TRENDS IN COMMUNIST PROPAGANDA

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5
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RIPPUB
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C
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45
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November 17, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 7, 1999
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34
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Publication Date: 
August 12, 1970
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REPORT
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1 71 Appryo'v ~4fof Release ,2 Tf ~ P8,5+10* 40 F~ LI N I S I P R # } # i f ~ ~k.~ f # '~ L JA . tm" Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Confidential, 11111111111111111111111111 F 0 R E I GN"' BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVIGE,i lllllll~~u~ui~~~~~lllll RENDS in Communist Propaganda confidential 12 August 1970 (VOL. XXI, NO. 32) Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL This propaganda analysis report Is based ex- clusively on material carried in communist broadcast and press media. ..-t is published by FBIS without coordination with other U.S. Government components. WARNING This document contains information affecting the national defense of the United States, withi; i the meaning of Title 18, sections 793 and 794, of the US lode, as amended. Its transmission or revelation of its contents to or receipt by an unauthorized person is pro- hibited by law, ONOUP I Excluded from aulomolic downgrading and d?clar lfkalion - Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 CONTENTS Topics and Events Given Major Attention INDOCHINA U.S. Air Support for Government Forces in Cambodia: Assailed . . . . 1 VNA Says Ambassador Bruce "Rehashed Old Allegations" at Paris . . . 5 Moscow Scores U.S. "Rejection" of Coalition, Bruce Statement . . . 7 Peking, Moscow Trade Charges on Indochina Policies . . . . . , . . 9 Establishment of Sihanouk Government Press Agency Announced . . . . 10 USSR Reports Firyubin Meeting With Sihanouk Cabinet Minister . . . 11 Action in Cambodia Described, "Victories" at Kirirom Hailed . 11 Comment on the War in the South, U.S. Strategy , . . . . . . , . . 12 Le Duan Meets With "High-Ranking" Army Personnel . . . . . . . . . .L3 Moscow Welcomes Cease-Fire as Step Toward Peace 15 Israeli Good Faith in Accepting U.S. Initiative Questioned . . , . 17 USSR Builds Up Its Peace Image, Rejects Joint Big-Two Role . . . . 18 Moscow Restrained on Arab Opposition to Political Solution . . . . 20 Peking Extols Palestinian Struggle, Assails "Superpowers" . . . . . 22 Tirana Supports Palestinian Rejection of U.S. Initiative . . . . . 23 FRG-SOVIET TREATY Accord Hailed by Moscow as "Milestone" for Europe . . . . . . . . . 25 U.S. BASES IN SPAIN USSR Says Bases Agreement Links Spain to NATO 28 MITRIONE SLAYING Havana Stresses Slain Official's Ties With CIA, FPI . . . . . . . . 29 PHILIPPINES Peking Hails Revival of Armed Struggle Led by CPP . . . . . . . . . 32 YT;GOSLAVIA AND ALBANIA Tito Calls for Improved Ties, Pledges Noninterference . . . . . . . 34 USSR INTERNAL, AFFAIRS NOVY MIR Continues Its Support of Liberal Causes . . . . . . . . . 36 PRC INTERNAL AFFAIRS Shanghai Exercises Control Over Its Rusticated Youth Apprfo*ediFT i Ses285 /X18 0&11G4&kZDE $.~iJODUEtR0003.00N0034; 539 Rebuilding of YCL Urged by HUPEH DAILY Editorial . . . . . . . . , 40 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - i - FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 TOPICS AND EVENTS GIVEN MAJOR ATTENTION 3 ?- 9 AUGUST 1970 Moscow (3310 items) Peking (2553 items) China (5%) 7% Domestic Issues (16%) 24% Indochina (6%) 6% PLA Anniversary (23%) 16% Middle East (5%) 5% Indochina (14%) 12% Hiroshima-Nagasaki (--) 3% [Cambodia (8%) 9%] Anniversaries South Yemen Govern- (3%) 1.1% Potsthun Anniversary (6%) 3% ment Delegation Test-Fan Treaty (--) 2% in PRC Anniversary Sudan Government (--) 10% FRG-USSR Talks (0.1%) 1.5% Delegation in Nerve Gas (--) 1.5% PRC Dumping Middle East (13%) 8% DPRK Military (6%) 6% Delegation in PRC These statistics are based on the voicecast commentary output of the Moscow and Poking domestic and international radio services. The term "commentary" Is used to denote the lengthy item-radio talk, speech, press article or editorial, govern- ment or party statement, or diplomatic note. Items of extensive reportage are counted as commentaries. Figures in parentheses indicate volume of comment during the preceding week. Topics and events given major attention in terms of volume are not always discussed in the body of the Trends. Some may have been covered in prior issues; in other cases the propaganda content may be routine or of minor significance. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 INDOCHINA Western press reports detailing instances of direct U.S. air ? support to Cambodian ground troops prompt.a flurry of VietnamesN .?ommunist.comment, including articles in the army paper QUAN DOI NHAN DAN on the 7th and in the party paper NHAN DAN on the 8th. Commentators say that this has exposed the President's "hypocrisy" in declaring in his 30 June report on the U.S. operations in Cambodia that U.S. air strikes would be continued only to interdict communist supply lines. Maintaining the fiction regarding the Vietnamese communist i.ole in Cambodia, Hanoi says that by "communists" the United States means the "Cambodian patriotic armed forces." Peking's NCNA briefly reports the Hanoi press commentaries, stressing direct air support and ignoring the issue of interdicting supply lines. Moscow follows Hanoi's lead in deploring the air action as a further indication of U.S. intent to pursue the war. The first session of the Paris.talks attended by Ambassador Bruce--on 6 August--was marked by the usual diatribes against U.S. "aggression" and obstruction of a peaceful settlement. The communist delegates also reviewed evidences of their "goodwill" since the bilateral talks started in May 1968 and denigrated--without detailing---the proposals advanced by the United States and Saigon. Peking continues to publicize. Sihanouk statements, and on 9 August NCNA releases his "open.letter to kings, heads of state, and heads of government of nonaligned countries." Not yet available in its entirety, the letter reviews the provisions of the Cambodian constitution to prove the illegality of Sihanouk's overthrow and of his replacement with the new regime. Peking again publicizes criticism of the USSR for its failure to recognize Sihanouk's government, in a 10 August NCNA summary of an article in a Japanese leftist monthly. Moscow for its part continues its routine-level polemic, answering Peking's charges of U.S.-Soviet collusion with countercharges of Sino-U.S. coll.'tsion. U.S. AIR SUPPORT FOR GOVERNMENT FORCES IN CAMBODIA ASSAILED HANOI AND Beginning on 7 August Hanoi media exploit the THE FRONT flurry of press reports that U.S. air strikes in Cambodia are directly supporting the Lon Approvec~lF~rvl a easet288$708/(~ e: 'tli llb 'O~ vRUO0 08 34-5 CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL P1 rS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 Vietnam--repeated on the 8th--says that despite Western press reports of direct U.S. air support for the Cambodians, the Nixon Administration continues to insist that U.S. planes "attack only the supply routes and concentrations of communist troops--that is, the Cambodian liberation troops-- who might become a menace for U.S. and allied troops--that is, satellite troops in South Vietnam." The broadcast then juxtaposes reiterations by White House and Pentagon spokes- men that the air strikes are aimed at interdicting supply lines to press accounts, including AP's report of the 5 August battle near Skoun, and quotes officers on the scene as confirming that the air strikes are directly supporting the ground troops.* The Hanoi broadcast cites REUTERS for the report that Defense Secretary Laird at his 6 August press conference "was forced to admit" that U.S. planes r' port the Lon Nol "puppet troops." It goes on to say that he argued that the strikes are protect- ing ordinary people, and that when asked about direct support of Cambodian troops "he was embarrassed and nonsensically said that these flight missions were being carried out in accordance with the battlefield commanders' decisions." A brief reference to Laird's press conference along similar lines also appears in a 7 August Hanoi English-language broadcast. Western press reports giving eyewitness accounts of direct U.S. air support are also reviewed in a QUAN DOI NHAN DAN article, broadcast in Hanoi radio's domestic service on the 7th, and in a NHAN DAN article, carried by VNA on the 8th. The army paper echoes the Hanoi broadcast earlier that day in recalling the U.S. guidelines that the air strikes are aimed at interdicting communist supplies and troops. And it also maintains the fiction. regarding the Vietnamese communist role in Cambodia by inserting the editorial explanation that "communist troops" means "Cambodian patriotic armed forces." NHAN DAN, on the other hand, merely refers to "air interdiction missions" aimed at "protecting U.S. forces in South Vietnam." NHAN DAN also explicitly recalls that the guidelines had been * Comment before the 30 June withdrawal of U.S. ground forces from Cambodia suggested that the U.S. air strikes were aimed at "shoring up" the Lon Ncl regime. In July there were more charges of air attacks and, at least .once, Hanoi cited Western reports of U.S. air support fcr troops as refuting U,S. claims that air strikes were limited to supply routes. (See 22 July TRENDS, p. 13.) Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FJ3IS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 enunciated by President Nixon in his 30 June report, on the withdrawal of U.S. ground troops from Cambodia, but the army paper does not mention the President's report. The party paper quotes Senator Mansfield as saying that the sending of aircraft to support the Fhnom Penh administration would result in an ".allsided war." And it goes on to say-that the fact that "Nixon has gone back on his 30 June statement by ordering brazen bombing and strafing of the Cambodian territory once again evidences the U.S. criminal policy of aggression" against Cambodia. Both NHAN DAN and QUAN DOI PHAN DAN insist that U.S. support cannot save the Lon Nol "clique" from defeat, but the army.paper is more explicit in documenting this claim. It cites as an example of U.S. air ineffectiveness the fighting around the city of Skoun, Kompong Cham Province, where government forces allegedly still sustained high casualties and ?led in spite of American air support. Liberation Radio commentaries on the 6th and 8th commented on U.,3. air action in Cambodia. in routine terms, like Hanoi referring to "daily" B-52 and other air strikes and saying that this would not help the Lon Nol "puppets." Apparently the first reaction to the recent flurry of news reports and Administration spokesmen's statements about direct support comes in a commentary on the 9th entitled "Nixon's New Trick. Is Exposed." It makes a passing.reference to Secretary Laird's press conference on the 6th, saying that he "admitted that U.S. aircraf-,; have bombed in support.of Lon Nc1. troops but that this support is but indirect, and that U.S. p,.icy toward Cambodia will not change." PEKING On 1.0 August, Peking's NCNA carries accounts of the NHAN DAN and QUAN DOI.NHAN DAN commentaries.on direct U.S. air support for the.Cambodi,~,:, forces. NCNA notes that the party paper ci.ted Western.press reports that large numbers of aircraft have been dispatched, and that this is another "escalation" of the war, but it ignores NHAN DAr's reference to the President's 30 June exrlanation.tLat U.S..air strikes would be used for interdiction of-communist supply.lines. The only known Peking acknowledgment of the President's reference to interdiction came in an NCNA commentary on 3 July, it that distorted his remarks when it reported that he said "air interdiction would be continued. against the Cambodian Liberation Army struggling against the rightist clique." Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 Peking's only other attention to the U.S. strikes comes in an NCNA dispatch on the 11th which condemns the U.S. "escalation." This item similarly ignores the controversy between reporters and Administration spokesmen on the nature of the strikes. MOSCOW Soviet media first note reports of direct U.S. air support for Phnom Penh troops on 4 August, when TASS cites the French CP of-gan L'HUMANITE as quoting a Cambodian colonel as saying the.t American planes had been supporting Cambodian troops fo'c a week. The L'HUMANITE item added that this is occurring "despite the fact that President Nixon had assured the American public that the American Air Force would not provide cover to the Saigon army and the Phnom Penh troops in Cambodia." However, neither this nor subsequent items recalls the President's statement on interdiction of communist supply lines.* On the 5th TASS reports that White House spokesman Ziegler the day before said that American aircraft "make raids on Cambodian territory" but that U.S. policy has "remained unchanged," since on 30 June the President said that the United States would carry out "air operations" in Cambodia. TASS notes that Pentagon spokesman Friedheim said that American planes "'sometimes' help Phnom Penh and Saigon troops in their military operations," and says that this "actually confirmed" reports by American news service that U.S..planes have raided the Kirirom area for over a week. And a 6 August IZVESTIYA article says that although Washington has been trying to cover up the fact that U.S. planes continue "barbaric bombing" of Cambodia, Ziegler, confronted with "irrefutable facts," "cynically declared that there was no change of policy." On the 7th TASS reports Secretary Laird's press conference of the previous day, asserting that he "admitted" that the United States is waging an "air war" in Cambodia, "confirming" press reports that the United States is "rendering active assistance" to the Phnom Penh troops when he said that the bombing raids are "of use" to those troops. r Moscow propaganda has generally avoided reference to air interdiction in commenting on Presidential statements. React- ing to the President's 30 June report, commentators cited him as saying that "bombing raids," "air raids," or "air operations" over "Cambodian territory" would continue. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 Other reports also stress that the air operations mean an extension of the war. On the 5th.TASS cites the New York POST as saying that there are all indications;tnat'the United States is conducting in Cambodia a "secret aerial war similar to that waged in Laos," and another TASS report that day cites Senator Mansfield-as expressing alarm over the air support, saying that it could lead to U.S. involve- ment in a "new full-scale war." VNA SAYS AMBASSADOR BRUCE "REHASHED OLD ALLEGATIONS" P..T PARIS The VNA account treats Ambassador Bruce's debut statement at the 78th session of the Paris talks on 6 August in typical cryptic fashion, and interjects rebuttals of his remarks. Observing that Bruce "rehashed shopworn allegations of the U.S. President" and said that Nixon wanted to solve the c conflict through negotiations, VNA adds that "as everybody knows, Nixon is going ahead with his policy of prolonging the war of aggression in Vietnam and expa'.iding the war to the whole of Indochina. in the hope of securi?,a a military victory." VNA says that Bruce "claimed" the United States wants the South Vietnamese people to determine their own future, and comments that "as everybody knows," it is the United States and nobody eloe that has undermined the South Vietnamese people's right to self-determination. After reporting that Bruce "evoked the question of 'troop withdrawal,'" VNA remarks that he did not touch on "the South Vietnamese and world peoples' demand" for an end to the U.S. "aggression" and a rapid, total, and unconditional U.S. troop withdrawal. VNA fails to report, among other things, Bruce's urging that an effort be made to narrow the differences between the two sides' proposals, and that both sides take another look at each other's positions; neither does the account acknowledge his remark that the "central issues" a'e troop withdrawal, political settlement, and -drisoners of war. VNA dismisses the statement of GVN delegate Pham Dang Lam-- who spoke first at the session--with the remark that he "again took up the fallacious allegation" made at the previous sessions concerning the "'re-establishment of the DMZ,' 'mutual troop withdrawal,' free elections organized by the Saigon puppets and so on." CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/@&~ RP85TOO87?gqO9A 3OO34-5 12 AUGUST 1970 COMMUNIST Both PRG delegate Nguyen Van Tien and the DRV's SPEECHES Nguyen Minh Vy delivered lengthy, polemical statements discussing the origins of the war, reviewing the various communist proposals, questioning U.S. sincerity, and charging U.S. escalation and spread of the war to all Indochina. The PRG delegate's statement--which Liberation Radio broadcast in full on 10 August'--recalls the NFLSV 10-point solution and its basic provisions, namely, a U.S. troop withdrawal and the establishment of a provisional coalition government. Nguyen Van Tien also recalled the PRG proposal--first advanced last December--that if the United States agrees to unconditionally withdraw its troops within six months, then the parties will discuss measures concerning the safety of the withdrawing troops. Tien added that had the United States engaged in serious negotiations and- responded seriously to the 10-point solution, peace would have been restored in Vietnam, "or at least this conference would have made a long step forward." Tien reiterated the standard charge that the United States is seeking a position of strength on the battlefield and at the conference table. And he claimed that President Nixon's eight-point program and President Thieu's political solution stand "simply aoil down to schemes aimed at maintaining American neocolonialist domination over South Vietnam." He added that "they contain absurd and arrogant demands we have severely criticized and rejected many times." The VNA report of DRV delegate Nguyen Minh Vy's statement notes that he explained "why" the Paris talks were stalemated and "why" the United States is prolonging the war in South Vietnam and extending it throughout all Indochina, but it does not report his de?cailed.argumentation in this regard. In noting that Vy charged the Nixon Administration with stubbornly rejecting the DRV-PRG demands for settlement, the account fails to report h?is critique of the allied settle- ment position. Thus, it ignores his saying that since the onset of the talks, the United States has insistently maintained * In the past three months Front media attention to the sessions has been confined to brief LPA summaries of the PRG statement. Prior to that Liberation Radio had usually broad- cast the full text of the PRG statement the day after the session. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85TOO875ROO0300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 its "arrogant" demand for a mutual troop withdrawal, "although termed as 'mutual withdrawal of-all external forces' or 'withdrawal of all non-South Vietnamese forces.'" VNA also omits Vy's remarks.on the manifestations of goodwill of the DRV and PRG in getting the bilateral May 1968 talks started and in solving the procedural matters so.that the present four-party talks got under way. VNA does report Vy's urging that the Nixon Administration change its policy and respond seriously to the NFLSV/PRG 10-point solution, but it ignores his lengthy exposition of the 10 points. THE PRESIDENT'S Both communist delegates commented on PRESS CONFERENCE President Nixon's 30 July press. conference remarks opposing a coalition government, be it negotiated or imposed, along the lines of earlier propaganda. For example, PRG delegate Tien said the President's remarks again disclosed "more. clearly his obduracy" in opposing the Vietnamese people's demands, and that his reaffirmation of the non-negotiability of the South Vietnamese people's right to self-determination is "simply a signboard" to avoid renouncing the GVN and engage in serious negotiations for a correct political solution. MOSCOW SCORES U.S. "REJECTION" OF COALITION, BRUCE STATEMENT Commentator Yuriy Zhukov, writing in PRAVDA on 6 August, makes the first substantial comment on President Nixon's 30 July press conference remarks on the issue of a coalition. government. Zhukov cites the President's remarks that.Thieu's position concerning talks "fully corresponds with ours" and that "we are against a coalition, government whether it is created through talks or imposed," and goes on to note that Nixon sent Ambassador Bruce to Saigon to make sure that there would be no divergences , in positions at the Paris talks. Zhukov observes that the President's stand is harder than that taken by Secretary Rogers on 13 July when, speaking in a "completely different tone," Rogers said that United States holds "an extremely flexible - position" an, "ready to do everything we can in the course of the talks" to end the war. Zhukov further cites an AP commentator on 23 July as recalling that Rogers stated that the communists could have political representation in proportion to their real Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FI3IS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 power in the country.* Zhukov says that people in Washington are waiting with interest to see if the President will support his Secretary of.State or Thieu and adds. that Thieu's position is the position of the American generals in Saigon, of the Pentagon, and of the White House itself. In this connection he quotes Washington POST commentator Marder and New York TIMES commentator Smith as asserting that the press conference shows that the U.S. position has become "more rigid."** A panelist in the 9 August domestic service roundtable discussion comments similarly and briefly refers to subsequent efforts in Washington to mute the thrust of the President's remarks. The commentator says that no sooner had "one American source" mentioned the possibility of "forming a coalition government removing from the scene the odious puppet figures," than the White House denied it, the President in his press conference giving "special emphasis" to opposition to a coalition govern- ment. The commentator adds that subsequently "observers" in Washington began to assert that the President "had not intended to say this," the Washington POST asserting that Ambassador Bruce "had some new proposal to make." But he notes that Bruce himself said that his presence "will not open a, new phase," but will simply be a "continuation." BRUCE IN Routine-level radio comment on Ambassador Bruce's PARIS participation in the 6 August session of the Paris talks takes him to task for offering nothing new in spite of the U.S. effort to portray his presence as a demonstration of a desire for a peace settlement. Commentators say that he merely restated the U.S. Government's position as it Moscow propaganda is not known to have previously acknowledged such remarks. The 15 and 16 July TASS reports of Rogers' comments upon his return from Asia, for example, reported only remarks to the effect that the end of the war was not near and that the United States was trying to get its allies to assist the Phnom Penh regime. ** Moscow media have not reported the substance of a Kosygin interview with the editor of the Indian paper PATRIOT in which, according to a brief AFP report on the 10th, Kosygin criticized the United States for rejecting the "Just proposal" to create a coalition government, calling this "a step back from the previous U.S. position." Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL 1!BIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 had been stated by President Nixon in his 30 July press conference--expressing unwillingness to withdraw troops, to stop-all military operations, and to agree to a coalition government. A 9 August PRAVDA article says without elaboration that the session showed that not only has nothing changed but that the U.S. position has ber:ome "even more rigid and, consequently, unacceptable." PEKING, MOSCOW TRADE CHARGES ON INDOCHINA POLICIES PEKING Peking currently does not originate comment critical of Soviet policies on Indochina. But on 10 August NCNA in Chinese summarizes an article in the July issue of a leftist Japanese monthly MAO TSETUNG THOUGHT which attacks the Soviet stand with regard to U.S. aggression in Indochina a the revival of "Japanese militarism." It includes the assertion that the Soviet "revisionist" government's failure to recognize Sihanouk's government and its maintenance of diplomatic relations with the Lon Nol regime is "absurd." Peking has previously picked up third-party criticism of the USSR for failing to recognize the Sihanouk government; the first instance was a 10 May NCNA report of a statement by the Burmese CP. On its own authority Peking has not gone further than implicitly criticizing the Soviet Union by pointedly noting the number of regimes which recognized the government--as Mao Tse-tung did in his 20 May statement. The article in the Japanese organ, as reported by NCNA, also attacks th'.:i USSR for having proposed through its UN representative "the convening of a new Geneva conference." It notes tha,%; 1 is proposal was later "withdrawn," but points to Soviet-Japanese "accord" when it juxtaposes a reference to the subsequent Japanese proposal for "a new international. conference" at the Djakarta conference. An * Moscow's East European allies, except for Romania, have also failed to recognize the new government. On 10 August Prague's CTK reports that Cambodian sympathizers with Sihanouk occupied the Cambodian embassy in Prague and that the second secretary announced the FUNK takeover of the embassy. Hamburg's DPA on the 10th reports that CTK later "withdrew" the above report, but FBIS has monitored no such "withdrawal." Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL F13IS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 NCNA English version of the item, carried on the.llth, omits the references to a Geneva conference and the Djakarta conference, although it does include the attack on the Soviet Union for failing to recognize Sihanouk's government. MOSCOW Moscow's continued routine-level attacks on Peking's Indochina stand include a 7 August Mandarin-language commentary which again takes issue with the 1 August Peking joint editorial. The broadcast cites the editorial's "slanders" of the USSR for "collaboration with U.S. imperialism" as an example of "rece:it" statements from Peking which have "shocked and provoked concern" among those people who really cherish the interests of the Indochinese peoples. It Ic not necessary to refute these statements, says the commentary, since "official statements of the DRV leaders and leaders of other countries in Indochina" have highly praised Soviet aid. The commentary responds to Peking's charges by countercharging Sino-U.S. collusion, saying that Peking's attack brought "Joy" to the American imperialists who have been talking about improving Sino-U.S. relations. A Mandarin-language broadcast on the 8th does not mention Peking explicitly when it says that Soviet aid is "a fact no rumormonger can deny," and that all "genuine fighters" against oppression will understu'id that "any provocative statements opposing the Soviet Union will be advantageous to the imperialists." ESTABLISHMENT OF SIHANOUK GOVERNMENT PRESS AGENCY ANNOUNCED On 9 August the Cambodian Front radio cites the information bureau of the FUNK for the announcement that the News Agency of Kampuchea (AKI) will be established on the 10th as the "formal spokesman" of the FUNK and Sihanouk's government. According to the announcement, AKI will replace the information bureau in releasing news items on the struggle of the Khmer people and all documents issued by the FUNK and government. Also on the 9th, the radio carries a state- ment by Hu Nim, minister of information and propaganda'in Sihanouk's government, that AKI will release "genuine information" to rebut the "fallacious propaganda" of the U.S. "imperialists" and the "puppet" administrations in Phnom Penh, Saigon, and Bangkok. Nothing emanating from the new press agency itself has thus far been monitored although, beginning on the 10th, VNA and Liberation Radio carry battle reports which they attribute to AKI. Hanoi's VNA promptly carried both announcements on the 9th, and on the 10th carries a congratulatory message from the director general of VNA. Hanoi radio had been the first--on 28 July--to report the Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CON]'IDEN't'lAL 1 '13 r 'THE N1),; ].,' A(JGU;J'.C 1.970 FUNK irrforrnatlon bureau's announcement that the now FUNK radio would begin broadcasts on 1 August, and the chief editor of Hanoi radio had promptly sent a, congratulatory meaaage,on its founding. Poking acknowledges the news agency with an 11 August NCNA report of the Initial announcement, attributed to the Front radio, and a summary of Ilu Nirn's statement, which is attributed to the news agency itself. There is no available Moscow report of the news agency thus far. USSR REPORTS FIRYUBIN MEETING WITH SIHANOUK CABINET MINISTER 'i'ASS on 7 August, and PRAVDA on the 8th, reports that Deputy Foreign Minister Firyubin saw 'i'hiounn Mumm, "minister of national economy and finance of the Royal Government of National Union of Cambodia," during the latter's "stopover" in Koscow. There is no mention of Firyubin's earlier meeting with Thiounn Mumm on 29 June--reported by TASS and PRAVDA at the time. On 3 July AFP had reported that the minister had left Moscow for Peking, postponing a planned tour of East Europe. Ile subsequently attended the 18-19 July Paris world trade union conference of "solidarity with the Indochinese people," and then visited Poland and Hungary. These reports are the only instances in which Soviet media are known to have mentioned Sihanouk's government, except for the original announcement of its establish- ment in May. ACTION IN CAMBODIA DESCRIBED. "VICTORIES" AT KIRIROM HAILED Communist media continue to acclaim "brilliant exploits" by the Cambodian liberation forces in the Kirirom area and a detailed review of the fighting there appears in a 3 August "special communique" from the Sihanouk government's defense ministry. The communique, publicized by the FUNK radio on the 6th and by Liberation Radio and VNA on the 7th, commends cadres and combatants for overcoming difficulties in achieving success at Kirirom and notes, among other things, that in 16 days the liberation forces there "vigorously fought more than 10 battles." The "victories" at Kirirom, according t~) the communique, testify to the "correctness" of the policies of the Front and government led by Sihanouk. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 10B113 'I1U NI.)S 1P AUGUST 1.970 AchicvumurrLu of the I:beraLlorr forces throughout Ctunbodla during the month of July arc rocounted in a FUNK Information bureau communique, oununarized by VNA on the 6th and by NCNA the following day. Avniltiblc battle reports on recent fighting do not mention the current engagcmentu near Phnom Penh. Reports do note action In Kompong Clicun Province--particularly around the city of Skoun-- and In Kompong I'Irorn, Kompong Spcu, Takeo, Kandal, Prey Vcng, and Glom Reap provinces. CCNWiENT ON THE WAR IN THE SOUTH, U. S. STRATEGY Recent alleged conununist military achievements in South Vietnam are cited in a 1 August GIAI PIIONG commentary which acclaims insurgent efforts In the first days of the rainy season. The commentary, broadcast by Liberation Radio on It August, claims that. "exploits" at the start of the rainy season "have invalidated the U.S.-puppets' deceitful arguments about their recent imaginary victories in Cambodia, such o.s : 'fhe Viet Cong--that, is, the liberation armed forces--were driven far from the border' and that 'the udversary cannot recover his strength for six more months." DNV military commentator Chien 'Mang (victor) in a 7 August QUAN 1)01 NIIA14 DAN article entitled "U.S. Strategy Is Confused," deals with U.S. failures throughout Indochina. Ile calls the allied Cambodian operation the "Liggest political and strategic mistake of the Nixon clique" and says the "counteroffensive to nibble at and occupy the Plain of Jars in Laos" was the biggest U.S. "military setback" in Laos. The article, broadcast by Hanoi on the 7th, begins with the claim that U.S. stirate&y has basically shifted from fighting rapidly for a quick solution to the strategy of fighting protractedly. It maintains routinely that "time does not work In favor of the U.S. aggressors." Ridiculing U.S. measures to carry out its strategy, the article cites the role of British expert Sir Robert `Thompson as an adviser to President Nixon and derides him for "nonsensically" saving that the revolution in South Vietnam is "merely a guerrilla war" and for "mechanically" applying his Malaysian experiences to South Vietnam. Chien Thang claims that, on the contrary, in South Vietnam "there have not only beer steadfast revolutionary bases and strong guerrillas but also powerful main forces" and there have been "armed struggles, political struggles, a guerrilla war, and a conventional war." Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONP.I:DEN'.l'IAL, i'131~, 'I'HEND 12 AUUU;1'1' 19'l0 I~~ :crt.bing the Cambodian "attack" as "defeated" and "irrational," Chian 'I.'hang goes on to sae unusually vitupcirativc language in criticizing President Nixon. He says that "Nixon is but a mcccliocre utratcglot who has sometimes been cLupid to the point that he believed that the Saigon puppet troops could be stronger than the Viet Cong and who at other times htu been stupidly rerkleu;." Maintaining that any U.S. hope for a "decisive victory" through the move into Cambodia would have required the "adversary" to be "stupid," Chien Tang concludes that "Nixon continues to erroneously assess his adversary. This paves that Nixon is more idiotic and ignorant than Johnson ,Lnd that tic will certainly meet heavier setbacks than Johnson dtd." LE DUAN MEETS WITH "HIGH-RANKING" ARMY PERSONNEL Hanoi radio and VNA on 6 August report that VWP First Secretary Le Duan "recently called on and talked to high-ranking officers" of the Vietnam People's Army, and the VNA press review on the same day notes that the meeting was prominently featured in NHAN DAN and QUAN DOI NHAN DAN. Available reports do not indicate if c,ther DRV leaders were present, but VNA does note that "stanuing members" of the "central commission of the party .in the army" were there. The "commission" is presumably the high party organization in the army which is usually referred to as the Central Military Party Committee. Such high-level figures as Vo Nguyen Glap, Song Ilao, and others have, at various times, been identified as members of the committee. Precedent for the current meeting was set last year when, according to a 22 May 1969 Hanoi broadcast, Ho Chi. Minh addressed a "recent" meeting of "high-ranking cadres of the eriLire army."* Last year Hanoi reported that the meeting was also attended by Le Duan, Pham Van Dong, and Giap. Truong Chinh was not appearing in public duffing this period in 1969. See FBIS TRENDS, 28 May 1969, pages 7-8. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL 14'I3ILI '1'IILNDS, 12 AIJGU;.IT :1970 - lh - Le Duan'n remarks at the current meeting are briefly uwnmarizcd by VNA. But judging by the VNA report, he touco,ed on many points raised in his lengthy lh February article on the 40th anniversary of the North Vietnamese party. VNA says that Le Duan recalled experiences of the party in developing a correct strategic line. It notes that he stressed the party's leading role and the role of the worker-peasant alliance and that he cited the party's ability to take advangagc of "enemy contradictions." VNA reports that Le Duan "encouraged the officers to sum up their experiences from the practical as well as the critical points of view" in order to develop a Vietnamese military science. And it notes that he recommended to the officers "to see clearly the current situation and tasks," charging that the United States still "nutures its scheme" to prolong and expand the war and quoting Ho that the war "may drag out" and the compatriots "may have to undergo new sacrifices to terms of property and human lives," but the Vietnamese people must be resolved to fight until total victory. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFtI*M't'TA1, PU1:0 Diis'NI)U 1;' AUGU;P.I' 1970 MIDDLE EAST MOSCOW WELCOMES CEASE-FIRE AS STEP TOWARD PEACE TARS on 7 August In a brief triple?-datelined item from Cairo, L,ondorr, and Washington promptly reported the respective Egyptian, Israeli, and U.S. announcements that the UAR- israeli cease-fire would go Into effect at 2200 GMT that day. Moscow's first comment comes in a domoutic service report from its Cairo correspondent on the 8th which credits the agreement on the three-month cease-fire to the "UAI{ pence initiative," and says that the Arab world considers the "temporary" cease-fire a victory for the UAR's constructive foreign policy. Also on the 8th, TASS says the Egyptian press points out that the UAR accepted the ceauc?-fire suggestion only "after agreement was reached" that during the three months "the enemy will not try to damage the security" of Egyptian troops on the Suez front or the positions of Arab troops on other fronts. Moscow has given minimal attention to subsequent military action on the Jordanian and Lebanese fronts: A brief TASS item on the 10th reports from Beirut that the Israeli air force made several raids into southern Lebanon on the 9th. And Moscow's domestic service, also on the 10th, notes Beirut press reports on an Israeli raid and observes that while Israel has undertaken a three-month cease-fire in the Suez Canal zone, to judge by latest eventa it is not prepared to cease "aggressive activity" in other regions. TASS has carried no reports of fedayeen operations since the 7 August cease-fire; the last such brief report, as usual attributed to the Joint Palestinian Command, was on 3 August. An average number of such _?eports--between 12 to 17 per month in the past three months--was transmitted by TASS in July. Propaganda has noted that the Suez front remains quiet; TASS correspondent Trushin reported on the 9th that daring a visit by correspondents to the front that day four Israeli planes flew over and UAR defenses fired warning shots. According to Trushin, the UAR military spokesman later told journalists that the Israeli planes were making a "reconnaissance flight" but almost entered the air defense zone. (Cairo media are the only sources for a report that Nasir on the 7th received Soviet air force commander Marshal Kutakhov, who arrived from Moscow on 1 August.) CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONI''ID1'.NTIAI, F131L '.''RENDS 1,1 AUCUG"T 1.970 i',ovlut conuncntators weleomc I,he culu.'e-t'Ire with caut.Louu optim.iunr, dcucrtbing LL an the "fir-,t, Important, Step" toward preparing conditions for a peaceful :;eLLicrnunt, but; warming of the obutacleu ahead. Medvedko krr.I.tuu In the 9 August I'ItAVDA of "real" difficulties and "difficult.icn artificially created by the enemieu of peace" which rnuut be overcome before a genuine peace can be eutabl.inhod. Lukovets in PRAVDA the amine day, observing that tlrc UAIt'u "peace initiative" aimu at uettling the cri;iu "by tneanu of talhu," says much effort iu utill required. Koryavin, in IZVESTIYA on the loth, points out that there are still complications and obutacles to the establishment of a firm peace, but asocuucs the "steps already takers" an malting "many things look more optimistic." An Arabic-language radio commentary by Soltan on the 10th says "the main point is that negotiations should riot be allowed to turn into political maneuvers." Even now, before the start of negotiations, he :rays,, "some In Israel" are trying to Interpret the November 1967 Security Council resolution as not dealing with the liberation of all occupied territories. An Arabic-language commentary on the 11th foresece "hard bargaining" on "regional and other questions" in view of Israeli statements regarding withdrawal and borders. A commentary by PRAVDA's I3clyayev, broadcast in English to North America on the 12th, says the UAR Government feels it necessary for both sides to "declare their readiness" to carry out all points of the Security Council Resolution No. 242, particularly regarding Israeli withdrawal from "all" occupied territories; at the same time, he adds. "the foundation cot;.Id and should be laid for recognition u?' Isi.el's borders as ''iey existed before 5 June 1967." U THANT TASS on the 8th reports without comment U Thant's REPORT 7 August report to the Security Council on the reactivation of the Jarring mission. The TASS account notes that the Secretary General's report included a letter to him from Jarring stating the agreement of the UAR, Jordan, and Isra!1 to hold discussions "under my auspices" aimed at the estitblishment of peace based on mutual acknowledgment oi' each other's soveriegnty, territorial integrity, and political independence, and on Israeli with- drawal from "territories occupied in the 1967 conflict." TASS does not, of course, acknowledge that the language of the Jarring letter is identical to that proposed in the U.S. initiative of 19 June. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBILS' TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 Isracl'u reaction to the U Thant report is noted but riot detailed by Moucow's domestic service in a report from its Cairo correspondent; on 10 August. The UAR Government, the report says, has drawn the attention of the United Nations to "To) Aviv's maneuvering" on the interpretation of the November resolution. Correspondent Itasuad:iri adds that U 'c'hant's report contains demands for the withdrawal of Israeeli troopu frcm the occupied Arab territories, and It iu "precisely this point that has aroused irritation and dissatisfaction among the Tel Aviv leaders." (Jerusalem radio on the 10th noted that the Secretary General's report omitted the conditions on which Israel based its acceptance of' the U.S. Initiative. Israel's reply called for withdrawal from occupied territories "to secure, recognized, and agreed boundaries.") ISRAELI GOOD FAITH IN ACCEPTING U.S, INITIATIVE QUESTIONED Moscow has glossed over Israel's 4 August official acceptance of the U.S. initiative:* A Turkish-language commentary on the 5th, for example, notes in passing that after the UAR's agreement with the American proposals, Israel, "hithough making certain provisos, was forced to declare .t s agreement" with the U.S. initiative, and thus "some progress" has been made toward a peaceful settlement. The acceptance is also acknowledged in the course of a Radio Peace and Progress broadcast in Yiddish on the 5th dealing with Prime Minister Meir's Knesset statement. Limited comment touching on the statement singles out Mrs. Meir's refusal to return to the 4 June 1967 borders and her insistence on secure frontiers, and asserts that "Israeli ruling circles" thus intend, "during the first steps leading to a settlement," to create cbstacles and ultimately frustrate a solution. In reporting the statement on the 6th, TASS fails to mention that Mrs. Meir was responding to, the. V"B initiative when it cites her as saying Israel is ready to conduct talks and send a representative to r;iscuss with the UAR and Jordan, "'with Gunnar Jarring's mediation,' questions that 'fall within the framework of the Security Council resolution." At the same time, TASS adds, she repeated "aggressive" Israeli claims, * The text of Jordanian Foreign Minister Atallah's 26 July reply to Secretary Rogers approving the U.S. proposal, broadcast by Amman radio on 5 August, is identified by TASS in a short report the following day as an official Jordanian Government statement "in support' of the peace initiative of the UAR." CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL F'BIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 .,p 7ceciCLcally declaring that Israel would not withdraw to the pre-5 June 1967 borders. TASS comments that "Israeli ruling circles refuse to give up their methods of blackmail and backstage maneuvers," which create difficulties for political normalization of the Middle East situation. Mrs. Meir'o remarks on borders are similarly singled out in a 6 August foreign-language commentary by Tsoppi, which asserts that the United States "compelled" the Israeli Government to "formally .ccept" its proposal. But Israel does not intend to revise its policy of military expansion, Tsoppi says, and even its consent to the U.S. plan, "which in fact does not :,et., any obligations for it, was only given after receiving the U.S. assurance that it would continue to supply modern offensive weapons." A broadcast in Arabic on the 7th sets Mrs. Meir's statement in the context of "desperate maneuvers" by Tel Aviv in the .light of its "total isolation" as a result of prospects for a political settlement. The broadcast says this was the first time the word withdrawal was heard in the Knesset since June 1967, and that Mrs. Meir was "also compelled to declare" Israel's agreement to hold talks through Jarring and within the framework of Resolution 242. It too, however, believes the statements on borders signify an Israeli intention to create obstacles to a settlement. USSR BUILDS UP ITS PEACE IMAGE, REJECTS JOINT BIG-TWO ROLE While playing up the UAR's "farsighted and consistent" position and giving Cairo credit for its "peaceful initiative," Moscow at the same time takes pains to enhance its own image as a promoter of a political settlement "from the very start." But Soviet propaganda rejects any notion of a "special role by two major powers" in pursuing a peaceful solution. Comment emphasizes that "as long ago as 1967" the Soviet Union put forward proposals aimed at a peaceful settlement, and propagandists present the adoption of Resolution 242 as resulting from the activity of the USSR and other socialist countries. A Soltan commentary broadcast in Arabic on the 10th, for example, finds it "worth mentioning" that the USSR "was one of the first countries in 1967 to submit proposals" for effecting a just peace. And Radio Peace and Progress Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 broadcasts in English to Africa and in Yiddish to Israel en the 10th, also recalling Soviet proposals "back in 1967," say that the cease-fire dispells "American myths" that the Arabs plan to liquidate Isra-~cl as a state, and that the Soviet Union has "some sort of special aims" in the Middle East and is interested Jn preserving tension there. A broadcast in Arabic on the 6th complains of "imperialist propaganda" attempts to "disfigure the aim of the USSR's present attitude, plaoing both the Soviet Union and tI.e United States on the same level regarding the efforts made for a Middle East settlement." It argues that the two countries' attitudes toward the essence and form of a settlement are "totally contradictory," the United States pursuing imperialist aims while the Soviet Union as a socialist state opposes oppression, exploitation, violence, and expansion in international relations. Declaring that the USSR strives to enable "the Egyptians, Syrians, Pales~i,;fans, and other people" of the Middle East "to determine their destiny by themselves," the commentary repeats the 15 July Supreme Soviet statement's formulation that the people and governments of the Middle East alone should be masters of the situation. And it recalls that in June 1967 Kosygin "refuted the statement that the two major powers" should lead the world and dictate their conditions to it. (In response to a question at his 25 June 1967 press conference at the United Nations regarding suggestions that peace in the world could be established by the two superpowers, Kosygin said that such a view, in the Soviet opinion, "is completely erroneous and certainly runs counter to our outlook, our doctrine, our plilosophy. We believe that all nations, big and small, can and should participate in the discussion and solution of all world problems, in particular in the General Assembly. We can never share the view that there can be any kind of dictatorship of two states-- the United States and the Soviet Union--over the world.") A broadcast in Arabic on 9 August also recalls that Kosygin said in June 1967--this time in his 19 June address at the special session of the General Assembly-- that the USSR did not recognize Israeli usurpation of territories and would work for the establishment of peace. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBTS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 U.S.,-SOVIET An Arabic broadcast on 7 August contains PEACEKEEPING Moscow's only monitored reaction to the idea of a joint Soviet-American peacekeeping force in the Middle East, as suggested in a 4 August, Washington POST editorial. Noting the efforts of "some imperialist circles" to impose their ways of solving the Middle East problem, the commentary observes that the POST proposed a plan "to use Soviet and U.S. forces in this respect." It rejects the idea as "an attempt to drag the c.oviet Union into U.S. diplomatic ways and methods which are alien" to the USSR, and asserts that the Soviet Union "resolutely denounces and condemns such ways and methods." A just Middle East settlement can be guaranteed by eliminating the causes of the conflict, it says, not by bringing in foreign forces. MOSCOW RESTRAINED ON ARAB OPPOSITION TO.POLITICAL SOLUTION Propaganda touches only indirectly on militant Arab--primarily Palestinian and Iraqi--opposition to Cairo's acceptance of the U.S. initiative, portraying the UAR action as meeting with growing approval in the Arab world. Moscow gave limited attention to the 5-6 August conference in Tripoli, Libya, of foreign and defense ministers of the "frontline states," TASS on the 5th noting the presence of delegates from the UAR, Syria, Jordan, Sudan, and Libya. The main topic on the agenda, TASS added, was discussion of fulfillment of the "joint action plan against Israeli aggression" approved by the conference of heads of a number of Arab states in Tripoli 21-22 June. Iraq and Algeria, which attended the June meeting, were not present at the August conference. Assessing the results, TASS blandly cites UAR, Jordanian, and Libyan press comment to the effect that the "successful" meeting brought "full agreement on unity of action of the Arab states" against Israel. Moscow widely publicizes the speech by Mazurov at a 5 August luncheon for a party-government delegation from dissident Iraq* * Budapest's NEPSZABADSAG in a 5 August article called Iraq's "negative attitude" on the question of a negotiated settlement "definitely harmful to the cause of peace in, the Middle East." Such a stand, it said, "only adds grist to the mills of the aggressive imperialist policy, against which the progressive forces of Iraq" are waging a "long and hard war." Articles in Budapest's ESTI HIRLAP on 28 July and MAGYAR NEMZET on the? 31st had similarly taken "Arab extremists" to task for refusing to act responsibly. Approved For Release 2000/0/ ID * ,DP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 in which he pledged continued Soviet aid to the Arab states and pointedly added that the Soviet Government, at the same time, "will do everything within its power to facilitate the attainment of a just political settlement." He characterized such a settlement as entailing "first of all," withdrawal of Israeli troops from all occupied Arab territories and "satisfaction of the just rights of the Arab people of Palestine." Other propaganda also stresses these dual aims proclaimed by Cairo. TASS on 11 August reported that Kosygin received the head of the Iraqi delegation that day and that "the discussion of questions of mutual interest passed in a friendly atmosphere." The delegation left for home on the 12th; no communique has as yet been released. PALESTINIAN Again indicating sensitivity on the Palestinian QUESTION question, Moscow in a 5 August broadcast to Arab listeners assails Peking for its opposition to a political settlement, and complains that Peking depicts the Palestinians' struggle "for their lawful rights as though it contradicted the possibility of peacefully liberating the occupied Arab territories." The commentary rhetorically asks if liberation of the lands occupied since 1967 does not serve the basic interests of the Palestinian people. And it maintains that realization of the November 1967 Security Council resolution, which provides for liberatic of the occupied territories and insures the Palestinian refugees' lawful rights, "would be an important step along the path of completely solving the Palestinian question." A Petrov article in LIFE ABROAD, signed to press 29 July, argues along the same lines in stating that Palestinian "national rights" can only be implemented within the framework of the general Arab "liberation struggle." Given the possibilities inherent in the 1967 Security Council resolution and other UN decisions, he says, Palestinian rights can undoubtedly be ultimately guaranteed "without infringing on the Israeli people's rights." In a lengthy article contrasting the "class" 'rersus "national" approaches to the Arab-Israeli conflict, Petrov says that Arab leaders are experiencing difficulties in convincing the working masses of the correctness of a political course to a Middle East Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 settlement. Considering that "not all Arab countries" agree with Cairo's decision regarding a political solution, the UAR leadership faces a diffictit task in explaining its policy to the Arab public, Petrov concludes. PEKING EXTOLS PALESTINIAN STRUGGLE, ASSAILS ;I SUPERPOWERS " Predictably, Peking fails to ac'".-o Tledge Nasir's acceptance of the U.S. initiative, and ignores the UAR-Israeli cease- fire instituted on 7 August. Long a voluble exponent of Palestinian armed struggle, Peking exploits the opposition of militant Arabs to the U.S. initiative for a peaceful settlement in the Middle East, at he same time obliquely attacking the Soviets for betrayal of the Arab cause. NCNA depicts the U.S. proposal as meeting with "strong condemnation and resolute opposition by the 100 million Arab people," quoting from Palestinian, Iraqi, and Syrian statements, but carefully avoids mentioning any criticism of the UAR, whose revolution anniversary on 23 July was duly saluted by Chou En-lai in "warm" greetings to Nasir. Thus NCNA on the 8th, summarizing Iraqi President al-Bakr's interview with the GUARDIAN, reports his rejection of the American proposal and his vow to continue the struggle against Zionism, but omits his charges, as published in the GUARDIAN, that Egypt is incapable of leading the Arabs or his critical comment regarding the "Nasirites." In keeping with present Chinese policy of not attacking Moscow directly, an NCNA commentary on 30 July accused the United States and "another so-called superpower" of planning a Middle East Munich* "in a vain attempt to force the Palestinian people and the people of the Arab countries to give up their just struggle." An NCNA commentary on 7 August described the cease-fire proposals as "a trick" designed to enable the "U.S. and Israeli aggressors to reinforce their base for aggression." It went on to assert that President Nixon had enlisted "certain people of the no-called superpower" to aid him in his Middle East "plot." * Prague's RUDE PRAVO on 6 August took a swipe at the Chinese in noting that NCNA's charges that the United States and the USSR are preparing a new Munich in the Middle East closely parallel the Munich charges made by rightwing "chauvinists" in the Israeli Government. Approved For Release 2000/08O TICI RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONFIDENTIAL FBIS TRENDS 12 AUGUST 1970 AIeco cii '( August, NCNA publicized the reply of FATAH, the ,,.organ of the leading fedayeen organization, to PRAVDA's rit..1cism of the guerrillas' stand on the U.S. proposal. G'ATAII, NCNA said, had enjoined Moscow to be silent if it could not offer the fedayeen "internationalist support." Two days later, in a dispatch from Damascus, NCNA reported that FATAH had charged the Soviet Union with assuming the right to decide the fate of Palestine and with supporting decisions that were against the will of the Palestinian people. (Chou in late May had sent a warm message of support to Fatah leader Yasir Arafat, on the occasion of the Israeli incursion into Lebanon, pledging the support of the PRC people and government for the armed struggle of the Palestinian revolution.) A Palestinian "special envoy," according to the Syrian news agency on the 11th, left the previous day for a tour of the PRC, DRV, and DPRK to hold "important talks" with officials on the "present situation and the necessary measures to counter the recent plot." Concurrently, Peking has given a warm welcome to a delegation from the hard-line People's Republic of South Yemen, and is now feting a delegation led by Presiuent an-Numayri of Sudan. In a speech at a 7 August reception for an-Numayri, PRC Vice Chairmen Tung Pi-wu, according to NCNA, warned against attempts by the United States and its "collaborator" to split the Arab countries and to stamp out revolutionary struggle in the Middle East. He confidently noted that the Arab people are "well tempered" in revolutionary struggle an-1 added that "so long as the goal of the national liberation movement of Palestine and other Arab countries remains unrealized, the so-called Middle East question cannot possibly be settled." It is the Palestinian and other Arab peoples, he said, "and not one or two 'super- powers' who will decide the destiny of Palestine and the Arab world." TIRANA SUPPORTS PALESTINIAN REJECTION OF U.S. INITIATIVE Peking's Tirana ally has underscored its support for the Falestinian fedayeen by giving a warm reception to a Fatah delegation which visited Tirana from 30 July to !< August. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 - 24 - 12 AUGUST 1970 The leader of the group, identified by Radio Tirana as a member of the "upper central committee" of Fatah, was greeted at Tirana airport by Defense Minister Balluku and later met with Premier Shehu and party chief Hoxha. ZERI I POPULLIT on 30 July, in an article marking the group's arrival, assailed he United States and the Soviet Union for their "plans" to "lay their hands on the riches and strategic positions of the area" and "to save the Israeli Government from political and military disaster." The article acknowledged, without comment, that the UAR and "some other Arab countries" have agreed to hold talks with Israel. It underlined, however, that Iraq, Syria, and the Palestinian Arabs have rejected the U.S. initiative, adding that "the Arab people are fully entitled to liberate by force their territories occupied by Israel through force." Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CONVII)(,MCJA1, i'uI 11111-0.111 1;' AIARR,T 19'(0 FRG-SOVIET TREATY ACCORD HAILED BY MOSCOW AS "MILESTONE" FOR EUROPE The. 12 AuE;uut signing in Moscow of the Soviet.-Went German treaty is promptly hailed by TAGS commentator Orlov au it "milestone" in Europe's poutwar history which will facilitate an improvement in that continent's political climate and may facilitate an Improvement in the general international situation. According to Orlov, the spirit of "realism" Is evident in the recognition of the inviolability of European frontiers, including the Oder-Neiuac line and the frontier between the FRG and the GD11, and in the commitment of the USSR and the FRG not to solve disputes through force or the threat of force. The common point of departure in the treaty, Orlov says, is the desire to help reduce tension and to promote the development of peaceful relationu for the sake of consolidating security in Europe. Orlov routinely takes note of the fact that there are "forces" in West Germany which do not r,pprove such developments as the treaty, "but, judging by everything, such quarters enjoy ever less support." At thin, writing, Soviet media have not released the text of the treaty and the accompanying letters to the USSR and the FRG's Western allies; nor are they known to have acknowledged the premature release of the documents by the Springer press. Consistent with treatment of the negotiations with Bonn since cneir resumption in the Soviet capital on 27 July, Moscow devoted only a low volume of prop,.ganda to the 7 August initialing of the FRG-Soviet treaty. TASS and Radio Moscow on the 7th promptly reported the fact of the initialing, and subsequent dispatches took note of favorable world reaction to the treaty. TASS on 9 August, for example, drawing heavily on the East European press, pointed up the importance of the agreement for the cause of European security. In the period between the initialing and the formal signing, TASS items briefly reported Brandt's arrival in Moscow for the 12 August ceremony and his activities in the Soviet capital, including his meeting with Kosygin. Gromyko's remarks at the 7 August airport departure ceremonies for Scheel had highlighted Moscow's minimal comment on the treaty initialing. As reported by TASS, Gromyko said Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 CO II V I01-JI' IAI, FM:; TH1.1;111):1 I,' d\t (I ;.T 19'(0 th'1.t thr' I'll Ikt; y1--;"r?d I'rrl;t(ltl; wht('h t)t'r^ 1)rt1)K "p1.tt;itJvoly I by bol h '; Idr"; , rind I,llrtl. I'll- :i()Vlrt (ir_IVOt't11)ICl)t, ror it,t; part, In eonvlncrd t,hn,L the' rot;rrll,;; tiro In 1,11r Lntrr^ot;tn or ltnpruvItiff, rrl.rcticmro beiwr'rrl 11,11f two rolli0x1vil rind In Lhc Lntt r^et;t(; of fut^t,her? di'LrnL;' tul(i t;c ;rt Ity III Ellrupr . A par?1.lelpn.nt to the dcmlent.fc acrvJco colr.menLntot'r;' r(I,u?ldtrtl?le Dhow on thr 9th paraphrar;cd tlrolti %o without, t.ttt,rIbution and took fULr' of the ravorablc rc,act Ion to the accord by the world put,I te, 'I'he cclnunctlttrtor want, on to c)br:r'r?ve that, "t,hot,e circler; In the Wrt;t," which were .l.nl.t.ta.l.ly critical of the t,re.aty "hicvc no groun(It: f'or narking tiny obj"et,ionr; againut the rc:;ultr, which were ext.r?crncly rruiLful, nccer;t:ary, and Important rot, the cause of peace In Europe." An it August I'UAVUA article, reviewed by TA::, concluded that. "there are good rear.;onu" for world public at ton t, ton to the treaty because the quctti.onu treated in the agrecmenL "have a great importance both for the development, or relations between the :;ovlet, Union and the FRG Lind for the i1tuaLion in Europe as a whole." EAST Moccuw's European allies, including It_>muniu, EUROPE have hailed the initialing of the accord as a step toward European security turd au an augury for LrnprLved relations betwoen the I11IG and other East European states. On the latter point, an article in ZYCIE WAHZAWY on Lhc 8th, reviewed by PAP, said that the initialing of the treaty "huu certainly produced a favorable climate" for other negotiations. A CTK-reviewed article in the Bratiulavrs PRAVDA on 8 August made a similar point but went on to warn, however, that the CUU/CSU opposition in West Germany remains intent on "torpedoing" the accord before .ratification. The Prague daily ZEMEDELSKE, NOVINY, in an article on the 10th, observed that the treaty could become "a springboard into the future of Europe" if Bonn continues to pursue the Polish- West German talks, seeks to resolve the "open issue" with Czechoslovakia, and "expresses its positive relation" to the GDR. * Soviet media have not reported the substance of a Kosygin interview with the Indian paper PATRIOT, in which, according to AFP on the 10th, he said that the treaty was a "major political event" which should serve to stabilize the situation in Europe and throughout the world. Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 t;UNI'II)I;N'I'IA1, VBI;; 'I'ItENI) 1;.1 A11(111t;'i' 1.1970 I'hr' Cirr;t nubuLrxnt,.Lttl Lttst, Ccrmar- ummenl; .tn the wake of the treaty .1nii,io'-.inN appcaru in it 1.' Aut~uul; NIJE," I)HU'i'GCIILANU rtrIi.cle, transmitted textually by A1)N late on the 11th. The ttrL.LCic uayu that it, is "good n(!ws" that, the I.itG-13ovicL nc.otLationt; have reached ct positive conclusion, and it Calls Lh-2 Lt'caty it uuccenti for 13ovie_t, policy and for the ;;)cI!ti.at;t. community as it whole. 'I'hc article further Charrtctr.rtzc?u the treaty as a defeat for the "rightist forces in Wcut Germany, for all those who lack the understanding to rvcogr,i~c the realities" of postwar Europe. A later ADN c11upat;ch on thL) 11th calls the treaty "a significant step toward detente, in Europe" and hails the Brandt-Schccl govern- ment's "more realistic" approach toward European affairs. In it related development, East German media on the 9th sutnrnari;:ed Ulbricht'c letter to the heads of state of various NA'.1'O and nonaligned countries on the need for developing relations with the GDR. Accordirg to the letter, the "fundamentally new situation" in Europe demands this. While the letter does not specify the FRG-Soviet treaty as an clement in the "new situe ;ion," an East Berlin broadcast on the 10th says that the successful Bonn-Moscow talks as well as the Polish-West German talks "belong to the factors of European politics which Walter Ulbricht, in his message to various heads of state, said has led to a new sit?iation." Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09t,IipIArF p85T00875RQQ03QOQ30034-5 iW nuruS'r 1970 U. S. BASES ,N S P A I NO USSR SAYS BASES AGREEMENT LINKS SPAIN TO NATO Soviet comment: oil the 6 August; uigoirig of the military bases agreement between thn tinIte(l StatCtl and ')pa.In utresucu that the agreement .links t;pain more closely with the NATO defense system to the detriment of ii:uropctui security, fills the "breach" in the NATO front created by the French withdrawal, and provides the Pentagon with new footholds in the Mediterranean. :;ovict media also point. out the risks of the new agreement to the ;Spuuish people and claim the agreement's "new obligations toward Madrid" are provoking domestic U.S. opposition to the Nixon Administration's use of the executive agreement. Commentators ;rnerally opined that, the Administration rushed the signing of the agreement i:r order to present the Senate and the country with a fait accompli, asserting that the agreement involved "the expansion of American military commitments" and should have been referred to the Senate for ratification. A commentator on the 9 August doriestic service roundtable program declared that the agreement binds Spain "to the NATO military system by the bac,' door." This theme was embellished by PRAVDA's Strelnikcv who rioted, according to a TASS review of the 10th, that U.S. military considerations have assisted Spain to realize, in affect, its "old dream" of membership in NATO despite continued opposition to Spanish membership by several NATO members. Strelnikov attributed tae conclusion of this "dangerous deal" to Pentagon efforts to strengthen and expand "the military beachhead in the Iberian Peninsula." RED STAR on 8 August, according to TASS, said that Spain has become the only place where the Pentagon can "somehow compensate the loss of its bases first in France and then in Libya." TASS correspondent Melikyan on 7 August claimed that the agreement's establishment of a high-level joint committee on defense matters creates "a bridge between Spain and the NAIJ military bloc" and represents "the first step" in Pentagon designs to "strengthen the NATO rear." Melikyan also asserts that nuclear-armed U.S. planes flying from bases in Spain will "create daily and hourly the danger of a new Palomares for the Spanish people," recalling the 17 January 1966 incident. Several other Sovicc. commentaries also raise the spectre of Palomares in stressing that the agreement "contradicts Spain's national security and the people's interests." CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000300030034-5 COI1I I I )I?; IT I A1, 1, 13 1.;., 7'It131U;.; J AUGIJ 'r I.970 MITRI0NL SLAYING HAVANA STRESSES SLAIN OFFICIALS TIES WITH CIA, FBI I;xL r;a i.v,: IU'w-cua re:portrtr,c u.ncl .l im!.Le(I ec:,nmtent on the abduction rtnrl ;,trt~;.c+ltu.?nt. s In.y f ng; of' Dun Mitr?iottc, U. S. police adviser to th,! ttr1wun.yrr.n GOvernrncnt, ha., emphau.i.zed hiu alleged lurks to t.1te CIA anrf P131. Havana Itnu sr.rggeu tied that; Washington refrtti.ned ft?:nn uruint? ilrutf+_tay to agree to the Tuixunarou guerriilari' clcnuuiWW;; for the ref ertue of prisoners In exchange for Mitrionc; L cc ;,ut;e 1 t t'carc+i his. release, would focus public attention on U.;;. c l.rtn+lcuttnc rretivit.Ieu in Latin America. Although Ilavana h.'!:t 'lVQ1(1Cd .1 .2ci.fical.ly approving Mltrione': execution, it ha!., I'.trtdcd t.hc "prudent and firm policy" followed by the 'l'ul"'uac+rns in the Mitrionc case. P:&th hc?fore and after M.itrione'u slaying, Ilavctnu medics repeatedly ,.7lrar?act;f:rizccl him as a CIA and FBI agent with a long history of CounLerrevolutlonary activity. Thus Radio Havana on the 6th, ci.ting political exiles in Paris as the source, reporteu that Mitrionc had ps.i.rtir..ipated in the 1961 Brazilian military coup which o't:,te:d President Goulart. It noted that he was a "po.litic:al-rnil.itary adviser" in Brazil at that time and "r?ocper:ited" with Brazilian generals responsible for the coup, t'arning up "during 1962 and 1963 . . . as a CIA agent in Belo !i ,r i :ante, :t c: ty where L;everaL of the officers who cooperated i . L':r:? r vup r?_ s i ded . " Other WLrtrana comment has intimated that, of Mitr:ione's connections with U.S. security organiza- Wr.t>,h;rigton preferred to "sacrifice" him rather than risk ,tI?,,u~._ r)f U.13. c1