CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T00975A004400320001-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
T
Document Page Count: 
12
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 27, 2002
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 20, 1959
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79T00975A004400320001-7.pdf808.58 KB
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0 DGCUM NTNd. - __i NC CHAN 3F. IN CLASS. CI_A`3 LNG To, TS Pic?: i f;t ii;L ,V t)ATE: AUrN r DATE ! EViEWEF ~xi X1 00 State Dept. review completed 44 Approved For Rele~/1179T00975A004400320001-7 Approvedr Rele VV2/1bXUgK L79TOQA75AO044003 20 April 1959 Copy No. C) , 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO04400320001-7 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO04400320001-7 5X11 Approved A004400320001-7 Language of presidium birthday mes- sage to Khrushchev reminiscent of O adulation during Stalinist "cult of per- USSR planning to hold bloc foreign min- iatnra' rnnfnrnnrn cnnn Chou En-lai plays down Tibetan situa- tion and stresses Sino-Indian friendship (J3 India - Nehru's Congress party appar- ently losing popular support. Yemen Crown Prince Badr and Nasir agree that all foreign missions in Yemen will be closed with representa- tion to be conducted through Cairo. Icelanders aroused over latest fishing incident with Britain. O Bolivia - Government apparently has situation under control fol- lowing rightist attempt at revolu- tion. 25X1 0 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN 20 April 1959 DAILY BRIEF Approved Fo 25X1 WN, 2 I. THE COMMUNIST BLOC its "leap forward" pro ram of raid economic develo ment and social reorganization. Approved For R ease 2002/10/21 : - 04400320001-7 Khrushchev: Praise for Khrushchev in the unprecedented birthday greeting sent him by the party presidium is reminis- cent of the adulatory language used to describe Stalin at the height of the "cult of personality" period. Soviet leaders' 65th birthdays are not normally noted with party greetings. The message was signed by all full and candidate members of the presidium except Ambassador to East Germany Mikhail Pear- yukhin. apparently no longer a member of the nresiriium USSR: Moscow is preparing a bloc foreign ministers' conference in Warsaw, probably in April but certainly before 11 May, according to the Yugoslav Embassy in Moscow. The -Yugoslavs believe the meeting, which may be attended'by Com- munist China, is an expansion of an :earlier plan to have the USSR, East Germany, Poland, and Czechoslovakia meet on the German problem. The bloc foreign: ministers presumably will reiterate the. Soviet position on major European problems with the aim of strengthening the USSR's hand. in the Geneva confer- ence opening on 11 May. I I Communist China: Chou n- is minimized the Tibetan situation in his speech to the opening session of the National People's Congress on 18 April. He claimed that Peiping now is completely in control of Tibet and stressed the theme of Sino-Indian friendship. The official summary of the 30,000?- word. report suggests Peiping will actively seek to dispel the growing belief that China is the most truculent member of the bloc and indicates the Chinese Communist regime will continue Approved FO Release 2002/10/21: CIA-RDP79T00975 004400320001-7 II. ASIA-AFRICA India: Despite major etoonomic advances during India's First an Second Five-Year-Plan periods., Nehru's Congress party apparently is losing popular support. In recent municipal elections in the southern state of Madras., one of the Congress party's strongholds., the party loist control of Madras city and of most other large towns. In similar elections in Punjab state in north India, where the party made a good showing in the na- tional elections of 19579 it recently won only one third of 391 seats. Strenuous efforts by the high command to rejuvenate the party evidently are not reversing this trend, Yemen: Crown Prince Badr and Nasir have agreed that all foreign diplo -tic missions in Yemen will be closed and that representation will be conducted through Cairo. The move mayj be aimed primarily at reducing Communist-bloc influence in Yemen and suL'gestq the heretnfnrP nrn-Snviet Andr is fnltinc in line with Nasir's anti- Communist campaign. III. THE WEST Iceland- Britain: The Icelandic parliament and public are more aroused over th recent intervention of a British naval vessel in preventing the arrest of a British trawler than at any time since last September when Iceland extended its fishing limit to 12 miles. With elections scheduled for this summer, NL all political parties are seeking to appear as champions of D Iceland's rights, and the Icelandic foreign minister says the Communists have gained considerable ground as a result of these incidents.) 20 Apr 59 DAILY BRIEF ii. 25X1 roved For k,lease 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T0097 A004400320001-7 M111 A pp E Approved For lease 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79TOO975AOO 400320001-7 0011 FS/ *Bolivia: A rightist revolution broke out briefly in La Paz ME 25 1000 on t6e -morning of 19 April but the government apparently Etas the situation under control. The perennially plotting rightists apparently hoped to take advantage of the deep division within the governing Nationalist Revolutionary Movement., caused by President Siles' efforts to carry out economic reforms. Bo- 0~-livials protracted economic crisis.is likely to cause further sudo. den violent outbreaks by either rightist or leftist elements., M-1 t-1A MM07Q-rnnQ7CAnnAAnn'2')nnn4 7 1) 25X1 Approved For Io THE COMMUNIST BLOC Chou En-lai's Report to the National People's Congress Premier Chou En-lairs report to the opening session of the National People's Congress on 18 April indicated that Commu- nist China will continue its "leap forward" toward economic de- velopment and social reorganization. According to the official summary of 'the: 30,000-word report, Chou reiterated Peiping's ultra-ambitious 195'9 targets for steel--18,000,000 tons., coal --380,000,000 tons, food grains- -525,000,000 tons, and cotton --5,000,000 tons. Although Chou insisted that the 1959 eco-? nomic plan is founded on "practical possibilities," it neverthe- less is based on extremely high claims for production in 1958 which- -at least in the agricultural field--are not credited by Western observers. Chou praised the communes as China's best means of speed- ing up socialist construction and effecting the future transition from a socialist to a communist society. On the subject of Tibet, Chou claimed the situation now is completely under Peiping's control but admitted that mopping-up operations were continuing in "remote" areas. He played up Sino-Indian friendship, stating that it should not be allowed to be weakened by a "handful of Tibet rebels." Chou's report and the Dalai Lama's indication on the same day that he would not conduct a public feud with Peiping seem likely to put the Tibet situation at rest for the time being. No important new foreign-policy lines were.laid down,.. although Chou's treatment of Asian-African nations suggests the regime will actively seek to dispel the growing belief that China is the most truculent member of the bloc. Chou repeated Peiping's earlier criticism of the UAR's attack on the Soviet Union and attacked the "hostile" policy of the Kishi government. He re- peated--without any sense of urgency--the usual formulation that Taiwan is Chinese territory which must be "liberated9" and that plots to create "two Chinas" cannot be tolerated. Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T00975A004400320001-7 20 Apr 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 1 25X1 Approved For ease - 400320001-7 II. ASIA-AFRICA Indian Congress Party Continues to Lose Popular Support Prime Minister Nehru's ruling Congress party recently re- ceived two dramatic illustrations of loss of popular support: when its candidates were repudiated in municipal elections in Madras and Punjab states. The party lost its majority in Madras city, the seat of the state government, and in most other large towns in the state, despite the strong showing it had made in the na- tional elections of 1957. The major gainer was the Dravidian Progressive Federation, which won 45 out of 101 seats in Madras city against the Congress' 37. The federation is a regional south Indian partyof the lower classes, which opposes domination of south India by the "Aryan" north, attacks rule by the Brahmin class, and resents adoption of Hindi as the national language. The middle and upper classes in Madras apparently were apathetic toward the elections. In Punjab state, where the Congress party had also done well in 1957, it recently won less than a third of 391 seats at stake in municipal elections. This trend away from the Congress party at the municipal level is reflected in other parts of India. Despite strenuous ef- forts by the party leadership since 1956 to improve organiza- tional contacts at the grass roots, the party now has lost control of three of the four largest cities in the country--New Delhi, Bombay, and Madras--and controls Calcutta by only a bare ma- jority. Awareness of this problem is shown by the fact that party president Indira Gandhi has just postponed a trip to Mexico, pre- viously scheduled for May., and has declined an invitation to Lon- don in order to tour India on party business. Factionalism and apathy presumably will be her major targets. The recent voting trend also indicates that the major achieve- ments of the Nehru government in economic development are not being translated into political support. Madras state,. for instance, has the best record of any state in India in implementing its plans for economic development., and its capable, active Congress party government had been preparing detailed long-range political and economic plans for the 1962 elections. 25X1 25X1 25X1 A pro d For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO04400320001-7 20 Wpr vu CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 2 25X1 Approved For III. THE WEST Iceland Aroused Over New Fishing-boat Incident With British The intervention of a British naval vessel on 14 April to pre nt the arrest of a British trawler operating within four miles of the Icelandic coast has caused greater resentment than any incident since last September, when Iceland unilat- erally extended. its control over coastal waters for fishing from fourth twelve miles) Communist press and leaders, seeking to capitalize on the incident for political purposes, have called for a sever- ance of diplomatic relations with the UK. The Progressives (agrarians) have joined the Communists in demanding the :re- call of the Icelandic ambassador to Britain. The Conservatives are demanding that the government introduce the matter for- mally before the NATO Council. Consequently, Social Demo- cratic Foreign Minister Gudmundsson is planning to explore with the Icelandic ambassador to NATO the possibility of invit- ing NATO Secretary General Spaak to come to Iceland and review the situation With elections mandatory if the constituency-reform bill pass parliament, as is likely, the various political parties are seeking to make the most out of the situation. The Commu- nists in particular are seeking to appear as the most vigorous champions of Iceland's right to extend its territorial waters. The Conservatives, although they have supported the minority Social Democratic government in parliament, feel they must also take an uncompromising line in defense of Iceland's interests. The Social Democrats, the smallest party in parliament and con- cerned over their future as a labor party, will consequently be inclined, particularly, in. view of the inflamed temper of par- liament and the press, also to adopt an equally adamant attitude toward the British) The to limit issue. likelihood of British general elections this year tends the Macmillan government's maneuverability on this 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO04400320001-7 20 Apr 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 3 25X1 25X1 Approved For elease 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T00975A00j Rightist Revolutionary Outbreak in Bolivia A rightist revolution broke out in La Paz on the morning of 19 April,. _l utthe. government, apparently has the situation undercontrol. The perennially plotting rightists apparently hoped to take 'advan- tage of the deep division within the governing Nationalist Revolu- tionary Movement. The division is caused by President Siles' only partially successful efforts to carry out economic reforms suggested by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in order to secure renewal of the agreement between Bolivia and the IMF on which US financial aid to Bolivia has been conditioned. Bolivia's protracted economic crisis is likely to cause fur- ther sudden violent outbreaks by either rightist or leftist elements. Symptomatic of the government's economic straits resulting from the virtual suspension of US aid was the fact that as of 13 April the administration had paid public employees only 8 percent of the salaries they have earned since 1 January. The 25X1 government depends heavily on irregular forces. President Siles recently said that he thought his cabinet appointment for rural Indian leader Jose Rojas would keep Rojas and his "5,000 rifles" allied to him, thus guaranteeing government security. Sites em- phasized that Rojas' followers plus the 2,000 pro-Siles miners constituted the largest politically unified force in the country. Some part of the army and police would also be likely to remain loyal to Siles. The leftist faction of the MNR which has been op- posing the government's economic reform measures appears to have the allegiance of other civilian military elements, Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO04400320001-7 20 Apr 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 41 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For I as0 2001/10/11 ? CIA_RDP79Tnn975nm04400320001-7 THE PRESIDENT The Vice President Executive Offices of the White House Special Assistant for National Security Affairs Scientific Adviser to the President Director of the Budget Office of Defense and Civilian Mobilization Special Assistant for Security Operations Coordination Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities Special Assistant for Foreign Economic Policy Executive Secretary, National Security Council The Treasury Department The Secretary of the Treasury The Department of State The Secretary of State The Under Secretary of State The Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs The Deputy Under Secretary for Political Affairs The Deputy Under Secretary for Administration The Counselor Director, International Cooperation Administration The Director of Intelligence and Research The Department of Defense The Secretary of Defense The Deputy Secretary of Defense Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs The Secretary of the Army The Secretary of the Navy The Secretary of the Air Force The Chairman, The Joint Chiefs of Staff Commandant, United States Marine Corps The Director, The Joint Staff Chief of Staff, United States Army Chief of Naval Operations, United States Navy Chief of Staff, United States Air Force Assistant to Secretary of Defense for Special Operations Director for Intelligence, The Joint Staff Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Department of the Army Director of Naval Intelligence, Department of the Navy Assistant Chief of Staff, Intelligence, Department of the Air Force Supreme Allied Commander, Europe Commander in Chief, Pacific The Department of the Interior The Secretary of the Interior The Department of Commerce The Secretary of Commerce Federal Bureau of Investigation The Director Atomic Energy Commission The Chairman National Security Agency The Director National Indications Center The Director United States Information Agency The Director Approved F - 25X1 Approved For Rs;easeTOP/21, 00975"04400320001-7 / Approved For Releas/25EcRFE100975A004400320001-7 / ~iiioii i i iiii iii i iii iiii i i i ii i i i i i i i i i i i i ~ ir. / i i ~i, ~ i ii //,