CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY

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Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 CONFIDENTIAL CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY COPY NO -R OCI NO. 0300/61 5 October 1961 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE l DOCUMENT NO. NO CHANGE IN CLASS. ^ 0 DECLASSIFIED CLASS. ((HANGED TO. TS NAVY NEXT R?VI:W DATE: 1990 completed. DATE: 1--5 .JuyPOO BEYIEWER: DOS review completed OSD review(s) completed. nm7ENTIAL 25X1 9 f r Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 rnti CrnCMMTI A If Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 NOV EAST-WEST RELATIONS . , . . . , . . . . page 1 Moscow's treatment of the Rusk-Gromyko conversations and its general commentary on the Berlin situation suggest that the Soviet leaders are confident that formal negotia- tions will be arranged. Pravda conveyed a favorable im- pression of the New York ads, and a Soviet public lec- turer in Moscow has predicted the exchanges would be fol- lowed by negotiations ensuring a peaceful settlement. So- viet spokesmen have stated privately that the next few weeks will be decisive in determining the bloc's next moves and have hinted that the year-end deadline could be extend- ed. A Soviet memorandum to the UN on partial disarmament steps and European security arrangements also was intended to strengthen the Soviet effort to obtain an agreement on negotiations by indicating a willingness to broaden the agenda of any East-West talks. UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENTS . . Page 4 Much of the UN activity during the 16th General As- sembly--now in its third week of general debate--centers on private negotiations to avert a Chinese Nationalist veto of Mongolia's admission. Such a move would prevent Mauritania's entry and also have far-reaching consequences on Taipei's position in the United Nations. UN members are also attempting to break the deadlock between the So- viet bloc and the West over the appointment of an interim secretary general. SYRIA-EGYPT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 5 Nasir's prestige appears to have sunk to an all-time low following Syria's break with the UAR. He had ordered contingency military preparations to permit rapid movement of Egyptian troops to Syria, but apparently has become less hopeful that a counterrevolt will take place to afford him the opportunity for direct military action in its support. He probably now will concentrate on a large-scale program of subversion against the new Syrian government and also try to accelerate the progress of his own revolutionary movement in other Arab countries. The Kuzbari government and the "Syrian Army Revolutionary Command" have consoli- dated their control and, in order to allay suspicion a- roused by their rightist background, are attempting to conciliate public opinion by promising to continue and expand some of the social and economic reforms instituted by Nasir. The USSR is maintaining an officially noncom- mittal attitude toward the revolt, although its leaders probably see the split as an opportunity for renewed Com- munist activity in Syria. OSD review(s) completed. CONFIDE L BRIEFS Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 r-AMMeinIMMTIAI Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY CONGO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 7 Little progress has been made in the negotiations be- tween UN and Katanga representatives, and the situation in Elisabethville remains tense. Each side professes confi- dence in its military superiority and is preparing for pos- sible further conflict. The stalemate apparently has pro- duced further pressure on Adoula to order a Congolese of- fensive. The schism between moderate and Gizengist fac- tions in the central government continues. LAOS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 9 Souvanna Phouma, Souphannouvong, and Boun Oum are to meet at Ban Hin Heup on 6 October to resume negotiations for the establishment of a coalition government. General Phoumi has indicated that Vientiane is willing to accept Souvanna as premier if the coalition cabinet reflects a "proper balance." Kong Le - Pathet Lao forces continue "mop-up" operations against Meo units in the Plaine des Jarres area; Vientiane troops, meanwhile, are conducting patrols in central Laos. At Geneva, general agreement has been reached on the future role of the conference co- 25X1 FRANCE-ALGERIA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 10 French-Algerian negotiations seem likely to be resumed soon, in view of the reportedly favorable reaction of the provisional Algerian government to De Gaulle's 2 October television address. In Algeria, however, tension between Europeans and Moslems remains high and is being stimulated by the rightist Secret Army Orgaftization, which hopes to provoke enough violence to wreck any prospect of a nego- tiated settlement. While De Gaulle's threat to dissolve parliament and to reassume emergency powers has further antagonized his domestic critics, all except the extrem- ists seem hesitant, because of the lack of a democratic alternative, to risk action which might overthrow him. FRANCO AND US BASES . Page 12 General Franco's public statement on 1 October that "circumstances counsel revision" of the ten-year US-Spanish defense and bases agreement implies that he will soon press for new concessions. The treaty runs until September 1963, with a provision for automatic extension; any negotiations for revision would normally get under way in the next few months. Spanish officials have indicated for some time that they want more modern arms; more recently, in a sep- arate development, they have pressed for US support of ' Spain s and Portugal's African policies. CONFIDENTIAL it PP TFP.q Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 PONM VNT1AL Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 .r; N"We CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 5 October 1961 SOVIET DOMESTIC PROPAGANDA ON THE PROSPECTS OF WAR . . . . Page 13 Internal press and radio commentary associated,,,with major tough Soviet statements addressed to the West have on several occasions aroused anxiety among the Soviet.pub- lic. These have, in each case, been followed by efforts to allay domestic fear that war might be imminent. Some Soviet citizens seem to have developed a certain amount of indifference to official statements. Others, however, were undoubtedly perturbed by official statements that the international situation is serious but appear to ac- cept the reassurances which have followed. There appears F_ Kilru-,; to be little doubt among the Soviet people that shoheV^,s; posi.tlern on the German question is Just. CROP PROSPECTS IN THE SINO-SOVIET BLOC . . . Page 15 Crop prospects for the Sino-Soviet bloc in 1961 are not outstanding and in some areas, notably Communist China, are particularly poor. China's prospects for a third suc- cessive unfavorable agricultural year indicate that food shortages--together with malnutrition and related health problems--will probably continue to plague the regime throughout the coming winter and spring. With the exception of the New Lands, growing condi- tions for small grains were generally favorable in the USSR this year. Although expected to be 15 to 20 percent above the poor harvests of 1959 and 1960, this year's to- tal grain harvest will still be below the bumper harvest of 1958, leaving the regime with little progress during the past three years toward its ambitious 1965 agricultural targets. Total output of grain in the European satellites is estimated to be about the same as last year, largely be- cause of a bumper crop in Poland. No basic improvement in the per capita availability of food is expected for the satellites in 1961/62. East Germany, Hungary, and Bul- garia will probably have the most difficulty in meeting consumer demands for foodstuffs. HOUSING PRIORITY LOWERED IN USSR . . . . . . . . . . . . . A newly published figure for housing construction in the USSR in 1960, significantly lower than that originally claimed in the official plan report, is a new indication of reduced priority for Soviet housing and casts doubt on the possibility of achieving the Seven-Year Plan (1959-65) for housing. A substantial underfulfiliment of the plan in 1960 and subsequent housing data suggest that the So- viet regime decided in mid-1960 to sacrifice part of the popular housing program to other construction projects. Page 17 HUNGARIAN FIVE-YEAR PLAN REVISED . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page,. 18 Following above-plan performance in 1959 and 1960, the Hungarian regime has announced higher goals for pro- duction in certain industries and for national income in its WE- CON DENTIAL BRIEFS Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 nnnirfnGNTIAI Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY Second Five-Year Plan (1961-65). Planned investments have been cut, however, allowing larger expenditures for mili- tary purposes and, possibly, for repaying foreign loans. The revised plan is generally conservative and probably will be fulfilled in its main aspects. 25X1 COMMUNIST CHINA CELEBRATES NATIONAL DAY . . . . . . . . . Page 1E9 On 1 October the Chinese Communist regime went through the motions of celebrating the 12th anniversary of its founding, but in contrast to previous National Day cele- brations the principal speechmakers made few boasts con- cerning the past year's achievements. Instead they spoke of "certain difficulties," "three successive years of grave natural calamities," and "a reduction of agricultural out- put," and said 1961 and 1962 would mark a period of eco- nomic consolidation and adjustment. On foreign policy matters, Peiping's tributes to Sino-Soviet friendship were met by unresponsive Soviet speeches and pro forma Soviet attendance at National Day functions in both Peiping and Moscow. PEIPING'S RELATIONS WITH JAPAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 20 Communist China has in recent weeks engaged in a prop- aganda campaign of growing shrillness against the Japanese Government. Reacting to what it considers Prime Minister Ikeda's increasing hostility, Peiping now calls him "worse than" his predecessor, Kishi. Annoyed with Japanese So- cialists for their new coolness toward united front tactics with Japanese Communists in anti-US activities, Peiping is casting about for new leftist channels through which to influence Japanese politics. 25X1 FACTIONALISM IN SOUTH KOREAN REGIME . . . . . . . . . . . Page 22 Factional struggle threatens the stability of South Korea's ruling military council. Security boss Col. Kim Chong-pit, whose followers tend to favor protracted mili- tary rule and a state-operated economy, is pressing for the removal of the council's vice chairman, Maj. Gen. Yi Chu-il, whose group appears to want a more moderate approach to the country's difficulties. The chairman of the council, Lt. Gen. Pak Chon -hui is believed to be working to avoid a showdown. 25X1 GHANA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 23 The regime's arrest on 3 October of prominent politi- cal adversaries and leaders of the union which spearheaded last month's strikes underscores Nkrumah's determination to forestall the emergence of any effective opposition movement. The arrests, along with the removal of K. A. Gbedemah from the cabinet last week, have stimulated new discontent with Nkrumah's leadership, especially among labor elements. However, Nkrumah's move may intimidate into inaction Gbedemah and other moderates within the ruling party who appeared to bectygt~t~~~VVarlc, ,ppen opposition. ~~ rr f + HL 25X1 IV BRIEFS Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 I)KICInCMMT1A1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 BRITAIN AND THE COMMON MARKET . Page 25 London has agreed to outline to a preliminary minis- terial meeting to be held in Paris on 10 and 11 October the specific concessions it seeks before joining the Euro- pean Common Market (EEC). Criticism of British accession by other Commonwealth members has sharpened in recent weeks. The Macmillan government may find it increasingly difficult to reconcile the general assurances it has given the Common- wealth and British agricultural interests with an approach to the EEC that is sufficiently forthcoming to give the formal negotiations a good start early in November. Page 26 President Dorticos' month-long trip to the bloc has elicited extensive propaganda support for Cuba and paved the way for negotiations on Cuba's 1962 trade with the bloc. Continuing executions in Cuba and Cuban subversion abroad may increase Latin American distaste for the Castro regime, but Brazil has recently indicated its opposition to any multilateral action against Havana. El Salvador's provisional military government is mak- ing preparations for election of a constituent assembly in December and is developing a party organization for this purpose. It continues resolved to carry out its pro- Page 27 gram of basic socio-economic reform; concessions made last week to powerful landowning families on a decree favoring agricultural laborers were probably only a tactical maneu- ver in the pre-electoral period. fort. In order to sell its planes to non-Communist coun- tries, Moscow has offered them at reduced prices and has emphasized favorable credit terms. Some of the newer So- viet models, smaller and more economical than the earlier SOVIET TRANSPORTS IN THE WORLD AVIATION MARKET , . . . . . Page I There are few important differences in speed, range, and carrying capacity between the jet and turboprop trans- port aircraft of the USSR and comparable Western models. Western aircraft, however, are generally superior in fuel economy, cost of maintenance, durability, safety, and com- planes, will probably be fairly widely accepted abroad. CON~AENTIAf. Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 11ThIFIIlFNTIAI Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 w, f.. CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 5 October 1961 CYPRUS AFTER A YEAR OF INDEPENDENCE . . . . Page 9 Cyprus is experiencing large-scale unemployment, a serious drought, increasing violence, and the growing influence of a domestic Communist party. Greek Cypriot extremists continue to demand union with Greece, and some members of the Turkish minority are again coming to feel that partition of the island is the "final answer" for communal problems. The government continues to func- tion effectively, however, and both President Makarios and Vice President Kuchuk appear determined to make the Cyprus settlement work. Makarios, in the face of Turkish Cypriot objections, is pursuing a "nonaligned" foreign policy but--as indicated by his remarks at the recent Belgrade conference--with an awareness of Cypriot economic dependence on and cultural affinity for the West. Com- bating the continued growth of Communism appears to pre- sent the government with its greatest challenge. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Iftol, IA)P Iut1V I IAL Nwe EAST-WEST RELATIONS Moscow's treatment of the conversations between Secretary Rusk and Foreign Minister Gro- myko and its general commentary on Berlin suggest that the So diet leaders are confident formal negotiations will be arranged. Following the third meeting be- tween Secretary Rusk and Foreign Minister Gromyko on 30 September, Pravda on 2 October quoted from a US statement that the sessions were cordial, that they were re- lated to the possibility of East-West negotiations, and that Gromyko was likely to meet with President Kennedy. Soviet press coverage of the first two dis- cussions merely reported that the meetings had been held but gave no indication of the gen- eral atmosphere or possible re- sults. The coverage of 2 Oc- tober, therefore, conveys an impression that the talks are proceeding favorably. Izvestia also injected a hopeful note in an article which cla'ime..d. that the Soviet people did not believe that the international situation was entirely covered with the "leaden clouds of war." A speaker at a public lecture in Moscow on 26 September predict- ed that the Rusk-Gromyko talks would be followed by negotia- tions and cited the US-Soviet agreement on disarmament princi- ples as a favorable sign. The East German party organ Neues Deutschland echoed this line in an editorial of 28 September, stating, "Everyone realizes now that there will be negotiations." Polish party First Secretary Gomulka on 30 September also asserted that "on our side nothing stands in the way of a peaceful solution of the German problem by means of fruitful negotiations and mutual agreements." The Pol- ish news service reported that "UN circles" expect an East-West foreign ministers conference to be followed by a summit meeting. This general line suggests that Moscow views the Rusk-Grog myko talks as the opening of a decisive phase in the Berlin cri- sis. A number of Soviet journal- ists, in their contacts with Amer-- ican officials, have stressed that the next several weeks will determine the future course for the bloc and have hinted that the Soviet year-end deadline for a solution could be revised if negotiations were in process or scheduled. The third secretary of the Soviet Embassy in Mexico City stated that the USSR was not disposed to sign a separate East German treaty if there were real possibilities for East-West agreement. A Pravda correspondent claimed that the next six weeks would be most important for set- tirmg: a date for a meeting at the highest level. He added that.. the date could be "sometime in 1962" provided the US agreed to the principle of negotiations. A TASS correspondent also empha- sized negotiations and warned CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 WVVVT.V RFV T VW name 1 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ' Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY that if they failed to material- ize, Khrushchev would have some "very interesting warnings" at the Soviet party congress. Communist sources in London were apparently responsible for press reports that the bloc foreign ministers would convene in November to consider the next move on Germany. According to these reports, the bloc would re- view the results of current East- West contacts, such as the Rusk- Gromyko conversations, and de- cide whether to proceed with a peace treaty before the end of the year. If no East-West ne- gotiations were arranged by No- vember, the bloc would go a- head as announced and convoke a peace conference, but that if it was clear the West was pre- pared to negotiate, the Warsaw Pact ministers would recommend postponement of a peace con- ference until "two or three months" into 1962. Other press reports quoted "Communist diplo- mats" as saying that the bloc might postpone a separate treaty if the West agreed to negotiate a Berlin settlement. These semiofficial state- ments have been accompanied by an official effort to appear responsive to Western views that the agenda of any formal negotiations should be broader than the Soviet proposal of a peace treaty and free-city status for West Berlin. The Soviets have begun to emphasize European security and certain limited partial disarmament measures to show willingness to enlarge the scope of East-West discus- sions. The Soviets have made it clear, however, that European security discussions are no sub- stitute for a German treaty. Disarmament A Soviet Government memo- randum submitted to the 16th UN General Assembly suggested reach- ing agreement on freezing mili- tary budgets, denouncing the use of nuclear weapons, banning war propaganda, concluding a nonag- gression pact between the NATO countries and the Warsaw Pact nations, withdrawing foreign troops from the territories of other countries; taking measures against the further spread of nuclear weapons, creating atom- free zones, and taking steps to lessen the danger of surprise at- tack. All of these measures have appeared as provisions of earli- er Soviet disarmament proposals, although not necessarily as "par- tial" disarmament measures. The increase in the number of partial disarmament measures listed may be aimed at countering neutralist dismay over the Soviet position that a test ban solution can be reached "only" through agreement on general and complete disarma- ment. Several of the measures-- a NATO - Warsaw Treaty nonaggres- sion pact, establishment of a nuclear-free zone in Central Eu- rope:,; withdrawal or at least re- duction of foreign troops in Eu- rope, and a ban on supplying nu- clear weapons to other countries --are probably calculated to ap- peal to groups in Western Europe who favor tying European security arrangements to a German settlement. CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 WEEKLY REVIEW Pane 2 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ' Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET The memorandum's call for reciprocal commitments not to be the first to use nuclear weapons is at variance with a recent statement by Khrushchev. The Soviet leader--who in past years had advocated such an agreement--told New York Times correspondent SuT erger ear y in September, "It would be un- timely at present to say that in the event of war, atomic weapons would not be employed." He added that if both sides were to promise not to employ nuclear weapons but retained their stockpiles and the'im- perialists unleashed a war, "any side" that felt it was losing would "undoubtedly use its nuclear bombs." Berlin Bloc leaders continue to stress possible guarantees for future access to West Berlin. Gomulka said on 30 September that the peace treaty will allow a "solution of the West Berlin problem in a way. . .which will provide it with free com- munications with the world and international guarantees of the interested powers or guarantees of the UN." On the same day, Czech President Novotny asserted that if Berlin had become a question of Western prestige, "Let us agree on guarantees for West Berlin, as clearly indi- cated by Khrushchev." the deadline. The bloc's intention to sign a separate peace treaty by the end of the year continues to be muted in statements and propaganda, although it appears occasionally. Gomulka referred to the deadline in speeches during a visit to Prague; an Izvestia editorial on 29 Sep- tember mentioned a treaty by the end of the year; and East Germany has continued to stress SECRET 5 Oct Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 = 3 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 Nftw'law CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENTS The 16th UN General As- sembly is in its third week of general debate. Most activity, however, is taking place in pri- vate negotiations among UN mem- bers on such key issues as the admission of Mongolia and Mauri- tania and the appointment of an interim secretary general. Admission of Mongolia The Security Council on 2 October again deferred considera- tion of Mauritania's and Mongo- lia's membership applications. All 11 council members acquiesced in the deferral, reportedly to allow time for further negotia- tions with Nationalist China on its opposition to Mongolia's en- try into the UN. The USSR still insists it will veto Mauritania's application if Mongolia is re- jected. Mauritania's applica- tion is first on the agenda, but the USSR has circumvented this tactical dilemma by threaten- ing to veto Mauritania's admis- sion unless Mongolia has already been accepted. The Security Council will probably meet again soon on the problem, and a Nationalist veto of Mongolia then could accelerate the assembly debate on Chinese UN representation and might also lead to early Soviet efforts to have the assembly reject Taipei's credentials--a vote requiring on- ly a simple majority. The West wants to have the issue debated as an "important question" re- quiring a two-thirds vote. possibly be such that the group in the end would vote as a bloc and oppose Nationalist China. The Secretary Generalship The Soviet delegation has further modified its position on Dag Hammarskjold's successor in an effort to meet the Afro- Asians' objections and to gain their support for some form of the troika principle. The bloc is currently pressing a proposal for the Security Council to name a provisional "chief of the sec- retariat" plus three deputies-- one each from the West, the So- viet bloc, and the neutral states. This four-man directo- rate would be required to act in the spirit of "concord" and to serve until April 1963, when Hammarskjold's term would have expired. In his explanation of this plan to Ambassador Stevenson, chief Soviet delegate Zorin was ambiguous on the question of whether the Soviet terminology involved a veto power for the deputies. On 1 October, however, the Soviet delegation published a formal statement outlining the proposals and denying that Moscow envisaged a veto power by any of the deputies. The Soviet delegation has been seeking support from Afro- Asians for this latest plan. The USSR reportedly has agreed 25X1 to the appointment of Burma's U Thant as interim secretary general with full powers. F__1 Although spokesmen for the twelve French African states in the Brazzaville group continue to assert that they will oppose Taipei as a bloc if Mauritania is denied UN membership because of a Nationalist veto of Mongo- lia, there are indications that the group is not as unified on this issue as some spokesmen claim. Foreign Ministry officials of Cameroun, Togo, and even Senegal have recently expressed opposition to Chinese Communist membership in the UN. However, resentment of Taipei could The USSR's main purpose seems to be to avoid a decision which would reconfirm the exist- ting situation and represent a 25X1 defeat for the Soviet contention that the executive branch of the UN should be reorganized. 5 Oct I Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 4 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 rove %a The early-morning coup in Damascus on 28 September caught the Nasir regime completely by surprise, and the small military clique responsible for the action quickly consolidated its initial success with comparatively little resistance throughout Syria. With the possibility of any pro- Nasir counterrevolt in Syria becoming increasingly remote, Nasir appears to be slowing down the contingency invasion prepa- rations noted in the days imme- diately following the coup. The ineffectual drop of about 100 paratroops in the Latakia area early on 29 Septem- ber was meant to be the first move in an invasion plan appar- ently based on a faulty inter- pretation of the situation, com- bined with Nasir's determination to take the strongest possible stand against the rebels through- out the crisis. Freighters at Alexandria continued loading of invasion materiel until 3 October, probably in the hope that some sign of indigenous support for an invasion attempt would show itself. With the chances for direct military action apparently fading, Nasir will probably con- centrate on subversion. The Kuzbari regime in Syria, .well aware that it will be called reactionary, has made strenuous efforts to give the impression that social gains made during the UAR period will be retained. The appointment of a moderate socialist as minister of national guidance was a move in this direction, as have been several announcements that such worker benefits as employee profit ,sharing and participation in management would be retained and expanded. The agrarian re- form law decreed by Nasir also is to be carried out. leaders Akram al-Hawrani and Salah al-Din Bitar. Apparently, the Kuzbari regime promised early parliamentary elections in return for this support. Nasir's monolithic political movement, the National Union, has been dissolved throughout Syria. Schools have been closed while the curriculum is being "cleansed" of material glorify- ing Nasir as the champion of Arab unity. Egyptians in Syria have been ordered to register with security authorities as foreigners, but orders for their mandatory expulsion have been rescinded; several hundred have already returned to Egypt. The prospects for continued maintenance of a stable govern- ment in Syria do not appear good. Before union with Egypt, Syria was beset with internal political turbulence, and coups and counter- coups were'frequent. The Kuz- bari government will probably be subjected to increasing pres- sure from less conservative political groups. There is, moreover, reason to believe that some of the army officers in the revolutionary command are not entirely satisfied with the make- up of the Kuzbari cabinet. Only Jordan among the Arab states has so far recognized the Kuzbari government; Qasim and King Saud are undoubtedly greatly pleased at Nasir's set- back but have given no indi- cation when Iraqi and Saudi recognition would be extended. Beirut has been the-scene of several sizable pro-Nasir and pro-UAR demonstrations since the coup and is apparently being used by Egypt as a base of operations against Damascus. The new government's inter- nal position should be strength- ened by the 1 October declaration of support from a cross-section of Syrian political leaders, in- cluding those who were respon- sible for Syria's union with Egypt in 1958. Of particular significance is the open suppG5A of such leftists as Baathist Because Iran and Turkey were also prompt to establish relations with Damascus, their ships are being refused service in transiting the Suez Canal.' Public reaction in Egypt a ears to have been largely thetic, and the Nasir regime is reported concerned over the 5 Oct 61 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001 3..'ge 5 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY SYRIA International boundary Provincial boundary o 20 40 60 Miles 0 20 40 60 Kilometers ? Palmyra possibility that the Syrian re- volt might prove contagious. Nasir's prestige is described as at "an all-time low," and Egyptian police have been placed on alert. Moscow is treating the Syrian situation with caution. Although the USSR almost cer- tainly welcomed the split as an opportunity to resume Com- munist activity in Syria, its official attitude is circum- scribed by the importance of maintaining harmonious relations with Nasir. Ambassador Thompson believes the Soviet leaders will wait to see if the Damascus government can establish itself firmly and let Western powers "test UAR reaction." ._\_j, D A M A S C 11 S ", W A / Darn ? ~' \y ? Suwayda O R A N ` R K) E Y Q ishli ~~ ( Al The outlawed Syrian Commu- nist party on 4 October pub- lished a statement in a Beirut Communist newspaper hailing the revolt as "an expression of hatred for imperialism and Pharaonic domination." The party calls for release from jail of the "detained nations--- alists" and for "'a national democratic rule hostile to imperialism and based on free parliamentary elections." Party leaders, effectively suppressed by Nasir for three and a half years, are obviously looking forward to a climate in which they can operate more successfully. 5 Oct 63 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 6 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 CONFIDENTIAL CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY 3URY Little progress has been made in the negotiations between UN and Katangan representatives and tension is continuingr.,in.Elis- abethville. The points at issue are the position of Katangans European mercenaries. and the terms of Katangans reintegration with the rest of the Congo. Ka- tangan officials claim that the mercenaries have been dismissed, and that their repatriation now is the concern of the UN and the foreign consular corps. UN rep- resentatives charge that the Europeans have merely gone under- 25X1 ground. A high UN official has told the Katangans that unless they helped to round up the remaining white mercenaries, the UN would have to take "appropriate meas- ures" to seize the Europeans. The American consul in Elisabeth- ville comments that such measures might lead to a reopening of hostilities. They:>Katangan..XN:.megotiat ions are complicated by the belief of the UN in its military superiori- ty, and by Tshombe's apparent feeling that he must put up a bold front. UN commander McKeown, in a 30 September con- versation with Ambassador Gul- lion, admitted the difficulties in planning and the language barriers encountered by the UN in the past, but ascribed its present posture mainly to an un- willingness, based on humanitar- ian considerations, to go on the offensive. He deprecated the Katangan "attacks," which he said were actually ill-directed mortar and small-arms fire. McKeown indicated that with the addition of a small jet fighter capability, the arrival of 20 armored personnel carriers, and some regrouping of forces, the UN would have the Katangan sit- uation in hand. The American Consulate in Elisabethville, while confirming that the UN troops believe that "next time we shall finish the job we started last time," re- ports that the UN Elisabethville headquarters has no intelligence organization. UN troops have been ostracized by local civilians and have little chance to gain information by informal contacts. The consulate also reports that on the Katangan, side there is a mixture of confusion and confidence, with much talk of a "last-ditch stand" and "whip- ping the UN again." The Katan- gans have received at least one and possibly six Dornier light transports, which could be used for reconnaissance and limited bombing missions. UN officials believe that mercenaries and military equipment are still being smuggled across the Rho- desian border, the vehement pub- lic and private denials of Rho- desian officials notwithstand- ing. Rioting by anti-Tshomb6 Baluba tribesmen in areas around Elisabethville is further com- plicating the security situation in Katanga. The 30,000 tribes- men in the Elisabethville refugee camp reportedly are also being molested by pro-Tshomb6 youth groups. Estimates of the number killed in these essentially trib- al outbreaks range from 50 to 100. Tshomb6 has maintained a moderate posture on the question CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ;e 7 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 NWW' tit c'iui 1 %00# of negotiations with Leopold- ville, but he apparently re- mains unwilling to meet with Premier Adoula on ground con- trolled by the central govern- ment. Adoula, in conversations with Ambassador Gullion in Leo- poldville, has also taken a rel- atively moderate stand on the substantive issues, but he has so far rejected Tshombe's offer to hold talks at a neutral site. The continuing stalemate in Katanga apparently is result- ing in further pressure on Adou- la to order a Congolese offen- sive. He told Ambassador Gul- lion recently that he had threat- ened to resign in order to head off the "activists" in his cab- inet; nevertheless, Congolese military leaders apparently are planning a large-scale invasion of Katanga from both Kasai and Kivu provinces. The Congolese command has had no training for such an operation, and trans- port and logistic facilities are inadequate, while liaison between Mobutu's Leopoldville headquarters and the various army components is tenuous. There is evidence of a continuing schism in Leopoldville between the moderate and Gizen- gist factions which has not been healed by the appointment of several Gizengists to the Adoula cabinet. Adoula apparently is relying on splits in the radical bloc--particularly between Gi- zenga and Interior Minister Gbenye--to keep it under con- trol. He admitted to Gullion that there were differences be- tween himself and Gizenga but expressed confidence that Gizen- ga could be controlled. Gizenga, in a conversation with Gullion, pressed strongly for a Congolese constitution which would effectively end Ka- tangan separatism. He was e- vasive when asked if he favored Congolese military intervention. He also insisted that the gov- ernment must have relations with all countries--presumably a reference to his Soviet bloc and Afro-Asian supporters, whose accreditation Foreign Minister Bomboko has been trying to de- lay, Belgian Foreigii Minis- ter Spaak remains convinced that Belgian interests in the Congo can be. preserved only: through the reintegration of Katanga and the continued presence of the UN; he says he has been pressing Belgian economic in- terests, notably the Union Miniere and Soviet? Generale, to use their influence with Tshombe for the peaceful rein- tegration of Katanga. Coin pany officials in Katanga, how- ever, in the past have not al- ways agreed with Spaak and have frequently acted independently. Both government and company officials in Brussels are bitter about UN actions in Katanga. Spaak also told Ambassador Mac- Arthur on 2 October that if the UN again resorts to force, the Belgian public will be outraged and the government will be forced to take a public position against such action. handled by a Belgian colonel. Spaak has acceded, in the face of strong domestic opposi- tion, to pressure from Leopold- ville for the withdrawal of Con- sul General Crener from l;lisa- bethville. Spaak had earlier op- posed such a move on the ground that Tshombe would not accept a re- placement unless accredited to the "Katanga government," thus depriving thousands of Belgians of consular protection, Crener will not be re- placed, and Belgian affairs will be SECRET 5 Oct 61 Tir"," rr, - .._ Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 SECRET ''vil CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY Souvanna Phouma, Souphan- nouvong, and Boun Oum are sched- uled to meet at the front-line village of Ban Hin Heup on 6 October to resume negotiations for the establishment of a coali- tion government in Laos. These discussions, the first to be held since the Zurich conference in June, will be initiated on the Vientiane-controlled south bank of the Nam Lik; thereafter meet- ings are to be held on alternate sides of the river. Major points for discussion include the des- ignation of a premier, the dis- tribution of portfolios in the coalition cabinet, the demobili- zation and integration of the opposing armed forces, and the timing of the national elections. General Phoumi told Ambas- sador Brown recently that Sou- vanna would be acceptable as premier if a coalition cabinet reflecting a "proper balance" among the three groups could be put together. Phoumi indicated that he would endeavor to ob- tain key cabinet posts for "his" group, but felt Souvanna prob- ably would demand the Defense Ministry for himself. Regard- ing the vital question of in- tegration and demobilization of forces, Phoumi stated his in- tention to arrive at agreement on "broad lines of handling this question" prior to the formation of the government, with emphasis on the implementation of demobi- lization before elections. Pa,thet Lao - Kong Le forces have continued their mop-up activities in Xieng Khouang Province. Reports indicate the loss by Meo units of posts at Tha Lin Noi and Pha Phong in the Plaine des Jarres area. Farther south, in the areas south and east of Thakhek, Vientiane forces have continued their oper- ations to eliminate enemy pockets. At Geneva, general agree- ment has been reached on the future role of the cochairmen. The approved draft, which eliminates the initial Soviet demand for a veto by the co- chairmen over activities of the International Control Commission (ICC), allows them to make recommendations to the ICC, which it may accept or reject. In a 27 September discussion of the future func- tion of the ICC in Laos, however, both the Soviet and Chinese chief delegates took the position that it should carry out its activities only with the full agreement of and on request of the Laotian Government. They maintained that the concept of permanent ICC teams at predetermined inspection points was unacceptable. The two bloc delegates pressed the US delegate for an estimate on how much longer the conference would continue and argued that, inasmuch as the three Laotian parties have al- ready expressed their views in the Zurich communique, it would not be necessary to have a unified Laotian govern- ment delegation at the con- ference. SECRET 5 Oct 6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 9 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Iftw %W41 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY In a private talk with Am- bassador Harriman on 29 Septem- ber, Soviet delegate Pushkin reiterated the Soviet desire for an early agreement and indicated that there was at least some room for negotiation on the future of the ICC's operation in Laos. However, it is unlikely that the bloc would agree to any plan which did not limit the ICC's authority to the terms of a general agree- ment which would have to be con- cluded between the commission and a government headed by Souvanna Phouma--who has stated his opposition to the idea of an ICC with unlimited authority. French-Algerian negotia- tions seem likely to be resumed soon, in view of the reportedly favorable reaction of the pro- visional Algerian government (PAG) to De Gaulle's 2 October television address. In Algeria, however, tension between Euro- peans and Moslems remains high and is being stimulated by the rightist Secret Army Organiza- tion (OAS), which hopes to pro- voke enough violence to wreck any negotiated settlement. While be Gaulle's threat to dis- solve parliament and to reassume emergency power's has further antagonized his domestic critics, all except the extremists seem hesitant, because of the lack of a democratic alternative, to risk action which might over- throw him. While the only specific steps De Gaulle outlined on 2 October were aimed at establish- ing a provisional executive body to govern Algeria, he made some attempt to mollify both the Europeans in Algeria and the PAG on his ultimate intentions. He made up for his much-criticized failure to mention guarantees for Europeans at his 5 September press conference, and stated that he does not regard negotia- tions and moves to establish a provisional executive as mutually exclusive. He stressed that the initiative for any provisional body should come from Algerians themselves, although Paris will reportedly set the process in motion this month by establish- ing, as a forerunner, a "con- sultative committee" to advise the Delegation Generalein Algeria on problems of self- determination. French of- ficials profess hope--on the basis of indications they reportedly received during the last round of talks at Lugrin --that the PAG might be will- ing to discuss participation in a provisional body. During the transition to independence, the provisional body would be supported by the "local police force" De Gaulle SECRET 5 Oct 61 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 10 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SO' ARy has proposed. According to the press, it will initially comprise 30,000-35,000 Moslems now'serv-- ing in or as auXiliarie. . ,of French security forces--not the army proper-;-and later, if ne- gotiations with the PA;r are suc- cessful, would incorpo.?ate 15,- 000-20,000 rebel guerri .ia tr.oops.: A likely commander of the police force he envisages to support the proposed provisional execu- tive appears to be Brigadier General Ahmed Rafa, the only Moslem general officer in the French Army, who was promoted from colonel early in September and on 4 October was named in- fantry assistant to the commander in chief in Algeria. Foreign Minister Couve de Murville told Ambassador Gavin in Paris on 3 October that talks would begin soon with the PAG. The PAG had reportedly felt that France should make the first overture toward resuming talks. A PAG official in Tunis told the US ambassador there on 29 Sep- tember that the rebels were alarmed by the growing strength of the OAS. He said that while they feared De Gaulle might not be able to carry out commitments made in negotiations, they never- theless felt that only he could judge when the internal French situation would permit serious new negotiations. De Gaulle's speech will in- crease the determination of the OAS, especially in Algeria, to provoke violence sufficient to make a negotiated settlement impossible.. The OAS will prob- ably be encouraged by the impres- sive response in the European sections of Algeria to its 2 October call for a half-hour general strike. The mobs which SECRET have recently been active in Algiers were composed predomi- nantly of young European toughs who probably see little future for themselves in an "Algerian Algeria,'.' and question their welcome elsewhere. They have access to plenty of arms, and might face the army and secu- rity forces with the necessity of firing on them. De Gaulle's 2 October characterization of politicians playing "their discredited games of the former system" destroyed whatever good will he may have earned in his consultations late last month with party leaders. Parliament convened in a sullen mood when the fall session opened on 3"October, and the Socialist party has authorized its depu- ties to introduce a censure motion against the government whenever an "opportune time" occurs. Such a motion, if passed, would almost certainly lead to a dissolution of parlia- ment, but the US Embassy in Paris estimates that no re- sponsible political leader is currently prepared to meet De Gaulle in a full-fledged public fight. Meanwhile, in addition to the influence of the OAS, there are some elements in the armed forces which dislike De Gaulle's policies but do not want to precipitate 25X1 chaos and enhance prospects of a fascist-type seizure of power. They apparently hope to back responsible civilians who would take the initiative in 25X1 proposing and organizing a "demo- cratic alternative" which could assume power legally. 5 Oct 61 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 11 of 27- Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 lfto~ SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY FRANCO AND US BASES General Franco's public statement on 1 October that "circumstances counsel revi- sion" of the ten-year US-Span- ish defense and bases agree- ment implies that he will soon press for new concessions. The treaty runs until September 1963, and negotiations for renewal would normally get under way in the next few months. Spanish officials have indicated for some time that they want more modern arms; more recently, in a separate development, they have pressed for US support of Spain's African policy. Under the 1953 defense agreement, which provides for two successive five-year exten- sions unless one of the signa- tories requests cancellation, Spain granted the US permission to construct and use air bases located near Madrid, Saragossa, and Seville and a naval base at Rota, near Cadiz. In exchange the US has provided military and economic aid amounting to some $1.2 billion since 1953. Addressing cabinet members and top-ranking military officers at the celebration of his 25th anniversary as chief of state, Franco stated that the agreement needed to be revised to meet the new situation brought about by recent technical developments. In the spring of 1960, Munoz Grandes, chief of the Spanish High General Staff, repeatedly stressed to the chief of the Joint US Military Group and visiting American military S P A ~ N MADRI%7!~- SECRET U.S. BASES IN SPAIN 717 Air base I, Naval base 0 MILES 200 5 Oct. 61 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 11.2 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 `y SECRET `'#l CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY officials the need for strength- ening and expanding the existing agreement. The US agreement to quit Moroccan bases by the end of 1963 leads Franco to feel he is in a much stronger position to extract new concessions from the US when the Spanish bases agreement is renegotiated. Madrid will become increasingly insistent on this point as the military capability of Morocco improves. Spanish officials have already expressed anxiety on several occasions over the security situation in Morocco as the US bases phase out. Madrid is particularly concerned over the eventual renewal of Moroccan aggression against Ifni and the Spanish Sahara and over demands by Moroccan nationalists for the surrender of the en- claves of Ceuta and Melilla. Spanish officials have shown considerable displeasure over Washington's African policy. On 8 August 1961, a high official in the Spanish Foreign Ministry vigorously defended Portuguese policy in Angola in a talk with US Navy Secretary Connally. While the official stressed that he was speaking on a personal basis, he argued that the US defense agreement should logically lead to US support for Spain's posi- tion in Africa. In view of Franco's statement in his 1 October speech that Portugal was being attacked unjustly abroad because of its African policy, the Generalissimo may have in mind pressing the US for some expression of sup- port in Africa. SOVIET DOMESTIC PROPAGANDA ON THE PROSPECTS OF WAR Soviet domestic radio and press statements since July on the prospects of war have taken the line that while the inter- national crisis is, grave, the forces opposing war are strong and growing stronger, and that there is confidence that they will prevail. These assurances have been coupled with asser- tions of the military strength and preparedness of the USSR. There has been no indication that the population at large is being steeled to endure a war; the hardships of World War II have been recalled frequently and graphically, but without citations of heroism or patriot- ism. There appears to be little doubt among the Soviet populace that Khrushchev's position on the German question is just. 25X1 25X1 On several occasions, pub- lic anxiety was apparently aroused by internal commentary associated with tough Soviet statements ad- dressed to the West but widely publicized in the USSR. Such com- ment has in each case been fol- lowed by press and radio ef- forts to allay domestic fear that war might be imminent. Such occasion-1. have included Khru- shcheV's announcement on 8 July SECRET 5 Oct 61 wT, PTrT V T?'VTTTvur no a 13 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY of the suspension of demobiliza- tion,. his radio-television ad- dress of 7 August in which he said the possibility of a West- ern attack could not be excluded, and the announcement on 30 Au- gust of the USSR's resumption of nuclear tests. The most re- cent period of possible public anxiety coincided with a series of dire estimates of rising international tension by Soviet military leaders from 14 through 26 September. On 25 September, however, Khrushchev's statement to Nehru that talks ?*can and must play an important role in cleansing the international atmosphere" provided a counterbalance to the military predictions. Daily press and radio commentary echoed both lines but by 27 September had settled on a distinctly hope- ful note. Information has been sparse. on the conclusions drawn by the Soviet man in the street from these frequently conflicting statements. Some citizens ap- there was little propensity to blame either US or Soviet leader- ship. A trip by embassy officers in early August to Alma-Ata and Tselinograd confirmed this im- pression. Many of the individ- ual Soviet citizens encountered expressed either deep fear or hatred of the Germans. Another trip by embassy personnel in late August to Tbilisi, Bukhara, Tashkent, and Samarkand revealed continuing concern, especially among educated and politically informed Soviet citizens. The embassy noted, however, that they were receptive to explana- tions of US attitudes on Berlin. A trip to Murmansk by em- bassy porsonnel'.in early Sep- tember revealed "certainty" on the part of the few Soviet con- tacts made that war would not come because it would be a "ca- tastrophe for all concerned." Successful negotiations were expected on a German peace treaty. None of the Soviet con- tacts expressed any great con- pear to have developed a cer- tern over the resumption of So- tain amount of indifference to viet nuclear testing, regarding them. Others, however, are it as merely one more step in undoubtedly perturbed by the the military build-up of both reiterations that the interna- East and West. tional situation is serious, especially in view of the re- In Moscow, however, indi- gime's retention in the armed vidual members of the Soviet forces of men due for discharge. intelligentsia for the first In late July, the US Embassy time seem prepared to believe in Moscow reported that ordinary that war is a possibility. Soviet contacts in Moscow were In mid-September the US Em- beginning to express great con- bassy received a report that cern over the international sit- activists were conducting a uation. Their reaction was pri- house-to-house campaign to marily one of resentment at the reassure the population that Germans for involving the US the Berlin problem would be and USSR in their own quarrel; settled peacefully. SECRET 5 Oct. ai W1 WT V 'D 1rTWWW page 14 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 'V SECRET CROP PROSPECTS IN THE SINQSOVIET BLOC China Communist China is facing its third successive unfavorable agricultural year. Grain output for 1961 will probably be about the same as last year's estimated 185,000,000 tons. This is also the same level achieved in 1957, when there were some 60,000,000 fewer to feed. As a consequence, malnutrition and related health problems can be expected to rise sharply next winter and continue at least through spring, with a further decline in labor pro- ductivity and continued public discontent, Peiping has published no statistics on agricultural pro- duction this year, but avail- able evidence indicates that the 1961 winter wheat harvest was probably the smallest in several years. The third successive year of drought in North China, a reduction in the sown area, late planting with consequent heavy winter kill, seed shortages, and peasant apathy all contributed to this small harvest. Weather conditions in South China have apprently been relatively good, and an average crop seems likely. In Central and East China, however, drought conditions were reported throughout the spring and summer. The extent of drought damage to the late rice crop, harvested in October and November, cannot be determined yet. It is clOar, however, that the outcome of the harvest in this Yapgtze valley area--ac- counting for 52 percent of the rice acreage in China--wil?l have major significance for the coming year's food supply. Conditions in Hupeh, one of the major rice-producing prd-vinces in this area, are worse thus far than in 1959 and 19600 Despite continuing shortages of foreign exchange, Communist China is preparing to negotialILLEGIB for further grain imports from nonbloc sources in the coming av- a ready hinted o e anadian trade commis- sioner in Hong Kong that they wish to buy more grain in 1962 than was stipulated in the earlier agreement. The Chinese have contracted for delivery of 5,500,000 tons of foreign grain in 1961 at a cost of more than $350,000,000. Asian Satellites In North Vietnam, prospects for the important October-November rise harvest, which normally accounts for two thirds of the annual rice output, are causing the authorities concern. Field work is reportedly behind schedule in many areas, with transplanting of rice delayed by the abnormally dry conditions during July and August. Should growing conditions remain abnormal, the effect on the late rice crop will create serious food problems for the regime next winter. While North Korea's expecta- tion of a bumper harvest this year may prove overly optimistic, weather conditions suggest at least a normal-to-good harvest. Pyongyang has not been plagued by the rural mismanagement which has characterized Chinese agriculture over the past few years. SECRET 5 Oct 6] arc+ti+vrv ntitrTL+nr n.,' a 15 of :27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 ~.. SECRET %Wf CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY For the third year in a row the USSR has made little or no progress toward the am- bitious 1965 target for total agricultural output. Grain production this year, favored by weather in all but the New Lands area, will probably total 115,000,000-120,000,000 tons. Although 15 to 20 percent above the poor harvests of 1959 and 1960, this will still be short of the 1958 bumper crop, which by non-Soviet estimates was probably about 130,000,000 tons. The USSR called it 141,200,000, and made this figure the point of departure for the 1965 goals, While the traditional exaggeration of grain figures, some inflation will remain, and the Soviets may well claim that the 1961 harvest is larger than that of 1.958 Production of meat and milk in 1961 will probably about equal 1960 and will continue to lag badly behind the in- creases needed to meet the Seven-Year Plan goals. More feed and slightly larger herds, as well as a mild winter and early spring, have favored the industry. On the other hand, meat production at the state slaughterhouses in the first half of this year was 7 percent below the same period last year, and the Soviet press has conspicuously avoided commenting on progress. Cotton production is expected to be somewhat above the mediocre 1960 crop, but dry weather in some of the important growing areas may keep the production of sugar beets, sunflower seeds, and fiber flax below the rela- tively good 1960 crops. Eastern Europe In the European satellites, total production of grain is ex- pected to be about the same as last year--about 43,000,000 tons-- largely because of the bumper harvest in Poland. Preliminary estimates of grain output in 1961 are down from 1960 in Bul- garia, East Germany, Hungary, and Rumania, and up in Poland, Albania, and Czechoslovakia. Weather conditions, which had been generally favorable during the spring for most crops through- out the satellites, turned for the worse about mid-June. As the only bloc member without any significant degree of col- lectivized agriculture, Poland has apparently done much better than East Germany or Czecho- slovakia under similar weather conditions, primarily because the collective units of the lat- ter two countries had higher harvest losses. In spite of its bumper har- vest, Poland will still need to import about 1,000,000 tons of grain if livestock herds and grain consumption are to be maintained at current levels, With the re- cent US decision to delay signing of a PL-480 agreement, Poland is left with import commitments of only 600,000 tons. If import needs are not met, the government will have to increase procurement of domestic grain by raising com- pulsory delivery quotas and/or in- creasing free market purchases to guarantee the grain supply. With the possible exception of Albania, no basic improvement in the per capita availability of food for the satellites is ex- pected during 1961/62. East Ger- many, Hungary, and Bulgaria will probably encounter most difficulty in meeting consumer demands for foodstuffs. The most serious shortages are likely in East Ger- many unless it can increase its imports, an effort which Walter Ulbricht has said will not be made. Nevertheless, availability of quality foods in Eastern Europe, especially in East Germany, Poland, and Czecho- slovakia, is significantly greater than in the Soviet Union and far greater than in China. SECRET (Prepared by ORR) 5 Oct 6- Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 16 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET of the National Economo the USSR for 1960 gives a figure for housing construction in that year considerably lower than the amount originally claimed in the official plan report. This is a new indication that the priority for housing construction has been reduced and casts doubt on the possi- bility of achieving.the Seven- Year Plan (1959-65) for housing. A substantial underfdlf illment''of the plan in 1960 and subsequent housing'data appear to indicate that, the Soviet regime decided in mid-1960 to sacrifice part of the popular housing program. to other construction projects. The handbook figure is 82,800,000 square meters, 2,200,- 000 lower than the total origi- nally claimed and only 3 percent above performance in 1959. This reduction, which may be in part an attempt at statistical correction, is the latest'in a series that started in December 1959. At that time it was anticipated by State Planning Committee (Gosplan) chief Novikov that, of the 1960 hous- ing goal of 101,000,000 square meters of new urban housing, only about 92,000,006 would be completed. In January 1961, the plan fulfillment announce- ment stated that about 85,000- 000 square meters had been built during the previous year.,. The original reductions seemed attributable to a; slow- down in private housing con- struction, probably because of the reported cancellation of state loans for private housing. Subsequent information, however, points to a substantial cutback of housing to be built under the state plan. indicated that judging by state housing accomplishment in 1958 and of 1959, the 1960 plan would probably be overfulfilled by 7 to 9 percent. Instead, however, the state housing goal for 1960 was underfulfilled by 7 percent. This lower rate of housing construction continued into 1961; the report on the first six months showed that only about 24 percent of the year's state housing had been completed. In spite of a sharp improvement in July, state housing completions still lagged behind those of the first seven months of 1960 by about 2 per- cent. A lower priority for hous- ing is also indicated by the decline in housing's share of the volume of state construc- tion to 28.7 percent in 1960 from 30.9 percent in 1959.and 32.6 percent in 1958. Further- more, while the 1960 housing plan was substantially under- fulfilled, the over-all construc- tion plan was virtually fulfilled. The shortfall in state housing in 1960 was so large that only about half of it can be attrib- uted to technical difficulties during the transition to new construction methods. The chronic shortage of housing in the USSR causes more intense and widespread dissatis- faction than any other aspect of Soviet life. Accordingly, ' ' . there has been no publicity on the lowered priority for hous- ing, in contrast to the fanfare accompanying;the high priority given to housing in 1957--which resulted in a sharp rise in housing in subsequent years. Prepared by ORR) SECRET The nowt published RanAbook I The mid-1960 plan report 5 Oct 61 WEEKLY REVIEW Page 17 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET ?..o CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY HUNGARIAN FIVE-YEAR PLAN REVISED Following above-plan per- formance in 1959 and 1960, the Hungarian regime has announced higher goals for production in certain industries and for na- tional income in its Second Five-Year Plan (1961-65). Planned investments have been cut, how-- ever, allowing larger expendi- tures for military purposes and, possibly, for repaying foreign loans. The goals established in the original directives, pub- lished in September 1959. were generally more conservative than the Five-Year Plan goals of any other satellite, and apparently this conservative outlook pre- vails. The average rate of in- crease in industrial production from 1958 to 1965 now is planned at 9.0 to 9.4 percent a year, compared with 7.4 to 7.9 percent a year in the 1959 directives. Since the growth of industrial production was about 11 percent a year during 1959-60, the rate of growth for 1961-65 will have to be only 8.5 percent to meet the five-year goal, or just slightly higher than the maxi- mum rate planned previously for the seven-year period. Agricultural production is to increase 30 to 32 percent by 1965 over the 1954-58 average. This target, which requires an average annual rate of growth of 3.5 percent from 1960, ap- pears to be the most realistic of any bloc goal for agriculture. National income is expected to increase 55 to 60 percent from 1958 to 1965 instead of the 50 percent in the original directives. This increase re- flects both the higher goals for industrial production and the above-plan performance during 1959-60. Nevertheless, total capital investment during the five-year period will be 10 to 12 percent less than previously planned. This scal- ing down of investment targets, however, is not designed to benefit the consumer, as per- sonal consumption is still to increase slowly. The offi- cial explanation for increas- ing the goals for production but not those for investments is the need to raise expendi- tures connected with national defense. However, increases 'in nation- al income probably will permit larger repayments than origi- nally planned on loans re- ceived from bloc countries after the Hungarian revolt in 1956. No postponement in re- payments of Soviet credits has been reported for 1962- 65, and no new credits to Hungary have been announced to offset such repayments. Because the now plan is so conservative, it probably will?be fulfilled in its main aspects (Pre- . 25X1 pared by ORR) SECRET 5 Oct 6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 e 18 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY ZVW COMMUNIST CHINA CELEBRATES NATIONAL DAY Peiping gave little public- China's socialist construc- ity to the advance preparations I tion. for National Day (1 October) in 1961. The festivities in Peiping were similar in form to those of 1960. The populace was given a two-day holiday and a few extra rations were issued-- but for the first time these in- cluded no meat, a fact which reflects the austerity forced on the regime by its economic setbacks. As in 1960, the:cus- tomary mammoth parade of half a million persons included mili- tia but no military units. The official press states that 2,000 guests from more than 70 countries were present, but fails to add that many of these were students, diplomats, and others already resident in Chi- na. The only prominent foreign visitors were the President of Cuba, the King and Queen of Nepal, and Dowager Queen 1+.- abeth of Belgium. On foreign policy matters, Peiping's attempt to paint a rosy picture of Sino-Soviet friendship was belied by unre- sponsive Soviet speeches and unenthusiastic Soviet attend- ance at National Day functions in both Peiping and Moscow. In its unctuous speech on 28 September, Chinese arsa~? , Liu Hsiao promised his Soviet audience in Moscow that Peiping, following Mao Tse-tung's teach- ings, would preserve Sino-Soviet solidarity like the "apple of our eye." Liu again endorsed the Soviet Berlin stand and in- timated--for the first time by a Chinese spokesman--that the Soviet party's draft program has validity outside the USSR. Back in China, People's Daily also acknowledged Soviet ex- perience could be helpful in The Russians gave only perfunctory attention to the Chinese anniversary. In a speech at a Moscow reception on 29 September, First Deputy Premier Kozlov reiterated stand- ard expressions of Soviet sup- port for Peiping's "lawful place" in the United Nations and for liberation of Taiwan. He avoided anything that could be construed as Soviet tolerance of Chinese ideological claims. In Peiping, the Soviet delegation attending the ceremonies contained no major figures. For the second year, Chou En- lai did not give a banquet for Soviet experts in China, a fur- ther indication that Soviet techni- cians have not returned in numbers. The tone of both press and public pronouncements on China's domestic outlook was at sharp variance with last year's. Al- though it was evident by Octo- ber 1960 that the regime was in economic trouble, particularly in agriculture, the full gravity of the situation was not acknowl- edged last year. The People's Daily editorial of a year ago stated, "There is every possibil- ity for the Chinese people to catch up with Britain... within a period of less than ten years." It spoke of the great leap for- ward as a continuing movement and called for an "unprecedented bumper summer harvest in 1961," The corresponding People's Daily editorial in 1961 admitted to a "reduction of agricultural output" as a result of "three successive years of grave nat- ural calamities',;' regarding industrial production, the SECRET 5 Oct 6-Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ,e 1* of Z7 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 -*me lwoo~ SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY editorial eschewed further ex- pansion for the time being and simply suggested "readjusting, consolidating, filling out, and raising standards" for 1961 and 1962. In its most specific :ref - erence.to. industrial production, People's bail stated that'.. "14 out of Dail 2- main targets" for the Second Five-Year Plan were fulfilled in 1959 and 1960. If this is compared with Li Fu- chun's announcement in March 1960 that 13 out of the 24 major industrial and agricultural prod- ucts had reached their 1962 targets by the end of 1959, there is a clear implication that in- dustry made little or no progress during either 1960 or 1961 over the level achieved in 1959. The regime maintained that the party's general policies have always been correct, but conceded a need to perfect the means for putting them into practice. The theoretical journal Red Flag stated in its 1 OctoVer editorial that "many of our cadres are familiar with wars and revolu- tion but they are not versed in the rules and regulations of socialist construction." The editorial commented that the party has called for a new study movement to take up "questions concerning the building of socialism':'.' There was no indication that the study move- ment would take on the pro- portions of a party purge. At the top level, a11. full members of the poliburo were represented in the ceremonies at Peiping except Peng Te-huai-- whose standing has been in question since September 1959-- and two regional party bosses who probably attended rallies in their own areas : 25X1 Prepared jointly 25X1 with ORR) PEIPING'S RELATIONS WITH JAPAN Communist China has in re- cent weeks engaged in a propa- ganda campaign of growing shrill- ness against the Japanese Govern- ment. Peiping's anger began when the Ikeda government refused visas for a Chinese Communist delegation to the Japanese Communist party congress in late July. The official Peiping Peovle's Daily said the act exposed Ikeda as "devoid of any sincerity for improving Sino- Japanese relations." The dele- gation would have been the highest Chinese Communist group ever to attend a party gathering in a non-Communist country. However, it was ex - Prime Minister Kishi's visit to Taiwan in mid-August which actually triggered the current rash of invective. The visit, although a private one, was viewed by Peiping as a blatant manifesta- tion of Japanese plotting, with Ikeda's connivance, to create "two Chinas." Particularly galling to Communist China was Kishi's reference to Taiwan and Japan as "two countries." Pei- ping even accused Japan of having designs on the island. SECRET 5 Oct 6' ?--_ 20 of 2? Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET Communist China's appre- hensions of a resurgent Japan in the Far East are comparable to the bloc attitude toward the possible revival of a mili- tarized Germany in Europe. "The iron hooves of Japanese aggres- sion are rattling again," Pei- ping asserts, adding that Japa- nese monopolists and militarists now are actively collaborating with Washington and Taipei in schemes against Communist China. Chief of Staff Lo Jui-ching, condemning alleged US-Japanese connivance in planning a North- east Asian military alliance, warned on 28 September that China "would never permit" Japa- neseaggressive designs to come to fruition. The ghost of Japan.'s "Great- er East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere" of the World War II is revived in connection with what Peiping regards as evidence of Japan's political and economic expansion in Southeast Asia. Such warnings to Asians probably reflect a sensitivity to Japanese economic penetration into Southeast Asian markets Peiping hoped to have for itself before economic difficulties on the mainland stalled its foreign trade offensive. Chinese Communist hostility toward Ikeda seems to have reached the level of that direct- 04.1 at Kishi, with whom the Chinese said they could have no dealings. Visits to China by members of the governing Liberal- Democratic part's -were, once en- couraaged,:,but Liberal-Democratic visitors in June received only a perfunctory welcome. Peiping is particularly annoyed over moves by the Socialist party--formerly Peiping's principal channel to left-wing elements in Japan--and its af- filiated labor federation, Sohyo, to dissociate themselves from united-front activities with the Japanese Communist party against Japan's ties with the US. The Socialists and Sohyo have instead begun to espouse their own program of apparent neutrality aimed at winning greater popular support. Clearly piqued, Peiping last summer asked the Japanese Socialists to delay sending a scheduled mission to the mainland. More recently, Peiping responded to feelers from the Socialists concerning the dispatch of a delegation to the National Day celebrations with an unethusi- astic, "Come if you want;.,to.'!,,(:Still, Peiping has not attacked the Socialists publicly, suggesting it may still hope that they will be able to play a useful role in promoting Peiping's and the Com- munists' interests. Meanwhile, Peiping seems to be placing a greater reliance on the Japanese Communist party ltselfm The Communists are now. called by Peiping the "vanguard" of Japan's anti-US struggle, an accolade formerly accorded the Socialists and Sohyo. However, Peiping is aware that Japanese leftists are generally distrust- ful of the Japanese Communists 25X1 and is searching for an osten- sibly non-Communist channel to SECRET 5 Oct 8' Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 21 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 1401, SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY FACTIONALISM IN SOUTH KOREAN REGIME The arrest by security forces on 25 September of 28 persons linked to the vice chair- man of South Korea's Supreme Council for National Recon- struction (SCNR), Maj. Gen. Yi Chu-il, is the latest mani- festation of a major factional struggle between Yi and national security boss Col. Kim Chong- pil. Both men head powerful alliances within the military junta. The chairman of the SCNR, Lt. Gen.Pak Chong-hui, is believed to stand above the conflict and to be working to prevent a Showdown. Should he fail, the stability of the regime would be endangered. Following the purge of the coup's front man, Lt. Gen. Chang To-yong, in'July, two major fac- tions emerged in the junta--one led by Kim, the other jointly led by Yi and marine Maj. Gen. Kim Tong-ha. The core of Kim Chong-pills faction is a group of young officers who were in the "eighth class"--the class of 1949--at the Korean Military Academy. This class suffered severe casualties in the Korean war and subsequently found promotions blocked by the rela- tively youthful generals. The officers in Kim's faction tend to favor protracted military rule and authoritarian measures to solve the country's economic and political problems. Yi's faction is made up largely of senior officers who are more inclined to preserve accustomed relationships and institutions. All those seized on 25 September are alleged to have been involved in preferential treatment, based on regional loyalties, to "illicit-fortune seekers." Those favored are among the 27 business leaders who dominate the country's economy and who have been ordered to pay $37,000,000 in back taxes and fines within six months. In order to force the regime to grant them more favorable terms, they have cut back their business activities, thus depressing the domestic economy. Feeling against the group is believed to be particularly strong among Kim's faction, which tends to favor the nationalization of industry. Pak's position on nationalization is unknown, but the struggle between Kim and Yi may increase the pressure on Pak to approve a state-operated economy. 25X1 25X1 any showdown, Kim's ac ion has the advantage that he controls the secret police. Furthermore, the 800 or more members of the "eighth class" still on active duty include a high proportion of battalion commanders, the lowest echelon of command to exercise court-martial juris- diction and one of the highest permitting effective personal contact with and personal control of troops. SECRET na ge 22 of 27 5 Oct Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 140pe 1%W SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY GHANA The Nkrumah regime's ar- rest on 3 October of prominent political adversaries and lead- ers of the union which spear- headed last month's strikes underscores the President's de- termination to forestall the emergence of any effective op- position movement. The move suggests that Nkrumah, who appears determined to increase Ghana's ties with the bloc and to press ahead with the imple- mentation of "socialist ideals" at home, will rely even more than in the past on repressive measures to silence his critics. Included among some 50 per- sons taken into custody were P,K. .K. .:.Quaido,. a member of the right wing of the ruling Convention People's party (CPP) and a former cabinet minister, and Joseph Appiah, the deputy leader of the small parliamentary group of the opposition United party (UP). Veteran politician J. B. Danquah, the UP's candi- date against Nkrumah in last year's presidential election, was also arrested, as were a- bout 18 leaders of, the Railway and Harbor Workers Union and a number of market women--a politically important group in Ghana. railway system immediately went on strike again in protest a- gainst the arrests. A govern- ment labor official has fore- cast "real trouble" for the regime. Nkrumah did not move at the same time against K. A. Gbedemah, a long-time associate who was ousted from the govern- ment last week along with other moderates who have expressed their opposition to Nkrumah's increasing alignment with the bloc and reliance on left-wing: advisers. This seeming over- sight probably is attributable to Gbedemah's close indentifi- cation, especially in the minds of Western negotiators, with the still-unsigned Volta River project. However, Gbedemah's re- moval from the political scene is almost certainly only a matter of time and may follow quickly, especially if Nkrumah is or becomes convinced that his former lieutenant is plan- ning an attempt to rally the many discontented elements in the country to his leadership. Gbedemah stated publicly after his ouster that he intended to remain active in politics. The detainees, who were ac- cused of plotting Nkrumah's assassination and other "sub- versive activities," were round- ed up under the Preventive De- tention Act, which authorizes the government to imprison per- sons for five years without trial. Some employees in Tako- radi of the government-operated feelings againnss ie 25X1 regime were continuing to run high among workers an tnat some o em, in eague with members of the SECRET 5 Oct P' uY1'C'TIT nVITIrDTT Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ''` SECRET NOV UP, were attempting to organize a general strike. The workers were known to be still unrecon- ciled to the new tax and forced- savings measures imposed last summer. Their hostility to- ward the regime was undoubted- ly increased by the recent announcement that strikers who had not returned to work by 11 September--a week after the strike began--would not receive pay for any day not worked. According to the American Embassy, when the strikes finally ended on 22 September-- following a threat by Nkrumah to treat holdouts as subver- sives--there was a general feeling among the participants that all of them would be paid for the entire time of the strike. GHAf1A IVORY J B (7. COAST _^'.k,AjiAM GH,ANA sa ; fli. r' ASFYANTi Kumasi Koforiduua (_T~l Afieuye Terns; - - - - Regional boundary 25X1 ---- Road THkorad mot/ Railroad O MILES 50 A Ghanaian economic delegation now is visiting the bloc to conclude new project agreements and credits arising out of Nkrumah's recent two-month tour of nine bloc countries. Bucharest has announced that the delegation signed a five-year trade pact and agreements covering "technical and scientific collabo- ration," cultural exchanges,,and 25X1 air services with Rumania on 30 September. SECRET 5 Oct Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ge 24 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Iftor INE (JKE.L BRITAIN AND THE COMMON MARKET In response to a request from the six Common Market (EEC) countries, London has agreed to outline to a preliminary minis- terial meeting in Paris on 10 and 11 October the specific con- cessions it seeks in applying for EEC membership. These con- ditions have heretofore been couched in generalities. To present the case in some detail, Britain's representative, Lord Privy Seal Heath, will reported- ly tender six "papers" and make a two-hour statement. prime Minister Macmillan has insisted from the beginning that the terms of entry must take account of the welfare of Britain's farmers and the com- mercial interests of its Com- monwealth and Outer Seven part- ners. As long as it was unclear exactly what this would involve, Macmillan could maintain that these interests would not be seriously hurt, while dampening EEC suspicions that he might be thinking of fundamental treaty changes. Developments of the past few weeks will complicate Heath's task of taking a suf- ficiently forthcoming attitude toward the Six without arousing further domestic and Common- wealth opposition. At meetings in Accra and London recently, Commonwealth criticism of British accession was much sharper than in midsummer (one participant called the Accra talks the "bloodiest" of such meetings), and emphasis shifted somewhat from worry over trade to fear for Commonwealth co- hesion. Some of this criticism, especially from Australia and Canada, was no doubt calculated to encourage London to be "tough" with the EEC. The Macmillan government was jarred, however, by the hostility to the Common Market expressed by Nigeria, Ghana, and Sierra Leone, Association of these three countries with the EEC--on the same basis as the ex-French and Belgian African territories--had seemed one way to avoid a "commercial division" of Africa. While all six EEC countries appear to welcome, with varying degrees of enthusiasm, the prospect of Britain's entry, none appears ready to sacrifice fundamental EEC principles. Indicative of this, the EEC Council declared following its 26 September meeting that "re- quest for membership in the community implies on the one hand acceptance without reser- vation of the rules and objec- tives of the EEC treaty, and on the other hand membership in the two other existing communities --the Coal-Steel Community and Euratom." The need to preserve a common front when the hard bargaining begins has been the major difficulty the Six have had in organizing themselves for the talks with London. France is still opposed to a permanent chairman of the EEC delegation, favoring instead a rotation system which would bring Couve de Murville to the chair during the probably crucial negotiating period early next year. Paris has had to agree, however, that the talks opening in November will be held in Brussels, the seat of the Common Market, and that the EEC Commission 25X1 will attend as adviser and participate fully in coordinating the EEC position. ;I +T 5 Oc- C9 U11WPVT.V RTi'VT 1 W Page 25 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 SECRET `"01 Cuban President Dorticos left Peiping for Moscow on 3 October on the final leg of his month-long tour of the bloc. The Cuban-Chinese com-- muniqu6 cited Peiping's "pleas- ure" that Cuba has "chosen the road of socialist development," The communiques following his Czech and Soviet visits in Sep- tember had treated the subject of Cuba's adoption of "social- ism" with similar reserve. All three bloc nations gave full support to most other Cuban themes, with Czechoslovakia and Communist China endorsing Cuba's claim that the US "occupation" of Guantanamo naval base is "unlawful." There has also been ample bloc propaganda .coverage of Havana's increas- ingly frequent charges that a "new US invasion of Cuba" is being readied. A delegation led by the Cuban under secretary of foreign trade arrived in Moscow on 27 September to negotiate details of the Cuban-Soviet 1962 trade program and may go on to other bloc countries later. The Cas- tro regime probably will press for a larger volume of bloc foodstuffs and other vital,con- sumer goods to lessen the effect of increasing shortages in these areas. In a speech on~.29 September, Castro announced he had received "good news" concerning bloc purchases of Cuban sugar in 1962 in a communication from "Comrade Dorticos and Comrade Blas Roca." Roca, a long-time Cuban Commute nist leader whose influence in the government reportedly has. increased sharply in recent .months, played an important role in the Dorticos delegation's discussions with bloc officials. According to Castro, the bloc has agreed to buy 4,500,000 tons of sugar for the next four years at more than the world market price. This would be 500,000 tons over the amount scheduled to be purchased by the bloc this year. However, in a 4 October press conference in Moscow, Dorticos said the bloc would purchase "at least" 4,860,000 tons of sugar annually through 1965. Evidence of Cuban subver- sive activity abroad an increased executions of opponents within 25X1 25X1 Cuba may further serve to harden free world opinion against Castro. Costa Rica severed relations with Havana on 10 September.. However, the Goulart adminis- t,rat.i.on in Brazil--whose attitude toward Castro would be of' key importance in any formal consideration of possible OAS action on Cuba-- has categorically declared it- self opposed to any "interven- tion" in Cuban affairs. Ecuador and Mexico, which previously have expressed res- ervations on any multilateral consideration of the Cuban problem, have given no indica- tions of changing this posi- tion thus far. Several other Latin American states which have long opposed the Castro regime, including Peru and Guatemala, have recently shown sharper hostility toward Castro. Guatemala has requested Panama to notify Castro that Guatemal will permit the establishment of a Cuban government in exile in its territory unless former Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz is expelled from Cuba within a month. SECRET 5 Oct 6 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ;e 26 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Now UU&flUt v I IML CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY EL SALVADOR El Salvador's provisional military regime, strongly com- mitted to a program of basic socio-economic reform, is making preparations for a constituent assembly election in December. The regime came to power in a military coup against a Commu- nist-infiltrated government last, January, and the young officers who dominate it are convinced that speedy reform is the only alternative to a Communist take-over. Theirs has been the first Latin Ameri- can government to launch a re- form program in line with the concepts of the Alliance for Progress since these concepts were outlined by President Kennedy early this year. Since the new regime came to power, the United States has authorized $23,000,000 in eco- nomic assistance, mostly in the form of loans. In addition, the Inter-American Development Bank has lent $8,000,000, and another $9,000,000 is being negotiated. The upsurge of Communist activity in El Salvador follow- ing the ouster of the Lemus ad- ministration last October had, frightened members of the long- dominant "fourteen families" ' and convinced some of them that reforms are necessary. By early March, however, there were signs of open resistance to the new government's reform program as the elite families began to realize that their position was being threatened by their long- time ally, the Salvadoran Army. The government's first reform measure, a decree providing for a paid day of rest on Sundays for agricultural workers, was the first measure by any Salvadoran government in favor of agricultural workers, who compromise the bulk of the coun- try's population and have generally lived at bare sub- sistence levels under an eco- nomic system little changed since colonial times. Other reforms have included the lowering of rents in urban tenements and increased govern- ment control of the institu- tion--long dominated by the big coffee planters--which regulates coffee sales, the country's principal source of export earnings. The provisional regime hopes that the support its reforms are winning from the lower and middle classes will assure its newly organized political party control of the constituent assembly to be elected late this year. The diverse political parties in existence prior to the establishment of the "official" party are considering the formation of an opposition coalition. Such a coalition would probably'have the support both of recalcitrant landowners and Communist and pro-Communist groups; such tactical alliances have been made in the past in El Salvador. Government leaders are seeking to avoid a climate of class warfare and have ener- getically sought to convince the elite families that their long-range interests would be best served by supporting the government's program. Last week the government made a con- cession to the landowning groups by modifying and postponing the effective date of a decree setting minimum standards for the food which agricultural laborers receive as part of their wages. This move was probably a'pre-election tactic signifying no weakening of the resolve of government leaders to carr out their reform program. CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 wFrur.v I? w rr'G'w ^- ge 27 of 27 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 GUNHUMIAL CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY SPECIAL, ARTICLES SOVIET TRANSPORTS IN THE WORLD AVIATION MARKET Moscow's efforts to pene- trate the international avi- ation market and to conclude civil air agreements outside the bloc have focused attention on the degree to which Soviet aircraft--particularly the latest model jet and turboprop. transports--are commercially competitive with comparable Western models. There are few important differences in per- formance and design character- istics. On the other hand, Western aircraft are generally superior in such factors as fuel economy, maintenance, durability, safety, and comfort. For several years the Soviet Union has indicated a willingness to sell its large transports outside the bloc, but the IL-18, a medium-range turboprop, is the first model it has backed with a serious promotional effort, including offers at reduced prices and on particularly favorable credit terms. In mid-1960, Avtoexport --a Soviet sales agency--was CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 QTltr''T AT ADTTrT T.. 0 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 authorized to seek nonbloc buyers for IL-18s and other civil air- craft, including helicopters; commercial officers from 23 foreign embassies in Moscow were given demonstration flights. Since then the USSR has delivered nine IL-leis to Ghana, two to Guinea, and two to Mali. Offers to other underdeveloped countries have not been accepted. Characteristics and Performance A comparison of Soviet transports with those of the West as to range, speed, carry- ing capacity, and landing facilities required reveal few significant differences. Most such comparisons reveal that the deficiency of a Soviet plane under one of these head- ings is balanced by shortcomings of its Western counterpart in some other category. An outstanding exception to the general comparability Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 COJWIAL CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY is the long-range turboprop TU-114, which is clearly supe- rior to any Western transport in flight-range and passenger capacity; the TU-114 can carry from 120 to 220 passengers up to 5,400 miles. On the other hand, few countries have enough territory to warrant the purchase of such a long-range transport. Khru- shchev himself has admitted that the TU-114 is basically a bomber and is unsuitable for passenger service. Weaknesses common to all Soviet transports are the high rate of fuel con- sumption and the use of heavier airframe structures than are manufactured in the West. The carrying capacity of Soviet transports is also reduced by the heavier weight of the aircraft engines. Soviet aircraft are also inferior in comfort and con- venience, The TU-104, for example, is extremely noisy. Cabin pressurization is often erratic, and cabin temperature is said never to exceed 60?F. Passengers are reportedly distracted by excessive structural vibrations. A further cause of inconvenience is the comparately small size of the cabin doors. Safety The Soviet Union, unlike Western countries, is not a member of the International Civil Aviation Organization, which sets rigid safety charac- teristics for its members' planes. The large number of crashes of TU-104s and IL-18s within the past few years attests to the inferiority of Soviet aircraft to Western models in safety characteristics. Because of its high landing speed, there have been many cases of tire failures on the TU-104, and on occasion water trucks have been employed to wet down the brakes. Few underdeveloped countries have runways long enough to accommodate a TU-104 safely. Serious safety deficiencies have also been evident in the CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 SPECIAL ARTICLES Page 2 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 ,%W UVIVI IILIV I JIjL `r-f T CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY IL-18s, and they were grounded for a time in 1960 following a series of widely publicized crashes. The trouble apparent- ly resulted from engine fires, which could not be confined and extinguished because of lack of adequate fire protec- tion. Although the IL-18s are again flying, there is re- portedly still considerable skepticism about the aircraft.'s safety among Soviet and satel- lite travelers. The operational safety of several other medium transports--the AN AN-10, and AN-12--is also questionable, since they use the same engine as the IL-18. An additional defect of Soviet turboprop transports is the comparatively lengthy time required to feather mal- functioning engines; a few seconds lost can mean serious structural damage. Cost and Economy The initial unit cost is lower for Soviet transports than for the equivalent Western aircraft, but such hidden costs as those arising from maintenance problems and ex- pensive spare parts requirements. make the difference illusory. The high cost of spare parts can make the Soviet air- craft expensive, even as a gift. Hungary received three IL-18s gratis only to learn later that the necessary stock of spare parts would cost more than the assessed value of the aircraft. Maintenance is easier for purchasers of Western aircraft. US aircraft manufacturers have offered buyers complete maintenance facilities in their own coun- tries, thus obviating the need for lengthy waits for parts and overhaul. Frequency of overhaul. has also been a serious draw- back of Soviet aircraft. Soviet aircraft engines average only 200 hours before major over- haul. By comparison, the average intervals between engine overhauls on Western aircraft is 1,000 to 1,300 hours. Soviet propellers, likewise, are short-lived. The estimated life of a propeller blade for the Soviet turboprop engine is only 300 to 600 hours, as opposed to 2,500 hours for a comparable Western model. The result is a vast dis- parity in the operational avail- ability of a Soviet aircraft and a comparable Western model. US jet transports, for example, fly on the average three times as much as their Soviet counter- parts. Even bloc purchasers have accepted Soviet aircraft re- luctantly. Soviet aircraft purchased by nonbloc countries have had other serious faults affecting economy of the operation. The AN-12 turboprop transports, for example, have experienced fuel tank ruptures and blown tires. Ghana Airways has had to change its Khartoum-to-Accra schedule from a weekly to a bimonthly run because of engine failures on the IL-13 in the African heat. CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 SPECIAL ARTICLES Page 3 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 CONFIDEITIAL CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY Prospects for Soviet Sales The shortcomings and un- suitability of some models of Soviet aircraft have been readily recognized by pro-- spective purchasers, who have viewed Soviet offers with skepticism. Thus the Soviet Union has never been able to sell the TU-104 outside the bloc, although it has fre- quently offered the plane to Middle East countries. How- ever, Soviet willingness to sell at a reduced price and to provide favorable terms-- especially including payment in native currency--are strong inducements and have brought limited acceptance of the IL-18. The newest transports in the Soviet inventory-- the short-range turboprop AN-24 and short-range jet TU-124--are smaller, and more economical than earlier models, and offers of these aircraft to underdeveloped countries will probably meet with greater success (Prepared by ORR) CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 R'DVrTAT. ARTTrT.RS parrs 4 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 UUN1-1UL 11AL_ __ CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY PRESIDENT KEKKONEN OF FINLAND Urho Kekkonen, who will visit the United States for approximately two weeks begin- ning 16 October, in almost six years as President and previous periods as prime minister has become Finland's most contro- versial postwar leader.. Now nearing the end of his term as President, Kekkonen is in the midst of a bitterly contested campaign for re-election early next year. The Finnish presidency is invested by the constitution with special powers in the con- duct of foreign relations, and Kekkonen has wielded these pow- ers actively. As a result, he has been sharply criticized for what many of his countrymen re- gard as an excessively accom- modating attitude toward the Soviet Union and a tendency to portray himself and his Agrarian party as the only elements in Finland capable of maintaining good relations with Moscow. He has incurred further criticism for keeping a hand in party politics despite a Finnish tra- dition of an austerely nonparti- san head of state. Born in north-central Fin- land. in 1900, the son of a log- ging foreman, Kekkonen has been physically vigorous all his life. He was national high-jump champion in his youth and en- gaged in a six-mile ski race with 58-year-old King Olav dur- ing his state visit to Norway earlier this year. Kekkonen studied law at the University of Helsinki and received his Doctorate of Law degree there in 1936, after having done post- graduate study in Germany. As a young lawyer, Kekkonen dedicated himself to a political career and eventually became le- gal adviser to the Agrarian par- ty--one of Finland's three largest parties, along with the Social Democrats and the Commu- nist-front Finnish People's Democratic League (SKDL). Kek- konen, like other aspiring young politicians who joined the party during this period when it suf- fered from a dearth of young leaders, is widely referred to as an "asphalt agrarian" because of his tenuous connection with the rank-and-file small farmers. Kekkonen was first elected to parliament in 1936 and rose rapidly in government circles. By the time of the Winter War with the USSR (1939-40), he had already held three ministerial posts. Little is known of his official activities during World War II except that from 1940 to 1943 he was chief of the Bureau for Displaced Per- sons, an organization whose task was to aid refugees from Karelia, the border province lost to the USSR in 1944. Postwar Career Following the war, Kekkonen served in a number of high posi- tions, including that of direc- tor of the Bank of Finland and minister of justice. While serving in the latter capacity from 1944 to 1946 he handled the proceedings against eight prom- inent Finnish wartime leaders who at Soviet insistence were tried as "war responsibles." These trials aroused much re- sentment and controversy in CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 JPECIAL ARTICLES Page 5 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 N. t,,UlYrtutlV 1 IAA. CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUM Finland since the overwhelming majority of Finns regarded the eight as patriots. Kekkonen incurred the dislike of conserv- ative and labor groups as a result of his part in the trial, even though he played a rela- tively minor role in the actual proceedings. He first became premier in 1950, and before he was elected president in 1956 had headed five cabinets--nearly all of them coalitions composed of Agrarians and Social Democrats. It was during this period that Kekkonen established his repu- tation as the leading Agrarian party politician and tightened his control of the party, which he has retained to this day. He also became known as one of the few non-Communist political leaders in Finland considered persona grata by Moscow, and began to groom himself to suc- ceed the aging elder statesman Juho Paasikivi, a Conservative party member, as Finland's next president, Presidency Kekkonen won the presidency by the narrowest margin in the history of Finland's electoral college--151 votes to 149 for his Social Democratic opponent. He has since sought to assume the dignity of his office, but there remains a gap between the gregarious Kekkonen and the stereotype of the remote and austere presidents of Finland who are accorded a respect sim- ilar to the deference paid elsewhere to royalty. He has proved to be a "strong" Pres-- ident who has not hesitated to exercise to the fullest the ex- tensive powers granted him by the constitution. His term of office has been marked by bitter recrim- inations between his supporters and those of almost all the other non-Communist parties. In addition to charges that he has failed to rise above parti- san considerations and personal animosity in the discharge of his presidential duties, there has been sharp criticism of his performance in the all-impor- tant area of Soviet-Finnish relations. He has chosen to deal personally with any seri- ous problems arising between Finland and the Soviet Union, and his frequent bypassing of the Foreign Ministry and of parliamentary committees in handling these matters has caused some resentment. Soviet-Finnish Relations Kekkonen's views on the nature of Finland's relations with the Soviet Union are di- rectly influenced by his belief that in order to maintain its precarious position of independ- ence, Finland can never pursue political or military policies in direct conflict with the strategic interests of the So- viet Union. In essence this is what is referred to in Fin- land as the "Paasikivi line," which Kekkonen's supporters, in the campaign to choose presiden- tial electors this January, are seeking to describe as the "Paasikivi-Kekkonen line." Ac- ceptance of this policy dictates CONFIDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 SPECIAL ARTICLES Page 6 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 w wIIFIUL[IIIHL ?/ CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY s KIMART that Finland must pursue a pas- sive foreign policy, the prin- cipal objective of which is to avoid embroilment in disputes between the major powers. For Kekkonen the basic problem of Finnish foreign pol- icy is to convince the Soviet Union of the security of its northwestern frontiers and to assure Moscow of Finland's de- termination to resist attack which might be launched against the Soviet Union across Finland. Finnish officials regard this as the old problem of overcom- ing traditional Russian suspi- cion and seeking to assure Mos- cow of the security of adjacent strategic areas such as Lenin- grad and Murmansk, All non-Communist parties in Finland support this policy of nonprovocation, but there are differences of opinion as to how far Finland should rea- sonably be expected to go in this respect. The opposition parties maintain that Kekkonen has carried the assurances of a friendly Finland on Soviet borders a step further and has acquiesced in Soviet interven- tion in Finland?s internal af- fairs. They cite the 1958 cab- inet crisis when Moscow refused to conclude a trade agreement until the coalition government of Social Democratic Premier Fagerholm had been replaced by a government more to its liking. Kekkonnen?s handling of the ques- tion of Finland?s association with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) in early 1961 is also criticized because he sounded out Moscow?s views beforehand, although only eco- nomic considerations were in- volvedo Kekkonen, however, main- tains that a policy of "brutal frankness and honesty" is necessary in dealing with the Russians and that even an es- sentially economic matter ac- quires political overtones in the eyes of the ever-suspicious Russians, Finland, therefore, must be prepared to go to great lengths to assuage these suspi- cions. Kekkonen?s views are also influenced by his pessimistic outlook on the outcome of the East-West struggle. He be-, lieves that in the past few years the world balance of pow- er has shifted from the Western powers to the Sino-Soviet bloc. Recalling Finland?s lonely struggle against the USSR in 1939-40 and the fact that the West did not come to the assist ante of Hungary in 1956, Kek- konen considers it his duty to order Finland's relations with the Soviet Union in such a manner that even if war breaks out between East and West, Fin- land will remain unaffected. His more pro-Western critics regard this as not only illu- sory but also dangerous for Finland, since it could lead to a "peace at any price" ap- proach in dealings with Moscow. Aware that the USSR could overwhelm Finland at any time, Kekkonen may be increasingly inclined to reconcile himself to a greater measure of Soviet intervention in Finnish affairs as the price to be paid to pre- vent outright annexation or absorption Most Finns as well as foreign observers concede that CONFIDENTIAL ,ice 5 Oct 61 SPECIAL. ) :LAS Page 7 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 VVIII 1UL1Vt il'tL _' ,'. CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY S there is no doubt as to Kekko- nen?s patriotism or his resist- ance if confronted by flagrant encroachments on Finland?s in- dependence by the Soviet Union. His defenders point out that Kekkonen was one of three par- liamentary deputies who in 1940 voted to continue the war with the Soviet Union rather than accept the onerous peace terms. They also refer to Kekkonen?s outspoken remarks at various official dinners and luncheons during Khrushchev?s visit to Helsinki in September 1960 on the occasion of Kekkonen?s 60th birthday. The President then asserted that the Communist system was not an appropriate one for his country and that Finland would not become Com- munist--even if all Europe were converted--unless a majority of its people so desired; he added that he thought this would never be the case, Kekkonen?s critics, how- ever, fear that in a crucial situation he may not have the courage and strength of charac- ter of Paasikivi, who, they maintain, was ready to say "no" to Soviet demands when he be- lieved Finland's interests might be adversely affected. These critics also believe that Kekkonen is prepared to go to any lengths to lessen the possibility of Northern Europe?s involvement in a future war and that to accomplish this he would be prepared to try to push the Soviet line of coaxing Norway and Denmark away from NATO, Thus far, however, he has not seriously advocated this line in his frequent con- tacts with his Scandinavian colleagues. Kekkonen has used exten- sive travel in Europe--particu- larly in Scandinavia--as one means of seeking to develop greater understanding of Fin- land's special position between East and West. He has also made numerous trips to the Soviet Union, most recently in January 1959 when he met Khru- shchev in Leningrad to discuss the crisis in Finnish-Soviet re- lations. Earlier this year Kekkonen made official visits to both Britain and Norway. His visit to Canada and the US is regarded by some observers as an effort to strengthen his po- sition in this pre-election period and to mollify critics who believe his numerous trips to the Soviet Union have given him a distorted view of the world power balance. How much Kekkonen?s own views may be affected by West- ern visits is somewhat ques- tionable Finns generally feel that their national history has left them little to 25X1 learn from the West in deal- ing with the USSR and Kekko- nen E Impervious to any outside in luence ins the matter of Soviet-Finnish relations. CONFIDENTIAL, SPECIAL ARTICLES Page 8 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 .CURRENT.INTEL?LIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY The first anniversary of Cypriot independence--16 August 1961--found the new republic facing a multitude of political and economic problems: high unemployment., the fourth con- secutive year of drought, in- creasingly frequent outbursts of violence, and growing Com- munist strength. Neither the Greek Cypriots (80 percent of the population) nor the Turkish Cypriots (18 percent) celebrated the anniversary, although gov- ernment leaders observed the event with a reception. Unlike most colonial areas which have gained independence in recent years, there was never a move- ment for a free Cyprus, and no Cypriot "nationalism" exists today. The London-Zurich Agree- ments, which established the republic, have been observed for the most part by all parties signing them in 1959--the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities and the governments of Greece, Turkey, and Britain--because all of them prefer the present arrangement, unsatisfactory as it may be, to the chaos that would follow their repudiation. Despite the island's many prob- lems, the complicated machinery of government set up primarily to protect the Turkish Cypriot minority has proved workable, largely because of the efforts of the Greek Cypriot President, Archbishop Makarios, and the Turkish Cypriot vice president, Fazil Kuchuk. Neither Makarios nor Kuchuk has pressed demands for so- lutions to remaining specific disputes as long as further negotiations leading to a com- promise are possible. When disputes within the government have come to a head, however, Makarios has acted with firm- ness bordering on disregard of the Turkish position. The two leaders are prob- ably aware that their subordi- nates and likely successors would be less likely to accept compromise--a fact that empha- sizes the necessity of settling outstanding problems before they leave office. General elections are scheduled in 1965, and Ma- karios has frequently stated his desire to retire from po- litical life at the earliest opportunity.. The two major problems to be negotiated between Greek and Turkish Cypriots when in- dependence was proclaimed were the establishment of separate Greek and Turkish municipal governments in the five cities on Cyprus--as provided for in the constitution--and the im- plementation of constitutional. provisions for a 70:30 ratio between Greeks and Turks in the civil service. Considerable progress has been made toward fulfilling the requirement on civil service. Negotiations on municipal governments remain deadlocked, however, with the Greeks press- ing for administrative separa- tion and the Turks demanding geographic partition. In April, the Turkish members of the legis- lature, in an effort to force a more rapid pace in negotiations, refused to approve an extension of the tax law. Makarios or- dered the tax collectors to continue their work, despite general agreement that he lacked authorization for such a move. Recently there have been indi- cations that the Turks may be will- ing to modify their, position on the municipal governments issue. )FIVTI C F AL 5 Oct el OnVf%T AT ADTT(1T T10 TI-.a 9 of 1 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 of Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMRY There has been a revival of extremism in both communi- ties. Reports of shootings and beatings of political op- ponents became more common in the summer of 1961. There are continuing reports that both sides are smuggling arms into Cyprus for possible future use by terrorist groups. Among the Greeks, an or- ganization of former members of EOKA, the underground organ- ization which fought the British from 1955 to 1959, has been formed, calling itself the Pan- Cyprian Organization of Fight- ers. Both this organization and the leading non-Communist Greek Cypriot opposition party repeatedly have denounced Makarios for signing the London- Zurich Agreements and have re- vived the demand for "enosis"-- union with Greece. Among the Turks, there is an apparent loss of confidence in the settlement, based on fear of economic domination by the Greeks, the delay in implement- ing the constitutional provi- sions designed to protect Turk- ish interests, and the revival of the enosis campaign. Parti- tion, long the Turkish reply to enosis, is again being suggest- ed 'as the "final answer." Communism is not at pres- ent a threat within the Turkish community, but among the Greek Cypriots it remains the great- est potential danger for the future of the republic. The Communist party, known as the Restorative Party of the Work- ing People (AKEL), the only large organized political party on Cyprus, received nearly 40 percent of the Greek Cypriot vote in the 1960 legislative elections. The party has five of the 35 Greek members of the House of Representatives--be- cause of a pre-electoral agree- ment with Makarios--and controls the municipal governments in three of the five cities. AKEL continues to gain sup- port by astute exploitation of grievances among the Greek Cypriots. The economic prob- lems, the existence of the two British bases on the island, and a latent neutralist senti- ment among the population all invite such exploitation. The Communists dominate the largest and most effective trade federation on Cyprus, have active youth organizations, and are expanding front groups among farmers and women. Their campaign has been aided by the Soviet Embassy, established in Nicosia in December 1960, and by visiting Soviet cultural and sports groups. A Soviet- Cypriot Friendship Society was created in March 1961. Radio Moscow began daily broadcasts to Cyprus in Greek and Turkish in the spring of this year. AKEL has thus far failed, however, in its campaign to force Makarios to request Soviet economic aid. The Soviet Embassy has repeat- edly stated that such aid is available if requested. The only major non-Commu- nist Greek Cypriot political organization is the government's Patriotic Front, and this, in essence, is a loose coalition thus far dominated by Makarios. While the Front is not now an orthodox political party, there have been repeated reports that it is to be revamped, with district and local organizations estab- lished and a program designed to counter some of the appeal of AKEL. The non-Communist labor federation, far smaller than its AKEL-dominated counterpart, lacks the funds and leadership to suc- cessfully challenge its opposi- tion for control of organized labor. The government has indi- cated it may be about to move against the Communist threat. In July, Makarios warned AKEL against "undermining" the work of the government and implied that AKEL's Lecognition as a legal party, reinstated by the CONI'IAL 5 Oct 61 RPIWTAT: APPTPT.tQ n--o 10 of 11 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 L; UN I IAL `" CUi-W NT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY British shortly before inde- pendence, may again be with- drawn. Foreign Relations Cyprus' relations with the major powers and with neighbors in the area are generally good. There has been no outstanding problem with Britain. There gard of Turkish Cypriot views. A Turkish Cypriot delegation recently visited Israel. Greece and Turkey have small military contingents on the island, and an agreement between Athens and Ankara for supplying arms to the new Cypriot Army appears im- minent. Makarios' performance at the neutralist conference at Belgrade probably gives the best indication of the govern- ment's present foreign policy. He emphasized by his attendance that Cyprus is committed to a policy of nonalignment. This is a policy generally approved by the Greek community--but not by the Turks. When Kuchuk threatened to veto Cypriot par- ticipation in the conference as in disregard of special treaty obligations, Makarios replied that if a policy of neutrality was in conflict with provisions of the constitution or any treaty, then such provisions were "completely unacceptable, as the interests of the people of Cyprus are above all." This dismissal of Kuchuk's threat did not lead to a veto, and Makarios went to Belgrade, but he was accompanied only by mem- bers of the Greek community, were occasional acts of sabotage against the water line to one of the two British bases in July and August; these appear to have been a reaction by farm- ers to the goverment's failure to provide an adequate water sup- ply, rather than a demonstration of antipathy toward Britain. Cyprus decided in March 1961 to remain within the Commonwealth for a period of five years. The Communists have crit- icized the existence of Amer- ican communications facilities on Cyprus, the labor policy of the American-owned Cyprus Mines Corporation--largest employer on the island--and the "meddling" in domestic labor matters by American personnel. The govern- ment, however, has largely ig- nored the complaints and has maintained close relations with the US Embassy. Britain has supplied $15,- 000,000 in grant aid during the first year of independence. The US has sent 50,000 tons of PL- 480 grain, and in June 1961 signed a technical cooperation agreement with Cyprus. In Au- gust, the Cypriot Government unveiled an ambitious five-year development program calling for the expenditure of some $173,- 000,000. It hopes to secure half of the funds from foreign sources. Makarios simultaneously announced plans to sell the "largest part" of the archbishop- ric lands to landless farmers and those with small holdings. Makarios' visit to the UAR in June was approved by nearly all members of his community, although the Turks were miffed by the obvious Egyptian disre- In his speech before the Belgrade delegates, Makarios de- nounced all forms of colonialism and called for self-determination for all people--including the Ger- mans. His remarks on Germany and Berlin were closer to the West- ern position on these issues than those of any other speaker and were promptly criticized by the Communist press on Cyprus. Greek Cypriot leaders are aware of the republic's dependence on the West and generally support the Western view in most inter- national organizations. They also recognize, however, the potential value of association with the nonaligned states-- particularly should the present settlement founder and the "Cyprus issue" once again be raised before the United Nations. CO 4 IDENTIAL 5 Oct 61 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 -1 of 11 25X1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO03300120001-3 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3 (,C'ITr1T.MIIL r' CONFIDENTIAL mawaul Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A003300120001-3