CIA HISTORICAL STAFF CHRONOLOGY 1946-65 VOLUME 1 1945-55

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6
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RIPPUB
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S
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78
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December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 23, 2004
Sequence Number: 
2
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Publication Date: 
June 1, 1970
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2005/02/15: CIA-RDP85B00803R0002 05 Secret 25X1 CIA Historical Staff ..-q 7 1946-65 Volume 11946-55 Secret June 1970 copy N! 39 Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 WARNING This document contains information affecting the national defense of the United States, within the meaning of Title 18, sections 793 and 794, of the US Code, as amended. Its transmission or revelation of its contents to or re- ceipt by an unauthorized person is prohibited by law. GROUP I Ezduded from oufomofic downgrading and d.cbulf cation Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0:F1F3I h-' bP85B00803R000200050002-6 25X1 CHRONOLOGY 1945-65 VOLUME I 1946-55 HISTORICAL STAFF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Approved For Release 2005/0EJp1E-'PP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 20 /Ii . r1A-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 This chronology provides the Agency historian with a brief, factual introduction to the main currents of the two turbulent decades of world affairs after World War II, when the United States emerged as leader of the Free World and when the Central Intelligence Agency evolved as a significant instrument of US national security policy in the cold war. The chronology reflects CIA's development and progress not only as a central agency for the analysis of intelligence information and the preparation of strategic intelligence estimates but also as an active, operational member of the US and Allied security system. The chronology consists of four parallel columns: column 1 cites occurrences of world-wide significance; column 2, events of national interest; column 3, developments in the US intelligence and national security communities; and column 4, milestones in the evolution of the Agency. Included are public events of major political, diplomatic, military, and technological significance, as well as selected intra-Agency activities. In format and detail the chronology is necessarily selective and terse. The historian will, of course, wish to exploit the many specialized chronologies in his field--both clas- sified and unclassified. In addition, he will also find useful the historical compilations prepared by the Library of Congress for the Committee on Foreign Relations of the United States Senate such as Background Information Relating to Southeast Asia and Vietnam, 5th rev ed (91st Congress, 1st Session, 1969) and A Select Chronology and Background Documents Relating to the Middle East, 1st rev ed (91st Congress, 1st Session, 1969). The numerous entries in the Annual Index of the New York Times provide details on the day-to-day progress of public affairs; Neville Williams' Chronology of the Modern World, 1st American ed, New York, David McKay, 1967, is an important British compilation; Andre Fontaine's two chrono- logies in his History of the Cold War, New York, Pantheon, 1965, illuminate events from the French point of view; and the latter part of William L. Langer's An Encyclopedia of World History, 4th ed, Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1968, furnishes a chronological survey of the postwar period in its broadest historical perspective. Approved For Release 200,~(1R:: A-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/~0 Vg7RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Contents Page 1946 . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . 2 1947 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1948 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 1949 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 1950 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 1952 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 1953 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 1954 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 1955 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 Approved For Release 2005/99A RC RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/02~MR I.DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Feb 46 JAN. United Nations Organiza- tion convenes in initial meet- ings in London; 10 Jan. General Assembly; 17 Jan. Security Council; 1 Feb. Trygve Lie (Norway) elected Secretary General; 25 Mar. Military Staff Committee meets first time. 6 JAN. Turkey's Premier de- nounces Soviet territorial claim to Kars and Ardahan provinces. 19 JAN. Iran asks UN to in- vestigate Soviet interference; 19 Mar. dispute tabled at Security Council; 24 JAN. US Signal Corps radar 25 Mar. Soviet troops contact with moon announced. start to leave Iran; 26 Mar. UN hearings open. 4 FEB. Romanian government Groza) recognized by US; 18 Apr. Yugoslav govern- ment (Tito) recognized. - 2 - Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/020bP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 22 JAN. National intelligence organization established by Pres. Truman: National Intelligence Authority (NIA) as policy and coordinating body, Intelligence Advisory Board (IAB) as community com- mittee, Central Intelligence Group (CIG) as operating agency, Director of Central Intel- ligence (DCI) to serve in all three bodies. Jan-Feb 46 Central Intelligence Agency 23 JAN. Rear Adm. Sidney W. Souers, USNR (Deputy Chief of Naval Intelligence), appointed first DCI by Pres. Truman. 4 FEB. IAB convenes for first time, with DCI, State, War, Navy, and Army Air Forces reps.; J.S. Lay, Jr., Sec'y. 5 FEB. NIA convenes for first time with Secretaries James F. Byrnes (State), Robert P. Pat- terson (War), James Forrestal (Navy), Adm. William D. Leahy (Pres. Truman's representat- ive), and DCI Souers; 8 Feb. first NIA Direct- ives (Nos.1 and 2) prescribe DCI and CIG missions and functions. 18 Feb. J.S. Lay, Jr., appointed NIA Secretary. 6 FEB. Central Reports Staff (CRS) activated in CIG with Ludwell L. Montague (from State) Acting Chief. 8 FEB. Central Planning Staff CPS) established in CIG; 25X1A ie ; 25 Jun. Capt. C.E. Olsen (Navy) appointed Acting Chief. 18 Feb. 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/0 ]RfDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005WCRP -RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 12 FEB. In Argentina's elec- tion campaign, US issues "Blue Book" on Nazi wartime influ6nce in Argentina and Latin America; 22 Feb. Peron counters with "Blue and White Book," charg- ing US Embassy with espionage; 28 Mar. Peron elected Presi- dent. 15 FEB. Canada seizes 22 as So et spies, Royal Investi- gating Commission announced; 4 Mar. Interim report. 14 FEB. Lt. Gen. Walter B. Smith succeeds W. Averell Harriman as Ambassador to USSR; 26 Apr. Embassy's Minister Counsellor George F. Kennan reassigned to,Washington. 5 MAR. Churchill warns of Soviet "iron curtain," sug- gests US-British "fraternal association" in speech at Fulton, Mo. Approved For Release 20051M '.,S ft RDP85BOO803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005IO2 l DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 14 FEB. first Daily Summary disseminated; 7 Jun. first Weekly Sum- mary; 10 Jun. Weekly Summary approved by IAB and placed under IAB's "common observa- tion" and advice. 20 FEB. State-War-Navy Coor- dinating Committee (SWNCC) reconvenes with new Navy member (John C. Geilfuss); Apr. new State member and chairman (Maj. Gen. John D. Hilldring); Jul. new War member (Dean Rusk). 14 MAR. Survey report on OSS and Strategic Services Unit (SSU) completed by IAB sub- committee; 2 Apr. NIA orders SSU liquidated by CIG by 1 Jul 47; CIG authorized to absorb OSS/SSU assets as appropriate; 4 Apr. succeeds Brig. Gen. John A. Magruder as SSU Dir- ector. 26 MAR. FBI (J. Edgar Hoover, Director) added to IAB member- ship. 18 FEB. 25X1A named CIG's first adminis- trative officer (acting); 17 Apr. 25X1A 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 20055LqhfRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Apr.-Jun 46 Global United States 5-9 APR. US naval force visits Istanbul and Dardanelles. 25 APR. Big Four Council of Foreign Ministers (CFM) recon- venes in Paris to discuss peace treaties, upcoming peace conference, status of Germany; meetings continue to 15 May, reconvene 15 Jun to 12 Jul. Present: Byrnes, Bevin, Molotov, Bidault. 2 MAY. 11-nation Internation- al Military Tribunal convenes in Tokyo; 27 indicted as war crimi- nals. 31 MAY. Pearl Harbor hearings concluded by Congressional Joint Committee; 20 Jul. majority and minor- ity reports released. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/gR-3R(RfRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Anpr-Jnn 46 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency APR. State's intelligence group (inherited from OSS/R&A) reorganized after budget cuts by Budget Bureau and House Appropriations Com- mittee; 9 Apr. research decentral- ized to geographical divi- sions; 23 Apr. Alfred McCormack (Special Assistant for Re- search and Intelligence) resigns; 9 May. William L. Langer succeeds McCormack, joins IAB. MAY. Transfer of FBIS assets from War to State proposed by Gen. Vandenberg; 29 Jun. transferred by NIA to CIG and assigned to Office of Collection; 17 Oct. moved to Office of Operations. 9 MAY. IAB agrees on USSR as priority intelligence object- ive in CIG 8 and 8/1; 19 Jul. CIG's first esti- mate of Soviet capabilities and intentions world-wide re- quested by President Truman; 23 Jul. estimate delivered. JUN. At War Department, Maj. Gen. Stephen J. Chamberlin succeeds Vandenberg as Direc- tor of Intelligence; 10 Jun. joins IAB. 7 JUN. CIG's first consult- ants are announced: 25X1 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/W6 Of DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/g _ RCRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jun-Jul 46 Global United States 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures in FY 46 reduced to $.46..2 bil- lion from $84.5 billion in FY 45. Military strength reduced to to 3 million officers and en- listed men, from 12 million in FY 45. 25X1 1 JUL. US tests atomic weapons at Bikini; 1 Aug. Atomic Energy Com- mission established along with Congressional Joint Committee on Atomic Energy; 28 Oct. David E. Lilienthal appointed AEC chairman; 12 Dec. science advisory committee established. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/ ~DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community MID-JUN. Communications intel- ligence activities reorganized: CIG and Army Air Forces added to community board (State- Army-Navy Communications Board --STANCIB), renamed US Com- munications Intelligence Board (USCIB). 17 JUL. NIA convenes in first meeting with DCI Vandenberg; 26 Jul. NIA establishes Interdepartmental Committee on Acquisition of Foreign Publi- cations, with Librarian of Congress as chairman, and sec- retariat in State. Jun-Jul 46 Central Intelligence Agency 7 JUN. Lt. Gen. Hoyt S. Van- denberg (Assistant Chief of Intelligence, War Department General Staff) appointed.DCI, replacing Souers; sworn in,l0 Jun. 25X1A I Inamed Deputy 25X1A "A or sec e 1 25X1A 17 JUN. OSS/SSU assets reor- ganized in CIG; SI and X-2 branches merged into a new Foreign Security Re orts Office (FSRO) headed by 1 Operations (OSO) established under CIG Assistant Director Donald H. Gallowa ; 26 JUN. DCI's office organ- ized: named 25X1A Execu ive to ; 23 Jul. Executive Staff established under 25X1A I rssistant 1xecut ive 25X1A Director, with Executives for Control, Operations, Advisory Council, and Personnel Admin- istration; 26 Aug. Organization Branch added. 19 JUL. Offices of Collection and Dissemination established in CIG; 10 Sep. combined into a single OCD. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/0211 CJAf DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jul-Aucr 46 Global United States 29 JUL. Peace Conference con- venes in Paris (29 Jul-15 Oct) with 21 nations represented; Oct. treaties concluded with Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Finland; 4 Nov. 4-power Council of 2 AUG. Senate votes US adher- Foreign ministers reconvenes ence to reorganized World for final amendments. Court (I.C.J.) except on "domestic" matters. 8 AUG. USSR renews demand for joint control of Dardanelles with Turkey (revision of Montreux Convention); 21-22 Aug. rejected by US and Turkey. - 10 - Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/02~klDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 21 Oct. renamed ice of Reports and Estimates. 20 JUL. CIG coordination staff further reorganized; CPS replaced by Interde- partmental Coordinating and Planning Staff (ICAPS); CPS personnel re-assigned to OSO and ICAPS; ing chief of ICAPS, 23 Jul. 22 JUL. Central Reports Staff reorganized as Office of Re- search and Evaluation (ORE) with Montague acting head; 25X1 25X1 AUG. At State, William A. Eddy succeeds Langer as Secretary's Special Assistant for Research and Intelligence; 1 Dec. Allan Evans named Director of Office of Intelli- gence Research. Jul-Aug 46 Central Intelligence Agency appointed chief; 1 Dec. 23 JUL. CIG Advisory Council established for communications intelligence; 16 Aug. 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1 C Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/ ' RC RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-Dec 46 15 SEP. Greek civil war re- newed. ' 30 SEP. Nazi war crimes trials at Nuremberg ended: 3 men ac- quitted, 19 sentenced by In- ternational Tribunal, 4 German organizations indicted, 4 ac- quitted. 12 SEP. Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace publicly de- plores "get tough with Russia" policy; 20 Sep. Wallace dismissed by Pres. Truman. 4 OCT. Pres. Truman publicly pledges US support to a sepa- rate Jewish state in Palestine. 19 NOV. Afghanistan, Iceland, and Sweden join UN; 16 Dec. Thailand joins UN. 28 NOV. Indo-Chinese war be- gins, Haiphong bombed by French; 20 Dec. Ho Chi Minh govern- ment evacuates Hanoi. 12 DEC. UN General Assembly calls for diplomatic boycott of Spain. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/02/StP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community OCT. Evaluation of CIG by Dr. Sherman Kent, "Prospects for the National Intelligence Service," published in Yale Review, autumn 1946--first major critique of US postwar intelligence in academic press. SP= -DPx 46 Central Intelligence Agency 1 OCT. CIG's authority for personnel-clearance investiga- tions agreed to by IAB. 17 OCT. Office of Operations (00) established under Brig. 25X1A Gen. Edwin L. Sibert, replac- ing "B" Deputy, OSO; 6 DEC. named acting Secret or NIA and IAB, suc- ceeding 17 Dec. reconvenes in last meeting chaired by DCI Vandenberg. 17. DEC. First major Congres- sional review of postwar US intelligence (filed by Peter Vischer, House Military Af- fairs Committee) urges per- manent NIA system under civil- ian direction and Congres- sional control. 31 DEC. Foreign Documents Division (FDD) established in 00, outgrowth of Army-Navy Washington Document Center for captured Japanese and German documents. Approved For Release 2005/0'M:RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 200M.-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Jun 47 10 MAR. Council of Foreign Ministers reconvenes in T-1os- cow on German questions; 24 Apr. adjourns without agreement; 25 Nov. reconvenes in Lon- don; 15 Dec. adjourns indefini- tely. 21 JAN. Gen. George C. Mar- shall, returning from 15-month China mission, succeeds Byrnes as Secretary of State; 12 May. Under Secretary Dean Acheson resigns; 1 Jul. Robert A. Lovett appointed Under Secretary. 12 MAR. Pres. Truman asks US Congress for aid to Greece and Turkey ("Truman Doctrine"); 23 Apr. $400 million bill passed by Senate; 9 May. passed by House; 22 May. signed by Pres. Truman. 5 MAY. French government Ramadier) dismisses Communist ministers. 3 MAY. Japanese constitution, developed under Gen. Mac- Arthur's sponsorship, goes into effect. 5 JUN. Secretary of State Marshall announces European economic recovery plan ("Marshall plan"); 2 Jul. rejected by USSR and East European satellites and Finland; Jul. Paris conference of 16 "Marshall plan" countries convenes. 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures in FY 47 reduced to $20.9 bil- lion from $46.2 billion in FY 46. Military strength declined to 1.5 million officers and enlisted men from 3 million in FY 46. Approved For Release 200~Mkff-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/O~f I DP85BOO803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community Jan-Jun 47 Central Intelligence Agency 20 JAN. Col. Edwin K. Wright relieved as DCI Vandenberg's Executive and named Deputy Director of Central Intelli- gence (DDCI). 12 FEB. NIA prescribes re- quirements on China in Direc- tive No. 8. 30 APR. Subcommittee on Psy- chological Warfare (PWC) es- tablished by SWNCC; 5 Jun. renamed Subcommittee on Special Studies and Evalu- ation (SSE). 15 MAY. IAB reconvenes in first meeting chaired by DCI Hillenkoetter. 22 JUN. Pres. Truman appoints three foreign-aid investiga- tion committees, chaired by Julius A. Krug, Edwin G. Nurse, and W. Averell Harri- man (reports released 9 Oct, 28 Oct, and 7 Nov,respective- ly). 22 Jul. House of Represent- atives establishes special committee on foreign aid (Christian A. Herter); 23 Dec. Congress, convened in special session, approves $540 million for France, Italy, Austria, and China. 18 APR. DCI's atomic-energy intelligence coordination functions defined by NIA Dir- ective No. 9. 30 APR. Rear Adm. Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter appointed DCI to succeed Vandenberg; 1 May. Hillenkoetter sworn in, Wright continuing as DDCI; 12 Mav appointed Exec-- 26 JUN. State-OSS map library and geographic intelligence functions transferred to CIA, to be located in ORE as Map ded 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/02(VC t-IPP85BOO803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/gRtSRCEP RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jul-Sep 47 JUL. US "containment" policy toward USSR urged publicly by "Mr. X" (George F. Kennan) in Foreign Affairs article on "The Sources of Soviet Con- duct." 11 JUL. Lt. Gen. Albert G. Wedemeyer sent by Pres. Truman on mission to Korea and China, returns 18 Sep. 15 AUG. India and Pakistan be- come independent Dominions in British Commonwealth. 2 SEP. Inter-American Mutual As- stance Treaty, including anti-Communist security agree- ments, signed at Rio de Janeiro conference, first un- der UN charter. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/gRrRC RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community Jul-Sep 47 Central Intelligence Agency 1 JUL. CIG security staffs re- organized, renamed Inspections and Security Staff (I&S); 1 Jul. Col. Sheffield Edwards appointed CIG Execu- tive for I&S. 26 JUL. National Security Act signed creating a single National Military Establish- ment (NME) under a Secretary of Defense, with unified Joint Chiefs of Staff, War Council, Munitions Board, and Research and Development Board; 18 Sep. establishment of National Security Council (re- placing NIA), National Secur- ity Resources Board, and Cen- tral Intelligence Agency (re- placing CIG). 26 JUL. Navy Secretary James Forrestal appointed and con- firmed as first Secretary of Defense (sworn in 17 Sep); 21 Aug. three departmental Secretaries in NME appointed: Kenneth C. Royall (Army), John L. Sullivan (Navy), and W. Stuart Symington (Air Force). 11 SEP. IAB convenes in last meeting before reorganization into IAC; Atomic Energy Commission member added (Rear Adm. John E. Gingrich, intelligence and security director); NIA issues final directive on changeover to NSC (NIA Dir- ective No. 11). 1 JUL. Executive for Adminis- tration and Management (A&M) established, replacing Person- nel and Administration Branch and ICAPS' management service; amed A&M Execu- 25X1A tiV1 dministrative matters transferred to OSO, along with Communications Division. 29 AUG. Rear Adm. Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter reappointed by Pres. Truman to statutory position of DCI as establish- ed in National Security Act; 26 Sep. re-sworn in. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/081t.ln,VDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-Dec 47 Global United States 5 OCT. Communist Information Bureau (COMINFORM), for coor- dinating Party activities in nine European countries, an- nounced in Moscow. 5 DEC. US embargoes arms ship- ments to the Middle East. - 18 - Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/Q2JJ Sep-Dec 47 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 26 SEP. Pres. Truman's NSC holds initial organizational meeting; 12 Dec. first NSC Intelli- gence Directives issued, out- lining CIA, departmental, and IAC responsibilities (NSCID Nos. 1-6); 17 Dec. first NSC directive prescribing CIA's responsibil- ities for covert psychological operations issued (NSCID 4-A). 1 OCT. W. Park Armstrong, Jr., succeeds William O. Eddy as Secretary of State's Special Assistant for Research and In- telligence, representing State on IAC. 4 NOV. SWNCC renamed State- Army-Navy-Air Force Coordinat- ing Committee (SANACC), with member added for new Depart- ment of the Air Force; Aug 48. placed under NSC; 30 Jun 49. discontinued. 1 OCT. Joint Army-Navy Intel- ligence Surveys (JANIS pro- gram) transferred to CIA from NME, reestablished as National Intelligence Surveys (NIS program) in Basic Intelligence Division of ORE; Joint Intelligence Study Publishing Board (JISPB) dis- continued, replaced by ad hoc committee appointed by IAB (Sep 47), then by NIS Commit- tee established under IAC, (Jan 48), with CIA chairman and secretariat. 20 NOV. Intelligence Advisory Committee (IAC), replacing IAB, convenes for first time: DCI Hillenkoetter, chairman; W. Park Armstrong, Jr., (State); Chamberlin (Army); Inglis (Navy); McDonald (Air Force); Gingrich (AEC); Brig. Gen. Walter E. Todd (JCS), FBI (re- presentative absent), and Prescott Childs (CIA/ICAPS) secretary; 8 Dec. Maj. Gen. C.P. Cabell succeeds McDonald (AF), and William C. Trueheart suc- ceeds Gingrich (AEC). Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/( PRWDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Mar 48 Global United States 27 JAN. Smith-Mundt Act signed, first Congressional authoriza- tion for US world-wide inform- ation and cultural activities program. 16 FEB. North Korean People's Democratic Republic (Commu- nist) proclaimed at Pyong- yang; 15 Aug. Republic of South Korea proclaimed, with Syngman Rhee as president. 25 FEB. Communist coup in Czechoslovakia, under Gottwald; Feb-Mar. "war scare" ru- mors in Europe. 27 FEB. Finland-USSR mutual assssistance pact proposals re- vealed; 6 Apr. pact signed; 23 May. Finland's Communist Minister of Interior dismissed; 1 Jul. Communists lose 11 seats in parliamentary elect- ions. 15 MAR. In Japan, opposition party (Democratic Liberals) formed; 14 Oct. elects Yoshida prime minister; 19 Oct. Yoshida forms new government. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/s DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community Jan-Mar 48 Central Intelligence Agency 1 JAN. Special Procedures Branch for covert psychologi- 13 JAN. NSC redefines coordin- ation of intelligence collect- ion (NSCID No. 2) and pro- duction (NSCID No. 3); 25 May and 18 Jan 49. scientific and technological intelligence (NSCID Nos. 8, 10). 13 FEB. NSC establishes con- sultants group to survey CIA and US intelligence community, with Allen W. Dulles (chair- man), William H. Jackson, Mathias F. Correa, and Robert Blum (Executive Secretary). Interim reports filed 3 and 13 May 48, final report, 1 Jan 49. 7 MAR. State's Policy Planning Staff reorganized, George F. Kennan appointed Director. cal operations in OSO; established 24 Feb. Thomas G. C?assady announced Chief; 22 Mar. renamed Special Procedures Group (SPG); 18 Jun. SPG replaced by Office of Special Projects, chartered by NSC 10/2. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 20051/VRRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Apr-Jun 48 30 MAR. 9th Inter-American Conference convenes at Bogota, interrupted by Communist riots, establishes defense council and drafts charter for new Or-' ganization of American States. (OAS). 18 APR. Italy holds national elections, Christian Democrats win absolute majority, against: 30% popular vote for Commun- ist-Socialist bloc; 23 May. de Gasperi and Sforza form new government. 14 MAY. British mandate in Palestine ends, state of Israel proclaimed; 14-17 May. recognized by US, France, and USSR. 20 JUN. Berlin blockaded by USSR, against West German occupation zones; massive US airlift launched on 26 Jun; 11 May 49. Soviet blockade lifted. 3 APR. Foreign Assistance Act signed, $5.3 billion author- ized for European economic re- covery programs (ERP); 6 Apr. Paul G. Hoffman named head of Economic Coop- eration Administration (ECA); 28 Jun. appropriations passed by Congress, signed. 11 JUN. Senate approves "Van- denberg Resolution," favoring principle of regional security arrangements, including Brussels Pact of 17 March and proposed North Atlantic Treaty. 28 JUN. Yugoslavia expelled from COMINFORM by Soviets. 28 JUN. Displaced Persons Act signed for admitting 200,000 non-quota DP's from Europe over following two years. 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures in FY 48 reduced to $16.3 bil- lion, from $20.9 billion in FY 47. Military strength declined to 1.4 million officers and men (as of 30 Jun 48) from 1.5 million in FY 47. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/g( RQP1RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community Apr-Jun 48 Central Intelligence Agency 3 MAY. Reference Center (orig- inally established in ORE, then moved to A&M) relocated in OCD, along with Collection and Dissemination Offices and Cen- tral Records Division; 18 May. Dr. James M. Andrews named AD/CD. 16 JUN. IAC's membership changes: for Army, Maj. Gen. A.R. Bolling succeeds Chamber- lin; 3 Dec. Bolling succeeded by Maj. Gen. S. LeRoy Irwin, and for AEC, Dr. Walter F. Colby succeeds Trueheart. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/02-/b5CJI,FDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jul-Dec 48 6 JUL. North Atlantic Treaty negotiations begin with 7 sponsoring nations: US, UK, Canada, France, Belgium, Neth- erlands, and Luxembourg: 3-30 Mar 49. Norway, Italy, Denmark, Iceland, and Portugal added to NATO group; 4 Apr 49. treaty signed; 21 Jul 49. ratified by US Senate; 24 Aug 49. ratified by other nations. 1 SEP. North China People's Government proclaimed on Communist radio; 30 Oct. Communist troops occupy Mukden, win control of Manchuria; 15 Jan 49. occupy Tientsin; 31 Jan 49. enter Peking. 19 AUG. US denounces Soviet Consul General activities in New York; 24 Aug. USSR announces closing of its consulates in US, asks same of US in USSR. 2 NOV. Harry S. Truman elect- ed President, defeating Thomas E. Dewey (Republican), Henry A. Wallace (Progressive), and Strom Thurmond (States' Rights); Alben W. Barkley elected Vice President. 7 NOV. French elections held: de Gaulle party wins 107 of 320 council seats, Communists reduced from 88 to 16 seats. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/MpitRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 1 JUL. NSC prescribes charter for US Communications Intel- ligence Board (USCIB), in NSCID No. 9. AUG. Survey of US internal security coordination complet- ed; conducted for NSC by J. Patrick Coyne (consultant from FBI). 15 NOV. Hoover Commission's Task Force on National Secur- ity Organization (Headed by Ferdinand Eberstadt) files public report of its survey of NSC agencies, including CIA; 21 Feb 49. Hoover Commission makes further national secur- ity recommendations based on report of Foreign Affairs Task Force, headed by Harvey H. Bundy and James Grafton Rogers. 28 leb 49. Hoover Commission partially endorses Eberstadt recommendations. Jul-Dec 48 Central Intelligence Agency 1 SEP. Office of Policy Coor- s- nation (OPC) established for replacing Office o pecia Projects. 25X1A 27 DEC. 25X1A amed acting AD /SO. 25X1A 31 DEC. ORE Scientific Branch 25X1A re-established as separate Office of Scientific Intelli- gence, with as AD/SI; 14 Feb. OSO's Nuclear Energy Group transferred to OSI. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/0 ji DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Plar 49 25 JAN. USSR announces new Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (CEMA, sometimes abbr. COMECON), embracing USSR, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and Romania; 11 Feb. Yugoslavia's exclu- sion confirmed. 20 JAN. Pres. Truman's 4-point program, in inaugural address, includes technical and finan- cial aid to economically un- derdeveloped areas; 24 Jun. program outlined in message to Congress. 27 JAN. Council of Europe es- tablished by western foreign ministers meeting in London; 8 Aug. Greece and Turkey added. FEB. Arrests and trials for espionage and treason in Sovi- et Bloc: 8 Feb. Cardinal ilindszenty sentenced in Hungary; 8 Mar. 15 Protestant clergy sentenced in Bulgaria; 10 Jun. Xoxe and 3 other ex-ministers sentenced in Al- bania; Jun. Hungarian Foreign Min- ister Lazlo Rajiv and others ar- rested (executed 15 Oct); 18 Nov. Robert A. Vogeler arrested in Hungary (sen- tenced Feb 50); 14-16 Dec. ex-Deputy Premier Kostov and others sentenced and executed in Bulgaria. - 26 - Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/0?/t*It-DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community JAN. NSC membership changes: Secretary of Treasury Snyder added; 7 Jan. Dean Acheson suc- ceeds Marshall as Secretary of State; 26 Mar. Adm. William D. Leahy retires as President Tru- man's Chief of Staff, intelli- gence briefing duties assumed by Souers; 28 Mar. Louis A. Johnson succeeds Forrestal as Secre- tary of Defense; 10 Aug. Vice President Barkley added to NSC. Jan-Mar 49 Central Intelligence Agency Director I renamed 25X1A CIA Executive; A&M Executive renamed Deputy 25X1A a, cu , responsible for CIA administrative and support functions. 1 JAN. NSC Intelligence Survey Group (Dulles Commit- tee) files final report; 28 Feb. CIA's comments forwarded; 7 Jul. committee's re- commendations partially en- dorsed by NSC. (NSC-50). MAR. NSC's internal security coordinating functions reor- ganized under J. Patrick Coyne with two interdepart- mental committees: Interdepartmental Intel- ligence Conference (IIC) re- established under NSC with members from FBI, Army, Navy, and Air Force; Interdepartmental Commit- tee on Internal Security (ICIS) established as a new committee with members from 18 MAR.I State, Treasury, Justice, and nATnPd D SO succee ing the NME, with CIA on an ad hoc basis. - 27 - 25X1A 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/gReRiC RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Mar-Aug 49 25 APR. German Federal Repub- lic established at Bonn, draft constitution signed by West German and Allied leaders; 23 May. constitution rati- fied by German states (pro- claimed 15 Jun); 15 Sep. Konrad Adenauer elected Chancellor; 9-11 Nov. admitted to Coun- cil of Europe membership. 12 MAY. Japan's war repara- tions-payments terminated; 1-14 Sep. peace treaty sup- ported by Gen. MacArthur and Secretary Acheson. 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures in FY 49 increased to $18.9 billion, from $16.3 billion in FY 48; US military strength in- creased to 1.6 million offi- cers and men, from 1.4 mil- lion in FY 48. 5 JUL. Adm.. Alan G. Kirk succeeds Gen. Smith as Ambas- sador to USSR. 5 AUG. US issues "White Paper" postmortem report on China's collapse, announces end of further aid to Nationalist combat forces. 10 AUG. National Security Act amended: NME renamed the De- partment of Defense, position of Secretary of Defense strengthened, Service secre- taries dropped from NSC mem- bership, Vice President added, Chairman of JCS made military adviser to NSC; 11 Aug. Gen. Omar N. Brad- ley appointed C/JCS. - 28 - Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/0JJJj jEi-1 DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 20 MAY. Armed Forces Sedurity Agency (AFSA) established. 1 JUN. National Coommittee for Free Europe established, chaired by Joseph C. Grew. 22 JUL. IAC membership changes: FBI's representation re-act- ivated (D. Milton Ladd); 28 Oct. Navy representative, Adm. Felix L. Johnson (new D/NI) succeeds Inglis on IAC. Mar-Aug 49 Central Intelligence Agency 17 MAY. 25X1A 25X1A 20 JUN. CIA Act of 1949 pre- scribes CIA's personnel, fi- nancial, procurement, secur- ity, and related administra- tive authorities and exemp- tions. 7 JUL. NSC 50 directs reorgan- ization within CIA. Approved For Release 2005/02L~A~J~pP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005&]F/OR.C)X-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-Dec 49 Global United States 23 SEP. USSR's first nuclear exp oslosl ion disclosed by Pres. Truman; 27 Sep. acknowledged by TASS. 1 OCT. Communist China's People's Republic proclaimed in Peking, under Mao Tse-tung and Chou En-lai; 11 Oct. Chinese Nationalist government retreats from Can- ton to Chungking; 30 Nov. to Chengtu; 8 Dec. to Taipei, Formosa; 14 Feb. USSR signs 30-year mutual aid pact with Communist China, agrees to $300 million loan. 7 OCT. German Democratic Re- public proclaimed in Soviet zone under Grotewohl and Pieck; 7 Jun 50. GDR recognizes Oder-Neisse boundary line in agreement with Poland. 16 NOV. Shah of Iran visits US; 30 Dec. joins Pres. Truman in solidarity statement. 27 DEC. Indonesia's independ- ence from the Netherlands pro- claimed at Amsterdam (Sukarno elected president 16 Dec); 28 Dec. recognized by US. Approved For Release 200 ~ J k-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005]gIMRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-PPS` 49 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 28 OCT. Scientific Intelli- gence Committee (SIC) estab- lished by IAC under CIA chair- manship. 15 OCT. CIA's office of Deputy Director of Central Intelli- gence (DDCI), vacant since 10 Mar 49, made a statutory po- sition by Executive Pay Bill of 49. Approved For Release 2005/02q~ipP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0,RRIC RJAi-JDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Feb 50 14 JAN. US consular offices in Peking seized by Communist regime. 3 FEB. Dr. Klaus Fuchs, Ger- man-born British scientist, detained in London on FBI tip; 1 Mar. pleads guilty of atomic espionage for USSR. 14 FEB. USSR signs 30-year mutual aid pact with Communist China; agrees to $300 million loan. 2 JAN. US military protection of Nationalist China publicly urged by ex-Pres. Hoover and Sen. Robert Taft; 5 Jan. rejected by Pres. Truman; 12 Jan. Secretary Acheson warns of Soviet imperialism in Asia, declares Korea out- side US "defense perimeter." 19 JAN. Diplomatic boycott of Spa n ended by US; 27 Dec. base negotiations and loan of $62.5 million to Spain and appointment of US Ambassador (Stanton Griffis). 21 JAN. Alger Hiss convicted of perjury, having denied in- volvement in Soviet espionage in 1937-38. 27 JAN. US military aid ex- tended to first 8 of 12 NATO countries. Mutual defense assistance agreements signed. 31 JAN. Pres. Truman author- izes H-bomb development. 10 FEB. US Export-Import Bank extends $100 million recon- struction credit to Indonesia; 1 Mar. $20 million to Yugoslavia; 2 Sep. $150 million to Mexico. Approved For Release 2001W,1k-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/gEftVAfRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Feb 50 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 6 JAN. NSC redefines protec- tion by CIA and community of intelligence sources and meth- ods (NSCID Nos. 11 and 12); 19 Jan and 3 Mar. assigns intelligence tasks of exploit- ing defectors from abroad (NSCID Nos. 13 and 14). 15 JAN. NSC staff changes: James S. Lay, Jr., succeeds Sidney W. Souers as Executive Secretary. Souers made Special Con- sultant to Pres. Truman, and added to NSC's membership. 17 FEB. IAC's membership changes: from JCS, Brig. Gen. Vernon E. Megee, USMC, (new DD/Intelligence in Joint Staff) succeeds Gen. Todd. From FBI, Victor P. Keay succeeds Ladd as FBI Director's representative. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/OikptDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Mar-Jun 50 19 MAR. Cuba, Guatemala, and Dominican Republic cited by OAS committee for plots and conspiracies disturbing Car- ibbean peace; 8 Apr. OAS Council orders corrective action. 8 APR. US patrol plane downed over Baltic; 11 Apr. USSR charges viola- tion of Soviet territory; 18 Apr. denied by US; 5 May. US condemns USSR. 25 MAY. US-UK-French tripar- tite declaration on Middle East supports status quo and supply of arms both to Israel and Arab states. 25 JUN. South Korea invaded by Soviet-organized North Korean army; 27 Jun. US forces under General MacArthur committed by Pres. Truman to repel invasion; 8 Jul. MacArthur redesig- nated UN commander; 1 Oct. UN forces cross 38th parallel into North Korea. 7 MAR. Judith Coplon (US citizen) and Valentin Gubichev (USSR) convicted of conspiracy and espionage. 27 JUN. Pres. Truman orders 7th Fleet to neutralize For- .mosa, announces intensified military aid to Philippines and Indochina. 30 JUN. US national security and ni ternational expendi- tures in FY 50 reduced to $17.6 billion, from $18.9 billion in FY 49. Military strength declines in FY 50 to 1.4 million offi- cers and men, from 1.6 million in FY 49. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/0g/IInpDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 14 Apr. NSC 68 issued, ad hoc committee established on US objectives and programs for national security. 21 Sep-14 Dec. reports and directives issued .(NSC 68/1 to 68/4). uty Executive, name acting CI Executive on departure of I Isucceeded by Murray Mc onnel, 16 Oct. Mar-Jun 50 Central Intelligence Agency 6 MAR. Dr. H. Marshall Chad- well succeeds Dr. Machle as AD/SI. 7 .1 1 Dep- 25X1 A 28 JUN. NSC meetings taken over by Pres. Truman; 19 Jul. W. Averell Harri- man (his Special Assistant since 16 Jun) added to NSC membership; Jul. NSC establishes Senior Staff to coordinate Korean War staff work, with represent- atives from State, DOD, NSRB, Treasury, JCS, and CIA (DCI), Marion W. Boggs as Coordina- tor. 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/02/1Q 85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0LPDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jul-Sep 50 4 JUL. Radio Free Europe (RFE) beams first broadcast to Soviet bloc countries. 7 AUG. West Germany joins Council of Europe, meeting at Strasbourg; 26 Sep. NATO Council, a- greeing on integrated European defense command, includes Ger- man contribution in principle, 23 SEP. McCarran Internal Se- curity y Act passed by congress over Pres. Truman's veto. 29 SEP. William C. Foster suc- ceeds Paul G. Hoffman as ECA administrator; 4 Oct. Robert A. Lovett succeeds Stephen T. Early as Deputy Secretary of Defense. Approved For Release 2005102 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 GRET Approved For Release 2005k~E3RBT-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jul-Sep 50 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 1 JUL. DCI's coordination staff (ICAPS) renamed Coordin- ation Operations and Policy Staff (COAPS), under Prescott Childs; Sep. Childs succeeded by James Q. Reber; 1 Dec. COAPS reorganized as Office of Intelligence Co- ordination (OIC), with Reber as acting AD. 18 AUG. IAC reconvenes, last meeting chaired by DCI Hillen- koetter. 12 SEP. NSC membership changes: Gen. George C. Marshall ap- pointed Secretary of Defense to succeed Louis A. Johnson; 12 Oct. DCI Smith replaces Hillenkoetter; 16 Dec. Charles E. Wilson appointed head of Office of Defense Mobilization. 18 AUG. Lt. Gen. Walter B. Smith appointed by Pres. Tru- man to succeed R.H. Hillenkoet- ter as DCI; 21 Aug. William H. Jackson appointed as Smith's DDCI; 28 Aug. Smith confirmed by Senate; 7 Oct. sworn in. Approved For Release 2005/0 Q1I PP P85B00803R000200050002-6 -SIE Approved For Release 2005/0SfBC- JZIEi-IMP85B00803R000200050002-6 Oct-Dec 50 Global United States 7 OCT. Chinese Communist for- ces invade Tibet; Oct. intervene in Korean war. NOV. Japan begins rearmament. 1 NOV. Assassination attempted with creation of quasi-mili on Pres. Truman by two Puerto tary National Police Reserve Rican nationalists at Blair to compensate for shift of House. US forces to Korea. 28 NOV. Greece and Yugoslavia restore diplomatic ties. 19 DEC. Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- hower appointed by Pres. Tru- man to head NATO forces as Supreme Allied Commander, Europe, (installed 2 Apr 51 in Paris). 23 DEC. US commits military aid of Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, in defense agreement with these countries and - 38 France. Approved For Release 200 W: ,IQ-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Intelligence Community Oct-Dec 50 Central Intelligence Agency 20 OCT. IAC reconvenes, first meeting chaired by new DCI Smith: Armstrong (State), Canine (for Irwin, Army), John- son (Navy), Cabell (Air Force), Colby (AEC), Megee (JCS), and Meffert W. Kuhrtz (for Keay, FBI). 7 DEC. Watch Committee (WC) established by IAC. NOV. CIA Senior Representative 25X1A posts established abroad, with State agreement, starting with 13 NOV. CIA's intelligence pro- duction offices reorganized: ORE replaced by Office of Na- tional Estimates (ONE) under William L. Langer and Office of Research and Reports (ORR) for economic and geographic intelligence and NIS program, first under Theodore Babbitt, then Max F. Millikan, (4 Jan 51). Office of Current Intelli- gence (OCI) established 15 Jan 51 under Kingman Douglass. OSI remained under Dr. Chadwell. 1 DEC. Two additional Deputy Directors established in CIA: DD/Administration (Murray McConnel) in charge of admin- istrative support offices, re- placing CIA Executive. DD/Operations' (renamed DD/Plans, 4 Jan 51) (Allen W. Dulles) supervising OSO, OPC, and 00. 13 DEC. DCA's office reor- ganized: Lyman B. Kirkpatrick named Smith's Executive Assis- tant, followed by 25X1 {29 Jun 5 1) 25X1 Lof 29 Nov 51). , and (Jan 52). 25X1 - 39 - Approved For Release 2005/02/E]k'6P85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005IO J DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Jun 51 12 FEB. 14 nations confer on Brrii-t sh-sponsored Colombo Plan for economic development of South and Southeast Asia. 18 APR. European Coal and Steel Community treaty (Schu- man plan) signed at Paris. 29 APR. Mossadegh takes over as Iran's prime minister; 30 Apr. Anglo-Iranian Oil Company nationalized. 25 MAY. British Foreign Office employees D.D. MacLean and G.F. Burgess defect to USSR. 6 JAN. Resumption of US mili- tary aid to Nationalist China announced; 20 Apr. increased aid, along with US Military Advisory Group, announced. 27 MAR. US and Canada conclude point civil defense agreement. 4 APR. Senate resolution ap- proves further US military buildup (4 divisions) in western Europe. 10 APR. Gen. MacArthur re- lieved of Far East commands by Pres. Truman; Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway named as his successor; 19 Apr..MacArthur addresses Congress in joint session; 3 May. Senate Armed Ser- vices and Foreign Relations Committee hold hearings on his dismissal; concluded 25 Jun. 18 JUN. US and Saudi Arabia sign defense agreement. 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures increased in FY 51 to $36.1 billion, from $17.6 billion in FY 50. Military strength increased in FY 51 to 3.2 million offi- cers and enlisted men, from 1.4 million in FY 50. Approved For Release 20SE05/02/15 : CRET IA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/IE1tRRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community Jan-Jun 51 Central Intelligence Agency 15 FEB. Ma'. Gen. W.G. Wyman succeed s AD/SO; 1 Ju Lyman B. Kirkpat- rick named DAD/SO; 17 Dec. Kirkpatrick named AD/SO, APR-MAY. CIA given observer membership on subcommittees of Interdepartmental Intel- ligence Conference (IIC), with FBI agreement; Nov. ad hoc membership on IIC reactivated. 1 APR. Walter R. Wolf succeeds McConnel as DD/A. MAY. Economic Intelligence Committee (EIC) established by IAC. 20 JUN. Psychological Strategy Board (PSB) established by Pres. Truman,with Under Sec- retary of State, Deputy Sec- retary of Defense, and DCI as principal members. 22 JUN. NSC re-allocates eco- nomic intelligence functions (NSCID No. 15). MAY. Col. Chester B. Hansen appointed public "CIA spokesman" and chief of new Historical Staff; 3 Jul. took over Congres- sional liaison, assisted by Walter L. Pforzheimer. 26 JUN. CIA Act of 1949 amend- ed, liberalizes CIA authority to employ retired military officers. 25X1A 25X1A Approved For Release V T 0SE' Approved For Release 2005/RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jul-Sep 51 10 JUL. Korean armistice nego- tiat s started at Kaesong; 26 Jul. truce agenda agreed on; 23 Aug. first Communist break-off of negotiations. 30 AUG. Philippines-US mutual defense treaty signed in Wash- ington; 1 Sep. ANZUS treaty with Australia and New Zealand signed in San Francisco; 30 Mar. both treaties ratified by US Senate. 8 SEP. Japanese peace treaty signed by 49 nations at San Francisco, US-Japan security treaty also signed; 20 Mar. US Senate ratifies treaties. 15 SEP. Greece and Turkey join NATO, enlarging Allied defense system to 14 nations. 23 AUG. US and Israel sign treaty of friendship, commerce, and navigation. 7 SEP. US and Ethiopia sign economic-aid treaty. 11 SEP. Deputy Secretary Rob- ert A. Lovett named Secretary of Defense succeeding Gen. Marshall; 24 Sep. William C. Foster succeeds Lovett as Deputy Secretary. Approved For Release 20515ETA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/OJJ pjE-'IIDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community Jul-Sep 51 Central Intelligence Agency JUL. Interagency Priorities Committee (IPC) for secret col- lection requirements establish- ed by IAC. JUL. IAC's membership changes: from JCS, Brig. Gen. R.C. Partridge succeeds Megee; from Air Force, Maj. Gen. John A. Samford succeeds Cabell (Nov). AUG. Bureau of the Budget gains membership on NSC Sen- ior Staff. 3 JUL. CIA Career Corps plan submitted to DCI Smith by Matthew Baird, Director of Training; Sep. Career Service Com- mittee established under DD/A. 17 Sep. DCI endorses report, but rejects "small elite corps", favors eventually in- cluding "all personnel in CIA, except clerical personnel, on a career basis". 9 JUL. Western Hemisphere Division (WH) established in DD/P as first combined OSO-OPC area division; 9 Oct. Near East/Africa Division (NEA) established; 5 Jan 52. area division mergers completed. 23 AUG. Allen W. Dulles, DD/P, succeeds William H. Jackson as DDCI. (Jackson named as DCI's Special Assistant and Senior Consultant, continued on DCI's executive committee.) Frank G. Wisner (AD/Policy Coordination) succeeds Dulles as DD/P, Wisner in turn replac- ed by Kilbourne Johnston in OPC. Approved For Release 2005/~2DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005 Mpt f RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Oct-Dec 51 25 OCT. Conservatives win in British elections; 26 Oct. Winston Churchill returns to power as Prime Min- ister; 27 Oct. Anthony Eden named Foreign Secretary. NOV-DEC. Espionage cases sur- faced in Eastern Europe: (1) 20 Nov. US transport plane downed in Hungary; 2 Dec. denounced by USSR as "spy carrier"; 23 Dec. fliers sen- tenced then released as US pays fines, closes two Hungarian consulates, and bans travel to Hungary; (2) 27 Nov. announcement of Czech Vice Premier Rudolph Slansky's arrest for espionage; (3) 11 Dec. Romania charges US parachuted two saboteurs in Oct; 20 Dec. denied by US. 10 OCT. Mutual Security Act signed combining US economic and military aid into coordin- ated 3-year, world-wide anti- Communist program (W. Averell Harriman, Director); 31 Oct. $7.33 billion ap- propriation signed. 14 NOV. US and Yugoslavia sign military aid agreement. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/0$I l ;WWlllg DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Oct-Dec 51 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 23 OCT. NSC defines "scope and pace" of covert operations in NSC 10/5. 31 DEC. Raymond B. Allen suc- ceeds Gordon Gray as PSB staff director. 28 DEC. Col. L.K. White named Asst. DD/A under Wolf, effec- tive 1 Jan 52. Approved For Release 2005/0~ t4fDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005f 71 R J -RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Apr 52 5 JAN. India and US sign 5-year technical assistance agreement. FEB-JUN. US-Latin-American military assistance agreements concluded: Brazil (15 Feb), Ecuador (20 Feb), Peru (22 Feb), Cuba (7 Mar) , Chile (9 Apr) , Colombia (17 Apr), and Uruguay (3 0 Jun). 20 FEB. NATO Council, meeting in Lisbon, agrees on rearmament goal of 50 divisions in West- ern Europe in 1952. 18 JAN. US foreign information programs reorganized in State Department as the Internation- al Information Administration (IIA), under Dr. Wilson Comp- ton. 28 FEB. US and Japan sign base agreement, supplementing 1951 treaty. 12 APR. Gen. Eisenhower resigns as Supreme Allied Commander, Europe, effective 1 Jun; 28 Apr. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway appointed his succes- sor. Approved For Release 200 LQ2,'l,~ ET-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0Z p1-1PP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Apr 5 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 12 JAN. Information security subcommittee, headed by Edward R. Trapnell, established under NSC's Interdepartmental Commit- tee on Internal Security (ICIS). 7 FEB. David K.E. Bruce suc- ceeds James E. Webb as Under Secretary of State. 1 MAR. Center for Internation- al Studies (CENIS), headed by Dr. Max F. Millikan, estab- lished at M.I.T. 2 APR. George F. Kennan suc- ceeds Adm. Alan G. Kirk as Ambassador to USSR; 3 Oct. declared PNG by USSR. (1 Mar. 00 added from DD/P). 1 JAN. DCI's executive commit- tee expanded: Loftus E. Becker named Dep- uty Director (Intelligence) (DD/I) with supervision over ONE, OCI, ORR, OSI, OCD, OIC Col. L.K. White, new A/DDA. Becker as DCI s xec. s .; 3 JAN. Dr. Sherman Kent suc- ceeds Dr. Langer as AD/NE and Chairman of Board of National Estimates. 25 MAR. Security Office and CIA's security policies re- viewed by J. Patrick Coyne (NSC staff) for DCI and IG, report filed Aug 52. 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/02/1~, ta- 85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/pF-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 May-Aug 52 15 MAY. Ethiopia-US technical assistance agreement signed. 27 MAY. European Defense Com- munity treaties and agreements signed in Paris. 23 JUL. Egypt taken over by Naguib in military coup; 26 Jul. King Farouk abdi- cates; 7 Sep. Naguib assumes pre- miership; 9 Dec. constitution dis- solved. 1 MAY. American travel to Communist-dominated countries banned by State Department. 30 JUN. US national security and international expendi- tures increased in FY 52 to $46.8 billion, from $36.1 billion in FY 51. Military strength increased to 3.6 million officers and enlisted men, from 3.2 million in FY 51. 20 AUG. USSR announces 5-year plan, providing 70% increase in industrial production. 23 AUG. Arab League security pact ratified by Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. 30 AUG. Iranian oil settlement proposed by US and UK; 24 Sep. rejected by Mossadegh; 16 Oct. Iran breaks rela- tions with UK. 27 AUG, 3 SEP. Ex-Ambassador John Foster Dulles, adviser to Pres. candidate Eisenhower, urges "peaceful liberation" of USSR's Eastern European satel- lites and rollback of Communist power, rejects co-existence and containment. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/?trkRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 May-Aug 52 Intelligence Community MAY. IAC membership changes: for Army--Brig. Gen. John Weckerling succeeds Bolling; Jul. Col. C.B. Cover- dale succeeds Weckerling; Aug. Maj. Gen. R.C. Partridge succeeds Coverdale. for JCS--Aug., Brig. Gen. Edward H. Porter succeeds Part- ridge. for Navy--Jun., Rear Adm. Richard F. Stout succeeds John- son; Dec. Rear Adm. Carl F. Espe succeeds Stout. 25 JUL. IAC establishes Intel- ligence Working Group (IWG) for economic defense intel- ligence to support NSC's Economic Defense Advisory Com- mittee '(EDAC). AUG. Adm. Alan G. Kirk suc- ceeds Raymond B. Allen as PSB director. 14 AUG. IAC establishes Scien- tific Estimates Committee (SEC), replacing the Scientific In- telligence Committee (SIC), and reconstitutes Joint Atomic Energy Intelligence Committee (JAEIC) as a permanent stand- ing committee of IAC. Central Intelligence Agency 9 JUN. DCI Smith's executive committee renamed deputies meeting. 28 Aug. Richard Helms (new Chief of FI Staff and acting Chief of Operations) added to committee. 5X1A Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/9t1RP RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-Dec 52 2 OCT. UK explodes its first atomic bomb off Australian coast, joins US-USSR "nuclear club." 15 OCT. Japan strengthens se- cur y forces, establishes Na- tional Safety Corps and Mari- time Safety Corps. 31 OCT. Bolivia nationalizes three largest foreign-owned tin mines. 1 NOV. US detonates first hydrogen bomb, at Eniwetok Atoll. 4 NOV. Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- hower and Sen. Richard M. Nixon elected President and Vice President, defeating Democra- tic candidates Adlai Stevenson and John J. Sparkman; inaugur- ated 20 Jan 53. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 200/91 -RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 20 NOV. NSC appointments an- nounced by President-Elect Eisenhower: J. Foster Dulles named Secretary of State and Charles E. Wilson Secretary of Defense; 28 Dec. Robert Cutler named President's Administrative As- sistant, directed to survey NSC organization and procedure (report approved 17 Mar 53). Sep-Dec 52 Central Intelligence Agency 29 SEP. Weekly intelligence reporting to presidential can- didates by CIA disclosed; Nov. National Intelligence Digest (NID) compiled for President-Elect. 29 SEP. DCI Smith, testifying in McCarthy-Benton libel suit, declares belief in security assumption that "there are Communists in my own organiza- tion," as in "practically every security agency of the Government"; 13 Oct. amends views, tells House committee that "I have found no penetration of Com- munists in my organization in the US," but that overseas, "in the past we have from time to time discovered one or two in our ranks." 7 OCT. Col. Stanley J. Grogan succeeds Col. Chester B. Hansen as public "CIA spokesman" and Historical Staff chief. 2 NOV. Photo Intelligence Division established in. CIA, assigned to ORR Geographical Research Area. 21 NOV. Pres. Truman's fare- well address to CIA employees. 29 DEC. DCI made permanent chairman of US Communications Intelligence Board. Armed Forces Security Agen- cy (AFSA) reorganized as Na- tional Security Agency (NSA). Approved For Release 2005/0SECRE-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0?2 CR4EPIDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Global United States 27 JAN. British Canberra bomb- er achieves less-than-a-day flight from London to Austral- ia (22 hours). 2 FEB. US Fleet's neutraliza- titi non of Taiwan ended. 28 FEB. Yugoslavia military collaboration agreements with Greece and Turkey signed. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 200!SBCE*-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 24 JAN. President's Committee of International Information Activities established, with William H. Jackson as chair- man and Abbot Washburn as Ex- ecutive Secretar ; 30 Jun. reporj filed; 8 Jul. summary of recom- mendations published. 29 JAN. Pres. Eisenhower's NSC convenes for first time. Secretary of Treasury George M. Humphrey and Budget Director Joseph M. Dodge added to NSC. FEB. IAC membership changes under DCI.'Dulles' chairman- ship. from JCS, Col. Samuel M. Lansing (alt. for Brig. Gen. Edward H. Porter); Sep. from AEC, Charles C. Reichardt; Nov. from Army, Maj. Gen. Arthur G. Trudeau. Jan-Feb 53 Central Intelligence Agency 24 JAN. Allen W. Dulles, DDCI, succeeds Walter B. Smith as DCI; appointment by Pres. Eisenhower announced; 10 Feb. submitted to Senate; 23 Feb. confirmed by Senate; 26 Feb. sworn in. 24 JAN. Lt. Gen. C.P. Cabell, head of JCS Joint Staff, named by Pres. Eisenhower to succeed Dulles as DDCI; 4 Apr. DUCI position re- established by National Secur- ity Act amendment, permitting either a military or civilian appointee but prohibiting both DCI and DDCI positions to be occupied simultaneously by commissioned officers; 10 Apr. Cabell's nomination submitted to Senate and approved; 23 Apr. Cabell sworn in. FEB. DCI Dulles continues Smith's deputies meeting as Executive Committee: DD/A Wolf, Asst. DD/A White, DD/P Wisner, and C/OPS Helms; 1 May. DD/I Becker replaced by Robert Amory, Jr.; 30 Mar. Lyman B. Kirkpatrick 16 FEB. C.D. Jackson named Pres. Eisenhower's Special Assistant for Cold War Plan- ning. 2A.FEB. Dr. Robert L. Johnson succeeds Dr. Compton as head of IIA. 27 FEB. Charles E. Bohlen appointed Ambassador to USSR; 27 Mar. confirmed by Senate. named IG; 6 Mar. 21 Apr. Huntington me a , OCI Director; 23 A r. DDCI Cabell,II 25X1A 25X1A I ~; continued as 25X1A xe ssistant.) Approved For Release 2005/0fftk~rDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/02J Ril,DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Mar-May 53 Global United States 5 MAR. Stalin dies; 6 Mar. Soviet leadership 6 MAR. US and Dominican Repub- passes to Malenkov; li-'c sign defense agreement. Deputy chairmen: Molotov, Beria, Bulganin, and Kagan- ovich, with Voroshilov heading' presidium; 20 Mar. Khrushchev, new presidium member, replaces Malenkov as Communist Party first secretary. 27 MAR. NIKE guided-missile 28 MAR. Libya joins Arab batteries for US air defense L& ague; announced; 30 Jul. signs base rights 17 Dec. first battery, at and economic aid agreement Fort Meade, announced. with UK. 10 APR. Dag Hammarskjold (Sweden) succeeds Lie as UN Secretary General. 15 MAY. Czechs pardon William N. Oatis, imprisoned in 1951 for alleged espionage activi- ties. 22 MAY. US and Ethiopia sign defense treaty. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/SLV1RpjJU-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Mar-May 53 Intelligence Community 7 MAR. IAC establishes Adviso- ry-Committee on Foreign Lan- guage Publications, chartered by NSC (NSCID No. 16), with CIA chairman and secretariat. 15 MAR. Air Force advisory com- mittee on air defense (Project Lincoln), chaired by Dr. James R. Killian, Jr., issues public report on US vulnerability to surprise attack. 17 MAR. Vice President Nixon named vice chairman of NSC. 17 MAR. NSC Senior Staff red ies gnated Planning Board, DCI represented by DD/I. Robert Cutler named NSC Executive Officer. 6 APR. Arthur S. Flemming ap- pointed Director of Defense Mobilization; 11 Jun. National Security Resources Board (NSPB) re- placed by office of Defense Mobilization (ODM), headed by Flemming. 27 APR. National security standards for government em- ployment revised, replacing executive order of 21 Mar 47. 12 MAY. Adm. Arthur W. Radford appointed JCS chairman, suc- ceeding Gen. Bradley; 2 Jun. confirmed by Senate; 15 Aug. took office. Central Intelligence Agency 17 MAR. DCI Dulles defends security and integrity of CIA personnel before Senator Joseph McCarthy's subcommittee. Again, 16 Jul to 3 Aug in subsequent correspondence with McCarthy, regarding William P. Bundy and Alger Hiss. 1 APR. Lyman B. Kirkpatrick succeeds Stuart Hedden as In- spector General; 24 Apr. named chairman of new CIA Career Service Board. 25 May. CIA's career ser- vice divided initially into 21 occupational-organizational groups. Approved For Release 2005/02/gU: I NP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/OSRIUj Li' 2DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jun-Aug 3. 16 JUN. East Berlin labor riots against government's new pro- ductivity orders; 17 Jun-12 Jul. Soviet mili- tary forces intervene. 10 JUL. Beria's dismissal and arrest on treason charges an- nounced in USSR; 23 Dec. executed with 6 associates. 11 JUL. Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther (US) succeeds Gen. Ridgway as Supreme Allied Com- mander, Europe. 26 JUL. National Liberation party in Costa Rica, under Jose Figueres, wins in presi- dential and congressional elections. 19 JUN. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, convicted spies, executed at Sing Sing. 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures increased in FY 53 to $52.5 billion, from $46.8 billion in FY 52. US military strength down to 3.5 million officers and enlisted men, from 3.6 million in FY 52. 15 JUL. US and Japan begin security agreement negotia- tions (agreement signed 8 Mar 54). 27 JUL. Korean armistice agree- ment signed at Panmunjon. 8 AUG. USSR announces achieve- ment of hydrogen bomb; 12 Aug. bomb exploded; 20 Aug. announced. 15 AUG. Mossadegh dismissed by Shah of Iran, replaced by Zahedi; 20 Aug. Mossadegh arrested; 8 Nov-21 Dec. tried and sentenced for treason. Approved For Release 200 /02 15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 E RET Approved For Release 2005] RJ -RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jun-Aug 53 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 20-23 JUL. Congresssional joint 'watchdog" committee for CIA and US Intelligence proposed in resolutions by Sen. Mike Mansfield and Rep. Edna Kelly. AUG. Committee on Manpower Re- sources for National Security, established by ODM, chaired by Lawrence A. Appley; 9 Jan. report published. 1 AUG. US Information Agency (USIA), headed by Theodore C. Streibert, replaces State's IIA. 6 AUG. Foreign Operations Administration (FOA) replaces MSA for economic aid programs; Harold Stassen continued as NSC member. 1 JUL. Col. L.K. White suc- ceeds Wolf as acting DD/A (named DD/A 21 May 54). 9 JUL. CIA rejects Sen. McCarthy's subpena demands, notifying him that "the policy of the CIA was to refuse to allow any employee to appear before any Congressional committee." Approved For Release 2005/OC / FJDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0S4tUl cfDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-Dec 53 Global United States 12 SEP. Khrushchev named USSR Communist Party first secre- tary of Central Committee. 4-7 DEC. US, UK, and French summit meeting in Bermuda. 26 SEP. US air and naval base rights established in Spain along with US economic and military aid to Spain. 1 OCT. US and South Korea sign mutual security treaty. 6 OCT-14 DEC. Vice Pres. Nixon visits 19 nations in Far East and Middle East. 12 OCT. US-Greek agreement on naval and air bases signed. 7 NOV-10 DEC. US airlifts Chinese Nationalist troops from Burma to Taiwan. Approved For Release 2005/Q2Li5 : IA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005E'-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 3 SEP. Operations Coordinating Board (OCB) replaces PSB; mem- bers include Under Secretary of State Walter B. Smith (chair- man), C.D. Jackson (as President's representative), DOD, FOA, and CIA representa- tives (DCI Dulles. assisted 9 SEP. Guided missiles devel- opment coordinating committee established in DOD, headed by Trevor Gardner. 6 OCT. Survey committee on community's watch system es- tablished by IAC (report filed 26 Apr 54). 13-14 OCT. NSC criticism of US military budgets disclosed, re-review by JCS undertaken. 5 NOV. Security regulations for classification and safeguarding of -'..nformation recodified by executive order. Sep-Dar 53 Central Intelligence Agency 14 DEC. DCI Dulles joins briefings of Mayor's Conference on National Defense in Washington. Approved For Release 2005/Q,2L1~5,FiZDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0 lUREI2DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-Mar 54 JAN-APR. Defectors from USSR request political asylum abroad. 24 ,Tan. Rastovorov, in Japan; 20 Feb. Khokhlov, in Frank- furt; 13 Apr. Petrov, in Austra- lia. 7 JAN. Pres. Eisenhower an- nounces US "massive retalia- tion" defense strategy; 12 Jan. amplified in speech by Secretary Dulles. 21 JAN. Nautilus, first atomic- powered submarine, launched at Groton, Conn; 30 Sep. commissioned. 25 FEB. Nasser takes over Egypt; 27 Feb. Naguib restored; 17 Apr. Naguib ousted again. 13 MAR-7 MAY. Viet-Minh forces in massive assault overcome French-held Dienbienphu; 1 Apr. invade Cambodia. 10 FEB. Strategic Missile Evaluation Committee, chaired by AEC commissioner Dr. John von Neumann, recommends ICBM with nuclear warhead; 21 Jun. Atlas development assigned to Air Research and Development Command (Brig. Gen. B.A. Schriever). 26 FEB. Sen. John W. Bricker's constitutional amendment, re- quiring Senate approval of US Executive's foreign agreements, defeated in Senate, 60-31. Approved For Release 2005/ k ft RDP85BOO803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 200x- EqA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Afm Jan-Mar 54 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency JAN. Supergrade Review Board reestablished, under DDCI Cabell's chairmanship. 1 FEB. Richard M. Bissell, Jr. named DCI Dulles' Special As- sistant for Planning and Coor- dination and member of his deputies meeting; 1 Jul. joined by J.Q. Reber when OIC was liquidated, ab- sorbed OIC's community coor- dination staff functions ex- cept IAC secretariat, which was transferred to DDI/ONE. MAR. Congressional leaders resume criticism of CIA: Sen. Mike Mansfield publishes details of alleged intelli- gence and operational errors, and calls again for a joint "watchdog" committee; 2 Jun. Sen. Joseph McCarthy charges CIA. infiltrated by Communists; 23 Jun. Rep. Peter Frelinghuysen, Jr., proposes a Presidential commission on foreign intelligence. 1 MAR. Civil Service Commis- sion discloses 48 separations from CIA as security risks; 11 Oct. further separations reported, totaling 75 for CIA out of US total of security risks (for punmu 28 May 53 to 30 Jun 54). Approved For Release 2005/02/ Rl DP85B00803R000200050002-6 JLIVIJ Approved For Release 2005/02/ RE1F85B00803R000200050002-6 Mar-May 54 2 APR. Pakistan and Turkey sign defense agreement; 19 May. US and Pakistan sign defense agreement. 8 MAR. US and Japan sign de- fense and economic agreements. 19 MAR. US discloses "atoms for peace" plan, including proposal for International Atomic Energy Agency. 10 APR. Iranian petroleum consortium agreement signed by eight French, Dutch, British, and US compar}ies. 5 Aug. agreement with Iran announced. 29 APR. India and Communist China-sign agreement on Chinese control of Tibet and "peaceful coexistence"; 26-28 Jun. Chou En-Lai visits India; 19-30 Oct. Nehru visits China. 5 MAY. Czechoslovakia protests US propaganda balloons; 15 Oct. Hungary also pro- tests balloons. 13 MAY-22 JUN. UN 5-power dis- armament subcommittee holds 19 meetings in London on inspec- tion system, methods of pre- venting surprise attack, and ban on nuclear testing. 8 APR. US and Canada announce joint radar defense plans; 27 Sep. agreement announced on construction of Distant Early Warning (DEW) line. 25 APR. US and Iraq announce defense agreement. 17 MAY. State Department dis- closes Soviet Bloc arms ship- ments to Guatemala. 20-21 MAY. US signs military agreements with Honduras and Nicaragua. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005 ltRDP85B00803R000200050002-6 WME Mar-May 54 Intelligence Community 15 MAR. NSC 5412 reaffirms CIA =s covert action responsi- bilities in consultation with OCB and departmental represent- atives. 1 MAY. Watch Committee recon- st tuted under CIA chairman- ship by IAC; Jul. National Indications Center (NIC) activated as community supporting staff. 3 MAY. Robert B. Anderson succeeds Roger M. Kyes as Deputy Secretary of Defense and OCB member. Central Intelligence Agency 19 MAR. DCI Dulles, in. first press interview as DCI, crit- icizes press and US Govern- ment, "We Tell Russia Too Much," (U.S. News and World Report.) 26 APR. Kermit Roosevelt appointed Assistant DD/P for PP and PM activities, and member of DCI's executive com- mittee (first as Helms' alter- nate, then regularly starting in Aug.) 18 MAY. State Department per- sonnel advisory committee (Henry M. Wriston, chairman) files report, recommends in- tegration of Departmental and Foreign Service personnel. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/02 jJ9 - P85B00803R000200050002-6 Jun-Aug 54 ~tC~ 2 JUN. Japan's Self-Defense Force (JSDF) established. 18-29 JUN. Guatemala's pro- Communist government (Jacobo Arbenz Guzm.n) overthrown by insurgent forces from Honduras under Col. Carlos Castillo Armas; 10 Oct. Castillo Armas elected president. 20-21 JUL. Indochina armistice agreements for Vietnam (parti- tioned at 17th parallel), Laos, and Cambodia, signed at Geneva Conference. 25 JUN. US Senate resolution condemns Communist interfer- ence in Western Hemisphere. 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures reduced to $48.6 billion in FY 54, from $52.5 billion in FY 53. US military strength down to 3.3 million officers and enlisted men, from 3.5 million in FY 53. 5 JUL. US expels three Soviet embassy aides for espionage. 10 JUL. Agricultural Trade De- velopment and Assistance Act approved, including "Food for Peace" program. 20 JUL. Dr. Otto John, head of West Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Con- stitution, defects to East Germany. 9 AUG. Balkan alliance signed at Bled by Greece, Turkey, and Yugoslavia. 26 AUG. Mutual Security Act re-affirms and extends anti- Communist programs. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005gpCk:-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jun-Aug 54 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 9 JUN. International Organiza- tions Division (10) activated in DD/P. 4-8 JUL. Two investigating committees on CIA and US in- telligence established to meet Congressional criticism: Task force under Gen. Mark Clark established by Hoover Commission on the Organization of the Executive Branch; Study Group under Lt. Gen. James A. Doolittle, announced by Pres. Eisenhower; 30 Sep. Doolittle Group report filed (summary of find- ings disclosed by White House, 16 Oct).. 3 AUG. CIA Career Service es- tab it shed. 10 AUG. IAC membership changes: from Joint Staff, Rear Adm. Edward T. Layton succeeds Gen. Porter; from AEC, Harry S. Traynor succeeds Colby. Approved For Release 2005/0 18kCJ.A,~2DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0:~ RItPiDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-Dec 54 3-6 SEP. Quemoy and Matsu bom- barded by Communist China. 8 SEP.'Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) defense treaty signed at Manila by US, UK, France, Australia, N.Z., P.I., Thailand, and Pakistan; four "neutralist" states ab- stained, India, Indonesia, Burma, and Ceylon. 3 OCT. Western European Union WEU established, West German sovereignty and rearmament agreements signed in London by Allied foreign ministers; 23 Oct. Protocols signed in Paris admitting Germany to NATO and terminating Allied occupa- tion regimes; 29 Oct. US and Germany sign bilateral treaty. 4 SEP. US Navy P2V patrol plane downed by USSR over Sea of Japan; 7 Nov. USAF RB-29 recon- naissance plane downed off northern Japan. 9 SEP. US and Libya sign agreement on economic aid and military bases. 28 SEP. US requests repatri- at of Field family (Noel, .Herta, and Hermann Field) from Hungary and Poland, imprisoned since 1949; 16 Nov. release accomplish- ed. 1 NOV. Algerian war begins. 2 DEC. US and Nationalist Chin sign mutual defense treaty. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2003gMR.-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Sep-Dec 54 Intelligence Community Central Intelligence Agency 4 OCT. Herbert Hoover, Jr., succeeds Walter B. Smith as Under Secretary of State and OCB chairman; Dec. Nelson A. Rockefeller appointed as Pres. Eisenhower's special Assistant for Cold War Planning and OCB representa- tive. 8 OCT. Technological Capabil- it e Panel (TCP) , chaired by Dr. James R. Killian, Jr., es- tablished by Office of Defense Mobilization. 11 DEC. Council on Foreign Economic Policy, under Joseph M. Dodge, established to coordinate US Government's foreign economic planning. DEC. Prototype of U-2 high- artitude photo-reconnaissance aircraft achieved (first test flight Aug 55). 19 DEC. House committee, under B. Carroll Reece, concludes investigation of foundations, 20 DEC. Counterintelligence criticizes undue influence in Staff (CI) activated in DD/P. US foreign information and re- search programs. Approved For Release 2005/0/~DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0251 d* RpP85B00803R000200050002-6 Jan-May 55 8 FEB. Bulganin replaces Mal- enkov as USSR chairman; 9 Feb. Zhukov becomes de- fense minister. 24 FEB. Baghdad pact signed by Turkey and Iraq; 5 Apr. UK accedes; 23 Sep. Pakistan; 25 Oct. Iran; 21-22 Nov. Council holds first meetings, with US ob- servers present. 28 JAN. Military defense of Formosa Strait area authorized by Congress in joint resolu- tion; 29 Jan. approved by Pres. Eisenhower; 5-11 Feb. Tachen Islands evacuated with 7th Fleet as- sistance. 12 FEB. South Vietnamese army training taken over from French by US Military Assis- tance Advisory Group (P.1AAG). 5-7 APR. Winston Churchill resigns' es gns as Prime Minister, succeeded by Anthony Eden; Harold Macmillan succeeds Eden as Foreign Secretary; 20 Dec. Macmillan succeeded by Selwyn Lloyd. 17 APR. Afro-Asian conference at Bandung opens. 14 MAY. Warsaw Pact signed, establishing Soviet Bloc al- liance and military command organization, including USSR, East Germany, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Ro- mania, and Albania. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 200?#IB7a-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community JAN. 24-hour watch established in National Indications Center. 28 FEB. US Information Agency USIA) added to OCB membership. 12 MAR. Planning and Coordina- tion Group (PCG) established in OCB as coordination channel for covert actions,-by NSC 5412/1. Tan-May 55 Central Intelligence Agency FEB. CIA Scientific Advisory Board established by DCI, un- der chairmanship of ith secretari 3 FEB. DD/A directorate expand- ed and renamed DD/Support, to include Offices of Training and Communications and a special administrative staff for servicing UD/P activities. Col. White continues as DD/S. 19 MAR. Harold E. Stassen ap- pointed Pres. Eisenhower's Special Assistant on Disarma- ment. APR. Dillon Anderson succeeds Robert Cutler as Pres. Eisen- hower's Special Assistant for National Security Affairs and NSC executive officer. 10 MAY. Clark Task Force re- port filed; 29 Jun. submitted to Congress in summary form. Approved For Release 2005/0 f tftrf DP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/02/'i a 85B00803R000200050002-6 May-Jul 55 United States 15 MAY. Austria State Treaty signed; 27 Jul. sovereignty restor- ed; 14 Oct. end of four-power occupation completed, with de- parture of US forces. 18-23 JUL. Big-Four summit conference at Geneva (Eisen- hower, Bulganin, Eden, Faure). Eisenhower proposes "open skies" armament control, with US/USSR mutual aerial inspect- ion and exchange of military blueprints; 16 Dec. his proposal ap- proved by UN General Assembly. 29 JUL. US reveals earth sat- ell e plan for International Geophysical Year (IGY) in 1957; 30 Jul. USSR announces similar plan. 30 JUN. US and West Germany sign mutual defense agreement effective 27 Dec. 30 JUN. US national security and international expenditures reduced in FY 55 to $42.8 billion from $48.6 billion in FY 54. Military strength down to 2.9 million officers and en- listed men, from 3.3 million in FY 54. Approved For Release 2005 1 ~I,Ar-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 20011 RE 1A-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 17 MAY. Senate committee chaired by Sen. Richard Russell begins.investitjation of alleged US-USSR bomber gap. 19 MAY. IAC esta3lishes Ad Hoc Committee on Information Processing (AHIP), with CIA/OCD chairman and secretar- iat. 30 JUN. US aerial reconnais- sance over Sino-Soviet Bloc areas in FY 55 "substantially increased" over FY 54. JUL. IAC membership changes: 22 Jul. from FBI, Alan H. Belmont succeeds L.V. Boardman; 23 Aug. from Army, Maj. Gen. Ridgely Gaither succeeds Gen. Trudeau. 1 JUL. International Coopera- tion Administration (ICA) es- tablished within State Depart- ment, replaces independent FOA and is dropped from NSC member- ship. 19 JUL. Survey committee on community's guided missiles intelligence assets ordered by IAC, under CIA chairmanship; 25 Nov. report filed. May-Jul 55 Central Intelligence Agency 28 JUN. pointed as enior Scientific Represent- ative abrnad! 8 Aug. replaced in OSI by Dr. Her ert Scoville, Jr., from DOD's Armed Forces Special Weapons Project. 15 JUL. Construction of new headquarters installation at Langley authorized by Congress, fo CIA's temporary ordered demolished when vacated. 27 JUL. DCI Dulles' executive committee enlarged by addition of Special Assistant, Lt. Gen. Lucian K. Truscott, Jr. (re- tiring as Senior Represent- ative, Germany); Oct. Truscott attached to Bissell's Plans and Coordina- tion Staff. 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A Approved For Release 2005/02bV dft 1 P85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/0P85B00803R000200050002-6 Aug-Dec 55 United States 8-13 SEP. Adenauer visits Moscow; West Germany and USSR establish diplomatic rela- tions. 15 SEP. Cyprus bans EOKA terrorists. 18 NOV-19 DEC. India, Burma, and Afghanistan visited by Soviet leaders Bulganin and Khrushchev, economic aid agreements negotiated. 14 DEC. 16 states admitted to UN membership from Eastern and Western Europe, Middle East, Asia, and Africa (total 76 states). 24 SEP. Pres. Eisenhower suf- fers a coronary thrombosis. Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 SECRET Approved For Release 2005ffiti4 RIIA?RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Intelligence Community 5 AUG. Reuben B. Robertson, Jr., succeeds Anderson as De- puty Secretary of Defense and OCB member. Aug-Dec 55 Central Intelligence Agency AUG. DD/I directorate reorgan- ized; 1 Aug. ORR's Basic Intelli- gence Division reconstituted as a separate Office of Basic Intelligence (OBI); 12 Aug. OCD renamed Office of Central Reference (OCR). SEP. Studies in Intelligence established in OTR, 26 SEP. Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr., joins NSC as regular member; 3 Oct. Vice Pres. Nixon requested by Pres. Eisenhower to continue holding NSC meet- ings; 20 Nov. Pres. Eisenhower holds first NSC meeting since his illness, at Camp David. 8 NOV. Intermediate-range bal- listic missile (IRBM) program assigned to Air Force in coor- dination with Army and Navy; 17 Nov. Rear Adm. W.F. Ra- born, Jr., named Navy Coordin- ator. 1 DEC. CIA's Congressional relations transferred to IG's supervision; 2 Nov. Norman S. Paul succeeds Walter Pforzheimer as Legislative Counsel; Jan 56. IG also made re- sponsible for liaison with President Eisenhower's new intelligence consultants' board and for supervising DCA's public affairs office. 28 DEC. "5412/2 Designated Representatives (Special Group)" established by NSC for coordinating covert actions. Approved For Release 2005/02#tSC , RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6 Secret Secret Approved For Release 2005/02/15 : CIA-RDP85B00803R000200050002-6