CA PROPAGANADA PERSPECTIVES JANUARY-FEBRUARY 1973

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
153
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 7, 1998
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 1, 1973
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5.pdf11.01 MB
Body: 
25X1 C1 Ob Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 iiiii0WWW8gMWMPTRTY January-February 1973 BANGLADESH AFTER ONE YEAR Introduction Bangladesh, a delta land about the size of Nicaragua, has a population of 75 million, making it the most densely populated, and the eighth most populous nation in the world. It is also one of the poorest. Besides its huge and growing population and its widespread poverty, it faces other difficulties of staggering dimensions: inadequate food production, serious war damage, uncertain trade prospects, and a new, inept bureaucracy that is burdened with major new responsibilities. It has been estimated that 3 to 4 billion dollars will be required to raise Bangladesh to even its pre-war economic level. Soviet Presence The Soviet Union has made every effort to capitalize on this situation and to cultivate Bangladesh, although, in financial terms, its aid has been limited -- only $120 million of an overall total of $1 billion (An estimated $70 million for relief and development, and more recently, approximately $50 million in trade credits. The Soviets' major project has been the clearing and dredging of the port of Chittagong, where the Soviet Navy has had a salvage fleet working for over eight months. The USSR claims it will take another year to complete this work., (However, the Dacca correspon- dent of the Swiss newspaper, Neue Zurcher Zeitung, i'eported in early November that Prime Minister MUjib was pushing for an early end to this work and wanted a written agreement from the Soviets to evacuate the port.) In addition to training and supplying some of the Bengali military forces, the USSR has sent large diplomatic and technical assistance missions to Dacca. The Soviets made obvious efforts to step up their relations in late 1972: among the groups that visited Bangladesh then was a cultural delegation headed by Dr. Vladimir Stanis, identified as Vice-Chancellor of Patrice Lumumba University and President of the Soviet:-Bangladesh Friendship Society. The group visited various educational institutions, including Dacca University. At a press conference during the visit, Stanis announced that ties between certain Bengali and Soviet universities would soon be established. A radio-TV delegation also arrived in Dacca at about the same time. It was headed by A. Losev, deputy chairman of the Radio-TV State Committee of the USSR Council of Ministers. He signed a two-year agreement providing for the exchange of radio and TV programs between the USSR and Bangladesh. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 More recently the two countries signed a 12.10 million ruble contract providing for survey, mapping and exploration of oil and gas in Bangladesh. It was confirmed that the agreement provided for on-shore exploration only, not off-shore, where up to twenty different parties have bid for exploration rights. (This may be just as well for Bangladesh in view of the experience of Sri Lanka with off-shore oil exploration by the Soviets. According to a report in a Colombo newspaper of early October, large-scale Soviet blasting of the seabeds in the northern fishing grounds is destroying the marine life and threatening the fishing industry.) Underlying motives of Soviet policy are subject to speculation, but the USSR is obviously interested in the continued cooperation of Bangladesh, which would serve its long-term goal of encircling China. Equally obvious is the Soviets' desire to gain access to repair and supply facilities for its Indian Ocean Fleet, and their work in Chittagong harbor could be an opening wedge. However, Prime Minister Mbjib has repeatedly said that Bangladesh has no intention of granting such privileges to any foreign power. He has also made clear that for economic and political reasons Bangla- desh wishes to remain non-aligned with respect to all the great powers. Foreign Aid Foreign aid to Bangladesh represents the most massive disaster- relief effort ever mounted, with some thirty nations and more than fifty private organizations providing assistance to alleviate the effects of war and the natural disasters that have plagued this area over past years. Because of its increasing imports, especially of food, and its static export levels, Bangladesh was a deficit area with a steadily growing need for foreign aid even before the 1971 crisis. In the year since then, however, it has received aid amounting to some $900 million for relief purposes and long-term development. Of the five major donors, who have given bilaterally and through the United Nations, the United States has contributed $320 million, India, $270 million, the USSR, an estimated $70 million, Canada, $65 million, and the UK, $50 million. Other donors, mainly the West European countries and Japan, have contributed $115 million. Recent pledges from the International Development Association, and an additional approximate $50 million trade credit from the USSR, have raised the total amount of aid to about $1 billion. Between half and two-thirds of this total amount has been in grants, with the balance mainly in long-term development loans. The First Annual Plan of Bangladesh for the current fiscal year calls for spending about $500 million of this aid. Approximately $115 million had been spent prior to July 1972. 2 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 In addition, the U.S. has committed over one million tons of food grains, 75,000 tons ofedible oil, and has resumed long-term development projects such as flood control, soil embankment, etc., which had been suspended during the fighting. All told, the U.S. has been the largest single source of outside assistance. India has provided 900,000 tons of food grains, transport equipment, money for refugee resettlement, a $13 million foreign exchange loan and has assisted in repair of bridges. Canada has provided mostly food grains. The USSR has given some food, fishing trawlers and transport equipment. Besides their major Chittagong project (see Soviet Presence), they have been involved in a few other construction projects. Plus Factors Although Bangladesh has suffered from its seemingly overwhelming problems for some time, they have been more or less obscured because the area was considered as a part of larger Pakistan, and the true statistics on East Pakistan (1:01s7 Bangladesh) were not readily apparent. Now, with the breakup of Pakistan, Bangladesh can use its own resources for itself. The Bengali people have long since became accustomed to extreme hardship and have demonstrated an ability to adjust to privation and difficulties that would be intolerable to others. They are enthusiastic about their independence, and their Prime Minister, Sheikh MUjibur Rahman (Mujib), and his party, the Awami League, appear to be in control. Although Soviet-inspired radical groups are causing political disturbances, Mujib and his party are expected to win in the elections scheduled for 7 March. In the midst of the generally negative and discouraging reports coming from Bangladesh, there have been signs of initial improvement in the economic area, principally in the progress of the past year toward recovery and reconstruction, made possible by massive foreign assistance and the efforts of the Bengalis themselves. Nearly all the refugees, estimated in the millions, who had fled to India in 1971 have returned and been resettled with few apparent difficulties. Emergency food shipments, which have been handled mainly by the United Nations relief mission in Dacca, have averted critical food shortages. Although the UN role in this operation is scheduled to be reduced at the end of March, there are reports it may continue its present control over the internal movement and distribution of imported food. Jute production, a major source of revenue, has about reached pre-war levels. The industry as a whole is estimated to be operating at about 75 percent of capacity. Jute exports are rising as foreign buyers have resumed purchases interrupted by the war in Bangladesh. (However, tea production, another major source of export earnings, remains low as a result of obsolete and neglected plantations, and this has meant a poorer quality of tea and higher production costs.) 3 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 The transport network, which was seriously damaged during the war, has started to function again: ports have been restored to operating condition, as has road transport, although there are about one-quarter less trucks now than before the war. Rail trans- port is operating at only about 40 percent of pre-war capacity because of damage to bridges, rolling stock and signal equipment. But river craft have been successfully substituted, especially in moving goods from the ports to the interior. Foodgrain Situation UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim recently appealed to member countries to donate 1.7 million tons of foodgrains to Bangladesh during 1973. This would supplement the 800,000 ,tons, that. Dacca ill try to buy commercially, and would help meet its estimated need for 2.5 million tons of foodgrain imports this year. So far Bangladesh has arranged to buy about 450,000 tons. About 350,000 tons have already been donated, including 200,000 tons by the U.S. The estimated need for 1973 is about equal to the amount imported in 1972. The Dacca government had hoped to reduce this figure, but the major winter rice crop was unusually low because of sporadic monsoon rains. Complicating the supply picture this year is the worldwide shortage of foodgrains, heavy pressures on world shipping, and the fact that India, one of the largest donors of foodgrains to Bangladesh last year, will be unable to contribute this year because drought has reduced its own crops. 4 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 THE GUARDIAN MANCHI:STER 9 January 1971 Russians' long salvage Chittagong CPYR*at WILLIAM MIUMMO NI), Chittagong, January 8 The fences around the Soviet dotnpound hero are patrolled by Itnesian senors clad in bright blue ishirt and aborts, and ear. tying submachine guns. inside jetty No. 1 there are 800 sailors Who operate 20 vessels, ranging front lerge -flatting workshops end mine,svveepers to smell launches. :Soviet tiavat penetration of the Institut Meat attea was mostly stretegic speculation ' until leg April when Bangle- desh accepted Rtissia'e offer tn elate? Chittagotig. Bangladeshes main port, of sunken war wreckage. Almost Immediately, the fleet from Vladivoelok Maimed In rind prepared for a lengthy stay, What the Russiann ard really Up to here him been shrouded hi' mystery for the last eight months. Wh9 'IMO the pnce the work gone so slowly? Why the need for armed sentries l' Is this the naval base that every- body seems to think Rosie wtinta to solitlifY her southern think imainst Chinn? to. anewer some of these questIona. Rent Admfral Sergel Menke, chief of the Soviet 9111. VIM item, permitted An ingruCC- tjon in Chittegeng The feet thet the Ilaissiens allowed such A' visit gunnel to indictee that what they ere rattly after Is building goodwill among the Bengalis rather than seeuringji military toehold. ? The Russians have turned A *Archaise into ,e reereation' hall for their creme but there were no outward signs of pre- Petitions for truly military) Presence in Chlttagong -- no liubmatitie pens or anything not directly Involved with ettivaget. Admiral Zuenko, aged 54, a veteran of 36 .years in the Soviet Navy, maseive Ukranian. Intelligent, stern. ,Yei friendly. " The very first question yeti . should. ask is why the Soviet vage team," h tot a civilian sae military Is dein! title work and said, speaking t rough a trans- lator. Answering his own questtone he unrolled a map on his desk showing about 1,000 square miles of oceati in the Jele of Bengal off the' coast of 'Dangle- desh. " Minesweeping was the main ' Work and this was strictly a military job," eie said, " This had to be dohe to,perrolt ships to enter the outer anchorage. If thp minesweephig were. not, completed; we,eould not Under- take any salvage work. I' ' Motif, half of the fleet wits engaged in. mine-sweeping, he sled, and vessels from the Indian Navy helped. Admiral Zuenko disclosed that the ' Indian 'ships had been placed under his command to chor- ding(' the effort. ? The cooperation do significant because, so far as le known, independent -India has never before submitted her vesseie to ? a Russian commander. Bangla- desh mine clearance was proba- bly the first collaboration at the command level since the sign- lng last yea' of the Indo-Soviet .defence treaty. The Soviet sal- vage operation itst scheduled to finish next December. ' When hostilities ended , last Deeentber in the Indo-Palthdan war there were 18 sunken elpe In Chittagong harbour. After eight months' work, the Rue- glans floated 101 of the wrecks and towed them away. It will stake 'a full year to Clear the remaining 41 wrecks. I Periodically, the Bengali press has tuggested that the Russians are tailing. Zuettko . denies this, "At the end of this 1 &child World War it took the ' Americans five peers to, clear the wreckage in Pearl Hartfore and there the visibility under- water was, perfect and the Americans were accustomed til, the climate." ? Clearing Chittagong involves immense technical problems, he said. The water Is more than 100 feet deep, and visibility is zero, The currents are swift and dangerous, severely limit- ing the amount of Unit that the 40 Ruselan divers can Work )below. , Conventional salvage mt-tfhocis Involve blowing apart the submerged hulls and floating them, peep by piece. However, ehis cannot be dond because tfhe blasting would kill the river fish, a staple of the 'Bengali diet, and would ecatter 'the' oil still inside the wrecks,' -polluting the harbour. The Russiane are sinking 'pontoons, attaohing them to the wrecks, nd floatingthe loons with compressed air. Thie 'brings the wreck to the surface. " Meny geld this technique ,would not aueceed. but fortus inetely they were mistaken," .the admiral eat& 1 ;On the armed guards around Abe coMpOund he said: "Every Military unit has to ingot on rules_ and regulations. This Is nbt for protecting out team, because the Bengali people', have never teken Any actions' against the Soviet team. " But we have to costliest the gates and who Ms in and out.? The 13engeli people aro or curious. If :Ahem Were ho guards the jetty would always be crowded. He also sugstetted. that the gear and vehicles on the jetty might fall prey to thieves if left: unguarded. ? The . fact that the Russians operate a self-contained foreign military presence here is a' source of betvilderment to the 'American Embessy in MILTS,' which dares not even allow the .US marine seturity personnel' tto appear in uniform for fear of, proenking hostility. The Soviet Union gets away with these' ' things because the Russians Acted swiftly. on Bangladesh's behalf, from her pre-Bangle-1 desh vetoes in the United Nation4 last year to the prompt dispatch of the salvage fleet to Chittagong. ? When the Russians arrived, Chettegonis port was blocked with wreckage and clearing ? ne cergo. Now It is C CAP rig 5fl0,000 Loifl n month: Ruselan preetiee ie high end the chances of the Wei. Union wooing Bangladeeh into a col, leetive security treale, similar to that stoned with India In August, 1971, appene very goodi ? ? Admiral Zuerikele fleet ? i!tould be the precursor of armed trnote 'pernienetrt Soviet militarY presence here, but for the time ; helo/Tithe Ritssians fere engaged putt in salvage, ? 1,011 ' Mtge ei Times. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01.194A000200090001-5 QYROHT Approved For ItErkw811409/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A0002000&ui-o LCG MIMES TIM 26 December 1972 Russia Plays I,vsf I bery Kole in Dapri!Pick-lciii ewe, hi' en Mee .1. nit ?11110ND Timm 11!aff wrOr CI I Til;r)Nj, B a e. plarieeh ? The fences are11111(1 the :envie( com- pound here Pre petrolled by Sniect tallone. clad In bright blue shirts and shnrte and carrying sub- machine gime. inside jetty No. I there are SOO Soviet sailors who operate a fled of 26 VP5Sels rengine from large floating workahorta . and mintaweepers down to smell launches, Snviet naval penetration of the Indian Ocean area was mostly strategic slit- ' culatinn unlit last April when Bengleriesh accept- ed Moscow's offer to clear Chit tagon r"e Bangladesh's main port, of sunken war wreckage. Almost immediately the Soviet fleet from Vladivos- tok steamed in and pre- . pared for a lengthy stay. What the lettsalens are really itp In here has been shrouded in mystery for the last eight months. Why has the pace of the work gone so slowly? Why the nerd for armed sen- tries? Is this the naval base that everybody seems to think the Soviet Union wants in order to solidify its southern flank against China? To answer some of these ques?tione, The Times ob- tained an interview with Bear Adm. Serect eTeienko, deer of the soviet salvage - team, who - permitted a firsthand view of the: operatione in Chittagong. Inseevilon $cctii3 to indi- rale that what they are really after is building rood will emnng the Ben- zalis rather than securing 1. Military lee-hold. The itus:dant have turned a warehouse into a recrea- tion hall for their crew- men, but there were no outward igli of prepare- lone for a truly military prvsenre in Chittaenne? ln submarine pen; or pill- ',mos or ?melting not di- eocov theeteee with sal- vage. Zuenko, 54, a veteran of 36 years in the Soviet levy, is a massive Ukrani- In, intelligent, stern, yet friendly. "The very first question you should ask," said Zuenkn, speaking through an interpreter. "is why the Soviet military is doing ehte work and not a chili. Sohnterine Pens The intAtOprOlvedFor R sInn; permitted such an an salvage team." And promptly answer- 1n e his own question, the Minkel unrolled a map on his desk shnwing about. 1,- 000 square miles of ocean In the Bay of Bengal off the coast of Bangladesh. "Mine-sweeping was the main work, he said. "and this was strictly a military sob. "This had to be done to permit ships to enter the outer anchorage. If the I:nine-sweeping ? were not completed, we could not undertake a n y salvage work." ? Assist Front India Abnut helf of the fleet WAS etica cod in mine- tweepine, he said, and tea- 1s front the Indian navy Also assisted. Zuenko revealed that the Indian vessels had been placed under his command En order to coordinate the effort. . This cooperation itself is significant because as far as is knnwn independent India has never before aubmitted its vessels to a Soviet. or atw other foreign erennin tt Orr. the command level eince the alerting last year of the bide-Soviet defense trea- ty. The sot let salvace! (Ter. Minn is cheduled to end hi December of next year. When hese Hides ended last December in the ludo. Pakistan war there were 15 sunken vessels In Chit- tagong harbor. After eight months' rtua5em% had Jerk floated 101i of the wrecks tnd towed them away. Periodically the Bengali press has suggested that the Russians aro stalling. Zuenkn denies this. ' "At the end of World War flit took the Ameri- cans five years to clear the wrorlt:k.TP in Pearl Harbor, and there the visibility un- derwater was perfect and the Americans were accus- tomed to the climate," be said. Technical Problems Clearing Chittagong, he added, is plagued with im- mense technical problems. The water is more than 100 feet deep, and visibili- ty is zero. The currents are swift and dangerous, severely limiting the amount of time that the 40 goalet divers can work be- low. Con ventional salvage methods involve blowing apart the submerged hulls and floating them piece by piece. However, title can- not he done here beransd the blazting would kill the river fish. stanle of the peneedi diet, awl would scatter the oil remaining Inside the wrecks. Soviet Salvage Crews What the Soviet salvage ercws are &leg Is sinking pontnons, attaching them hingta tie a it mine- to the wrecks anti floating eileased990/0i910147CIAIRIYPT/10b111?Inp2q4? 'the first collahnretion at pretted a le In 2 Wreck to the surface. "Many slid tide tech- nique woniti not succeed," said Zeenkn, "but fortun- ately they were mistaken." Asked about those armed guards ;minim' the - compound. ho "Every military unit line to insist on rules end reett- lations. This is not for protecting our team, 1,2.. cause the Bengali people have never taken any ac- tion% against the Soviet ted wild we have to control the gates and who goes in tind out. The Bengali peo- ple are very curious. If there were no guards the Jetty would always be crowdtel." Ile also suggested that the gear and vehicles sit- ting on the jetty might fail prey to thieves if left un- Americans Puzzled The fact that tho Soviet navy operates a self-eon- 't ained foreign military presence hero Is a source of bewilderment to the American Emba any in Dacca, which dares not even have the U.S. Marine enmity personnel appear In uniform for fear of pro- voking hostility. The Soviet Union FCCMS to he getting away with these things because it has Acted swiftly on Lan- gladeelfs behalf?from its pro-Bangladesh vetoes in the United Nation last yeer to the prompt die- patch of the salvage fleet to Chittagnng. When the Soviet fleet arrived, Chittagong har- bor was blocked with wreckage and clearing zero men. Now it Is clear- Ing ifin,cton tnns a month. Soviet- preetige as a re- tt It, Is hi g It and the chances of waning Pan- glaricah Into a collective security treaty similar to that Flamed with India in August, 1971, appear very toed. flat could. In. Nectirsor of a 11 I 11,1 1,9 97 pm! v ,r-rtt* - ? tr, fr7?111,.717,1,r-r ,77177, ,er ti Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 C-PYRGHT _ CPYRGHT mem permanent Soviet military prvence here but for the limo being the Rus- sians appear to he engaged purely in salvage. Zuenko had, his Pteward: lay out a repast of heavy ssian bread, butter from Vladivostok, to from Georgia and tinned cherry jam. The are but a few of the enmities to help the bear adapt to tho' Bengal. MARCH OF THE NATION, -New Delhi 23 September 1972 ,so-AD Voo j f 1 i .1 1,41 irt By Our Special Correspoiadert CLEAR TERMS This prompted Mujib to publicly declare that Bangla Desh government will not allovV, the establishment of foreign bases. In fact this declaration is part of the Indo-Bangla Desh' Joint Statement of March 19. The Statement states in unambi- guous terms the "opposition to the creation of land, air, and naval bases in this area." A feeling ,exists that the Russians are deliberately de- laying the salvage operations in order to establish the semi-official presence of their naval fleet in the area and to gain time to negotiate with Shickh Mujib. This suspicion is rein- forced by the knowledge that the Soviets arc currently con- ducting a technical survey of the seabed, something abso- lutely unnecessary for their salvage operations. Despite protests from Bangla Desh officials they have fenced off a large area of the Chitta- gong jetty and have refused NEW DELI-fl: The Soviet naval fleet is very much In the In Ilan chiding res- Ocean, berthed in Banta Desh waters at the port of Chittapag. Bengali Officials, osite for runniug rtry to all non So CAUTIOUS Further calls follow, but ' they are arranged cautiously so as not to create alarm. Finally, visits become quite frequent and so common- place -that the host country finds it difficult to deny, access, particularly if their economic dzpendence on Russia has meanwhile grown significantly. The Raissians also involve themselves in the develop- ment of .ports, shipbuilding, and repairing yards. Usually these facilities, after comple- tion, are handed over to the recipient country but Com- munist advisers as a rule are stationed at these projects to look after Soviet interests. The Russians also provide technical aid to the host country's navy and offer naval workshop and train- ing facilities. They help in establishing fishieg industry by constructing suitable ship- yards and dry docks. The ussians also plan for port improvements designed to facilitate export of crude oil and promisc oIlcxplora- tion in off-shore areas. t seems to acquiesce with this Soviet Wove port Ctilirlitgiritiveelsrnninisgid resentment 13 heard in 13uag1a Desh. - . Mujib was expected to Most Bangla Desh poli- RELUCTANT MUSIB discuss these developments .ticians feel that the so,called with Indira Gandhi It is not "salvage operations" is a known whether he did so sinster and covert Soviet during his talks with her move to create a regular last week. Soviet naval base in Chi . na- Bangle Desh Foreign gong. . . , Minister, Samad is one of Having signed a Friend- the Bangle Desh leaders who ship Treaty with India the wants to caution Mujib Soviets allowed India to sign against Russians. In his a similar one with Bangle recent tour of some Arab and Desh. This assured them an South East Asian countries indirect access to the for- Samad collected considerable mer Pakistani province, information about the modus MARCH learns that the operandi of the Russians. Soviet "operation Salvage",, In this particular field, which began in April last, they first rend their merchant is progressing very slowly ships or fishing trdwlers to because of the Soviets refused make friendly calls at target to commit adequate equip-. ports. ' Once this practice is ment. This has evokedcon- High-ranking officials ex- press concern over Soviet attempts to persuade Prime Minister Mujibur Rahman to allow them to construct a naval base in or near the port of Chittagong. Mujib, though under considerable Russian pressure, has thus far successfully rtfuStd to give in. Before he left for London last month the Russians had escalated their demand. They repOrtedly expressed the desire.. to open a Soviet Consulate in Chittagong. The Consulate Would be re- quired to take care of the influx of Soviet Railors once siderable ryteisment in t Bangla Desh. roved orn 'r demand PgaVitiva ? ? c? established and the Soviet, egablish aensivn ICCOMC familiar, a 111/09/02 : C,a97,791.04d594A00012 to pay a formal visit. Newlidtivns far Soviet naval base at Chittagong needs to be viewed against this back- ground. Facilities at Chitta- pong arc believed to be tied in with the reported Soviet offer of MIG fighter squa- dron to - Bangla Desh and provision of experts to train Bangla Desh military tech- nicians. , While in London Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was caution- ed about this covert Soviet naval presence in Chittagong port by British naval autho- rities, who expressed, not only concern but also apprehension over the expansion of Soviet !level presence and activity in the Indian Ocean. ? Algeria, Cypi us, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and several other Arab and Medi. terranean countries have been din 66 It Soviet mano. ports revoa that the Soviets are also in CPYRGHT pp CI CPYRGHT PYRGH mveci For Rplease 1999/09/02 : CIA-P .DRA60draMAQACRON:JAAPPlelhbor, India. There is an understandable fear of Indian domination here, and the Indians have been taking the blame lately ? often unfairly ? for many of Bangladesh's economic troubles. When the Bangladesh Government made bad deal in ordering huge quantities o. substandard emergency-relief clothing from India several weeks ago,.for instance,, many were quick to blame the Indians. Indian Army accused The Indian Army is accused by Many of having hauled away Pakistani weapons, mill equipment, and a good part of the jute crop, thus contributing to the destitution of this new nation. j Bicycle-rickshaw drivers complain that tires provided by India cost more and wear out faster than those that used to be sold he iby the Pakistani's. The Indians are also often blamed for ti cross-border smuggling that is drain!! Bangladesh. Some Bengalis convenient Ignore that it takes not only Indians but all Bengalis to make the smuggling a success. The Russians, in the meantime, hal suffered a bit from traits that are oft' associated with Americans in overseas pos ? pushiness, heavy handedness, a lack grace. To some Bengalis. the extroverted ? some terested in acquiring naval facilities in Burma. 'Sri Lanka Prime Minister Mrs. Sirimao Bandaranaike has been increasingly wary of Soviet intentions in the Indian Ocean. Recently she placed 30 Sri Lanka ships on alert following the detection of ,a -foreign ship, believed to be Russian, operating close to ,Sri Lanka's territorial waters. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR 16 October 1972 Low-profile 11.8. aid wins Bengalis over Soviet and Indian popularity wanes By Daniel Southeriand Staff correspondent of ' The Christian Science Monitor - Dacca, Dangianesn Thanks to, a massive aid program com- bined with a low-key approach, America's standing in Dacca has risen markedly over the past few months. At the same time, the popularity of India and the Soviet Union ? 'the two .pOwe responsible for the liberation of Bangladesh ? has dropped considerably. The main cause for improvement in Amer- ice's image is clearly the U.S. aid being poured into this new state. The United States now is the biggest provider of foreign aid to Bangladesh. The United States has been channeling a good part of its aid through the United Nations and through voluntary agencies. The U,S. aid staff in Dacca is a small one. Bengalis say they've been impressed with this low profile and with the lack of political strings attached to the aid. Lots to live down Bengalis also say the United States still has a lot to live down because of its support'for West Pakistan before and during the India. Pakistan war of last December. But all along, educated Bengalis have tended to distinguish between what they considered a bad policy of the U.S. Government and the good qualities of the American people. This fund of goodwill for the American people has given the U.S. Government some. thing to build on. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the Bangladesh Prime Minister, dearly wants American aid A p I/nn CIA-RDIA:Cpen ent on either e Would say aggressive ? Soviet Ambassador here, Valentin F. Popov, pomes across as an "ugly Russian." A number of Bengalis thought Mr. Popov showed terribly bad form when he tried at the very last minute to persuade Sheikh Mujib to accept Russian instead of British facilities for medical treatment last July. The sheikh chose to go to London, where he probably feels more at ease tnan ne woum ever teei m moscow. Because of past British influence, many educated Bengalis are simply more at home with Englishmen, or Americans, than they are with the Russians. When the Russian Ambassador gave the sheikh's wife a Christmas present last De-J comber, Bengalis considered this a most peculiar thing for a supposedly godless Russian to do. Suspicion grows Some of the Bengalis who were at first Impressed with the ability of Russian experta to speak their language now have become a bit suspicious of this talent, The Russians have also been criticized for, Slowness in their efforts to clear the mines and sunken ships from. the harbor at Chitta- gong, the country's largest port. Many Bengalis were under the impression that the Russian Navy would get the job done quickly. But it has turned out to be an extremely difficult task. India and the Soviet Union are still referred to here as the two great allies of Bangladesh. Not much is made of American aid in tie, pg9411,11=0016. krat8t175 - 0,17," "^Ti I It Apprr:RelliTor Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 that they are not to criticize India or the Soviet Union. Attitudes change But underlying attitudes in Dacca, particu. fatly among government officials, are ob. viously changing. In the capital city at least, word has filtered down that the Americans are engaged in a WO-million aid program. Russian aid amounts to only $6.6 million. ? At the United States- Information Service (USIS) library, which was blown up during the war, the atmosphere has relaxed consid.' erably. Demonstrators who used to march to the nearby Foreign Ministry to air their complaints also occasionally hurled roan through the whidows of the USIS building ? just for good measure. But an American official recently noted with pride that last time we got stoned was four weeks ago." Things are obviousiy looking utt.- nin GUARDIAN, Minchester .16 Doccraber 1972 CP Hyear of Bangladesh liangladesh, the eighth Most populous nation criticism of Alttilb's subcontinental policies. Yet oti earth, is one year old tomorrow. Bangladesh Is the moment may ,be coming for a eloser,look at at political and cOmmitnal peace, and has experi- sonic tenets Of Mujibism. Tomorrow?al another enced little starvation lot months past. The ? emotional, million-strong gathering?the Sheikh economy of Bangladesh, If still a thing of shreds is expected to outline his current thinking on 'Ind tatters, at least begins to contrive slow 'war crime trials, finally to choose between amnesty recovery. One year ago, in the wake of appalling and a course that will put 40,000 or more Bengalis, carnage and wholesale destruction, none of this Bihar's, and captured Pakistani' soldiers In the seemed remotely possible. The year of nationhood dock for collaboration and atrocities. If these trials has proved, against the odds. a year for congratu-, go ahead at full spate they could remove. for batons and thanksgiving. East Bengal can clearly many years, the possibility of President Bhutto manage its own affairs : it iN not the incompetent recngnising Bangladesh : this. in turn, will land the Punjabi overlords so despised and ;titled. condemn the entire Indian arena to continued This first hIrthdag may not have fulfilled the hostilities, huge expenditure on arinammits and most ecstatic herpes of' the Dacca masses, but it the existence, in all three countries, of embattled remains a signal victory for decent hmnan hostage minorities, prey to random vengrance and aspiration. official persecution. Thus far, Sheikh Mujib hag Nor, looking beyond generalities of iclealism been able to argue stoically that it wns for Pakis- to the grind of daily subsistence. is there cause tan, the principal aggressor. to Med his recogni- for more Mundane depressions. Visiting cominen- tion terms?and Mr 13hutto, beset by his own tators have repeatedly prophesied the imminent internal political weaknesses. has let moment collapse Of law. order and the econerny. hiint; ? after moment slip away. Sheikh Mitlibur lialiman's grip on his people has But now, with 'Vicious student riots against proved lottgli and charismatic. And the neasaht liangladesh being ferniented In SIMI and the economy (only rivalled in global impoverishment Punjab, Bhultn's freedom or action does seem by Burundi and tipper Volta) has reacted to genulnely eircumstribed. If the subcontinent adversity with steely local resilience?small ? wishes peace,Jhe next practical step. nutst come village units using rich soil to offset the buffet from Mujib. Bhutto knows as much and hopes for ings or war, ? Bangladesh now does not face a it. India, too, sees only harm coming from an awirt slide int() mass famine or anarchy. There epic of legalistic bloodletting. Vriends know Is a chance to build. ? Sheikh Mujlb is truly horrified by what his peopk. lint, washing over these. rocks or certainly and endured, but there are the living to think about questions. World opinion, for example, has under- how?the 3(10,000 Bengalis stuck in Pakistan. the pinned Bangladesh to fine effect. Though the 90,000 PakIstan troops incarcerated In India, the International aid business shows inevitable kinks, restless 700,000 Btharls, the gaoled 40.000. This is It has mirsed the country to ? health, and this a formidable mountain of misery. Sheikh Mitjib physical assistance has been paralleled by diplo- timid begin moving it tomorrow, 1111 net In twin muirsympathy. Only Chinn and P roW tluirdrics with , the early aspirations of 11` ;growing of the Moslem Kock have indulged in much open Bangladesh. . Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 5 Approved For Relagtflie99T09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 BALTIMORE SUN CPYRGHT 16 December 1972 Pangradekkimarks firsibirthday today; Mujib revie.ws the yeaes. atcomplishments fly rrtAti SAIMARWAre. Sun Slat f Correspondent . Dacca, Bangladesh?A boom; ing 31-gun salute will mark the end of the first yeat of I3angla- desh'S existence today. And then the new nation will begin Its second year, which could be more challenging, with the,eu- phoria of liberation yielding to. despondency. ' ' ? Sheik Mujllidr ' Rahman; founder, leader and prime minister of Bangladesh, In. an -interview summed up the per- formance of his regime that took over power after a bloody, upheaval and Said: "Nobody has died of starvation In my country despite many predic- tions that there would be wide- , . spread famine." Constitution Is signed "I have given my country a .democratic constitution, in such short record time that nowhere else has this ever happened." The constitution was finally signed yesterday by all the members of the Constituent As.sembly, and that assembly now stands dissolved. "I am giving democracy to my people and they will be able to elect a new govern- ment next March. I could have continued in office for another 10 years without any challenge from my people, but I want elections so that they can exer- cise their democratic rights," The national administrative apparatus Is now effective throughout the country, despite communication difficulties In a terrain crisscrossed by rivers, where many of the war-dam- aged bridges still are unre- paired. Sheik Muilb. as he Is calledl .by his people, added that there has not been any "genocide" of the non-Bengali-speaking III. hark, as many feared there would be. Ile made it clear, however, that the 260,000 out of half a million Biharis who Pakistan. wilt nave to go tnere and the remainder will stay in Bangiaaesn as -my people on my responsibility." Despite Mr. Mujib's remark- able performance, it should be realized that the armed chal- been very numerous. They , could have been much worse, because of widespread distri- bution of 'automatic weapons last year for the war against Pakistan when the Indian' Army. with the help of the Bengali guerrillas, erased East Pakistan from the map and created the new Bengali nation of Bangladesh. ?? Prime Minister Mujib would like to believe that the growing number of political parties, of all ideological colorations, is due mainly to politicians' fears that he is about to initiate a government purge of all oppor- tunists and also those who are corrupt. According to observers, the national ruling Awami League will be returned to power in March with a massive vote, provided Mr. Mujib is able to campaign and crisscross the country. The Bangladesh government Is getting British helicopters, which Mr. Mujib could use in campaigning without much phy- sical strain. ? The national political issues for the first time in the 25 years since independence from Great Britain will be on do- mestic issues and net aimed at the outside power or forces in West Pakistan, against which Bengalis have fought all along. However) the new Bengali nation still" lacks the psycho- logical fulfillment of nationhood, despite recognition by over 95 nations. What.-thd Bengalis want is recognition by their erstwhile rulers in West Pakistan, who now make up all of Pakistan. Their insistence on recognition before any dialogue with Paki- have chosen, 14) governmeat- stan's prcsiden Zufikar All conducted su pttOliVit nFO duet 1;91991039 that Mr. Bhutto may try :to talk them nut of their nide- pendence. . In foreign affairs the country Is seeking ufriendship with all with malice to none." The United States, India, Britain and Russia are all considered necessary for help and Mi. The nation survived the disas- ters of the last year only with a massive $1 billion In eco- nomic and food aid. The na- tion's leaders are aware that that kind of money is not going to be available in future. Aid groups to leave As it is, most of the 50-odd volunteer organizations and agencies who are running aid programs here now are talking about moving to Vietnam, where they feel the need for help will be greater than in Bangladesh. The traumatic experience of last year has made the Bengalis doubly wary of any influence which may Suggest, however remotely, that their sbvereignty is being compro- mised. Mr. Mujib said, "I want rriendship with all but I will not tolerate any interference in my country's internal affairs," In answer to 'a question as to how he viewed Bangladesh's relations in the future. ? Mr. Mujib has reason to be wary of foreign powers inter- fering in his domestic affairs. Last week the pro-Moscow' Communist party, which had, been underground for the testi 25 year, put tip a very expen- sive- show in the world's poor.; est 'country and attracted for-4 eign attention.. Awaml League leaders made no Secret of who they believe was financing such on elabo- rate and expensive show and for what political ends. ? . Mujib is determined not have any truck with any politi- ?eill party, notwithstanding the fact that some of these parties joined his followers last y,ear A GlAaRDP74-0111Sia 00200090001-5 consultative committee under Indian influence to guide thq, war of liberation. ? There is an undertone of .anti-Indian feeling voiced in private and public,. This, many. 'Indian officials say, is because,. of a Bengali desire?which thel Indians say they share?for a,' separate identity. Bangladesh Is still adjusting to the new realties and isi groping for ways to improve I the lot of its poor, who are the tvnrld'a rinroct There Is ri0 mistaking that' Bangladesh is Sheik Mujib's country. His portrait Is every- where and he is regarded as the supreme leader who Is going to solve all the prob- lems. "* Mr. Mujib, at 55, looks healthy after his recent Illness , and operation, tle enjoys hit pplitical power and the strength he has acquired after , A long fight. 7711'rn'rq',`U.7{,Irrlr -,,:rinfrf:TArlinrriiirrir,itrtv ?11t9TUfliaTIMI.Ifj(1,VA ? wir trIpyypi Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 BALTIMORE SUN 14 December 1972 Bangladesh revisited: A young giant' tries to makoPitRon 16 cents a da C pyRnslwrin Immo/it, Stitt Stall CrirreAnonditnt ? Dacca, Bangladesh?This 13enga1l nation of 75 million people, having emerged from a bloody conflict a year ago as the world's eighth largest country, rethains one of its poorest. Bangladesh hone of the lowest per capita Incomes ($69 a year or abOut 16 cents a day) of any nation on earth. Twenty per cent of the pop- ulation has an average annual Income of less than $2, And Ihe overpopulation is such that there are 1,361 people for every square mile. ? The country's prime minis- ter, Sheikh Mujihni? Ralunan, Is making an effort to raise living standards, but the task seems formidable. The nation's planners are: giving top priority to agricid-' fore tillice 95 per rent or the ? people depend on it. (Manui. factoring accounts for only 6 pr cent of the gross national product and employs less than 1 per cent of the labor force.) Thus, the short-term objec- tive?with the help of foreign aid?is to protect agriculture frnm thn unrwinc nf wnallwr and produce enough to feed the people, The planners realized. de- spite claims to ihe contrary, that Bangladesh does not have the raw materialS and technical skills for large- scale industrialization. And the nearly half billion dollars in foreign aid has been pumped into agricul- low", ntul fiehrwine ftpu. eminent also has given priority In restarting the Jule, cotton textilc and sugar mills that were closed down Inst year when the West, Pakistanis abandoned them, In Ihe Indo-Pakistani war. The Bangladesh ' govern- ment has a modest plan for the current fiscal year (July' 1972 to June. 197:11. costing $950 million. Rut Again, the bulk of the fluids are to he spent on agriculture, with in- dustry getting a mere 5.5 per cent. The country's major assets- are 8 million cubic fret of natural gas, and the climate and soil In prnrliire ernp5, rmq-, tart " ?olden fiber" Y I , NEW YORK TIKES 714 January 1973 RICE CROPS DROPS RAVAGED ASIA War and Weather Produce Sh daps in Many Areas , jute. The latter gets the; .country the most foreign ex- Thange dollars, apart from 'leather and tea, Jute Is used. In making burlap bags and twine. However, Bangladesh's jute crop is threatened by rising food prices, -since farmers are finding it more 'profitable to divert their acreage to food grains, such as rice. Natural gas queation The government has yet to decide what to do about the natural gas. It would take years either to pump the gas to Calcutta or set up a pe- trochemical complex at the ;port of Chittagong. The average Bengali ,seems to have few com- plaints, Ile feels that the country k so far down that the only place to go is up. Meantime. .there is an acute shortage of consumer goods. which has to be im- ported from abroad, prefera- bly from England or Japan. Bengalis do not like Indian consumer goods which they believe to be "costly and :also shoddy." The government is pledged In coninhern nnlinrt' sin?and has yet to make up its mind if it wants foreign capital for development. The 'few foreign-owned enter- prises are not ?nationalized and their owners are allowed to run them. However, the government has decided to bar private investments from India as it it would revive past me- mories of Rajasthan' Hin- dus and Bengali Hindu, land owners who exploited the Muslims here. That was part of the reason the Muslim Bengalis opted for Muslim Pakistan against predomi- nantly Hindu India 25 years ago. Sheikh Mujib himself now Is !poking into the price rise and shortages. lfe has banned strikes and threat- ened hoarders with serious punishment. The sheikh hopes to import enough con- sumer gnods to bring down prices before the March elec- tions. Needless to say, the economy has become one of the major campaign issues. CPYRGHT year anaitne prosputl yr L.,- porting rice because of an es- timated 20 per cent drop in production. Stockpiles were wiped out last year when Thailand ex- ported more than two million tons to countries such as the Philippines, Indonesia and Bangladesh that experienced Unforeseen shortages. Adverse weather played havoc with rice crops in the SINGAPORE, Jan. 13 (Ru- ler).-The green revolution. in Asia SCOMS about to come to lin abrupt halt this year .with rice crops ravaged by war, drought and floods, Harvests are falling far short of forecasts in- several countries, and of Asia's three i)1..? principal rice ex orting coun- tries ojitymi, volltold have nitgel-stir Thailand, the foremost ex- portet, faces a shortage this Hut tuu Om, with pruiduudon forecasts for 1972-73 down Only 4.5 per cent. The shortage has been covered by imports from China, the United States, Italy, Japan and Thailand. Indonesia was caught un- aware )3y a serious shortage the last three months, Which saw, the price of rice nearly triple on the domestic market. Months of harsh drought caused a drastic shortfall In rttlirrinne, whorn fhtt given flirt deo errip inrinnetelok etri,. revolution was born in the big to meet her own needs by early 1960's with the devel- mid-1974, had to import 1,- opment of a high-yield "mira- b00,000 tons. Indonesia is still etc rice" that was expected to trying to buy, additional sup- make most countries self-suffi- plies. #1" 9 ntr,ref Mina. est Mitt Arnnrienn nirpnot, .1 Nor With a forecast by an century washed away much of man Efferson, that world de- the crop in the northern Phil- mand is likely to exceed out- ippines, while in the south put In five to 16 years, at Relestiele891/019,02 : CIALeR OuOttlfttkee020 Cirtrup to OCItTle9JC neeas. Indonesia Needed Imports Catching Neverthele the r- n Malaysia's 1972 harvest was ss ove I Atitinnk fnr tho philinninng wits 7 expected to produce a surplus for the firnt time Wi"" /oh tons?mainly due to double- planting and increased irriga- tion. ; An acute rice shortage led to riots and looting in thr Cambodian capital of Phnorr Penh in September, and a ma. jor food crisis looms this yeai as the war shrinks the avers ?age yield of paddyfieids. Peasants Desert Land Statistics published rbeentlk by the Cerehrmien ImerinNt Ministry showed the area un der cultivation had fallen b3 nearly hal?' over the test E months. Thousands of peasant have deserted their land an fled' es refugees to Phnon Penh. South Vietnam Importer 200,000 tons of rice last yea to fill' the Op left .by produc 0041010(144sulting from thy War. Japan, by contrast, is this year in the position of 'comic! CPYRGHT !ring a .o reduce her stockpile, which )ver the last few years has :limbed to 2,700,000 tons. South Korea was hoping to ialve imports to 400,000 tons his year, but officials ,now ;oncede that the country will iee'd at least 5Q0,000 tons be- :ause of the poor 1972 harveit. Production figures are not tvallable for North Vietnam, China and North Korea, but irtrvests In North Vietnam are hought to have been seriously affected by the war. , THE ASIAN, Hong Kong 13 December 1972 Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 , tq EPS helD U.s crti 11 it (11) agg II 01 d - therid.1741 SPECIAL TO THE ASIAN ? NASHINGTON ? North kmerica is now the world's sreadbasket, with the failure pf ;rain harvests in the Soviet Union. Mith the strength the United States las militarily-and in other aspects sf its economy, this situation has ;erious political implications. The Jnited States could, if it were so nelined to, use its potential :apacity to grip the world by its hroat and choke its alimentary :anal to influence political leeisions of ? the international :ommunity. In the thirties the world's wheat leficicney areas were supplied by hree regions: Latin America, siorth America and Eastern gurope, including the Soviet 'Jnion. Today with its population boom .Atin America is barely self- cuflicient, The Soviet Union is now naking large ?purchases of grain !nd many of the other countries of Lastern Europe are importing vast uantities of grain. Australia and Icnieve any abrupt Ihcreases In ha Led p,e act.en t., demands on it. - US grain exports have been increased 12 times in less-than 40 years, in spite of greater home consumption. The high protein diet of North Americans requires about one ton of grain a year per person to feed cattle and poultry as well as humans. European and Japanese needs have also risen. As far back as 1967. a US agricultural economist warned that the foreseeable North American grain surplus was all that stood between the world's increasing population and starvation. Economists are nervously. wondering what would happen if future .crop failures in the Soviet Union coincided with Indian famines. Already India has had bad harvests_ from monsoon failures which .are obliging it to go to the US for grain, despite its optimism last year it had reached self-sufficiency. In .the late sixties when : crop failures hit India ew Lemma are only seconaary suppliers. Apart from its political implications the world's dependence on US supplies has serious dangers' to the food million tons. Organisation efficiency. agriculture science and knowhow have enabled the US with scarcely six per cent of its people working on the farms to feed all of A formcr US Secretary of its own peoples and many other Agriculture, Orville Freeman. has parts of the world. This year the warned that it h US .r.,amt s to harvagas2 difficult for the AtiVirang FQrni"ilease CPYRGHT CPYRGHT CPYRGHT Soviet Union only 167 million .ons. The Asian's correspondent_li Bangkok reports: Rice experts from member- --ountries of the International Rice Commission were in agreement .hat greater attention must be )laced towards the development or mprovcd rice varieties which equire only moderate V.; /Ur daptability as 60 per cent of the rea under rice in Asia is raided. In the past. emphasis has been n the development of high ielding varieties for irrigated onditions. Little attention had Deen devoted to raise rice yields in nirrigatcd areas that depend for heir water supply from rain. The experts meeting here recently Felt that as considerable success had now been achieved in raising rice productivity in irrigated areas, more emphasis should now be directed towards breeding varieties suitable for less favourable environment such as rainfed areas and marginal land. Attention should also be given to suitable cultivation techniques and cropping patterns in these areas. A FAO official drew the attention of the delegates to the fact that population in rice- consuming countries was steadily increasing at an annual rate or mree per cm. thp food problem of the developing egruntries in relation to rice production must come mainly from increased productivity of There was also increasing demand for rice by the existing population Which was linked to urbanisatioo and increased incomes. Apart from Asia, the demand for rice was also on the increase In land already under cultivation. The Deputy Regional Representative or FAO for Asia and the Far East. Mr Soestilo I-I. Pralco.so. warned against any optimism that the rice problems would be solved in the near future. He said that through the introduction of high yielding varieties coupled with both imorovement in agricultural inputs and favourable weather conditions particularly in tropical Asia, rice production was increasing remarkably in many countries during the last quarter of the seventies. He said that in 1970 the world paddy productiqn had reached a record 300 million metric tons and this had led many people to express optimism that the rice problems would be solved in the near future. He said that, except for limited areas. rice production was still the subject of considerable fluctuations. consequently hanirerini both the desired stead?, Increase 131 OUULLIVII FITIU n SUR/ c supply of rice to an ever increasing population. Mr Prakoso said that the shortage or rice has already been reported in some countries in Asia and.this should serve as a warning that continuous efforts are Africa and South America. needed for further improw G hke RCMP 749-61 4914A0 0 0 gentle/6191 -5 1,E1,1"/ ' 1-rtr 91, 25X1 C1 Ob Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 January-February 1973 LENGTHENING SHADOWS AND PYOTR YAKIR Soviet counter proposals on the subject of a freer exchange of ideas between East and West have been restrained. Typical of this was their recent reaction to the concept of satellite television programming. It was this reaction, in fact, that resulted in the nearly unanimous United Nations vote prohibiting satellite television programming without the permission of the recipient government. Ironically Lenin was the first proponent of influencing the peoples of the world via radio. Moscow became and remains one of the most powerful and busy of all the world's broadcasting centers with programs in all of the world's main languages -- and all directed at presenting the Soviet political point of view. Moscow is also one of the world's most paranoid listeners to foreign radio broadcasting and apparently fears television might prove even more effective in reaching a wider audience as yet apathetic but potentially dangerous. Also indicative of the leadership's nervousness over the exchange of information or ideas is a recently adopted decree forbidding the use of the telephone for purposes contrary to the interests of the State and public order. This measure, too, is an additional weapon for use in the current campaign against the steadily weakening dissidence movement. Evidence from telephone taps has already been used in the trials of dissidents. A switchboard operator testified at the trial last year of Vladimir Markman in Sverdlovsk that he had made anti-Soviet remarks in telephone calls to Israel. One of the charges against Vladimir Bukovsky was the possession of telephone numbers of Western correspondents. At this writing, it is anticipated that Pyotr Yakir may momentarily be subjected to public trial and the telephone can be expected to play no small role in the charges made against him. Last June Pyotr Yakir, one of the Soviet dissenters' more outspoken members, was arrested. Five months later it was being bruited about Moscow that Yakir had been broken by the security police (KGB) and that he might be ready to go into court to denounce the "democratic movement" and to name his fellow dissenters and their Western contacts. Those credited with spreading this story assure their contacts that Yakir has not buckled under physical torture. An article in the 14 December Soviet Analyst makes the telling point that though torture was employed on a tremendous Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 scale during the Stalinist purges in the Soviet Union and East Europe, it was not the physically tortured who were brought to confession in the great trials- Some were tortured at one stage or another during interrogation but usually before it had been decided to display them publicly. Others, such as NL Orakhalashvili, were so tortured they had to be done away with in secret. Star confessors such as Nikolai Bukharin were not physically tortured but were methodically weakened by varying degrees of brutality such as inadequate diet and inadequate sleep, accompanied by very long, though not continuous, interrogations. Even Ijoebl who appeared at the Slansky trial in Prague in 1952 said that such interrogation techniques had in effect deprived him of his ego. Even when rested and fed it no longer occurred to him to withdraw his confession. "I was quite a normal person," he said, "only I was no longer a person." The time taken to process prisoners in the public purge trials in Moscow and East Europe was usually from three months upwards. Pyotr Yakir, a sick man to begin with, has now been in the hands of the KGB since 21 June -- ample time for the interrogators to accomplish their task. In addition, as Amnesty International reminds us today's interrogator has the technical capability to produce "progressively more sophisticated methods of torture, including mind-shattering, audio-visual techniques that make the medieval thumbscrew and rack look like Children's toys." Opinions differ as to whether or not Pyotr Yakir has been broken under interrogation. As reported in the Baltimore Sun of 23 December, two highly trustworthy Moscow dissident sources have described the rumors of Yakir's collaboration with the authorities as misinformation skillfully planted by the KGB in order to damage or break the morale of other Soviet dissidents. Should it turn out that Yakir has denounced the activities of his fellow dissidents, one need only recall that long before his arrest he confided to London correspondent David Bonavia that if he were beaten he would "tell all." "I know that from my previous experience in camps. But you will know that it is not the real me who is speaking then. . It is believed that Yakir will be brought to trial in the very near future and it may well be that the KGB will try to use his testimony to implicate others and denounce the dissidents as a whole. Undoubtedly the KGB will use the Yakir case to damn the chief "samizdat" publication of the dissident movement, The Chronicle of Current Events. The world should denounce this latest example C5E-Soviet methods of intimidation and forced confession reminiscent of the days of Stalin. Which in turn leads one to reflect on Western reaction to what is happening within the Soviet Union. We know that although the Soviet leaders are lured by the potential payoffs of detente, 2 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 orthodoxy will die hard for most of them. It is the instinctive tendency of a suspicious, conservative leadership to tighten internal controls at a time of increased foreign exposure. It is that leadership which reacts violently to foreign criticism of its treatment of dissidents and minorities as interference in its internal affairs. Nevertheless, that same leadership has in the past and can be expected in the future to make small compromises to appease its critics. It is this potential of achieving even the smallest of compromises-thatimakes.400ernireactionsselpm$S00aAqaousi.}FForith the exception of Western media, reaction to Soviet dissidents appealing for help has been generally negative. It was reported during the Brussels International Symposium on Human Rights held last December that over 100 documents appealing to the West for help had been sent out during the past year. They have met with total indifference and silence on the part of most international psychiatric organizations, the United Nations Human Rights Commission, the United Nations secretariat. In fact,. in 1969 the then Secretary General U Thant ordered the Moscow office of the United Nations to refuse to accept appeals locally. This was after Mt. U Thant had received five appeals through this channel. He suggested that those who wished to appeal should use the mails to address themselves to the UN Headquarters in New York. The World Council of Churches, World Health Organization, International Red Cross, and international Baptist groups, all of whom have had appeals addressed to them have not even acknowledged receiving them. All that the dissidents of the Soviet UAJAMOant is serious, responsible intervention at the intergovernmental level and assistance from international organizations to ensure fair, public trials and less dehumanizing labor camp conditions. So spoke Yuri Shtein, former Soviet film director and member of the unofficial Soviet Group of Initiative for Defense of the Rights of Man in the USSR and now in exile in the West, before the Brussels Symposium on Human Rights: "I do not nourish any illusions as to the power of world public opinion and its ability to compel a government to carry out drastic changes in its domestic policies. But to restrain, to put a brake on manifestations of anti-democratic trends, to eliminate the menace of physical repression hanging over innocent victims, those are among our possibilities." 3 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 VICES OM 7'}WEi8112M.WEROUND CDS TELEVISION NETWORK. TUesday, July 28, 1976 10:00 11t00 PM, EDT 4' With CBS NEWS!Cdrrespondents Harry Reaooner and William Cole, PRODUCED BY CBS NEWS EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: , Perry Wolff ' REASONER: Good evening. You are about to see some extraordinary film. They are interviews with three Ruseiane, filmed in Russia, about their dissatiefaction and dissent, and there is also a moving voice message, recorded in a prison camp:1? ; and smuggled out. 60 .0 COLE:I Well, the first man you'll eee is Pyotr Yakir. He's 48 years old and,1?10,1 . , . . dedidated.Communist. He wants change from within. He has spent 13 years in con-.2'e cent ration campa, and he is what you might call the non-titular head of the demo..; cratic Movement. He was put into a camp the first time when he was 14, because. ' he was Mn rather's son. His father wag General Jan Yakir, a very celebrated general of the Soviet Army. Stalin decided that Yakir should be 'shot. He vas-,;;W* taken out of bed one night and shot,. / REASCNER: Yakir begins by speaking of a famous recent trial. 1; i '???.: 1 ? A COLE: Yes, Pyotr believes that a change came in Russian .opinion in 1966,,wi h theiillegal trials of two well-known Russian writers, Sinyavsky and Daniel..; 1 1, .1,; fl. REASONER: He also, of course, speaks in Russian, but as we listen to him, and In these other interviews, the translation will be by David Floyd, of. the London 2212E/meth, an expert on Soviet affairs. Let's listen to Mk. Takla'. ' t' YAKIR: (Speako in Russian) FLOYD: (INTERPRETING): The most important turning point in the way people are thinking wan when Daniel and.Sinyavsky were arrested. Many- educated people thought Daniel and Sinyavsky had done wrong by sending their writings abroad, and follow- ing their trial and after Samizdat - Samizdnt refere to the system by which people nimply reproduce and pass from hand to hand various writings - published the first speeches of Daniel and Sinyavsky, there came about a striking change, because both. Sinyavsky and Daniel spoke about what they thought. They had written down what they believed, and didn't consider themselves guilty. And many people began to think: really, why should pdeple be tried for their Convictions? Why, simply fori what be thinks, does k,man have to be arrested?' It was very similar to Stalin ? times, when people were sent to prison not even for what they thought, but for ' what they were thought to believe, and had not said to anybody, but it bad how been proved that .they were dissenters. So from that time on there were ' tests. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 [ CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194P4002000190001-5 And then there was the trial of Galanskov and Ginzburg, and that was tne_time,of the greatest enthusiasm, because firstly a great many people protested against the . fact that the trial was held illegally and behind closed doors. During the tklal the situation changed a great deal. 'Whereas during the trial of Sinyavsky and . Daniel it had been impoasible to approach foreign correspondents - the vigilantes ''.1; would take people straight off to the police - at the Moscow City Court we all discussed the affair with the correspondents. True, they wouldn't let us in any- ' Where, but a certain contact was established, and everything we learned ye passed 4 on immediately to the correspondents. The trial ended, and against 'it there Were h , a great many protests. More than 2,000 people put their names to various letters of protest against conviction of people for their beliefs. Sometime - about the same time, during the trial, Lariesa Daniel and Pavel Litvinov handed correspond- ! 'ente a protest against the trial and, appealing to world public opinion. That! wag 1 :the first, major step, which was a breach with all previous traditions. Never be- ore in Russia had there been a case of people appealing to the .West with a pro-,, ' fteat against unlawfulness in our country.. ;This is a great stride forward compared with Stalinism. Under Stalin there was always an iron curtain, and no. one knew what was going on here. Millions of people were destroyed and nobody knew about it. Now we're trying to publicize every arrest, every dismissal. This we consider our main function - that is, in- !forming people about what is going on and of those illegal acts. We consider this the main task of the day. , 1 , illere is what I think. We are,all being arrested - those who took part in the democratic movement - but that's not the point. We are apparently being arrested because it doesn't suit the authorities to have people about who criticize them, .. But there's no going back. If we're not here there'll be others there are al.. ready many of us, many young people, and no independent thinking people in the , t Soviet Union will go back to what used to be. They'll beat us and they'll ki 1 us. All the same people will go on thinking differently., Approved For Release 1999/09/022: CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 -,,,mr,v-7(qlwrTnr ',7}vv-rtni,cinvirillq If' ? TT 411- ' r/PticilikTrUtY)P" Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 CPYRGHT THE NATION, Bangkok 25 December 1972 'IF THEY BEAT Mt, I WILL SAY ANYTHING. By Alice Somerfield REPORTS FROM MOSCOW suggest that a spec- tacular show trial may be in preparation, and that the principal exhibit and star witness will be Pyotr Yakir, one of the most prominent of all the Soviet Unions small band of dissident intellectuals. What is one to make of this rumour, and what does it Indicate about the Soviet authorities' intentions? Pyotr Yakir is 49 years Old, a historian who worked as a librarian in the Academy of Sciences Library until his arrest in June this year, Since then his case has been investi- gated (Soviet law pre- scribes a maximum of nine months pre-trial in- vestigation). At his arrest it was reported that he would be charged under article 70 of the Soviet Criminal Code, which covers anti-Soviet agita- tion and propaganda, and can carry a sentence of up to seven years in pri- on and five years exile. Vladimir t3ukovs ky, whose case was reported earlier this year, received the maximum sentence under the same article. ? Appeals which contrasted the treatment of Yakir with that accorded to Angela Davis in the United States askedi for him to be released on hail, but were rejected. Now rumours are rife that techniques of 30 years ago in his book, My Childhood in Prison, is confirmed by other ac- counts. Yakir is the son of General Iona Yakir who was purged and shot Under Stalin in 1937. Pyotr Yakir, then 14 years old, and the rest of his family, were impri- soned after the fashion ? of the times for the crime of being related to an "enemy of the people." He spent 17 years in pri- sons and camps of various types under Stalin, and was finally released only, after Stalin's death, Re- habilitation of both father and son followed, but the spectre of Stalinism has haunted Yakir ever since, and was the driving force behind his participation in numerous protests and appeals in recent years. These have included appeals to the United Nations commission on Human. Rights, concern- Yakir has been persuaded Ing the infringements of by his interrogators to civil rights in the USSR, ..confess to his guilt and appeals to international help them in their in- Soviet Communist Party vestigations of the whole conferences, as well as underground movement. letters . to Soviet leaders and offocial bodies of all With this in formation kinds concerning indivi- they apparently propose to mount a spectacular dual cases of injustice. trial of dissidents., RIGHT TO FREE Interrogation methods ; SPEECH in the USSR are reasona In 1969 Yakir and a ably well-documented and number of like-thinking although they can involve p-eople, including Vladi- ; physical violence, do not mir Bukovsky, the histo- necessar do so. Yakir s rian Andrei Arnalrik and under interrogation and ily ' ? own vivid nicture_ilf the Appr oved For -Keleafeillt991/ftliata. eti\-143121bWrOgocga harievskaya, founded the Action Group for the Defence of Civil Rights. It is not illegal under the Soviet constitution to found groups of this na- ture, but from the first it was frowned ori by the authorities. Yakir insist- ed that he was not inter- ested in forming under- ground organisations, as he believed in openly claiming the right to free speech, which, inciden- tally, is also guaranteed under the Soviet consti- tution. Recently the trials of Bukovsky and of other dissidents less well known in the West have indi- cated that the Soviet au- thorities were making great efforts to silence the small group of dissi- dents, In 1970 Yakir could tell an American journalist, William Cole, that it did not matter if he and the others were arrested, as there were many more to carry on where they left off. Since then, however, the ranks of the dissidents have been sadly thinned. In an interview with a Western journalist this month the distinguished Soviet, phy- sicist, Academician An- drei Sakharov- himself a prominent member of th dissident movement-said that it had never been in worse straits. The impact of the movement is, ,in any case, largely moral- as dissidents exercise no direct political power. It must have come as a particular blow, there- fore, to liberal-minded ;Soviet eitizens to learn that Yakir had cracked health and a heavy drinker before his arrest, the pressures may just have been too great. It was one of the more grotesque aspects of the Stalin period that ap- parently sane and intelli- gent people were brought ,* to confess the most ex- traordinary crimes in court. It seems that Yakir is likely to do something similar. He has reportedly been convinced by his interrogators that, as a! Marxist, he should not i have tolerated the Marxist aspects aspects of the civil rights movement in the USSR. He has con- fessed his guilt and has supplied a great deal of information about the movement. Before leaping to any conclusions about this 4 news, however, it is worth recalling what the British , journalist David Bonavia Wrote from Moscow at , the time of Yakir's at- rest last June, reporting a conversation they had had in the Soviet capital: "These are Mr Yalcir's words as accurately as I can remember them. `If they beat me, I will say I anything-I know that from my former exper- ience in the caning, But you will know it will not e the real me speaking. Another thing, I shall never in any circum-, stances commit suicide. So you will know that if they say I have done away with myself, some-' ' one else will have done me in. Remember one thing: in this country it is progress when they put people in labour camps and psychiatric hospitals 0 ?LI atrisprif. It is progress NI* 1,FIVy are not shot' CPYRGIATApproved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 1 jeNonetheless, many ilnkm must be wonder- turn to sone features of hirtiself did ?pie in the Soviet ing if the Yakir case the Stalinism which he oppose.. does not indicate a re- DIE WELT, Hamburg 6 December 1972 CPYRGHT THE YAKIR CASE AND THE LONDON 'OBSERVER' by Cornelia Gerstenmaier it is one of the practices of the Soviet security service. .the KGB, to circulate certain false reports, and to launch them in the Western press. In this column would come such things as the report in the illustrated Stern, which 2 years ago published an "Exclusive Interview" with an alleged aunt of Nobel prize winner Alexander Solzhenitsyn. In it, the aunt had said negative things about her nephew. The aunt's statements proved to be false, but Stern had done Solzhenitsyn's notorious enemies a service. Behind Stern was the "Novosti" news service, which had provided the "a71-7 and other "information." This was no isolated case, for"Novosti" is a purposeful and energetic institution, which is generally known, to be a branch of the KGB. It is all the more amazing that many foreign correspondents are taken in again and again by the strange news arrangements of the agency. Western reporters seem now to have been taken in again by the KGB's pointed false reports. This time it is in connection with the coming trial of Pyotr Yakir, the prominent civil rights advocate. Yakir was arrested on 21 June; this was surprising neither to himself nor to his friends. For years, Yakir has been consi- dered the protagonist of anti-Stalinism, who fought like Bukovskiy and others for the realization of human rights in his country. Yakir is the son of the famous General Yona Yakir, who was shot in 1937 on Stalin's orders. According to the illegal principle of "arrest of kin," the son -- a child of 14 years -- was also put . in prison. He describes the first part of the following 17 years which he had to spend in concentration camps in a moving book, which appeared in a German translation a few months ago. (Peter Yakir, Kindheit in Gefangtmallalt, Insel Verlag, Frankfurt/Main, 1972, 187 pages). Like many other books on this theme, Yakir's re- port is written decidedly laconically, moderately, and it is just this dry mode of reporting which allows what is described t unfold plastically before the reader, like a film. In 1956, Pyotr Yakir was officially rehabilitated. A little later, his executed father was also reaccepted in the ranks of respected heros by party resolution. The son received a post as a scientific worker at the Historical Institute of the Academy of Sciences. He lost this work in 1969, not least because he warned publicly against a revival of Stalinism. Approved For Release 1999/09/92 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 pprove or e ease 1 IUIU . - Eyotr Yakir had become one of the most courageous spokes- GiiiiRaHthe young "democratic movement." But while his friends and comrades of like mind disappeared in the prisons one after another, the officials hesitated to arrest Yakir. He was protected at first by his own and his father's fate: the historic guilt of the regime connected with it disconcerted even the authorities. After repeated house searches and massive threats ("we'll put an end to you in every imaginable way"), finally Yakir too. was arrested. His will be perhaps the most important political trial since Stalin. Yakiee wife, Valentina Savenkova, was told by the KGB that the investigation could possibly take up to a year; that is, more than the legal limit. On 13 November, Valen- tina Savenkova was also arrested. Nothing is known of her present fate. The assumption is, that they hope to put pressure on her husband through her imprisonment. Apparently the authorities think that they havenow found a way out of the embarrassing "Yakir case." Referring to Moscow dissident circles, the London Observer recently reported that Yakir had "recanted," and in given the investigation commission material against other members of the opposition. The correspondent from the Observer comes to the astounding observa- tion that Yakir "as a Marxist," could not "sanction the non-Marx- ist aspects of the civil rights movement." The reporter expects that Yakir will be the chief witness "in a trial" of other dissi- dents. Many a reader of the Times will perhaps remembger that Yakir, shortly before his arrest, had commented on this to David Bonavia, the Moscow correspondent from the Times who was later expelled, as follows: "If they beat me, I will tell all. I know this from my previous experience in camps. But you will know that it: is not the real me who is speaking then..." More likely, however, the Observer report is a fabricated KGB report. One like it was also circulated immediately after Yakir's arrest, as Western news services reported that Pyotr Yakir had been arrested for "unconstitutional activity." (This version was exactly contrary to the actual facts, since Yakir was finally arrested for demanding observance of the constitution.) At that time the Western press also referred to Soviet dissident circles. Actually, however, official sources ("Novosti"?) had informed foreign correspondents of the arrest of the clvil rights advocate, and had added that fictitious justification. A report which the BBC recently announced in connection with the Yakir case seems even more contestable. There too, with reference to "reliable sources," it was said that Yakir had "given way" under investigation. At the same time, it was learned that Yakir had to count on 4 years in prison, and in the event that the famous Samisdat periodical "Chronicle of Current Events" con- tinued to appear, he would be sentenced to another year of prison for every issue which came out. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 APPirRivEr5gineceanniMinPZecitrilD87E9-9(14914066200.10able are purely KGB special reports. The "Chronicle of Current Events." the news organ of the "democratic movement," is already in its fifth year, and the authorities have yet to succeed in eliminating the bimonthly publication. Numerous people have been arrested In connection with the "Chronicle," which is published anonymously, and the 27th issue has nonetheless just appeared, although consi- derably late. If Yakir is now to pay for the continuation of the magazine with his freedom -- and this could mean with his life -- then behind this is an attempt to place moral pressure on the publishers of the magazine, after other means have failed. , ' It would be conceivable that the authorities will thus succeed in suppressing the most impressive Samisdat product, and in robbing the "democratic movement" of its most important means of communication at the present time. What is sure is that a defeat exacted in this way would not be to Yakir's liking, for he and his friends have gone their way ready -- if necessary -- to Day a high price. CPYRGHT Der Fall Jakir und der ?Observer" Lancierte Meldungen sollen den Biirgerrechtler diffarnieren Eigenberlehtder WELT R. ntsztmber Es geh5rt zu den Praktiken des sowje- tischen Sicherheitsdienstes KGB, ge- Melte Falsenmeldungen in Umlauf zu setzen und diese in die westliche Presse vi lancieren. In diese Pubrik fiel ztnn BeiSpiel em n Bericht der Illustrierten ?Stern", die vor zwei Jahren em n ?Ex- klusiv-Interview" mit einer angeblichen Tante des Nobel-Preistrilgera Alexander Solsehenlzyn gebracht hatte. Darin hat- te die Tante Nachteiliges tiber ihrtn Nation gesagt. Die Angaben der Tante erwiesen sich els falsch, der ,,Stern" le- doch hatte Solsehenizyns notorischen Feinden amen Must erwiesen. Pinter dem ?Stern" hatte dna sowle- tische Nachrichtenbtlrot Nowostifi ge- . standen, des die ?Tante und andere anformationen" zur Verftlgung gestelit CPYRGHT Freunde nicht tiberraschend. Denn sett Jahren gilt Jakir els der Protagonist des Arm-0 .:111'nisfil -t ? I - %iv ? Alf ? %- andere nachdrUcklich ftir die Verwirk- lichung der Mensehenrechte in seinen Land gekampft hat. Jakir let der Sohn des bertihmten Generals Jona Jakir, der 1937 auf Befehl Staling erschossen wur- de. !Nisch dem ungesetzlichen Prinzip der ?Sinpenhaft" kern damais aucn dbr Solui ? em n Kind von 14 Jahren ins Ge- fling-nig. Den ersten Abschnitt der fol- genden 17 Jahre, die Pjotr Jakir In Konzentrationslagern verbingeh mullte, schildert er in einem ergreifenden Bueh, das vor einigen Monaten auch in deut- scher libersetzung erschienen 1st. (Peter Jakir: ?Kindheit in Gefangenschaft", Insel-Verlag, Frankfurt/Main 1972, 187 Seiten). Wie viele andere Bticher zu diesem Thema, let Jakirs Bericht betant hatte. Dies 1st kein Einzelfall lakonisch, ntichtern geschrieben und as , ?Nowosti" let eine ebenso zielbewue 1st gerade diese trockene Art der Be- win te richterstattung, die cies Geschilderte wie tatkraftige Institution, die allge- einen Film ganz plastisch vor dem Leser let. Mehl els Zweigstelli, des KGB bekannt abrolien 18f3t. Um so erstaunlicher let es, da' viele Auslands-Korrespondenten immer wie- der 6,1.1i die seitsamen NachrIchtend arrangements der Agentur hereinfellen. rn Erneut scheinen jetzt -,-.,estliche Be- rlchterstatter gezieiten Falscaeldun- gen des KGB aufgesessen zu Beim Dies- nal im Zusammenhang mit dem bevor- stehenden Prozell gegen den prominen- ten 13Orgerreditler Pjotr Jakir, Jakir war cm 21. Juni verhaftet war- den; Eh Ihn selbst und /dr seine Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : cIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 1956 wurde Pjotr Jakir offiziell re- habilltiert. Wenig Bidder wtirde durch Parteibeschlun auch sein exekutlerter Vater wieder in die Reihen der vareh- rungswiirdigen Heiden aufgenomrnen. Der Sohn erhielt einen Posten ale wis-! senschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Histori- schen ,Institut der Akadeinie der Wis- senschaften. Dlese Arbeit varier er 1969, nicht zuletzt, well er offentlich vor einem Wiederaufleben des Stalinismus gewarrit hatte. Pjotr Jakir war zu einem d'r mutig-. sten Wortftihrer der lunge!), ?derriokta- .1,1.41 ? wahrend seine Freunde und Gesin- nungsgenossen nacheinander 1r den Gefangnissen verschwanden, zogerten , die 13chtirden, Jakir zu verhaften. Ihn schUtzte Zuntichst main elgenes Und des Vetere denn Sehieksali die damit verbundene tustorisene achu a des rteglimo lautide wohl selbst die Machthaber befangen. Neel% wiederholted Hatisstichungen ti.ld massive...! Drohttngen (?Mit Ihnert warden wit auf led? erdenkliche Weise Schlufl machen") wurde schltel3lich auch Jakir verhaftet. Seine Verhandiung wird der vielleicht wichtigste politische Frozen salt Stalin sem. Jakira Frau, Va- lentina Sawenkowa, wurde vom KGP mitgeteilt, die tritersuchung_ vierde mbglicherweise bis zu einem Jahr dauern, also des gesetzlich festgesetzte H6chstme8 tiberschreiten. Am 18.Iln- vember wurde auch Valentina Sawen- kowa verhaftet.. Cher ihr derzeitigen Schicksal let rdehts bekannt. Die Ver-? rnutting liegt nahef 'do man mit 'Direr Inhaftierung 1hren Mann tinter Druck zu setzen sueht. ? , Offenbar glaUbeti dle.Behtirden, Jetzt ellen Aubweg ails dem ftlr ale peinlicher, Jakir" gefunden zu haben. linter Berufung auf Moskauer ' Dissidenten- kreise horiehtete soehen fel Y./Nedori erscheinende ?Cbserver", Jakir habe ?widerrufen" tiberdle.a babe er der Uri- tersuchungSkinniniselort Belashingarnit- terial Ober andtre Oppositionelle Vartilgung geStellt;, Der .Xorreepor. let CPYRGAI-If roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 des ?Observer" kcimint iat der erstatm- .; lichen,Begriindung, dail Jakir als ?Mar- xist die nichtmarxistisehen Aspekte der Bilrgerreehtebewegisng nicht billigen" ' !tonne. Der Berichterstatter erwartet, da4 Jakir ,bei einem ProzeB" els Kron- zeuge gegen andere Dissidenten vorge- Rata werden wird, -- - Maneher Leser der ?Times" wird sich vielleicht erinnern, slaB Jkir. kurz vor seiner Verhaftung irn Hinblick nut drew dem wenig spater ausgewiesenen Mos- kauer Korrespondenten der ?Times", DaVid 13onavia, Folgendes gesagt hatte: .,Wenn sie mich schlagen, werde leh al- les sagen. Ich kenne dna aus meiner frtiheren Lagererfahrung. Aber Sic warden wissen, nab darAn nicht rnein wirkliches kit spricht ..." Wahrseheinlicher 1st allerdings, daB bet dem ?Observer"-Berieht eine fabri- zierte Zweckmeldung des KGB vorliegt. Eine solehe war auch unmittelbar roach .Takirs Verhaftung in 'Umlaut gebracht warden, ala westliehe Naehrichtendien- ste rneldeten, Pjatr Jakir sei wegen ?verfassungswidriger Tfitigkeit" ver- haftet worden. (Diese Version stand in gertauem Gegensatz zum eigentlichen Sachverhalt, denn Sakir war letztlich verhaftet worden, well er die Einhal- tung der Verfassung gefordert hatte). Auch darnels hatte sich die westliehe Presse nut sowjetische Dissidentenkrei- se berufen. Tatsilehlich hatten aber of- fizielie Quellen (?Nowosti"?) ausiiindi- stile Korrespondenten tiber die Verhaf- tung des Btirgerrechtlers informiert und jene fingierte Begrtindung hinzugefilgt, Noah anfeehtbarer als der Bericht des ?Observer" erscheint eine Meldung, die ktirzlich die BBC im Zusammenhang mit dem Fall Jakir verbreitete. Atteh dart hieB es unter Berufung aut ?zuver- lassige Quellen", Jakir sei in der tinter- suchungshaft ?umgefallen".Gleichzeitig sei in Erfahrung gebracht worden, daB Jaidr mit vier Jahren Haft zu rechnen habe, und da3 er ? im Fall, dell dna be- rtihmte Samisdat-Periodikum sChronik der laufenden Ereignisse" weiterhin er- scheine, far jede Nturtmer, die nOch herauskomrne, zu einem weiteren Mu* .Freiheitsentzug verurteilt werde. , Dies schnst den Verslaeht, da13 inns% bier mit reinen Zweekmeldtmgen des KGB zu tun hat, vollena zu bestatigen. Die ?Chronik der laUfendenEreignisse", das 'Nachrichtenorgart der ?demokratis schen Bewegung", erscheint nun berekts im ftinften Jahr, ohne dall es denikle- horden gelungen ware, die Zwahress natssehrift auszuschalten. Zahlreiche Personen sind Ira Zusammenhang mit der anonym erscheinenden ?Chronik" verhaftet worden, dennoch 1st soeben, wenn such mit erheblicher Verspittung, I die 27. Nummer erschienen. Wenn jetzt Jakir mit seiner Freiheit und das heifit unter Umstanden mit seinen Le- ben ? far den Fortbestand der Zeit-1 schrift zahlen soil, dann steht dahinter der Versuch, nut die Herausgeber der Zeitsehrift moralischen Druck auszu- ilben, nachdem andere Mittel versagt haben. wlire denkbar, daf3 es damit den- Behorden gelingt, dna eindrucksvoliste Produkt des Samisdat zu unterdrticken und die ?demokratische Bewegung" ih- res sun Zeit wichtlgsten Kommunika- tionsmittelo zu berauben. Pest steht,daft eine solche erprefite Niecierlage nicht im Sinn Jakirs ware, denn at und seine Freunde haben ihren Weg beschritten in der Bereitschaft clafttr ? wenn Wig ? ouch einen hohen Preis zu zahlen. ? WASHINGTON POST 3 December 1972 CPYRGHT CPYRGHT Dissident Said to Aid KG ny Robert (i. Kaiser ?v Milnuor Post POrvirtii turvitit MOSCOW, Dee. 2?Pyotr I n prominent Soviet tits intent arrested lnst June, h cooperating with Soviet Mt (hod Lies and providing in formation Amu former col iengurs, neenrdine to reports Circulating in reliable des: tsrries here. Yakir's help has kept busy here than n dozen represen(n, lives of the , secret pollen (KGB), who have been follow- ing up lends he has provided, the sources report.. At least 21 people In Moscow and other titles have been called in by the secret pollee as a result of Ynkir's statements, the sources said. Appnrently, none or these people has been arrested. The sources said they had no iden what might be the ultimate COMierttlenert of the affair. Before his arrest in June, Yakir, 49, was probably the single most native member of Moscow's tiny dissident tom- nitinitY. circulating documents and prornoting the dissidents' causes. tie had many acute m - toes. nmApproveac spondents here, nnd was a source Of nitwit niforninuon ithoot ihn akslaimi tHrsi,rnitsist Ile was also an extremely heavy drinker, presumably an aleoholle. Ile told-, the corre- spondent of the London Times in Moscow last winter that he didn't know what he might confess to if he was ever ar- rested. .-1! they beat me I will say Anything." he told David Bona- via, the Times correspondent who has since been expelled from Moscow by Soviet au- thorities. "I know that from my former experience in the camps. But you will know It will not be the real me spenk- ing," Aecording to one report cir- culating here, the deprivation of alcohol in prison forced Ynkir into prison hospitals twice. After the second limp!. tallzation, it is said, he began cooperating with the KGB. Some of those questioned by pollee because of Yakir's stnte- ments have met the former dissident in personal, pin- cinily-supervised confront a- tionS, according to dissident stitge4. In AS 92 r 'pi ? La- says that It would be 'best to admit what went on in t(le ppst, slid that ho now seas the errors of his ways. In one session with On out- sider, Yakir reportedly said he realized that he had gone too far in his dissident activities by establishing - connections with emigre groups in the IYest. the scurries said. Some of the people called to the KGB because of Yates statements hold official jobs la flr.rIAt11I. 1.1,41011,4 nt I elsewhere, dissident sources reported. Several had known Yakir some years ago, but had not seen him in s long time, the sources said. According to these sources, Ynkir is niso telling the au- thorities about his contacts with foreign correspondents. Many of 'Valdes activities are undoubtedly well.known to the police, who have been monitoring his netivities for years. Before he was arrested, many dissident intellectuals refused to have any dealings with him, . because - they thought this was unsafe. Yakir is the only Soviet dig- VA.:04=10W try. His Wiwi., Clen, Iona 7 Wick, Was n hero of.Alie sten Civil War end !ember trIt the Communist Party Central Committee. He was Idled In Stalin's purges In 1937. Yakir and his mother were sent to prison camp at that time. Be stayed inside for 17 years. The whole family was rehabilitated by INtlitta S. Khrushchev. The younger Yakir has writ- ten n hook about his youth In erison camps. 11 was publisitt.1 Inst month in London. The charges against Yakir have not been publicly stated. Dissidents assume he will be charged With anti-Soviet activ- ities. An unofficial report cir- culating at the time of his ar- rest said he would be accused of systematically providing anti-Soviet material to foreign propaganda agencies. ? 00200090001-5 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 DALTINORE SUN CPYRGHT 23 December 1972 ? Soviet informer reports doubted Washfupton aureole of The Sun wasntngton?A rumor the the one-time head of the Sovle dissident community is collabo rat)ng with the authorities is a bit of misinformation skillfully planted by the secret police, in the 'view of recent Soviet emigres who maintain ties with Moscow. According to the emigres, the account of Pyotr Yakir's alleged co-operation with the secret police probably was spread by a dissident who was attempting to ingratiate him- self with the authorities in order to get an exit visa. t but coming as they do from t two highly trustworthy Moscow . sources, they do give reason to question the reliability of the earlier rumors ? about Mr. Yakir. ? ' Mr. Yakir, the ? 49-year-old son of a high Soviet Army General executed during Josef J. Stalin's purges, was ar- rested last June, presumably to be tried on charges of anti- Soviet agitation. Early this month some Western newsmen ?one quoting "reports circu- lating in reliable dissident cir- cles"?reported that Mr. Yakir had given evidence against dozens of his old friends: 25 reported called in At least 25 forther associates of Mr. Yakir were reported to have been called In for interro- gation by the police on the basis of information he gave. He was reported to be present personally at some of the ses- sions, apparently to challenge his friends' denials of the charges against them. He was quoted as having told his daughter, Irina, at a meeting in prison that materials pub- lished by the dissidents had been used by "anti-Soviet" forces abroad. Moscow call transcripts They base their theory on 'elephone calls they made re- cently from New York to members within the dissident rommunity. in Moscow. They nee transcripts of the con- s,ersations. The transcripts do not con- elusively establish the source d the rumors?a difficult task my place and art almost im- mssible one In the context of Moscow's nervous and instinc- t vely secretive underground? LOS ANGELES TIMES 21 January 1973 Several things about the ru- mors struck people who had known Mr. Yakir as particu- larly strange. He is a man with a sense of strong personal loyalties, not the type to need- lessly endanger friends. The remarks attributed to him were not in keeping with his "Weasels and lies" ? It Is Mr. Dubrov, the emigres, think, who is the source of the stories about Mr. Yakir. The Moscow source said Mr. Dubrov "weasels and lies?each time he tells a dif- ferent story." Id Mr. Dubtuv once had permission to leave the country, but. that' it was rescinded by the authorities, He then was used by the police in an effort to discredit Mr. Yakir, the source suggested. ; The second telephone convet- sation was with Zinaida Grigo- renko, the wife of former Red Army Maj (len Pyntr rcnko, who before his incarcer- ation had preceded Mr. Yakir as de facto leader of the dissi- dents. "I think it Is advanta- geous to someone to spread these absurd rumors." she was quoted as saying. "The investi- gation has not even finished, how could anyone know any- thing?" Mrs. Grigorenko, a dose friend of the Yakir family, described the meeting between Mr. .Yakir and his daughter as a simple visit between father and daughter, having nothing to do with the investigation or politics. Irina ' was eight months pregnant at the time and ill. "At that meeting," Mrs. Grigorenko said, "all he said was, 'My daughter, have the baby and !tee a peaceful life now.'" ile ,'ree and open discussion of all I Issues. Psychological blow Strangest of all was the question of how the rumors triginated. Even if there ere any truth to them, whatn ember of the democratic I. ? ? I 110 ...111?11t 0,./.1,1 a pi the damaging news, particularly to the Western press. The rumors about Mr. Yakir, one of the most active and most respected members of the movement, were a major new psychological blow to a group already decimated by prison sentences and exile to the West. That was the aim, the emigres argue, and the rumor was a bit of clever psychological warfare against the dissidents. In one of the telephone con- versations, as reported by the emigres, the Moscow source called "nonsense" the ,report that 25 people had been sum- moned because of Mr. Yakir. The source said that "without the slightest doubt" only three persons had been called 'in? Mr. Yakir's daughter, another woman close to the dissidents, and a man called Dubrov. A MAN BOWS ENDING A CHAPTER OF SOVIET DISSID reIth a bush of dark hair. In his hea- ,I face the eyes are vigilant and He is the protagonist in one nf the most wretched and unexpeet- i d episodes in the history of the lit- tle band of Russian dissidents, for yott- fonovich Yakir is said to have collapsed dining his arrest and thrned state's e.v idence against those who were his friends, 'Yakir's whole lif.y has been a s?ic- erssion of prrson II and political ragot ies. He i, th^ son of Gen. Inna Yakir. one of the at my le,.!!..Ts who vas shot in purgn of senior ofticers in Pyo:r lottovich him- self then spent b.; of the first 30 :ve:irs. of his life in labor erinniz, according to Thuy. III, ? COMMUNIST ATROCITIES IN AN LOC. The execution and torture of anti-communist civil servants of the Viet-Nam Government is hardly new in the conduct of the com- munist struggle for power in South Vietnam. In An-Loc, they have practised the form of terror and revenge as they did elsewhere constantly and ruthlessly to frighten people into submissiveness. The following testimony of refugees and escapees from An- Loc, as recorded by correspondent Nicolas Ruggieri of IPS, is con- sidered fragmentary but sufficient to picture how the? communists have applied their proselyting program ? and >c leniency 2, to their innocent other-siders. ? 45 ? Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 The dispatch went like this: A woman refugee who declined to give her name told of three officials slain by the communists in the area. -- How did they kill them? ? They gunned them down. ? Did you see how they gunned them down? ? They shot them in the head. -- How many bullets? ? Three bullets, one for each man. --- Did the communists call upon the people to come and witness the executions? - Yes. they call upon the people 'to go there, but the people are afraid of seeing the killing.., nobody wants to go. First those communists planned to carry out the execution at the bus station, later they did it at the police station. The people do not want to see these bloody executions... Le-Van-Can, a rural development cadre from An-Loc, said: If one of us was captured, it's sure he would be severely punished. The communists would kill him in the most miserable way, such as cutting up his hands and his feet and arrange the pieces of hands and feet on the ground so that they would spell out rural development cadre. ? 46 -- Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A0002000900ui -b Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 -- In your opinion, are civil servants and cadres particular targets of the communists? ? They called us wicked pacification and considered us their number one enemies. They would kill us immediately if we were captured. Next to us (rural development cadres) are policemen and security agents. Tran-Van-Hoa, a youthful An-Loc refugee who is a polio vic- tim said : - - My father was an interfamily chief. He ran for hamlet chief and was placed on the communists' black-list. When he became security officer of our hamlet he was again marked for death. Knowing this, he decided to join the army. One night he came back to see our family, and the communists tracked him down and burned the house. He managed to escape but was soon captured and after 30 minutes of investigation the communists killed him on the spot.... IV. -- THE BLOODBATH IN BINH-DINH. The communists always talk about their War of Liberation . and their sacred mission of Liberating the South They had the chance to control the northern part of Binh-Dinh for two months and here is one among many stories of how people are liberated' to the extend from - - by them: ? 49 ? Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000200090001-5 ? ... Mrs Nguyen-Thi-Chin, the mother of three child- ren, recounted for us the events which made her a widow. Her busband, Mr Ho-Nguu, the elect hamlet chief of Tai Luong on Highway 1 a few kilometers north of Bong Son in Hoa-Nhon District, was with the 40th Regiment in position close to his hamlet. At the time the regiment abandoned their camp under heavy communist attack, Mr Nguu was unable to leave with the soldiers because during the withdrawal he was badly burned by napalm which hit close to his position. The communists let his wife take him back to their home in Tai-Luong where she nursed him. ? Then on May 25, just about the time he was able to get out of bed and walk slowly, the cadres came to the house and arrested both Mr Nguu and his wife. Their arms were tied behind them and they were led to the Hoai- Thanh Primary School on Highway 1 where some three hundred people had been gathered. ? Again it was a night time setting. Mrs Nguu was for- ced to kneel behind him. As the ? People's Court . pro- ceeded, Nguu was accused of being a