CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
T
Document Page Count: 
16
Document Creation Date: 
December 12, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 7, 2002
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 13, 1959
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6.pdf726.18 KB
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Approved Four Release12~V9/O4RIM116ME71TOOU7 A004300250001-6 13 February 1959 pU y State Dept. completed TO r P ~,nc ^ ac ECRET S u 63 DOCUMENT NO. S YU REV!EWE:3: Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 Approved For elease 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A00 300250001-6 , yam 25X1 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN 13 February 1959 DAILY BRIEF 13 February or talks on economic and technical assistance. King Mahendra committed himself to accept Soviet aid dur- ing his visit to Moscow in June 1958, but he has since lost enthusiasm for Soviet assistance an will probably be cau- tious in accepting Soviet aid offers. (Page 1) I. THE COMMUNIST BLOC USSR-Neal: A Soviet delegation arrived in Nepal on the oil company operations will be strengthens . ting will increase, and forces favoring greater pdartici ion in II. ASIA-AFRICA Middle East oil: Price cuts in Middle East oil may be imminent. This development, following the recent cut in the Venezuelan crude price resulting from the current world-wide oversupply of oil, is likely to dismay Arab government offi- cials. The Arab governments have actually planned on larger oil revenues. Arab pressure for more favorable profit-split- France? Tunisia disclosure of a French es- - -- - o 1Alegia ment concl ded last August to modernize Tunisia's telecommu- nications h s stem ora deter missed all French employees in its Postal, Telephone, and Tunlsla pionage network in Tunis probably will result in a substantial tion of its relations with France. Tunisia has dis- i 25X1 5' Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 France: Paris intends to propose to the North Atlantic Council that the NATO area of responsibility be extended to in- clude the Sahara. France's future relations with NATO may largely be determined by the council's reactions to the proposal; Premier Debrd recently emphasized that unless France obtains NATO backing for its Algerian policies it would be compelled to maintain its NATO-committed Mediterranean naval units "sep- arately." De Gaulle, however, explained that such units would "rush" to join NATO forces in case of -IF LATE ITEM *USSR-Iran: Moscow has acted quickly to establish a record designed to justify retaliatory moves against the Shah's regime by broadcasting a Soviet memorandum handed to the Iranian for- eign minister in Tehran on 10 February, following the breakdown of negotiations for a nonaggression pact. The lengthy memorandum 13 Feb 59 DAILY BRIEF 25 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 Approved ForR lease 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A 04300250001-6 describes in detail Soviet efforts to meet the Shah's initiative by accepting Iran's initial draft and by conceding that Iran could remain in the Baghdad Pact. Moscow charges, however, that the decision of the Shah's government to renounce its own pro- posals was "prompted by the Americans," and marks a "turning point" in Soviet-Iranian relations. In reminding Tehran that the 1921 Treaty of Friendship obligates Iran "not to permit the con- version of its territory into a base for military action against the USSR," the memorandum suggests that Moscow is prepared to denounce a US-Iranian bilateral defense agreement as a vio- lation of the treaty. F IV. SIGNIFICANT INTELLIGENCE REPORTS AND ESTIMATES (Available during the preceding week) Implications for the Free World and the Communist Bloc of Growing Nuclear Capabilities. NIE 100-5-59. 3 February 195 25 01 4 9. Consequences of a Soviet-Iranian Nonaggression Pact. SNIE 34-2-59. 3 February 1959. j 59 DAILY BRIEF iii 13 Feb Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For~fj I. THE COMMUNIST BLOC Soviet Delegation to Begin Economic Assistance Talks in Nepal Moscow has announced that a Soviet delegation arrived in Nepal on 12 February to open talks on economic and technical assistance. King Mahendra had committed himself to accept Soviet aid during his visit to the USSR in June 1958 and had agreed that, after study of specific assistance projects, his government would negotiate final details with a team of Soviet experts. How- ever, Mahendra apparently had been discouraging the visit of the Soviet delegation The Soviet offers, renewed during a visit to Katmandu by the Soviet ambassador in early December, reportedly involve a variety of projects, including roads and road-building equip- ment, a hydroelectric plant, and civil air assistance. Moscow would lend Nepal up to $7,500,000 to finance the cost of the projects. The Soviet announcement of the delegation did not refer to the subject of a visit to Nepal by President Voroshilov, c oscow has reportedly exerted heavy pressure on Katmandu for the long- planned visit following Voroshilov's trip to India starting 24 Febru- ary, but Katmandu has attempted to put it off until next fall, using as an excuse the parliamentary elections scheduled to be held be- 25X1 25X1 tween 18 February d 3 April under the new constitution. 25X1 25X1 13 Feb 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 1 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 25X1 Approved For R4 II. ASIA-AFRICA Impending Price Cuts in Middle East Oil Plans of Western oil companies to cut prices of Middle East crude 5 to 10 percent within the next few days probably will set off a round of demands by area governments for a larger share of the profits in an effort to stave off revenue losses. The threat of price cuts, the first since 1953, comes at a time when Arab governments are demanding continued substan- tial production increases and a larger say in company operations. The reaction probably will be most severe in Saudi Arabia, which has experienced only moderate increases in revenues during the past two years in comparison with other Middle Eastern countries. Saudi Arabia's director of petroleum affairs last week indicated that his government was considering ways to put pressure on the Arabian-American Oil Company (Aramco) to assure a continually rising income. Cuts in the posted. prices of Middle East crudes would be in reaction to cuts in Venezuela last week and reflect the world oversupply of crude oil. In recent years, Middle East output has been increasing at a faster rate than world demand, causing pro- duction declines or relatively slower rates of growth;. in other parts of the free world. This pattern, however, apparently now is due for a change. Petroleum consumption in the free world is expected to grow be- tween 5 and 10 percent annually over the next few years. Since the remainder of the free world's oil producers are seeking a larger share of this increase, expansion of Middle East output presumably will have to be curtailed. Coupled with lower rev- enues from lower prices, this condition is likely to increase ten- sions between the companies and. the local governments in the area. 25X1 13 Feb 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 2 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6 25X1 Approved For Fielease 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A Tunisia's Relations With France' Again Deteriorate CDisclosures regarding the operations in Tunisia of a French espionage network- -together with President Bourguiba's claim to a portion of the Sahara and the French shelling on 9 February of a Tunisian village--probably will result in a substantial deteriora- tion in Tunisia's relations with France. The espionage network involved some Tunisians as well as French telephone and. embassy employees. It is reported to have been directed. by an assistant French military attache, and to have sought information on Alge-- Tian rebel activities and contacts with high Tunisian officials by tapping telephone lines, including Bourguiba's telephone he Tunisian secretary of interior claims that the network operated. under cover of a French technical assistance program concluded in August. Under this program, France was to expend $1,640,000 toward the replacement of the Tunisian telephone sys- tem. This project and a contract let to a French firm in Novem- ber may both be terminated, part of the emphasis Tunisia is placing on these disclosures maybe the result of France's refusal last month to transfer Tunisia's franc zone holdings to Tunisian control and to under- write Tunisian financial losses incurred by the devaluation of the French franc. The incident will be used to reduce still further France's influence and control in Tunisia. The dismissal of all French employees in the postal, telephone, and telegraph system-- all of whom were under contract- -was such a move, and will win popular acclaim because of widespread unemployment among l ti t b a an s Tunisians. Bourguiba probably will also demand a su reduction in the 650-man French Embassy staff. 13 Feb 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 3 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 25X1 Approved For -w III. THE WEST 25X1 25X6 proposal to extend the NATO area of responsibility to include France to Propose Extension o NATO Area to Include Sahara he French Foreign and Defense ministries have drafted a the "whole of the Sahara," The French definition of "Sahara" appears to be in geograph- was removed from NATO military jurisdiction in 1954 at France's requesf) ical terms, in view of De Gaulle's previous private allusions to extending the NATO area to the Sahara "as far as the Red Sea." The new proposal stems from official French views that NATO is being outflanked to the south and. that NATO support of France in North Africa, particularly in Algeria, is vital not only to France but to the whole Western world. French attitudes toward Egyptian President Nasir suggest that the proposal is also con- ceived in part as blocking further Egyptian influence Premier Debrd bluntly told. Secretary Dulles on 6 February that unless France was backed in its Algerian policy it would re- tain its Mediterranean naval units "separately." De Gaulle as- sured Dulles, however, that the French fleet would "rush" to NATO and become part of NATO forces in case of warp Algeria De Gaulle has previously criticized the "inadequacy" of present NATO naval command arrangements covering the Med- iterranean and Atlantic communications between France and North Africa, and has indicated his desire that a new naval com- mand be established. combining these areas under a French of - ficer. Debrd told. General Norstad in late January that France'sA 25X6 25X1 13 Feb 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 5 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6 25X1 Approved For Rel allies did not fully appreciate the contribution France was mak- ing to the alliance by its effort in Algeria) CThe vehemence with, which the French are presenting these views suggests that Allied reaction will be a major determinant in France's attitudes toward future relations with NATO. 25X1 25X1 13 Feb 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 6 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6 25X6 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 25X1 Approved For LATE ITEM Soviet reaction to breakdown of talks with Iran The USSR's initial reaction to the breakdown of negotiations with Iran for a nonaggression pact attempts to establish a record designed to justify retaliatory moves against the Shah's regime. On 12 February Moscow broadcast to Iranian listeners and its home audience a Soviet memorandum handed to the Iranian for- eign minister in Tehran which sets forth a step-by-step account of the negotiations. After describing Soviet efforts to meet the Shah's initiative for a pact, the memorandum charges his govern- ment with following "an evil game" in order to mislead public opin- ion, particularly in Iran. The memorandum points out that the USSR not only accepted Iran's initial draft of a treaty, but also conceded that Iran might remain in the Baghdad. Pact and was even willing to discuss revi- sion of the Soviet-Iranian 1921 Treaty of Friendship. Moscow claims that the decision of the Shah's government to renounce its own proposals--a point repeated several times--was "prompted. by the Americans," and marks a "turning point" in Tehran's relations with the USSR. According to the memorandum, this decision is proof of a "hypocritical and insincere policy" toward the USSR which will lead to "serious consequences." The memorandum foreshadows other bloc moves aimed at dis- crediting the Shah and stimulating apprehension and discord within Iran. The broadcast renews Soviet accusations that the Shah's re- gime does not represent either the national interests of Iran or the aspirations of the Iranian people. The memorandum also reminds the Iranian Government that it is obligated under the 1921 Treaty of Friendship "not to permit the conversion of its territory into a base for military action against the USSR." This suggests that Moscow is prepared to con- demn a US-Iranian bilateral defense agreement as a violation of the treaty. 13 Feb 59 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 8 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300250001-6 Approved For RLIc sp 7nn71n9104 ? r IA-RnRZ910 9Z5A 04300250001-6 1440p, 1w 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 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975A004300250001-6 Annrrn,crl Fnr Rc c d ~ ~nnQ75An~Rnn95nnn1_R - Approved For Release 2002/09/04: CIA-RDP79T00975AO04300