NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP79T00975A028900010008-3
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
T
Document Page Count:
12
Document Creation Date:
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 1, 2006
Sequence Number:
8
Case Number:
Publication Date:
May 5, 1976
Content Type:
REPORT
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP79T00975A028900010008-3.pdf | 349.71 KB |
Body:
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Top Secret
National Intelligence
Bulletin
State Dept. review completed
DIA review(s) completed.
Top Secret
N2 699
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National Intelligence Bulletin
May 5, 1976
CONTENTS
LEBANON: Fighting intensifies in
Beirut port area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
EGYPT-POLAND: Warsaw decides not
to sell tanks to Cairo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
USSR-MOZAMBIQUE: President Machel
to visit USSR this month . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
POLAND: Dissidents criticize government's
foreign and domestic policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
FRANCE: Army's reorganization plans . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
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National Intelligence Bulletin
May 5, 1976
The struggle between Christians and leftists for control of Beirut's port
intensified yesterday, despite a call from the tripartite truce committee for a new
cease-fire. Both sides are using armored vehicles and heavy artillery.
The leftists have made new advances but have still not penetrated the
Christians' main defensive line. 25X1
The Christians must control the port in order to pro ec
s ra iya , their main s- ronghold in Beirut, and to maintain a major supply corridor
north to Juniyah.
Although the fighting has not yet spread beyond the port district, nearby
Christian and Muslim neighborhoods exchanged artillery fire throughout the night.
The presence of Palestine Liberation Army troops in many disputed areas of the
capital has probably helped contain the fighting.
Jumblatt yesterday called for a "roundtable conference" in France following
the presidential election. He has raised this issue before in an effort to gain
concessions from the Syrians, who adamantly oppose any proposals that would
loosen their control over political negotiations.
Jumblatt's announcement of the proposal just after a meeting with Ambassador
Brown may prompt fresh Syrian charges of US interference.
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National Intelligence Bulletin
May 5, 1976
The US defense attache in Cairo reports that Poland apparently has decided not
to sell T-55 medium tanks to Egypt.
The attache, who received this information from his Polish counterpart,
believes that pressure from Moscow caused Warsaw to back out of the deal. The
Poles produce the Soviet-designed tanks under license and in late 1975 reportedly
planned to sell Egypt 150 tanks for $30 million.
Warsaw's apparent refusal to supply the tanks compounds Cairo's problems in
keeping its armored forces operating. Cairo probably wanted the Polish-built tanks
to replace inoperable equipment in existing Egyptian formations, rather than to
form new armored units.
a large part of the tank
force is in poor condition because of a shortage of spare parts. The Egyptians have
told Western attaches that there are no replacement engines for the army's T-55
tanks, and that they are cannibalizing tanks.
Egypt is considering a reorganization of its army as one way to make do with
dwindling amounts of equipment.
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National Intelligence Bulletin
May 5, 1976
Tass announced yesterday that Mozambican President Samora Machel would
make an official visit to the USSR later this month at the invitation of the Soviet
government. Machel's visit, occurring soon after visits by Mozambique's defense,
commerce, and information ministers, underscores the warming trend in relations
between Moscow and Maputo.
Machel will almost certainly make a pitch for increased Soviet military and
economic assistance, and the Kremlin-always anxious to increase its influence with
Maputo at Peking's expense-is likely to respond affirmatively. The issue of Soviet
aid to Rhodesian insurgents based in Mozambique will also probably be discussed.
The Tass announcement may have been timed to embarrass Secretary Kissinger,
who winds up his two-week official visit to Africa on Thursday. The Soviet media
have alleged that Machel refused an invitation from the US to meet with the
Secretary.
The Soviets generally have treated Kissinger's trip in a routinely negative
fashion. Moscow's sensitivity to charges that it played a role in Ghana's decision to
cancel the Secretary's visit to Accra was evident, however, in an Izvestia article
published yesterday. It labeled such allegations as "absurd inventions" that are
another example of the recent US practice of seeing the hand of Moscow behind
every difficulty or failure in US foreign policy.
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National Intelligence Bulletin
May 5, 1976
Emboldened by the Helsinki agreements, Polish dissident intellectuals have
circulated a number of documents calling for more democracy, freer travel, the
unimpeded right of public expression, and a more independent foreign policy.
The US embassy in Warsaw obtained from its British counterpart last week a
typewritten copy of the "broadest, most forceful, and most courageous dissident
statement" that it has yet seen. This undated, unsigned manifesto is a comprehensive
criticism of Polish foreign and domestic policies.
The document calls for the restoration of true sovereignty, full popular
participation in government, civil liberties along West European lines, multi-party
democracy, economic progress not founded on the sacrifice of the workers, and the
free exchange of ideas and knowledge. It contends that relations with the USSR,
while officially friendly, overlook two centuries of injustice, including the 1939
partition and the Katyn forest massacre. It argues that the alliance with the USSR is
"costly" and asserts that Poland's natural ties are with Western Europe.
The document does not urge specific action, nor does it name names.
Moreover, it is not a call to violence. It does, however, challenge intellectuals and
workers not to "sell themselves" to the party but to develop "positive plans and
postulates."
When the manifesto becomes more widely known, it will probably strike a
responsive chord in many Poles. The document could heighten public tension over
economic conditions and recent amendments to the constitution.
The regime has limited its reaction to earlier documents of this sort but it may
find i necessary to act more firmly in the future.
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National Intelligence Bulletin
May 5, 1976
Defense Minister Bourges has outlined his plans for the reorganization of the
army. The plans reportedly include a decrease in the number of headquarters and an
increase in combat units. The changes are in addition to the partial reorganization
that occurred on January 1.
In addressing the defense committee of the National Assembly on April 29,
Bourges said 11 of the army's 51 headquarters will be eliminated and the 140
combat units will be increased by 10.
Bourges said that army strength will drop from 330,000 to 311,000 men,
contrary to an earlier report that President Giscard had reservations about a
6-percent cutback. There is to be no reduction in officers or noncommissioned
officers. The draft will be retained, and conscript time will remain fixed at one year.
A key feature of the reorganization is a regrouping of units to eliminate the
brigade level. The division will become the principal tactical element with seven new
divisions added to the present nine. These will probably be light divisions, stronger
than the current brigades, and will probably consist of four "regiments" and support
units. The 16 divisions will include eight armored, six infantry, one alpine, and one
parachute division. The reorganization would improve the army's unity of command
and ability to react.
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