of domestic service news items picturing the West as aggressive would accord with a special effort to stir up the Soviet people against the United States or the West. 2. Peking Domestic Service Newcasts Information covering Peking domestic service news items on all subjects is also available. During critical periods this informa- tion is collated in much the same manner as Moscow domestic ser- vice news items in the project described above, This file dates from 1958, 30 Moscow and Peking Newscasts to Other Audiences Some information on Moscow and Peking news programs to foreign au- diences can also be supplied. Currently the branch receives moni- tori' -summaries of Peking programs in Russian to the USSR, in English to Africa, and in Mandarin to Taiwan, and of Moscow pro- grams in English to North America and Spanish to South America. For information concerning the content of a Moscow or Peking news- cast in any other language, RPB must query the FBIS field bureau. that monitors the program. Spot information--for example, whether or not Moscow broadcast information to the French about a given development--can generally be obtained in less than eight hours. CONFIDENTIAL page Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 116 CONFIDENTIAL TEXTS AND EXTRACTS OF OFFICIAL PRONOUNCEMENTS Mils Central Files contain texts, listings, and indexes of authoritative bloc prO4ouncetents-leaders speeches, party or government statements, diplomatic communications, editorials from the top Soviet and Chinese communist party nawspapel"S, and so 'forth? Card indexes cohtain extracts of Soviet leaders? statements On certain selected key themes, Fidel Castrots speeches are filed, as are selected statements by Yugoslav and Western communist leaders. Most of the files date from the early 19509s, 'although not all of them are exhaustive for the initial years. Ao Files of Texts 1. USSR Speeches, statements, articles, interviews, letters, telegrams, and communiques by CPSU Central Committee Presidium members and candidate members, CPSU Central Committee Secretariat members, and ussR Foreign and Defense Ministers. .Filed by speaker. The file dates from 1952, and is completefrom 1954, Statements of eight leaders holding the, key party' and state posts are indexed* b. Speeches, articles and other statements by Soviet military leaders (marshals, admirals, and generals, as well as selected colonels). Filed chronologically. co Speeches and statements by Soviet U.N. delegates. Tiled chrono- logically since April 1957Q d, Diplomatic statements and communications made in the name of the Soviet Government or Foreign Ministry. Filed and indexed chronologically. e. CPSU Central Committee and Council of Ministers decrees, deci- sions, and resolutions. Filed chronologically. f. TASS statements and denials. Filed and indexed chronologically, g. PRAVDA articles, PRAVDA's editorials, editorial articles, and authoritative articles signed "Observer" are filed in two series, one on domestic affairs and the other on foreign topics, Filed chronologically since 1951; foreign affairs articles are indexed. h. CPSU Congresses. Speeches and materials from the 19th? 20th, 21st, and 22d CPSU congresses. CONFIDENTIAL page 10 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL 2. East European Satellites a. Albanian, Sulgarianzechoslovak, East German, Hungarian, Polish, and; Rumanian communist party and military leaders' speeches, statements, articles, interviews, letters, com- muniques, and so forth. All filed by speaker. Statements by those holding the four key party and state posts in all the satellites except East Germany are indexed. b. Government or foreign ministry diplomatic notes letters or statements, Filed chronologically by country. Party central committee decrees, decisions, resolutions. Filed chronologically by country. 3. Communist China, North Korea, North Vietnam, Mongolia a. Party and military leaders' speeches, statements, articles, interviews, and so forth. Filed chronologically by speaker. Statements by five of the top Chinese leader's are indexed. b. Government of foreign ministry diplomatic notes, letters or statements. Filed chronologically by country. Those of Communist China are indexed. Party central committee decrees, decisions, resolutions. Filed and indexed chronologically by country. d. PEOPLE'S DAILY editorials and authoritative "Observer" articles. Filed in two series, on domestic and foreign af- fairs. The latter are indexed. Filedates from 1952. 4. Blocwide a. Warsaw Treaty Organization materials. , Speeches and declara- tions made at Warsaw "Pact meetings, filed chronologically. b. Bloc political and economic meetings. Speeches, declarations, and announcements regarding CEMA meetings and such political meetings as the 1957 and 1960 Moscow conference of world com- 'munist parties. 5. Other Communist Pronouncements a. Yugoslav communist party and military leaders' speeches, statements, interviews, and so forth. Filed chronologically by speaker. CONFIDENTIAL page U. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Other Communist Pronouncements (continued) b. Fidel Castro's speeches and statements and a selection of pronouncements by other Cuban leaders. Filed chronologically. Co Western communist party leaderi9 speeches, statements, arti.o cies, and so forth. Tiled chronologically by country. d. World Peace Council resolutions. Filed chronologically. e. World Federation of Trade Unions resolutions, Filed chrono. logically, B. Files of Extracts Leadership Statements on Key Themes 1. War Themes A card file, now containing some 15,000 entries, catalogues para.. graph or sentence reference in Soviet and Chinese Communist elite pronouncements to key themes relating to basic issues of war and peace and relations between the communist and noncommunist worlds. The categories cover such issues as the likelihood, preventa,. bility0 and consequences of war; kinds of wars; and weapons of war. Elite statements are defined to include those made by the USSR or CPR government, foreign ministry, and top party or military leaders in notes, letters, speeches, artiCles? interviews, and. so forth, as released by bloc media. Statements not carried by the blocs own media--Khrushchev9s off-the-cuff remarks at embassy receptions reported only by the Western press, for example -- are not included. In view of the relative infrequency of speeches on foreign policy by top Chinese Communistleaders0 articles from the CPR party organs PEOPLE9S DAILY and RED FLAG-as broadcast by Peking hedia--are additionally screened for statements on the war themes. The file of extracts of Soviet statements dates from November 19560 although some categories have been added since that time. The coding and extracting of CPR statements dates from April 1960. The cards represent an exhaustive record of the Soviet and CPR leaders9 statements in the categories listed on the opposite page. Categories which normally apply to statements by Chinese Communist spokesmen are so specified in brackets. CONFIDENTIAL page 12 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL WAR TI1EMES CATEGORIES Consequences of World War Devastating destruction would be suffered by both sides Capitalism/imperialism?would be destroyed Mankind would survive People must be educated not to fear war [CPR] Destruction from radioactivity; discussion of shelters Destruction from bacterial/chemical warfare Possibility of Preventing War War is not fatalistically inevitable9 although the danger of war exists so long as capitalism remains extant (the 20th CPSU Congress thesis) World war can be excluded from society even while capitalism remains in a part of the world (the 21st .CPSU Congress thesis) Socialism will be victorious throughout the world without war Likelihood of War. War is inevitable War cannot be eliminated/excluded while capitalism exists in a part of the world One should not harbor any illusions; the nature of imperialism will never change [CPR] Tensions should not be relaxed [CPR] Prewar situation exists; war is about to break out U.S. (or imperialists) are preparing a terrible crime against humanity -- a thermonuclear war First Use of Nuclear Weapons West would use nuclear weapons first even if the Soviet Union re- nounced their use Soviet Union would not use nuclear weapons first CONFIDENTIAL page 13 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Nuclear Deterrence Soviet nuclear capability deters the West 'Denial of Western concept of deterrence Retaliation Brandishing of Soviet strength. Threats of retaliation against Western "aggression" in any part of the world Threats against Western bases War Psychosis; War Propaganda Balance of Power Balance has shifted in favor of the bloc; "East wind prevails over West wind" [CPRI; West is a "paper tiger" [CPR] USSR is the strongest military power Socialism is at least no weaker than imperialism Number of nuclear tests upset the balance; fewer tests would leave the USSR in a weaker position Danger of War Breaking Out Through Accident, Miscalulation rMad" pilots; pilot error H-bomb flight accidents Nuclear missile submarine accidents Surprise/Sudden Attack and Preventive War Response to surprise attack (second strike) USSR might strike first Local or Small Wars (geographic/limited weapons) Local war is likely to spread into world war Local wars can be contained CONFIDENTIAL page 14 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL "Just War" Just or sacred wars (East-West wars; bloc defense of homeland) National Liberation Wars National liberation war is inevitable/permissible Just or sacred liberation wars, civil war Opposition to export of revolution/counterrevolution Peaceful versus nonpeaceful transition to socialism Nth Country Problem Question of additional countries acquiring nuclear weapons Hints that the Warsaw Pact might be given nuclear weapons Denials that the bloc has atomic weapons/bases Warnings that missile bases may be established in other bloc states Threats/denials of Soviet bases in nonbloc states Soviet Rocket and Missile Development Production; stockpiles; types of rockets and missiles "Fantastic" Soviet weapons Soviet Military Strength, Capability, Strategy Discussion of Soviet army, navy, air force, rocket troops, artillery, etc. Discussion of military equipment, air and sea vehicles Bloc Military Capability CPR military capability [CPR] Warsaw Pact military strength Defense Needs; Manpower Versus Weapons Bloc mobilization/demobilization Defense needs g fully reliable or need further buildup CONFIDENTIAL page 15 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENT IAL Defense Needs; Manpower Versus Weapons (continued) Relative importance of manpower versus weapons- Bloc civilian mobilization; discussion of DOSAAF Deprecation of UeSe Military Capability Polaris, SAC, etco Outer Space Outer space for military purposes Legal issues International cooperation Troop Withdrawal Troops should be withdrawn from foreign territories Western Military Pacts Expansion of NATO, SEATO, CENTO New pacts Nuclear-Free Zones Negotiations and Summit Meetings Negotiations as means of settling international disputes Mutual concessions/counterproposals CPR must participate in solution of international questions CPR needs relaxation of tension for peaceful development [CPR] Future East-West summit meetings Bloc summit meetings Responsibility of Powers in World Affairs Responsibility of USSR and United States Responsibility of USSR and CPR CONFIDENTIAL page 16 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Peaceful Competition References to peaceful competition with the West [CPR] Taiwan "Liberation" of Taiwan Two Chinas issue Offshore Islands 2. CPSU Congress Speeches Sentences or paragraphs from the speeches delivered at the 19$11, 20th, 21st and 22d CPSU Congresses relating to selected key themes are coded and carded as in the. above War Themes project. Some 45 Soviet speeches at the 22d congress9 for examples are coded and carded in the following categories in addition to the war themes: Leadership ? Stalin Collective leadership and personality cult Ant iparty group Characterizations of Khrushchev Investment Priorities Heavy versus light industry Economic development versus defense requirements Increasing agi#UltUral inVestment Power stations Agricultural Organization Sovkhozes versus kolkhozes Private plots Rural redevelopment CriticisMOf MTS reform Criticism Of agricultural administration Role of specialists New lands Geneticists Administration of Economy 1957 industrial reorganization Economic Managers rights/powers CONFIDENTIAL page 17 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Administration of Economy (continued) Party control. commissions 'Size of party apparatus Other Internal Issues Bloc Affairs "Socialist legality" and role of state security Titetable for transition to communism "Withering away of the state Dictatorship of the proletariat All references to China. Albania0 Yugoslavia Soviet role Applicability, of CPSU draft program and Soviet experience to bloc or communist movement Stages and timetable of transition to communism Bloc discipline; obligation of parties to observe decisions of conferences of fraternal parties; separate roads to socialism; nationalism; backsliding from socialist internationalism; dogmatism; right/left opportunism; revisionism Class struggle in socialist states Economic coordination and specialization Revolutionary Movements Other Role of communist party in national liberation movement National democratic state; role of national bourgoisie Noncapitalist or socialist road for new states Tasks of revolutionary movement in capitalist states Bloc economic aid to underdeveloped countries Bloc aid to national liberation struggles "General line" of Soviet or bloc foreign policy Character of present epoch Definition of peaceful coexistence References to "sober elements" in Western leaderships Separate treaty with GDR Guarantees of access and/or free-city status for West Berlin Partial disarmament measures Use of funds saved through disarmament to aid under- developed countries CONFIDENTIAL page 18 ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL 3. Khrushdhev. on Some Key International Issues All Khrushchev statements about disarmament, Germany, Laos, and Cuba and all his references to the possibility of A Soviet-Japanese peace treaty are extracted and filed. The file dates from May 1958 on disarmament, from July 1960 on Cuba, from April 1961 on.Laos, and from October 1961 on the Japanese peace treaty question. Khru.. Shchev's references to Germany are logged from November 1958 to July 19611 the file of extractS'begins with June 1961. 4. Ad Hoc Projects In addition to the continuing major carding projects described above, files of significant extracts of bloc statements are produced in connection with specific developments and held for purposes of back research. These have included the coding of Soviet propaganda on the Middle East crisis in the summer, of 1958 in such categories as "Soviet Threats of Counteraction," carding of Soviet propaganda charges against the original individual members of the "antiparty group," and other similar projects. Currently, the carding of Fidel Castro's public statements in a number of broad subject categories has been started on a pilot basis; this file at the present stage is not exhaustive in any of the categories. CONFIDENTIAL page 19 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL III. OTHER COLLATIONS Soviet Leaders/ Activities and Status 1. Information from the Soviet radio and press concerning the where- abouts and activities of CPSU Presidium members and candidate members and members of the CPSU Secretariat is recorded in a file dating from December 1959. Information gathered from this pro- ject is used in analyses of propaganda bearing on the Soviet lead- ership situation. 2. A companion to the above project is a listing begun in April 19610 noting radio and press mentions of places and buildings named after living Soviet leaders. (In January 1962 the USSR Supreme Soviet decreed that places would no longer be named after living ,persons. The Soviet radio and press, however, have continued to mention collective farms and towns named after members of the . Presidium.) 3. The members of Soviet government and party delegations to foreign countries are listed in a record dating from April 1961, B. Khrushchevisms A log begun in early 1959 records Khrushchev's proverbs, anecdotes, references to his family and characterizations of himself, descrip- tions (both colorful and rude) of Western personalities, statements ridiculing religion and referring to the Bible and to God0 jabs at the Chinese Communists, and in general remarks that depart in Khrushchev/s personal style from the Soviet propaganda stereotype. The statements include his many zoological metaphors applied to a wide range of subjects and personalities ("They have let the goat guard the cabblage0" for example, in a May 1960 reference to the notion of the Vice President representing the President at the summit); attacks on a wide variety of Western personalities (an October 1961 statement likening Senator Margaret Chase Smith to "Satan in the guise of a woman" for supporting resumption of nuclear tests); and such characterizations of world figures as the September 1960 remark that "I would say Mr. Lumumba is as much a communist as Khrushchev is a Catholic." CONFIDENTIAL page 20 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL D. Indexes of Bloc Press Articles In providing an integrated analysis of politically relevant bloc radio and press propaganda, RPB depends for press and journal source ma- terials primarily on translations supplied by Foreign Documents Divi- sion, by the State Department?s field staff, by nongovernment sources such as the Joint Committee on Slavic Studies 9 CURRENT DIGEST OF THE SOVIET PRESS, and by the FBIS bureaus in Austria and Germany. Some bloc publications are received in the branch for reference purposes. Translated tables of contents of selected bloc newspapers and journals-- received from a variety of sources--are kept on file. The branch maintains an index to RED FLAG and eight other Chinese Communist jour- nals dating from 1958. E. Tables of Contents of FBIS Publications Contents pages of the FBIS DAILY REPORT and SURVEY OF COMMUNIST BLOC BROADCASTS are clipped and filed chronologically. The DAILY REPORT contents pages (Soviet, Satellite, and Far East sections) cover the period from 1952 to date; SURVEYs from 1956 to date. CONFIDENTIAL page 21 I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 50X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL . , -IV. AREA. AND TOPIC FILES The branch's Central Files include folders containing background data and published RPB articles or reports pertaining to each area and coun- try and to a number of key topics. Under "France" for example, these files contain folders of (1) all articles dealing with bloc propaganda about France that have appeared in the FBIS SURVEY OF COMMUNIST BLOC BROADCASTS, clipped and filed chronologically and listed by title0 (2) all published FBIS special reports concerning bloc propaganda on France, filed in chronological order and listed by title, and (3) other relevant background materials. These files contain information and extracts dating from 19480 although records are more complete for Moscow than for Peking or satellite propa- ganda. Systematic collation and analysis of Peking propaganda began at a somewhat later period. European and Far East satellite output, moni- tored less exhaustively by FBIS, is covered more selectively in RPB publications Individual series of folders contain records of all information collated in the branch and discussed in its publications concerning bloc propaganda treatment of all areas and of the following themes and topics2 Western "Aggression" and Blocs Bacteriological Warfare Hostility (allegedly displayed tories, nations, or tical0 military, or Espionage (allegedly committed Disarmament and Nuclear Issues by the West against bloc terri- property by means of overt poli economic actions) by the West against the bloc) (including peaceful uses) Outer Space East-West Relations Soviet Strategy Soviet Capabilities United Nations Neutrality "Liberation Struggle" and Colonialism Racism (as allegedly manifest in the United States or the West) Jewish Question Religion and the Vatican Western Disunity Economic Crisis in the West East-West Trade and Soviet Aid Amity (between bloc and Western countries) VOA and other Western Propaganda CONFIDENTIAL page 22 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENTIAL Rightwing.Socialists May Day World Federation of Trade Unions "Peace Campaign" and Front Groups International Communism Sino-Soviet Relations The series of folders on USSR domestic affairs is broken down into a num- ber of subcategories, including Economy, Welfare and Culture, Science, Military, State and Law, Ideology, Nationalities, Party Affairs, Stalin, Soviet Leaders, the October Revolution Anniversary, and Lenin Anniversaries. CONFIDENTIAL page 23 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1 CONFIDENT IAL CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/04: CIA-RDP09-02295R000100130001-1