CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T00975A007000250001-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
T
Document Page Count: 
17
Document Creation Date: 
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 3, 2002
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 23, 1963
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79T00975A007000250001-6.pdf1.09 MB
Body: 
Approved For Rise 2V0Vb :SEcRET0975A 000250001-6 23 May 1963 Copy No. C 101 State Dept. review completed GROUP 1 Excluded from automatic downgrading and declassification Approved For Release 210VrDO CM~ 0975AO07000250001-6 0 000 iiiiiiiiiiiiiii,/,iiiiii;hiii ~~~zz, / 2sx 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO07000250001-6 Approved For Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO07000250001-6 2003/n4/4n ? CIA RDP7oTAno75 r 'nn25nnn4 6 25X j n.~.~.-.......a F o or e j 23 May 1963 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN CONTENTS 1.. Haiti:. Situation report. .(Page 1) Indonesia: Sukarno agrees to discuss oil prob- lem with special US emissary. . (Page 4) . 4. Indonesia-Malaya: Planned foreign.ministers' meeting on Malaysia may not take place. (Page 5) 5. Cuba-Mexico-Brazil: Cuba is concerned. over the future of its commercial air links in the .hemisphere. (Page 6) Belgium: French complain of Spaak's anti- French.bias. (Page 7) 7. Notes: USSR; Britain; North Korea - Uruguay; PON Approved For Release 2003/03/10 CIA-RDP79T0097 A0.07000250001-6 25X` j j Approvor Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79975A007000250001-6 ippTbGA Pcjrn:D.PAIa 25X 25X1 HAITI -?- International boundary ----- Departement boundary p National capital CAYCSDepartomenl Capital Rod road Road REPU$LIC 23 M pg3Veld]?Rf lcls "VE egf46LRD&tT10 M0 $0250001-6 ,~ A roved .lease 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T A007000250001-6 jj pp 25X1 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN 23 May 1963 DAILY BRIEF' 0 *Haiti-. The failure of Duvalier?s domestic op- position to oust him by 22 May reduces but does not eliminate the possibility of new attempts against him in the near future. Duvalier may now increase his efforts to find and destroy Clement BarbotVs small group of terror- ists, the only known organized opposition element .in Haiti. He may also tighten his control of the country by further weakening the Haitian Army and boosting the authority of his militia and secret po- lice organizations, the Communist bloc. Other possible moves which Duvalier may now be considering include the expulsion of US Ambas- sador Thurston and efforts to acquire financial and economic support from other countries, including 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 11 E 1 25X1 d I he Polish Government is about to raise its diplomatic ties with Haiti to the ambassadors l level. I Approved Fo Release 2003/03/10. CIA-RDP79T0 975A007000250001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO07000250001-6 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO07000250001-6 25XM10 *Indonesia-. (Sukarno has agreed to discuss with a US special emissary the problem of Indonesia' s e- lations with the Caltex and Stanvac oil companies) (Ambassador Jones described his meeting with Sukarno yesterday on the status of the oil negotiations as cordial. Sukarno was noncommittal in response to the warning that the US f els the negotiations have reached a critical stage.1 (Shortly after the interview, Sukarno left on his annual "vacation" tour outside Indonesia. The date. and place of the proposed meeting were left open, but Sukarno indicated he would prefer. it be.held in Rome) (Jones received the impression that Sukarno was not familiar with the course of the negotiations which .has reached a point where the companies are threat- ening to stop exporting Indonesian oil after 15 June.)) 25X1 QO Lviay UO z DrUnj It Approved For Rel ase 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79TOO975 007000250001-6 25X I I I Approved For Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO07000250001-6 uth aam 1NES NORTH BORNEO pp MALAYA ualaLkgipUr. PROPOSED FEDERATION OF MALAYSIA ApIgve F 63-eft:N'I'liA/L3jiv'1',RAEVqM'P' q7 Imay Approved For Relea a 2003/03/10: CIA-RDP79T00975 007000250001-6 such a. meeting would be useful. done nothing to encourage the Malayans to believe (it is not clear that the Malayans ever regarded a meeting between Sukarno and Rahman in Tokyo as firm. Sukarno's public pronouncements, denouncing 25X1 the Malaysia scheme and the Malay leaders, have 23 May 63 Indonesia-Malaya- (The- planned June meeting on Malaysia of the Indonesian, Philippine, and Malayan foreign ministers may not take placed ~The Indonesians claim that Malayan Prime Min- ister Rahman has abruptly canceled a preliminary secret personal meeting with Sukarno, said to have been firmly scheduled for 23 May in Tokyo. Indo- nesian Foreign Minister Subandrio has told Ambas- sador Jones that Sukarno will consider the cancella-? tionan insult, and that the ministerial meeting, ten- tatively sched d for.7 June in Manila, probably ue cannot be held. DAILY BRIEF Approved For Relea a 2003/03/10: CIA-RDP79T00975 007000250001-6 25 j Approved For Relea a 2003/03/10 .CIA-RDP79T00975 007000250001-6 Cuba-Mexico-Brazil: IThe Cuban Government, apparently apprehensive that one of its two remaining commercial air links with the rest of the hemisphere may be severed by Mexico, is trying to rrange a commercial air agreement with Brazil. f Cuban airline flights are now running at three rou d trips per month. Cuba's other regular air link with Mexico City is the twice-monthly Iberia flights which stop at Havana en route between Madrid and Mexico. 23 May 63 j ^NN, vvca. I vI I'cIca DAILY BRIEF 6 25 007000250001-6 2501 M W11111171111111111711111117111117 . . ........ . 5 .. . ............. z'. M25 M. Approved For Releas 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79TOO975 007000250001-6 Belgium: (Foreign Minister Spaak fears that De Gaulle's European and Atlantic policies are rekindling nationalist forces in Europe, and will have the e[fect of making Germany the arbiter of the continentj t~Spaak*told the US Embassy of French complaints tha is attitude is anti-French. He said that De Gaulle and the French Government are extremely irritated over opinions he has voiced. Spaak denied he- is anti-French, but expressed hisfear-that German power may rise in the wake of present French attitudes) (He foresees that De Gaulle's policy will make Germany the principal continental European nuclear ally of the US, followed in time by the deterioration of French-German relations as Germany is forced to draw away from France. French policy could. also, he believes, drive a wedge between Anglo-Saxons and continental Europeans, and may force French Socialists into populap front arrangements with the French Communists,l) 23 A/lay 63 DAILY BRIEF 7 25X1 I I M ZDA I 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO07000250001-6 Approved For Release 2003/03/10 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO07000250001-6 %~O////"W"M%//O///////// 25 a pproved For Releas 2003/03/10: CIA-RDP79T00975A0 000250001-6 III NOTES USSR: The USSR launched another scientific data c oblection vehicle--Cosmos 17--from Kapustin Yar on.22 May. This vehicle is nonrecoverable, the ninth such vehicle successfully launched since the .Cosmos series began in March 1962. Cosmos 11, launched.just prior to the Soviet high-altitude nuclear test series in October, ceased transmitting on.11 November but has recently resumed; Cosmos 14 launched on 13 April, is also active. Britain: n a conversation with Secretary Rus at Ottawa on 0 May, Lord Home expressed London's reservations about the NATO Multilateral Force (MLF) proposal. Home indicated that the additional $2$- million cost to Britain might prove to be the last straw. The objection to the MLF by the British military worries the Macmillan government more .than Labor's ' attitude which was described as "am - bivalent." f 23 May 63 DAILY BRIEF 11 Approved For Relea e - 007000250001-6 25 FEB. 25 Approved For Relea - 007000250001-6 North Korea - Uruguay: North Korea has reached agreement with Uruguay for the establishment of a North Korean trade office in Montevideo. The office will provide Pyongyang's first permanent representa- tion in Latin America except its embassy for Cuba. Trade prospects between the two countries are not promising, and Pyongyang probably plans to use the office primarily as a base from which to push for political contacts in South American countries. p 23 Ma.y 63 DAILY BRIEF 9 Approved For Rele se 2003/03/10: C1 A-RDP79T00975 007000250001-6 25) ------ ---- -- Approved For Rele 000250001-6 25X1 25X1 25X1 NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE ESTIMATE (The United States Intelligence Board, on 22 A/lay 1963, approved the following national intelligence estimate! NIE 11-63:- "Main Trends in Soviet Foreign Policy F-- I 20 Z&y 63 DAILY BRIEF 10 IDAUUIUUULDUUU-1-0 wase zuujiuji -i u : tAA-KLW1 U I UUU ////,E Approved For R r se 2003/03/10 :CIA-RDP79T00975A00 00250001-6 THE PRESIDENT The Vice President Executive Offices of the White House Special Counsel to the President The Special Assistant for National Security Affairs The Scientific Adviser to the President The Director of the Budget The Director, National Aeronautics and Space Administration The Department of State The Secretary of State The Under Secretary of State The Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs The Deputy Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs The Counselor and Chairman of the Policy Planning Council The Director of Intelligence and Research The Treasury Department The Secretary of the Treasury The Under Secretary of the Treasury The Department of Defense The Secretary of Defense The Deputy Secretary of Defense The Secretary of the Army The Secretary of the Navy The Secretary of the Air Force The Assistant Secretary of Defense (International Security Affairs) The Assistant Secretary of Defense The Chairman, The Joint Chiefs of Staff Chief of Naval Operations, United States Navy Chief of Staff, United States Air Force Chief of Staff, United States Army Commandant, United States Marine Corps U.S. Rep., Military Committee and Standing Group, NATO Supreme Allied Commander, Europe Commander in Chief, Pacific Commander in Chief, Atlantic The Director, Defense Intelligence Agency The Director, The Joint Staff The Director for Intelligence, The Joint Staff The Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Department of Army The Director of Naval Intelligence, Department of Navy The Assistant Chief of Staff, Intelligence, Department of the Air Force The Department of Justice The Attorney General The Federal Bureau of Investigation The Director The Atomic Energy Commission The Chairman The National Security Agency The Director The United States Information Agency The Director The National Indications Center The Director Approved For 25X1- 25X1 Approved For Fase 2VGP0 :5EfT09757000250001-6 Approved For Release 2y :gER!10975AO07000250001-6