INTERNATIONAL ISSUES REVIEW

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CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7
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RIPPUB
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S
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50
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December 16, 2016
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November 22, 2004
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11
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Publication Date: 
October 31, 1979
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REPORT
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pTror Release 21(14/12/22 : CIA-RDP8OTOO942AOOO59@@~4 Assessment Center International Issues Review Secret PA IIR 79-009 31 October 1979 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/22: CIA-RDP80TOO942AO0050001b,6i11-7 5 2 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 SECRET INTERNATIONAL ISSUES REVIEW 31 October 1979 CONTENTS NUCLEAR POLITICS WESTERN EUROPE AND THE INTERNATIONAL NUCLEAR SYSTEM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 The West European nations are finding it increas- ingly difficult to reconcile their longstanding interest in the development and export of nuclear technology with their participation in institu- tions designed to tighten the rules governing in- ternational nuclear commerce. This article eval- uates their attitudes toward US initiatives to strengthen the international regulatory system. COOPERATION AMONG EMERGING NUCLEAR STATES This paper describes the incentives and disincen- tives for nuclear cooperation among nuclear con- sumer states. It summarizes three case studies and concludes that present trends work against collaboration that could lead to a weapons capa- bility. NORTH-SOUTH ISSUES DISCORD AMONG LDCS THREATENS GLOBAL NEGOTIATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Increased squabbling among developed countries-- largely reflecting the impact of higher oil prices--will make it more difficult in the future for LDCs to maintain a unified front at global negotiations. 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/12/22cRGtA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 The West European nations are finding it increas- ingly difficult to reconcile their longstanding interest in the development and export of nuclear technology with their participation in institu- tions designed to tighten the rules governing in- ternational nuclear commerce. This article eval- uates their attitudes toward US initiatives to strengthen the international regulatory system. NUCLEAR POLITICS WESTERN EUROPE AND THE INTERNATIONAL NUCLEAR SYSTEM 5X1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5X1 COOPERATION AMONG EMERGING NUCLEAR STATES This paper describes the incentives and disincen- tives for nuclear cooperation among nuclear con- sumer states. It summarizes three case studies and concludes that present trends work against collaboration that could lead to a weapons capa- 5X1 5X1 5X1 bility. INTERNATIONAL ISSUES REVIEW 31 October 1979 CONTENTS NORTH-SOUTH ISSUES 25X1 16 25X1 DISCORD AMONG LDCs THREATENS GLOBAL NEGOTIATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Increased squabbling among developed countries-- largely reflecting the impact of higher oil prices--will make it more difficult in the future for LDCs to maintain a unified front at global negotiations. Approved For Release 2004/12122, - A-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release jjf_/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS ILLICIT ECONOMIES: A FOUNDATION FOR UNDERSTANDING THE INTERNATIONAL TRAFFIC IN NARCOTICS 28 This article assesses the economic structure and impact of the international narcotics traffic. It places drug production and trafficking within the framework of a larger illicit economy that often develops from local black markets and con- cludes that the large quantities of money these illicit activities generate may harm a country's social and economic development. INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM IN 1979: A PRELIMINARY ASSESSMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Although most established patterns of interna- tional terrorist behavior continue, the overall number of attacks has decreased, including those against Americans. Nonetheless, several groups stepped up the scale and lethality of their opera- tions. 25X1 25X1 25X1 11 Approved For Release MW?/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/12/ RW-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 25X1 of the world market for nuclear technology. Western Europe and the International Nuclear System The growing problem of nuclear proliferation and the prospect of a severe energy crisis in the coming decade underscores the importance of the attitudes of advanced industrial nations toward the future use of nuclear technology. During the past 20 years, a num- ber of interrelated institutions and organizations have emerged to govern and regulate international nuclear commerce. The West Europeans play an impor- tant role in these institutions and their role will become increasingly significant as they expand their capacity to supply each other and non-European coun- tries with advanced nuclear technology and services. This paper examines the attitudes of West European countries toward the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the willingness of these countries to give continued support to international regulation Introduction One of the most important factors bearing on West European attitudes toward international regulation of nuclear commerce is the fact that the current system is largely US-inspired. The IAEA, for example, was ini- tially established as a vehicle for implementing the Eisenhower administration's Atoms for Peace Program. The nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), too, was largely a product of American diplomacy. During the past decade, there have been additional US initiatives-- such as the London Suppliers Group and the current In- ternational Nuclear Fuel Cycle Evaluation (INFCE)--that have been intended in part to further tighten the rules governing international nuclear commerce. Most West Europeans never have questioned the need for or the value of measures to prevent the prolifera- tion of nuclear weapons. In fact, some West Europeans, 1 Approved For Release 2004/12L22fie A-RDP80TOO942AO00500010011-7 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 29944' 122 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 such as the Swedes and the Dutch, are deeply concerned about the proliferation threat and strongly endorse US initiatives to tighten control over nuclear commerce. Nevertheless, most West European governments long have differed with the United States over the extent of con- trol needed. As a group, they tend to feel that the dissemination of knowledge concerning nuclear technology has reached the point where additional rules and regula- tions to govern nuclear commerce are likely to be inef- fective, especially in the long run, and will only in- crease the economic and political cost to those nations still willing to abide by a rigorous international sys- tem of nuclear safeguards. Moreover, most West Europeans feel that one can maintain a legitimate distinction be- tween civilian and military applications of nuclear tech- nology and that the US emphasis on thtential misuse of this technology is too alarmist. the o This growing disagreement with the thrust of US nonproliferation policy also reflects deeper doubts about the central role that Washington will continue to play as the principal architect of the international nuclear system. Many West Europeans were shocked by the Congressional passage of the Nuclear Non-Prolifera- tion Act last year. From their standpoint, it was a unilateral action to establish new controls on the transfer of nuclear technology, in violation of an under- standing that INFCE participants would refrain from such controversial actions as long as basic issues still were being debated in the evaluation. This legislation, par- ticularly because of its requirement that the US Govern- ment renegotiate bilateral nuclear agreements with other countries to make them consistent with US laws, has had a negative impact on West European perceptions of the United States as a reliable supplier state. More funda- mentally, the West Europeans anticipate further attempts by Washington to utilize existing international institu- tions to achieve the nonproliferation objectives of the recent legislation. An Era of Good Feelings Current West European anxiety about the future of international nuclear commerce contrasts markedly with the opinion prevailing when the basic institutions, pri- marily the IAEA, were established in the late 1950s. At 25X1 2 Approved For Release 29922: CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release '2004/12182RICIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 5X1 25X1 that time, the United States was the principal world supplier of nuclear fuel and technology. Other West Europeans thus found themselves dependent on the United States for their supplies of nuclear fuel and technology. This dependence did not generate much friction at first because Washington encouraged the development of nuclear technology in other countries during the 1950s and through most of the 1960s. Indeed, the IAEA in its early years was in many respects a conduit for US tech- nical assistance to nuclear research and power programs both in nonindustrial and industrial nations. Under these circumstances, the West Europeans--initially in the process of economic recovery--had every reason to welcome American generosity and institutions like the IAEA. F_ -1 Even the controversial issue of international safe- guards for nuclear facilities, a prime responsibility of the IAEA, was not a serious bone of contention. The re- laxed attitude on the part of the West Europeans was a direct reaction to two US actions intentionally designed to keep differences of opinion to a minimum within the Western alliance. Despite its desire for a universal nuclear safeguards system under IAEA auspices, Washing- ton recognized the independent safeguards system devel- oped by those West European nations participating in EURATOM (European Atomic Energy Community). Second, when the United States began to push for the development of the IAEA safeguards system in the 1960s, Washington used a case-by-case approach that allowed the implemen- tation of safeguards only as new nuclear facilities came into being. The Watershed The Non-Proliferation Treaty drafted in 1968 con- stitutes an historical turning point because it inaugu- rated a far more rigorous regulatory system than had previously emerged under the IAEA. It has since been one of the primary factors conditioning West European attitudes toward the whole system of. international in- stitutions governing nuclear power develo ment and regii~ lating world trade in such technology. 25X1 3 Approved For Release 2004/1h 9IA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2 12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 There are at least four distinct problems connected with the NPT that have influenced Western Europe's nu- clear energy programs and export policies. These issues, taken as a whole, help explain why since the late 1960s there have been some West European reservations about the IAEA and about initiatives to intensify the system of institutions responsible for regulating nuclear tech- nology. These problems are: -- The US demand in conjunction with the NPT that EURATOM subordinate its own safeguards system to the broader IAEA safeguards program. -- The language in Article III of the NPT which, paradoxically, is interpreted to accord sig- natories freedom to require less stringent safeguards when exporting to nonsignatories than to other NPT parties. -- The clear distinction in the treaty between the status and obligations of nuclear weap- ons states and those of nonnuclear weapons states, which conflicts with the principle of European unity. -- The unwillingness of France and Spain to become parties to the treaty, which further compli- cates the effort to reach a European consensus on the control of nuclear technology. These issues have not been serious enough to weaken West European support for the IAEA. Nor have they undermined recognition in Western Europe of the need for and value of safeguards. However, these issues do suggest some of the reasons why West European governments retain doubts about the effectiveness of international cooperation in Vested Interests The other major development along with the Non- Proliferation Treaty that influences West European pol- icy on nuclear technology regulation is the growing economic and political stake some West European countries have in nuclear technology. France and West Germany have become major exporters. The Italians, Swiss, and Swedes 4 Approved For Release 2&0/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 Approved For Release 2004/I 2 2 ECIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 are other important suppliers. Increasingly, these coun- tries have found themselves in fierce competition with each other and the United States as the international market for nuclear reactors has contracted. Indeed, the West German nuclear industry is in serious financial trouble, which often makes it difficult for Bonn to accept US policy on safeguards. Furthermore, most West Europeans are convinced that it is imperative for them to close the back end of the nuclear fuel cycle by reprocessing spent fuel. Their argument for this position is political and emotional as well as economic. Most West European nuclear experts concede the US point that the recycling of plutonium in conventional thermal reactors does not yield major economic benefits. However, they argue that reprocess- ing will lessen their dependence on outside sources of nuclear fuel. privileged position and their dependence on it. that the United States is attempting to prolong its European dependence on the United States for fuel and technology is now admittedly much less than it was in the 1950s. The two uranium enrichment consortia, URENCO and Eurodif, could supply Western Europe with about 70 percent of its enrichment requirements between now and 1985. These developments have significantly eroded the kind of leverage the United States used in the past to advance its policies in the nuclear field. But the United States remains the single largest supplier of nuclear technology. Along with Canada and Australia, which also have stringent export controls, the United States also exerts considerable influence over the world uranium market. As a result, proposals to strengthen the system of institutions governing nuclear commerce tend to reinforce the suspicions of the West Europeans The Current Scene West European apprehensions are reflected in their behavior or reaction to current developments that impinge on the IAEA-NPT system as a whole. These developments can be separated into four categories: 5 Approved For Release 2004/1gJ%E flA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2994 W22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 IAEA politics, including the agency's nego- tiations with EURATOM over safeguards. -- The EURATOM-US discussions concerning the ulti- mate disposition of US-supplied nuclear fuel in Western Europe. -- The concluding phase of the International Nu- clear Fuel Cycle Evaluation (INFCE). -- Relations among supplier states in organizations established to coordinate nuclear export pol- icies. With respect to the International Atomic Energy Agency, the West Europeans have concluded that this cen- tral institution is here to stay, whatever reservations they may have about US attempts to emphasize its police- man's role. Where possible, these countries have tried to balance US nonproliferation policy with strong su port for the agency's technical assistance program. This choice reflects their general preference that the IAEA fulfill its second function as a promoter of nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. However, none of the West European members have given unqualified sup- port to the attempt of some less developed members to shift IAEA funds toward technical assistance programs. On the contrary, the West Europeans have avoided actions that would politicize the IAEA because they are disturbed about what has happened in other UN-affiliated organiza- tions. Their behavior on budgetary debates and on the issue of the representation of less developed countries (LDCs) on the IAEA Board of Governors indicates that the West Europeans try to preserve their vital interests without becoming caught in the middle of the dispute be- tween the United States and the Third World over the transfer of nuclear technology. The West Europeans have cooperated with the US effort to get the IAEA to develop a more effective safeguards system within what they re- gard as realistic limits. At the same time they have endorsed the LDC request for greater access to nuclear technology because this corresponds with their own vested interest in exporting such technology to the Third World. 31 October 1979 25X1 6 Approved For Release 2YR& /22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/'MYTCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 5X1 limit the scope of IAEA supervision as much as possible. Despite this philosophy of accommodation, there is one issue related to the IAEA on which members of the European Community (EC) have long been adamant: their need to protect the integrity of the EURATOM safeguards system as an important instance of European integration. Ever since the United States requested that this regional safeguards system be more closely coordinated with the one administered by the IAEA, the EURATOM members have insisted on their right of self-inspection. This demand has been controversial and has deeply disturbed the So- viets, whose fears about nuclear weapons programs in Western Europe have led them to become strong advocates of the IAEA safeguards program. It was not until 1977 that EURATOM and the IAEA finally agreed on an inspection system that would pro- tect the interests of each party. Negotiations on the measures necessary to implement this system have been under way for the past two years. They have been acrimo- nious at times as several EURATOM members have tried to Last March, the deadlock was partially broken. EURATOM and IAEA officials developed formulas to govern the presence and activities of agency inspectors at West European nuclear facilities. These inspectors will not be able to conduct independent verification in the full sense of the word but they have been given greater rights to observe and confirm the records of EURATOM inspectors. The EC member states also were willing to commit them- selves to comprehensive verification at fuel fabrication plants--an issue im ortant to the United States and other IAEA members. This compromise does not resolve all the issues be- teen EURATOM and the IAEA. Implementation of the IAEA presence still has not been worked out for all of the 240 or so nuclear facilities inside the European Commu- nity. For example, inspection procedures for uranium enrichment plants like the one operated by URENCO in the Netherlands have been a stumbling block. URENCO offi- cials want to be sure that sensitive information concern- ing their centrifuge technology does not fall into the hands of their competitors as a result of IAEA inspec- tions. Another issue that remains to be resolved is the 7 Approved For Release 2004/'f 22E1.CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 Approved For Release 2/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 need for a formula to allocate the additional financial costs associated with the new EURATOM-IAEA relationship. While it may take several months to iron out these problems, an agreement will probably be concluded this year or in 1980. This agreement, however, will be a delicate arrangement representing less than a universal safeguards system that treats all nations on an equal basis. The political and economic stake the West Euro- peans have in their own safeguards system is just too strong to permit a transfer of more responsibility and authority in this area to a central international in- stitution. The US Negotiations Another problem area has been Washington's request to renegotiate its accord with EURATOM that governs the disposition of US-supplied nuclear fuel in Western Europe. The Carter administration, in accord with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978, has pressed the countries to begin discussions on this issue during the past year. I I Not surprisingly, the West Europeans were reluctant to begin talks on new export controls. Some EC member states, especially France, believe that the US attempt to impose further restrictions on the reprocessing of US fuel is designed to sabotage their plans to recycle plutonium for use in fast breeder reactors. Furthermore, Washington's demand for greater control over the retrans- fer of US-supplied nuclear fuel strikes at the heart of the principle of free trade within the European Community. The discussions which began last November are still at an early stage. EC representatives have given their 25X1 preliminary reaction to a US draft for a revised nuclear cooperation agreement. They cannot negotiate seriously, however, until the EC Commission has been granted a for- mal negotiating mandate by the member states. It is not clear how flexible the members, especially the French, are ultimately prepared to be. The fear that the United States might eventually resort to selective 8 Approved For Release 2 HB2/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/'2TCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 5X1 5X1 awareness might encourage EURATOM to test the US admin- istration's determination to impose its maximum demands. or temporary embargoes on the shipment of nuclear fuel as a pressure tactic may incline some of them toward compromise. They are aware, however, that the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act does not require the United States to take any immediate measures because the issue does not involve safeguards on nuclear facilities. This Whatever the final outcome of the negotiations, EURATOM already has won an important concession. There will be no further discussions concerning its agreement with the United States until INFCE concludes early next year. INFCE Developments The US-sponsored conference to evaluate all phases of the nuclear fuel cycle has been the principal battle- ground where the West Europeans have defended their need to close the back end of the fuel cycle. Nevertheless, their desire for greater energy independence which rein- forces this interest in reprocessing spent fuel has not entirely precluded a cooperative attitude. On the con- trary, their contribution to the Evaluation's eight work- ing groups has been substantial and reflects a serious commitment to the search for more roliferation-resistant technologies. Perhaps the most striking evidence in INFCE of West European sincerity has been their support of the effort to reduce the levels of highly enriched uranium used in research reactors. Furthermore, the British and French have accepted the US argument that the recycle of pluto- nium in conventional thermal reactors has little to rec- ommend it on economic grounds. These two nuclear weap- ons states have indicated that they will forgo the re- processing of spent fuel for such purposes--but not for purposes of fast breeder reactors. 25X1 These concessions to US nonproliferation policy, nevertheless, appear meager compared to the fact that the West Europeans, along with the Japanese, have largely forced the United States to abandon hope that INFCE would begin a new consensus on the international nuclear system. 31 October 1979 9 Approved For Release 2004/1 ZRElCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2`1/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Even before the evaluation began in October 1977, the West Europeans, led by the French, insisted that INFCE remain purely a technical exercise that would not bind the participants to policies which they did not approve. Furthermore, the West Europeans have not been content to view INFCE as a "damage limitation" exercise. In- deed, they have been aggressive in advancing their po- sition in the various working groups on the controver- sial issues of uranium supply, reprocessing, and the fast breeder reactor. Their argument is that the re- cycle of spent fuel in fast breeder reactors is essen- tial in the long run because it promises to reduce their dependence on supplier states whose export policies have made ready access to uranium less certain. The effort to compile and summarize the results of the evaluation's working groups is nearly complete and most West European participants are now convinced that they have succeeded in blunting the impact of US non- proliferation policies on their domestic nuclear programs. Washington, for example, has dropped its objections to reprocessing if it is essential to existing research and development programs for the fast breeder. Thus, most West Europeans feel INFCE has been valuable because the technical exercise has encouraged a more pragmatic Ameri- can policy. Despite this reaction, it is doubtful that the West Europeans will support proposals to "institutionalize" INFCE as a permanent organization. Most will prefer that future work on proliferation be handled within the various working groups supervised by the IAEA. More importantly, Western Europe's significant exporters of nuclear tech- nology believe that the special organizations designed to coordinate export policies are more appropriate forums for the proliferation problem. Suppliers Organizations The West Europeans play a major role in the two in- stitutions created to coordinate the export policies of supplier states, the London Suppliers Group and the NPT 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1Shi$gTCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 Exporters Committee or "Zangger Committee."* Participa- tion in these organizations obligates suppliers to insist on IAEA safeguards as a precondition for the transfer of nuclear fuel and equipment. Yet this obligation repre- sents only a minimum consensus. Some West European sup- pliers will insist, as a matter of their own policy or as a result of US pressure, that the recipient country accept "full scope" safeguards applying to all its nu- clear facilities, acquired or indigenous.** However, "The Zangger Committee was established in 1970 to implement arti- cle III of the NPT which obligates supplier states to adhere to a common export policy. All the West European nations except France and Spain--which have not signed the treaty--and Portugal belong to the Committee. The London Suppliers Group lies outside the NPT regime. It is a smaller consultative body formed under US leadership in reaction to the Indian nuclear explosion in 1974. The group's guidelines on export policy are not legally binding, but the criteria and trigger list of sensitive nuclear material and equipment are virtually identical to that employed by the Zangger Committee. Seven of the group's 15 members are West ditional concern with national sovereignty and independence. European, including the French who feel that a "gentleman's agreement" on nuclear export policy is compatible with their tra- **The complex question of nuclear safeguards may be summarized as follows: All states that have joined the IAEA must adhere to an organization document (INFCIRC 66) which first specified the agency's role in administering safeguards and conducting inspec- tions of nuclear facilities. Those nations that have also signed the NPT are committed to a more stringent safeguards system as outlined in INFCIRC 153. This document goes substantially beyond INFCIRC 66 because it provides for the use of containment/ sur- veillance equipment and requires states to establish a State Sys- tem of Accounting and Control (SSAC) for nuclear facilities. This more rigorous system is sometimes referred to as "NPT safe- guards" to distinguish it from the earlier system. As a matter of practice, NPT safeguards are often equivalent to "full-scope safeguards" because NPT signatories are required to accept safe- guards on all nuclear facilities within their territory. However, as suppliers NPT parties can export nuclear technology to non-NPT countries under the less stringent guidelines outlined in 11 Approved For Release 2004/1TCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 Approved For Release A W122 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 efforts to bind the West Europeans legally to this strin- gent safeguards policy have not had much success. Most West European suppliers balk because it might cost them the export contracts they need to keep nuclear in- dustries in business. Resistance to full scope safeguards is not the only obstacle to the effort to create a broader consensus. The London Suppliers Group is an ad hoc organization which only obligates its members to consult and exercise restraint. The Zangger Committee trigger list to control the transfer of sensitive nuclear materials and equip- ment has a legal foundation in Article III of the Non- Proliferation Treaty. But France is not a signatory and, therefore, not represented in the committee. Furthermore, the Belgians, Italians, and Swiss have re- fused to go along with the decision to harmonize the trigger lists of the two suppliers organizations. These nations took particular exception to Washington's posi- tion that heavy water production technology should be on the Zangger trigger list because they do not consider this technology sensitive. These factors suggest that the effort to coordinate export policies may have gone about as far as possible. The future of the London Suppliers Group in fact is un- certain. Member states agreed not to hold meetings as long as INFCE is in progress. There is a possibility that the group may become dormant, though members would probably still abide by its guidelines and trigger list. The Zangger Committee meets once every six months to re- view the activities of its members. Recent developments suggest that active West Euro- pean involvement in the movement to tighten export cri- teria in the future will take place directly with the United States on a case-by-case basis. This has been true since developments in Pakistan's nuclear program heightened awareness of the danger of proliferation. Numerous informal consultations concerning this problem have taken place between US and West European officials, often on the fringe of INFCE. Other such consultations, however, have only dem- onstrated the degree to which commercial rivalry among suppliers makes a consensus difficult to obtain. As if 31 October 1979 25X1 25X1 12 Approved For Release 260=/22: CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/'IW2g 'Jt lA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 to highlight the difficulty caused by commercial rival- ries, less stringent safeguards policies have apparently enabled West Germany and Switzerland to make a major technology sale to Argentina, at the expense of more proliferation-conscious Canada. Prospects An attempt to summarize West European attitudes to- ward the international nuclear system can be misleading but it appears that these nations as a whole feel they are in a limbo. On the one hand, they have for the large part resisted intense US pressure to revise the rules of the game to any substantial degree. In this sense, they have won a breathing spell. Indeed, some West European officials expect that US nonproliferation policy will be- come even more flexible, or change direction, especially if a new administration comes to power late next year. This expectation, though possibly misguided, may encour- age the EURATOM countries to drag out negotiations with the United States over export controls as long as pos- 25X1 Developments unrelated to US policies, on the other hand, will almost certainly force the West Europeans to acknowledge the need to reassess the rules governing nu- clear commerce. Evidence that Pakistan is developing a nuclear weapons option underscores the dangers in the unrestricted spread of advanced nuclear technology. Few 225X1 West Europeans, including the French, are willing to deny their responsibilities in this area. 25X1 31 October 1979 13 Approved For Release 2004/1A(~JETCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release iii/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Even if there are no nuclear explosions or accidents in the coming year, the West Europeans will find it dif- ficult to strike a balance between nonproliferation ob- jectives and their desire to accommodate the demand in the Third World for nuclear technology. The second NPT Review Conference will commence next summer. -At that time, the less developed countries will bring great pressure on the West Europeans to live up to Article IV in the treaty which obligates supplier states to share nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. West Euro- peans are acutely sensitive to accusations from Third World nations that industrial nations are participating in a nuclear cartel designed to deny the less developed countries the fruits of Western technology. Perhaps the most decisive factor in the long run for the West Europeans will not be their support for nu- clear programs in the Third World, but their attitude toward technological progress in the nuclear field within their own region. At the present time, nuclear energy programs in several West European countries are in serious trouble. A combination of circumstances re- lating to the antinuclear movement and the political problem of storing spent fuel has forced a number of governments to postpone reactor construction as in West Germany and Sweden or cancel plans altogether as in Austria. The Three Mile Island nuclear accident has strengthened the public appeal of critics of nuclear power in several other West European countries. In contrast, the French and British Governments have strongly renewed their commitment to nuclear power in response to the long-term economic and political im- plications of a tight petroleum market. The French, within the next five years, will outstrip the West Ger- mans in nuclear technology as numerous reactors come on line and as the first commercial-scale fast breeder re- actor becomes operational. If it widens, this disparity between those countries in Western Europe that succeed in reducing their dependence on fossil fuels via nuclear power and those nations that do not could further complicate their ability to reach a consensus on European and extra-European issues. The French and British, for example, will probably find themselves much less vulnerable than other EC countries 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release ZROW2/22: CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1212QRECIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 to outside pressure whether from OPEC or the United States. Whatever impact the nuclear energy issue has on the ability of the West Europeans to reach common policy positions, those countries whose nuclear programs are now stalled face serious consequences if they fall behind in the search for energy security. In the long term, this problem rather than the proliferation issue or US policies may become the key factor in shaping West European views on the value of and need for institutions to regulate the growth of nuclear power. 15 Approved For Release 2004/122?F&FIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 Approved For Release 20=112/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Cooperation Among Emerging Nuclear States* There is growing concern among the nuclear supplier states that countries outside their ranks could effec- tively combine to frustrate their efforts to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. This apprehension is based on recognition that the consumer states are increasingly sensitive to--and may attempt to resist--what they per- ceive as a discriminatory, unnecessarily rigorous non- proliferation regime. Their resentment has been expressed at such inter- national forums as the United Nations Special Session on Disarmament of 1978 and the ongoing International Nuclear Fuel Cycle Evaluation (INFCE), and it will prob- ably play a major role in determining the atmosphere at the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Con- ference of June 1980. The growing availability of the resources--skills, technology, money--required to sup- port a modest nuclear program contributes to the pos- sibility that the nuclear consumers may circumvent sup- plier-imposed controls, either individually or in colla- boration. Additional factors that may encourage collaboration among nuclear consumers include: -- Common perspectives, problems, or enemies in the international arena. Common ideology, religion, or ethnic identity. -- Complementarities in resources, technology, or other fields. 25X1 25X1 16 Approved For Release Q 112/22: CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1 2CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 -- Desire to exploit the commercial potential of nuclear exports. -- Desire to build new regional bonds or acquire prestige through sharing advanced technolo- gies. -- Desire to cement a relationship in order to assure access to scarce resources such as oil. Against these considerations, a number of factors can operate to inhibit collaboration in the nuclear field. First, governments normally attempt to preserve existing or prospective national advantages, including "nuclear secrets"---unique technologies and the so-called sensitive technologies--that are closely linked with nuclear weapons development. They might do so in order to maintain: -- Potential military advantages and reduce the chances for acquisition of nuclear weapons by other, particularly hostile, nations. -- Perceived political advantages, both domestic and foreign, of possessing an elite tech- nology. -- Potential commercial advantages from unique national nuclear technologies. A second deterrent to nuclear cooperation, espec- ially with another threshold state, is the possible damage to a country's relations with those major nuclear suppliers that are strongly opposed to the spread of sensitive technology. Countries contemplating nuclear transfers outside the international safeguards system must consider the impact this would have on their secu- rity and economic ties with these suppliers, including probable termination of nuclear aid. Finally, a potential nuclear sharer might avoid collaboration because it requires all of its nuclear materials, technology, and skilled personnel for its domestic nuclear programs. F -1 17 Approved For Release 2004/1 g1 E iA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1 EtIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 5X1 5X1 One example of actual nuclear sharing is provided by Peru's acquisition from Argentina of nuclear technology for peaceful uses. Buenos Aires favors such assistance because it constitutes formal recognition of Argentina's leading role in Latin America in the field of nuclear energy. Both nations also see peaceful nuclear coopera- tion as a means of strengthening bilateral relations generally, a goal that has become increasingly important because of common border tensions with Chile. The like- lihood of substantially increased cooperation in the future, however, is limited both by Peru's serious financial problems and by its lack of trained personnel and of guaranteed access to necessary nuclear material. international environment could affect this equation in At present, the factors working against nuclear cooperation that might lead to a weapons capability ap- pear to outweigh those that would encourage such a de- velopment. Nevertheless, a variety of changes in the 31 October 1979 19 Approved For Release 2004/1 3 EclA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release x$2/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 North-South Dialogue: Discord Among LDCs Threatens Global Negotiations F- I The less developed countries (LDCs) are demand- ing a new round of negotiations on global economic and development issues. Nonetheless, the LDC posi- tion on the agenda and structure of such talks is un- certain, largely because influential factions among them hold widely varying views on the priority of issues to be discussed and the goals of the nego- - While these types of disagreements are not new, increasing internal squabbling will make it even harder than in the past for the LDCs to develop com- promise positions. Within the past year: -- Higher energy prices have exacerbated ten- sions among oil importers and exporters. -- No strong LDC leaders have emerged, making it more difficult to develop strategies and tactics. -- Institutional problems--mainly infighting between G-77s (Group of 77) New York- and Geneva-based delegates--have increased and diverted attention from negotiations. As a result, before the LDCs' UN caucus--the Group of 77--can focus on another round of North- South discussions, it will have to establish a uni- fied LDC position, paying particular attention to tensions between oil-importing and oil-exporting LDCs. These problems undoubtedly will surface at the round of South-South talks scheduled for New York in January 1980. 25X1 25X1 20 Approved For Release gQ@4 /22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1YI?`CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 How the G-77 works out its internal problems will help determine the ability of the developed countries to cope with global negotiations. If the G-77 papers over internal disputes on energy, for example, the LDCs' final position would probably be too general to elicit a specific response from the developed countries. On the other hand, continued discord within the G-77 could present the industrial- ized countries with several pro Is on one issue, also making a reply difficult. The Setting In general, the less developed countries believe that their economic position has deteriorated, that industrial- South dialogue has lost considerable momentum. ized nations have become less responsive to LDC demands-- in part because of energy and economic concerns within the developed countries--and that the concept of a North- To regain the momentum, the G-77 has proposed that the UN launch a new round of global negotiations at the 1980 Special Session on Development.* The G-77 has not specified an agenda and structure. Instead, the resolu- tion restricts itself to a general outline which calls for: -- A broad-ranging discussion on energy, raw materials, trade, development, and money and finance. -- Participation by all countries within the UN framework. 25X1 'Dates for the Special Session will be decided by the General As- sembly. Most observers believe the meeting will not take place before September 1980. 21 Approved For Release 2004/1-Q21glA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 20b4 22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 -- Use of the Committee of the Whole (a committee established by the United Nations to monitor progress in the North-South dialogue) to work out the agenda and procedures. While there is a consensus among LDCs that global negotiations are one way to move the North-South dialogue in a more action-oriented, constructive direction, and that energy issues should be addressed, there is still no unified G-77 position on the priority of various is- sues. These issues include: -- The extent to which energy will be dis- cussed, particularly the importance of Mexican President Lopez Portillo's re- cent energy proposals. -- How new global negotiations will mesh with talks already under way in other forums, particularly the UN Conference on Trade and Development. -- The role and importance of the UN's Inter- national Development Strategy, designed to promote economic cooperation and de- velopment in the 1980s. Such differences among LDCs continue to reflect individ- ual national political interests, disparities in levels of economic development, and splits among regional groupings. While the hallmark of the G-77 in the past has been its ability to close ranks when facing the industrialized countries in negotiations, events over the past few months suggest that this solidarity will be much harder to come by in the future. Higher oil prices and the global eco- nomic slowdown have exacerbated factional disagreements. At the same time, in part because no generally acceptable leadership cadre has emerged, institutional and regional jealousies have intensified. 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release ZJJ~WJ/22: CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/~? ?CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 25X1 The Energy Issue Higher oil prices have strained LDC solidarity be- cause oil-importing LDCs have put increasing pressure on oil-exporting LDCs for relief and assistance. These ten- sions surfaced publicly at the Fifth Session of the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD V) in May 1979 when a group of oil-importing LDCs demanded that energy be included on the conference agenda, breaking a longstanding unwritten agreement against discussing energy in multilateral forums. oil exporters were able to avert these demands by promising to take part in intra-LDC energy talks in the future--a promise the LDCs pursued durin the summer, mainly in nonaligned forums. Immediately following UNCTAD V, the LDCs engaged in heated debates over OPEC pricing policies at the June 1979 meeting in Colombo of the nonaligned movement's Coordinating Bureau. The OPEC members that attended-- Algeria and Iraq--became increasingly uneasy with the issue. In part to counter LDC criticism directed at itself, Algeria offered a proposal for global negotia- tions. Although the plan did not respond directly to LDC demands, it had some appeal. Without completely forgetting their energy concerns, most LDCs viewed global discussions as a vehicle to spur the North-South dialogue at a time when it was losing momentum after UNCTAD V. The members of the Coordinating Bureau recommended that the nonaligned summit in Havana make a final decision on Algeria's plan. Further discussions were held among nonaligned mem- bers at a presummit meeting in Georgetown, Guyana, in late August.* Although the ostensible purpose of the meeting was to develop proposals for increasing mutual assistance and solidarity within the nonaligned movement, ener issues dominated the discussions. *Nonaligned members attending the Guyana meeting were Algeria, Cuba, Guyana, India, Jamaica, Iraq, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, and Yugoslavia. 25X1 23 Approved For Release 2004/4]R(TCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 266I22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Guyana had prepared and circulated a hard-hitting paper that analyzed the adverse impact of OPEC price in- creases on oil-importing LDCs. The paper proposed sev- eral potential schemes of direct assistance to non-OPEC LDCs including: -- A complicated scheme in which OPEC would levy a surcharge on crude exports and rebate the money to oil-importing LDCs. -- A discount on oil purchases for domestic use by oil-importing LDCs. -- The establishment of special funds to finance economic cooperation programs and development of energy resources in LDCs. After several days of heated discussion--during which Iraq threatened to walk out--OPEC members managed to have only a severely watered-down version of the orig- inal draft released. Nonetheless, the meeting did high- light the concern of oil-importing LDCs over the supply and price of "raw materials" (a euphemism for oil) and did emphasize the "overriding importance of the economic dimension" of mutual assistance among LDCs (a muted call for more OPEC aid). Probably most important, how- ever, the Guyana meeting ensured that the energy prob- lem would be introduced at the Havana nonaligned summit. Energy proved to be a divisive issue in economic discussions in Havana. Although the language in the economic portion of the final nonaligned declaration does not criticize OPEC, in order to pass the Algerian resolution oil exporters had to commit themselves to another resolution on collective self-reliance, which keeps the door open for more OPEC aid and assistance to other nonaligned countries. Most LDCs view the two resolutions as one package even though the OPEC commit- ments are more implicit than explicit. India, Jamaica, and Yugoslavia were reportedly in- strumental in keeping the focus on energy issues. Even so, some member countries have argued that non-OPEC LDCs 31 October 1979 25X1 24 Approved For Release g@@J /22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1 IQ2E1CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 yielded to OPEC pressure in the last hours of the con- ference. Moreover, rumors persist that OPEC members worked to soften sentiment against the oil producers by making a number of special bilateral deals. FP_ I 25X1 The collective self-reliance resolution does not con- tain specific promises of preferential pricing and rebate schemes sought by many oil-importing countries. Nonethe- less, nonaligned members agreed: -- To grant priority of supply to each other for "primary products and commodities." To increase financial assistance to one another. To channel more investment funds into other non- aligned countries. 5X1 To participate in joint energy projects, includ- ing research and development into new energy sources. Venezuela reportedly played an active role in persuadin other OPEC members to agree to these guidelines.* The Leadership Problem As the pressures within the LDC camp have increased, it has become more difficult for any individual, country, or region to take a leadership role. At the UNCTAD V meeting in May, for example, the African, Asian, and Latin American groups each chose a regional spokesman to negotiate on individual agenda items, instead of one G-77 spokesman. In fact, numerous LDC representatives have admitted that the meager results of UNCTAD V re- flect, in part the lack of leadership within the Group of 77. Moreover, it has become almost impossible for a spokesman for one faction or region to table a proposal *Saudi Arabia, although a nonaligned member, did not attend the summit. OPEC members have implied that their commitments as a group are not firm until all members are in agreement. 25 Approved For Release 2004/1?/MTCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release AW-2/22: CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 without running counter to the interests of another faction or region. For example, Mexican President Lopez Portillo's speech at the United Nations in September, in which he called for global negotiations on energy and other related issues, was criticized by several OPEC members for focusing too much on oil without the neces- sary links to development issues. In another example, the G-77, after months of dis- cussions, is still trying to hammer out a position on the UN's International Development Strategy (IDS). Some LDCs-- led by India--believe that the IDS should be instrumental in establishing common LDC goals over the next decade. A few others argue that IDS has been a failure in the 1970s--largely because developed countries have not lived up to their commitments--and generally view the G-77 proposal for global negotiations as an alternative. Most, however, are searching for some compromise solution in which global negotiations would not overshadow or abandon IDS. Institutional Disagreements Further complicating G-77 efforts is a growing ten- sion between its New York- and Geneva-based delegates--a somewhat lesser known, but not less serious problem. Each group desires to take the lead in North-South negotiations and in internal G-77 decisionmaking. G-77 representatives in Geneva tend to be more con- cerned with progress in individual negotiations, are some- what more pragmatic, and are less inclined than their New York counterparts to think about the North-South dialogue as a whole. Many Geneva delegates--as well as the UNCTAD Secretariat--oppose any activity in New York that they feel distracts from UNCTAD negotiations. In particular, they are suspicious of the Committee of the Whole and are generally opposed to Algeria's global negotiations pro- posal. New York representatives, on the other hand, view UNCTAD with some disdain and view the UNCTAD delegates as merely technicians. To enhance their role as the Group of 77 policymakers, most New York representatives tend to favor new global negotiations centered in New York. 25X1 25X1 26 Approved For Release 2 f /22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 1004/32 T'CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 To deal with the problem, the Group of 77 established a committee of 21 representatives in Geneva in early 1979 to study the possibility of creating some mechanism to coordinate and carry through their policies. The strongly differing factions within the Group of 77 prevented the committee from reaching a consensus. Instead, the committee sent a report to the full Group of 77 that presented the differing points of view. Moreover, the G-77 foreign ministers at a recent meeting in New York also could not agree either to form the support group or to abandon the idea; instead, they instructed a committee in New York to continue studying the merits of the proposal. Outlook How the Group of 77 manages its internal problems will largely dictate its position at new global negotia- tions. While it is too early to predict that the LDCs will be unable to reach a unified position, the coordina- tion process will be more difficult this time around. The Group of 77 might work out some positions general enough to be acceptable to a large majority--that is, falling back to the lowest common denominator approach they have used in the past to work out contentious issues. None- theless, a growing number of countries would probably be dissatisfied. Under the rubric of collective self- reliance, these countries are looking for specific commit- ments--particularly from OPEC--on energy, aid, and develop- ment to help with immediate concerns of higher oil prices and slower growth. 25X1 25X1 Many LDCs will be looking for these responses at a promised round of South-South talks scheduled for January in New York. Moreover, the meeting could become very heated if it is preceded by an OPEC decision in December to raise oil prices again without a specific plan to aid oil-importing Group of 77 members. This would sharply re- 25X1 duce the Group of 77's ability to maintain a unified front against the industrialized countries and to negotiate on specific issues at global consultations. 27 Approved For Release 2004/li/ CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2Y22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Illicit Economies: A Foundation for Understanding the International Traffic in Narcotics* I-- I The following article focuses largely on the role played by narcotics in the flourishing illicit econo- mies of many developing nations, but it also will be of interest to analysts looking into the institutional problems that generally inhibit development. The paper outlines the conditions necessary for the devel- opment of a sizable illicit economy, discusses the role played by government policy, and surveys the im- pact of illicit activities on domestic social and po- litical institutions. The international traffic in narcotics can have a sizable economic impact on drug-producing as well as drug-consuming countries. The scope of this impact is difficult to measure because drug transactions, along with other contraband smuggling, occur within an illicit transnational market system. In most countries the net- work that criminal elements use to exchange illegal goods and services provides a foundation for a more widespread illicit economy. By steadily infusing large quantities of financial resources, the international narcotics traffic contributes significantly to the growth of an illicit economy. These infusions of money can place severe pressure on existing social structures by shifting traditional political and economic power bases, often as a result of bribery and corruption. Illicit economies result from a complex interaction between political and economic processes and frequently reflect a society's pattern of socioeconomic develop- ment. Illicit economies are most frequently unintended consequences of government attempts to regulate be- havior through law and policy. There are many types of 25X1 25X1 25X1 28 Approved For Release 28 12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release '2004/15U2RHrlA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 illicit economic activity. For example, the unrecorded exchange of legitimate goods and services for cash in order to avoid taxes is common in most developed coun- tries. on the other hand, international narcotics traf- ficking is a more organized criminal enterprise that uses a broad range of illicit services. The Origins and Development of Illicit Economies The foundations of illicit economic development most often grow from a local black market in the host country. The distribution mechanism to supply the black- market system is smuggling. By providing channels for distribution of illicit goods and services, existing black markets and smuggling enterprises contribute to the organization of an illicit economy. Smuggling also links black markets in different societies. The trade and finance activities associated with this transnational network of illicit activity parallels the international economic system. Black markets result from government regulation of the market. Through regulation of choice in the market- place, governments attempt to reallocate resources in ways consistent with the purposes of national develop- ment. To the degree that the demands of the population differ from government objectives, the foundation for a black market emerges. The purpose of government trade controls is to in- crease acquisition costs to the point where contraband that does enter has a negligible impact on the economy and society. While government policy may restrict sup- ply, demand persists. The resulting scarcity of goods brings black markets into being to supply demand at artificially high prices. When no domestic source of supply is available, entrepreneurs smuggle commodities in from abroad. How Black Markets Operate Black-market activity most frequently occurs under conditions of social disorganization or when there is a lack of consensus on the value of social and economic controls. In addition, the less developed countries (LDCs) frequently do not have the ability to govern. 29 Approved For Release 2004/' ? 12Fh,,GIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release M2/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 They also often lack the basic infrastructures, such as communication and transportation networks, necessary for a modern economy and society to function. The laws and regulations that have evolved to govern modern market societies often are absent or fail to govern behavior effectively in countries where national integration is minimal and where traditional cultural and social values and norms still predominate. Under such conditions, farmers and merchants often have great difficulty in perceiving their traditional pursuits as "illegal" activities, particularly if a government remote and alien to their daily existence makes the declaration. Smuggling occurs to some extent in nearly every nation and can take several forms. Manufactured goods-- such as appliances, automobiles, electronic devices, and firearms--can flow from industrialized countries, fre- quently through intermediary nations, to the LDCs. Con- traband, particularly raw materials--like gemstones, precious metals, animal products, and some agricultural commodities--flow from the LDCs to the industrialized nations. These smuggling patterns parallel the regional division of labor and flows of trade and commerce that characterize the transnational economy. Also smuggling occurs locally between neighboring states; this pattern is particularly prevalent in those areas where a national boundary cuts across tribal and cultural groupings. There are a number of places around the world-- Lebanon, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Paraguay--that are long-established intermediate markets for smuggling activity between the source of supply and the point of final consumption. They exist for reasons of culture, geography, history, and law. Often, they are entrepots for a particular region, have a cosmopolitan atmosphere tolerant of diverse lifestyles, and are trade and com- merce centers with good communications and banking fa- cilities. A legal environment conducive to interna- tional trade and finance--that is, one with few govern- ment constraints--is common. In such centers smugglers can acquire contraband legally, since contraband becomes illegal only at the points of origin and of final desti- nation. Such an arrangement allows the smuggler to evade reexport controls, maintain warehouses, minimize taxation on the visible portions of his operations, and coordinate exchange activity. 30 Approved For Release ?RV/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Within the LDCs an urban-rural dimension is funda- mental to black-market and smuggling activities. In the rural areas of many LDCs there is only a barter and subsistence economy. In these areas black-market crops and commodities are often necessary adjuncts to subsist- ence farming. The farmer can barter to sell illicit goods in order to raise money for food, medicine, and weapons in local village marketplaces. Black-market agricultural commodities include not only opium gum, coca leaves, and marijuana, but also timber, coffee beans, and cocoa. The more urban areas pose a different set of prob- lems. In many cases the middlemen in black-market and smuggling activities, including drug trafficking, are members of minority groups whose opportunities for making a living are often limited to such areas as trade and commerce in which the dominant social groups have no interest. Like many rural groups, the minorities are not yet integrated into the dominant society and political system. Simple societies in similar situations have survived through mercantile activities, acquiring goods here and exchanging them there. Traders and merchants are important links in the distribution channel, for they provide an exchange partner for someone in need of a product. In this sense, the trader is the point at which two societies, perhaps with considerably diverse forms of social organization and exchange activity, often interact. Contacts between rural and urban societies and between similarly situated minority communities overseas may facilitate the develop- ment of a trading network, using trade and communication routes that have persisted for centuries, for all types of goods. Extended entrepreneurial families commonly perform this middleman role. The overseas Chinese of Southeast Asia are an excellent example.* Black markets and smuggling possess a degree of coordination and organization that is uncommon in crimi- 25X1 31 Approved For Release 2004/12~~ZRFtIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 nal activity. Because distribution channels used for smuggling can cross great distances and several legal jurisdictions, they are often quite complex. Two fac- tors contribute to this complexity: the number of dif- ferent functions the division of labor within the distribution channel encompasses, and the degree of organization necessary to perform each of these functions. Impact The institutionalization of an illicit economy within a nation can present serious political, economic, and social costs to a government. Production, processing, and distribution of narcotics are especially noteworthy as criminal enterprises within an illicit economy because they introduce relatively large amounts of money into local economies. In LDCs, for example, the immediate costs are inflation and the outflow of much needed for- eign exchange to pay for consumer goods manufactured in industrialized countries. These costs detract from a government's ability to pursue more productive goals and, to this extent, detract from a country's potential for development. Given the regional division of labor associated with the international narcotics traffic, the net flow of foreign exchange earnings from the international nar- cotics traffic probably favors the industrialized coun- tries, which benefit from bank deposits and consumer purchases. To the extent that drug-related funds are used to purchase contraband items in the illicit economy, the legitimate economy suffers further. Such participa- tion also weakens government authority because illicit economies almost always allocate goods and services in a manner inconsistent with government intentions and needs. The Role of Narcotics In the LDCs, narcotics-yielding plants have increas- ing importance as agricultural commodities because of their unusually high value in the black markets of local economies. Narcotics require only simple processing be- fore consumption, unlike many other raw materials. Ex- cept, perhaps, for bulk shipments of marijuana, illicit drugs are also compact and relatively easy to transport. Often, traffickers or their middlemen will transport the 32 Approved For Release H6 NT2/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/199'EIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 crop to market for the farmer, thereby lessening a po- tentially serious marketing problem and increasing the farmer's profit. Though initially the farmer partici- pates in barter and subsistence economies, the returns from drug production may promote the development of a local cash economy. The profit margins become so high that crop patterns gradually shift. The returns from drug production and trafficking within the LDCs impose additional costs on the govern- ment. First, these returns undermine traditional social elites by shifting political and economic power bases, a change effected in large measure through bribery and corruption. Second, the resources that a government must devote to controlling drug production, trafficking, and related activities in the illicit economy put an additional strain on public expenditures. The large profits from narcotics trafficking and the organized structures required to process and distrib- ute narcotics also encourage criminal enterprises to develop and persist. Often, existing criminal enter- prises engaged in other types of black-marketeering and smuggling activities have already created conditions conducive to organized drug trafficking. These enter- prises can bring financial and other resources to bear to ensure their continued functioning, principally by immobilizing the authorities with bribery and corruption. To the extent that monopolies can develop and persist, a significant sector of the illicit economy in a coun- try becomes institutionalized, creating an environment favorable to an expansion of organized criminal activity in non-narcotics-related areas. In extreme cases, a pattern of corruption--sometimes with roots in narcotics trafficking--can become so wide- spread as to undermine the political structure of the local government- In politically fragile situations, public knowledge of high-level corruption that greatly exceeds normal standards can lead to social and politi- cal upheaval. 25X1 33 Approved For Release 2004/1Z EClA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 20 12 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Casualties Due to International Terrorist Attacks January Predicted September 1979 1979 Total 1978 Total Total incidents 192 256 353 Incidents in- volving deaths 45 60 62 Incidents in- volving injuries 47 63 57 Total deaths 166 221. 450 Total injuries 359 479 430 Geographic Distribution of International Terrorist Incidents January- Predicted September 1979 1979 Total 1978 Total North America 12 16 19 Latin America 28 37 61 Western Europe 105 140 166 USSR - Eastern Europe 3 4 3 Sub-Saharan Africa 8 11 24 Middle East - North Africa 30 40 61 Asia 9 12 16 Oceania 1 1 3 34 Approved For Release 2B1 81122 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1?EbIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 International Terrorism in 1979: A Preliminary Assessment* F__ I Most established patterns of international ter- rorist behavior recorded in 1978 have continued into this year, including attacks on Western diplomatic and business facilities, an emphasis on simple types of operations, and a preference for striking targets in industrialized democracies. Significant changes have included a major decrease in the number of attacks worldwide, as well as in the number and proportion of attacks against Americans. However, several terrorist groups stepped up the scale and lethality of their operations in order to publicize their respective "causes." Intergovernmental cooperation in combating terrorism was spearheaded by a West European agreement on extradition and prosecution and by the drafting of a UN convention on the taking of hostages. Trends For the year as a whole, there was a decrease in the number of international incidents (table 1). If trends continue, 1979 will, in terms of the number of attacks, be the second least active year of the decade. There has been an even more marked decrease in the num- ber of deaths from terrorist attacks, although one or *Data presented in the tables that accompany this study are based upon the same types of unclassified sources that have formed the basis for our previous annual surveys of international terrorism. Estimates for the final figures for 1979 were made by assuming that terrorism will follow exactly the same trends in the last quarter of 1979 as those experienced through September. While this assumption undoubtedly will result in some inaccuracies in our predictions, we have no theoretical or empirical basis for believing that there will be an overall increase or decrease in terrorism worldwide during the last quarter. 31 October 1979 35 Approved For Release 2004/1EFpIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005 t 2 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Geographic Distribution of International Terrorist Attacks Against US Citizens or Property January- Predicted September 1979 1979 Total 1978 Total Middle East- North Africa 10 13 40 Asia 3 4 9 Total 42 56 123 Nationality of Victims of International Terrorist Attacks January- Predicted September 1979 1979 Total 1978 Total North America 45 60 127 Western Europe 105 140 113 Middle East - North Africa 34 45 70 Latin America 19 25 46 USSR - Eastern Europe 12 16 17 Asia 2 3 13 36 Approved For Release 20$fl9M2 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/1U25tIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 two incidents involving multiple casualties in the last quarter of 1979 could well skew these figures. There has not been a concomitant decrease in injuries from international terrorist attacks. However, as has been 25X1 noted in our previous surveys, most terrorist incidents are not aimed at causing casualties, and onl one- fourth of all attacks resulted in injuries. Terrorists continue to prefer operations in the industrialized democracies of western Europe and North America (table 2). More than half of all incidents were recorded in Western Europe alone, both by indig- enous organizations and by groups that have chosen to export their grievances abroad. Perhaps due in part to increased governmental countermeasures, terrorism in Latin America and the Middle East has lagged far below the levels recorded last year. F_ I 25X1 There have been fewer attacks than the previous year, both in relative and absolute terms, on US citi- zens and property, but Americans this year were the victims of many more lethal incidents than before (table 3). At least six Americans (Ambassador Dubs in Afghanistan; Lewy in Rhodesia; Berkowitz in Iran; and Goodman, Mosley, and Claypool in Turkey) representing diplomatic, military, business, and private interests, were assassinated. Infrequent though deadly operations appear to have replaced the formerly preferred fire- bombings of American vehicles. 25X1 Officials and businessmen--especially individuals who are symbols of Western power and wealth--are still the primary targets (table 4). Tourists and other pri- vate citizens are victimized only incidentally (for example, as passengers on a hijacked airliner). West European nationals were victimized in over half of all reported incidents; North Americans are the second most frequent targets. Among US victims, businessmen con- tinued to be the most numerous, although the absolute number of attacks against corporations has dramatically decreased (table 5). Despite the publicity given to occasional sophis- ticated operations, most terrorist attacks continue to be simple in conception and operation (table 6). Bomb- ings remained by far the preferred type of attacks, 25X1 37 Approved For Release 2004/' @CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004i2 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 International Terrorist Attacks on US Citizens or Property by Category of Target January- Predicted September 1979 1979 Total 1978 Total Diplomatic 9 12 22 Military 6 8 30 Other US Government 4 5 2 Business 13 17 47 Private citizens 11 15 21 Total 43 57 122 Types of International Terrorist Attacks January- Predicted September 1979 1979 Total 1978 Total Kidnaping 18 24 27 Barricade- hostage 6 8 11 Letter bombing 11 15 5 Incendiary bombing 6 8 69 Explosive bombing 89 119 133 Armed attack 21 28 36 Hijacking 5 7 2 Assassination 23 31 29 Theft/break-in 2 2 12 Sniping 3 4 9 Other actions 9 12 20 Nonterrorist hijackings 22 29 23 38 Approved For Release 200_*: CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/Jf gr CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 accounting for nearly half of all terrorist operations. Unaccountably, incendiary bombings have plummeted from second to seventh place in frequency among terrorist attacks. Despite preboarding security precautions that make the smuggling of weapons on board airliners highly improbable, aerial hijackers have discovered that pilots generally assume that their claims of being armed are true, and have thus acquiesced to their de- mands. Hence, although few hijackers have been armed, hijackings--by terrorists and nonterrorists--have in- creased somewhat over 1978 totals. Fortunes of Major Groups* The Irish Republican Army, as well as the Irish National Liberation Army, succeeded in generating substantial international publicity with several major operations during the year, particularly those aimed at symbols of the British Government and the Crown. They assassinated Airey Neave, would-be Conservative Secre- tary for Northern Ireland; Sir Richard Sykes, Ambas- sador to the Netherlands; and Lord Mountbatten, a member of the British royal family. The IRA also continued to inflict mass casualties, injuring 18 persons in a bombing in Brussels and killing at least 18 soldiers and wounding another eight in an ambush near the Irish border at Warrenpoint. According to a recent British military assessment of the IRA, the group has adopted a more clandestine structure, making it much more difficult to combat. While this reorgani- zation has increased the clandestine security of IRA units and thus permitted successful major operations without leaks to the authorities, compartmentation may lead to operational errors. Many observers believed the IRA's successful assassination of a Belgian banker and the near-successful assassination attempt on SHAPE Commander Alexander Haig were both cases of mistaken identity. Despite popular outcry in the wake of these attacks, and a papal plea for a cease-fire, IRA opera- tions are expected to continue to be successful in the near term. 25X1 25X1 *Coverage of this topic necessarily touches on acts of domestic as well as international terrorism involving these groups. 39 Approved For Release 2004/152/ CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2Q2QE /R'R22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 On the European continent, the ETA, a Basque na- tionalist organization in Spain, met with successes similar to those of its Irish colleagues. The group assassinated several important military officials, leading to increased pressures on the government to adopt repressive measures that the ETA believes would ultimately redound to its benefit. Hoping to combat French-Spanish cooperation against Basque terrorists who slip across the border, the ETA declared war on French business and tourist interests in Spain, con- ducting a vigorous bombing campaign which in one week- end claimed 118 casualties at three airport and rail stations. Spanish rightists, despairing of a firm governmental response to this wave of terrorism, con- ducted a series of vigilante raids against Basque leaders in France. Despite the positive outcome of the 25 October referendum on Basque autonomy, some members of the ETA are expected to continue to use terrorism to press for complete independence. Italian terrorist attacks continue at their pace-setting rate, although there have been some noteworthy police successes against the major groups. Individuals believed responsible for the kidnaping and eventual murder in 1978 of Aldo Moro, one of Italy's leading political figures, were arrested in Italy and France. Other individuals responsible for major right- wing terrorist attacks were detained in Latin America during the year. Fissures within the Red Brigades, Italy's well-known leftist terrorist group, appeared to be growing, with an ideological battle between its factions appearing in the country's newspapers. International terrorism by Fatah was held in abey- ance pending the outcome of Yasir Arafat's diplomatic offensive to obtain Western recognition of the Pales- tine Liberation Organization (PLO). Moreover, Fatah's capability to conduct international terrorist exploits was restricted by the assassination in Beirut in Jan- uary of Ali Hassan Salameh, reputed planner of Black September's attack on the 1972 Munich Olympics. Saiqa, a Syrian-sponsored Palestinian group that had not conducted any international terrorist attacks since 1973, made headlines through a series of attacks 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 20CW12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/Q&qgfi CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 5X1 25X1 under the name of the Eagles of the Palestinian Revolu- tion, a fictitious name used to mask Saiga's attacks against Egyptian interests in Europe and the Middle East. Its most spectacular operation was the takeover of the Egyptian Embassy in Ankara, Turkey. After the takeover ended, Turkish authorities granted permission for the opening of a PLO office in Ankara, reputedly in return for PLO mediation with the terrorists. Saiga's terrorist activities were halted, if only temporarily, with the assassination in France of its leader, Zuhar Muhsin. Other Palestinian groups met with similar mixed success. The Black March Organization, believed by some observers to be either the Black September Or- ganization or a cover name for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, underscored its opposition to the Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty with a bloody attack on Brussels Airport. West German authorities thwarted possible similar operations by arresting several would-be Palestinian terrorists entering the FRG in late April. El Salvadoran leftists were responsible for the most noteworthy international terrorist operations in Latin America, seizing several foreign embassies and private installations, assassinating diplomatic and business officials, and kidnaping still others, in- cluding Americans. These organizations hope to be as successful as the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. Antiterrorist Cooperation Regional cooperation was especially evident among European countries faced by terrorism. Members of the European Community in October scheduled to open for signature a convention designed to resolve some tech- nical legal difficulties experienced by its members in implementing the Council of Europe's Convention on the Suppression of Terrorism. The convention calls for extradition or prosecution of individuals suspected of certain offenses, whatever their motivation. In May, police chiefs of 17 major West European cities met to discuss means for combating terrorism and other forms of violent crime. 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 SECRET Approved For Release 2QQ4j 22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 The most notable attempt to combat terrorism on a global scale was the drafting by a United Nations ad hoc committee of an international convention on the taking of hostages. The draft convention calls for the same judicial measures to be applied against the takers of hostages as have been previously advocated in three international conventions dealing with crimes on board aircraft. Despite some differences regarding the con- vention's scope, the draft is expected to be opened for signature b the end of this session of the UN General Assembly. Several nations joined the three international conventions on crimes against aviation, as well as the UN convention on internationally protected persons. The new round of demarches by the supporters of these agreements is likely to add further to the list of adherents. Several steps were taken by major Communist nations toward cooperating with the West in combating terrorism. China has expressed support for the draft UN hostages convention and has requested information from the United States on international terrorism, Cuba renewed its an ijac ing agreements with Canada and Venezuela for another five years. The Soviets, concerned about dissidents using political violence to obtain publicity during the 1980 summer Olympics in Moscow, have requested counterterrorist aid from West Finally, a major nongovernmental actor joined the fight against terrorism in September, when Amnesty In- ternational (AI) announced that it would pay serious 25X1 25X1 42 Approved For Release 222 1, l22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2b04/92=TCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 attention to human rights violations by "liberation" movements and terrorist groups. Its willingness to look at abuses by both established governments and their politically violent opponents will enhance its international reputation for evenhandedness. I Outlook While the statistical decreases in terrorist activ- ity that we have noted are at first impression encour- aging, the decline in incidents may be only a temporary phenomenon. Terrorist incidents have shown a two-year cyclic pattern during the 1970s, with 1979 having been predicted to be a valley. Several terrorist groups may have been improving operational security and sophisti- cation, recruiting and training new members, and merely waiting out government dragnets. This would allow them to adapt further to governmental countermeasures, thus increasing the likelihood of more frequent--and oc- casionally more sophisticated--attacks. I 43 Approved For Release 2004/gig&TCIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Secret Secret Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7 Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP80T00942A000500010011-7