PORTUGUESE GUINEA - GUINEA: REBELLION IN ABEYANCE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
06773319
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
March 8, 2023
Document Release Date: 
September 4, 2019
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
F-2018-01470
Publication Date: 
January 26, 1973
File: 
Body: 
Approved for Release: 2019/08/19 C06773319 -Secret_ DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE EEKLY SUMMA 'Secret 26 January 1973 No. 0354/73 Copy N2 45 Approved for Release: 2019/08/19 C06773319 Approved for Release: 2019/08/19 C06773319 (b)(3) The WEEKLY SUMMARY, issued every Friday morning by the Office of Current Intelligence, reports and analyzes signif- icant developments of the week through noon on Thursday. It frequently includes material coordinated with or prepared by the Office of Economic Research, the Office of Strategic Research, and the Directorate of Science and Technology. "ropics requiring more comprehensive treatment and there- fore published separately as Special Reports are listed in the r.ontents. WARNING The WEEKLY SUMMARY contains classified information .iffecting the national security of the United States, within the meaning of Title 18, sections 793 and 794, of the US Code, as amended. -Its transmissiOn or revelation of its con- cnts or receipt by an unauthorized person is prohibited by !avv. DISSEMINATION CONTROLS The WEEKLY SUMMARY ?lust be handled within the framework of specific dissemination control provisions of OC.10 .1/7. (b)(3) (b)(3) CONTENTS (26 January 1973) Portu G in a - in NR Record NR Record Approved for Release: 2019/08/19 C06773319 Approved for Release: 2019/08/19 C06773319 Portuguese Guinea - Guinea REBELLION IN ABEYANCE Amilcar Cabral's assassination in Conakry on 20 January has almost certainly stalled the anti- Portuguese insurgent movement he headed. It also has plunged nervous President Toure into a new frenzy of defensive activity motivated by concern both for the rebel movement and his own regime. loure, who had given the insurgent forces under Cabral wide latitude in Guinea, has acted quickly to control the situation. While Toure rai's against imperialist plots, the Guinean military has moved to disarm insurgent elements throughout Guinea and taken control of the Conakry installa- tions of Cabral's organization. Rebel personnel in the capital reportedly have been divided into small groups and placed under the control of Toure's party. No conclusive evidence identifying Cabral's killers is available as yet, although Toure has announced that the commander of the rebel "navy" has confessed. Toure predictably has placed basic responsibility on the Portuguese, who have, just as predictably, denied all responsi- bility. In a radio interview on 22 January, Toure charged that most of the assassins were members of the Portuguese colonial army who had pre- tended to desert to the rebels. On 23 January, Toure claimed the commander and "others" had been captured by the Guinean Navy the day after the assassination while fleeing to Portuguese Guinea in commandeered rebel boats. Toure claimed they had several hostages, including a top Cabral aide, Aristide Pereira. Toure also has a s- serted that a move is under way to "uproot" a "fifth column" within the rebel organization. Two rebel patrol boats apparently did leave Conakry harbor shortly after the assassination the fugitives actually were captured by a Soviet destroyer from the contingent that has been protecting Toure since the 1970 Portuguese-backed raid on his capital. Toure requested Soviet help when the Guinean Navy proved unable to complete :ts mission. Page 20 Toure's public treatment of the affair is in- tended, above all, to refute the damaging explana- tion, offered by Lisbon and widely accepted in press accounts, that Cabral's murder resulted from factionalism within the rebel movement. In fact, available evidence points in that direction and also suggests that Toure's prompt control measures were motivated by concern that warfare might break out between the factions, presenting a security hazard to his own regime as well as further weakening the nationalist cause. the killers probably were disaffected rebels. in the two weeks prior to the assassination, long-standing frictions between mulatto Cape Verdians, who are dom- inant within the rebel leadership, and mainland black Africans, who make uo most of the rank and file, grew much worse the mulattoes and blacks were kept separate by the Guineans. Toure's take-charge attitude, plus rebel de- pendence on the Guinea base, means that the Guinean President will have a strong say about the insurgents' future leadership and direction. No successor to Cabral has emerged, and Toure is in command. The two most likely successors are Luiz Cabral, Amilcar's brother, and Pereira. Luiz headed the rebel office in Dakar and Pereira the Conakry office. Toure's restrictions on the insur- gents during the sorting-out period makes rebel military initiatives unlikely and can only ad- versely affect their stated intention to declare an independent rebel government. Meanwhile, Toure, despite his concern over the various problems raised by the assassination, is clearly bent on exploiting the event to prop- agate the nationalist cause and enhance Guinea's prestige. He evidently intends to stage another spectacular funeral like the one he put on last year for Nkrumah. WEEKLY SUMMARY 26 Jan 73 Approved for Release: 2019/08/19 C06773319