CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN - 1960/11/09

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02977808
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RIPPUB
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U
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14
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March 17, 2020
Document Release Date: 
March 26, 2020
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Publication Date: 
November 9, 1960
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Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 I �01r 4.M�AFCC I v.( 111 � � 1 9 November 1960 Copy No. C 75 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN DOCUMENT KO NO (At JOE RN CLASS. g 0 LitCLASSIFIED CLASS. diaL2 TO: TS 6 0 PILXT fLVILW DATE: 2.0/0 ALiTH: RH 70.2 1 0 JUN 1980 DATE: REVIEWERI -MID-SECRET /Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808, Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 TOP SECRET Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 'fill SECRET 9 NOVEMBER 1960 I. THE COMMUNIST BLOC Soviet and Chinese parties reportedly reached compromise on some aspects of their dispute during Moscow meet- ings in September and October, but re- mained far apart on others--including some central issues. II. ASIA-AFRICA Jordanian forces end "emergency" alert and withdraw more units from Syrian frontier; both Jordan and UAR, however, expected to continue subversive activity. Situation in the Congo. Saigon issues communique on previously reported late October Communist attacks in effort to focus attention on Hanoi's stepped-up campaign against Diem re- gime. Laos--Former Premier Phoui Sanani- kone now in Luang Prabang assessing possibilities for reconciliation of divided non-Communist elements. 0 �Sukarno moving Indonesia closer toward his concept of "guided democracy" in naming leaders for his People's Congress. Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 � 1VI- GLittr, 1 0 Nov CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN 9 November 1960 DAILY BRIEF I. THE COMMUNIST BLOC *USSR-China:LIfter long and bitter wrangling during September and October in meetings preliminary to the world Communist conclave to begin on 10 November in Moscow, the Soviet and Chinese parties managed to ar- rive at some compromise formulas on certain aspects of their dispute but remained as far apart as ever on other issues, including some of the central ones. the Soviet party, represented by Suslov and Kozlov, traded personal insults with the Chinese delegation, headed by Teng Hsiao-ping, and both parties at times descended to "puerile but heated" exchanges. Most of the parties rep- resented supported the Soviet views, but Albania continu- ally and the Asian satellites frequently sided with the Chi- nese, At a banquet following the apparently inconclusive meetings, Khrushchev and Teng Hsiao-ping quarreled "violently" about the nature of Soviet leadership of the world Communist movement (Page 1) II. ASIA-AFRICA Jordan-LIAR: Jordanian forces have been ordered to end the "state of emergency" alert in which they were placed after the assassination of Prime Minister Majalli last August, and some units--in addi- tion to the Guards Brigade already withdrawn--are being pulled back from the Syrian border area. There has been no evidence of a comparable step-down in the readiness posture of Syrian forces near the frontier. The Jordanian action indi- cates diminished concern in Amman over the imminence of a large-scale military clash with the UAR, but terrorist and propaganda activity by each side can be expected to continue. AApproved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO297780e A PA 'Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 %NO *le Republic of the Congo: The prospect for a full- dress UN debate on the Congo has brought a reitera- tion by Tshombe and Lumumba_91 their positions in �the current political impasse. (In a 7 November mem- orandum passed to the American consul, Tshombe ex- pressed the hope that Congolese and Katangan leaders would agree on a "new" formula for a political associa- tion�presumably a confederation�which would be "in conformity with the regional peculiarities" of the Congo area: On the same day, Lumumba endorsed the UN role In the Congo and applauded the criticism of Brussels and the Mobutu government contained in the report of UN rep- resentative Dayal. In contrast with the political lull in Leopoldville, the struggle in Orientale Province between pro- and anti- Lumumba elements continues unabated.LCongo Army ele- ments reportedly threatened on 4 November to march on Stanleyville if pro-Mobutu officers were not released from detention`O (Page 3) South Vietnam: The South Vietnamese Government's communique of 8 November charging an incursion into its territory by three regular North Vietnamese battalions from bases in Laos appears designed to dramatize its struggle against local Communist dissidence. The charges apparently refer to the previously reported at- tacks between 21 and 26 October against outposts near the Laotian border in the central highlands of South Vietnam. These attacks reportedly were carried out by bands of lo- cal tribesmen under Communist cadres who probably were Infiltrated from North Vietnam, In implying that its charges may be brought before the International Control Commission, South Vietnam may hope to focus attention on North Vietnam's increasing activity aimed at the overthrow of the Diem gov- ernment. 0 g- c .) Laos: Tomer Premier Phoui Sananikone, who has just �L ILh returned to Laos after an absence of several months is now /--5---t-/ .xn Luang Prabang assessing the situation with an eye to 1---/ 9 Nov 60 DAILY BRIEF Ii �Top SECRET AApproved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 11 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 31.11,1(1, I �000 1410 conciliation of divided non-Communist elements in Laos. Presumably he will consult with Premier Sou- vanna Phouma, who is at present on another fence-mend- ing tour of the northern provinces. However, Phoui's fall from power last January was attended by a great deal of bitterness, the scars of which may limit his usefulness as a mediator;j (Page 4) Indonesia: President Sukarno's choice of leaders for his new 610-member People's Congress, which he plans to convene on 10 November, advances his concept of "guid- ed democracy" looking toward the amalgamation of all po- litical elements, These leaders have been drawn from the major parties and include the Communist party secretary general as well as an army representative. The congress is expected to be another rubber-stamp body. Sukarno and the army will continue as the principal forces in the actual governing of the country. (Page 6) 9 Nov 60 DAILY BRIEF *ill --TOP�SECREL A4W,8"cf";a7(":Wii2020/03/13 CO2977808r Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 New Moscow and Peiping Fail to Resolve Disagreements an account of the conference in Moscow during September and October of bloc and nonbloc Communist parties which was called in an effort to resolve Sino-Soviet differences prior to the meeting of world Communist leaders that is to begin on 10 November. According to this accou4t, the exchang- es between the Soviet and Chinese representatives were extremely bitter, and a number of issues were left un- settlecti fAs a basis for discussion, the Soviet party had pre- pared a document setting forth issues in the Sino-Soviet dispute. Some 100 pages of amendments to this document reportedly were proposed during the conference:j ahe principal Chinese spokesman, Teng Hsiao-ping, "fiercely attacked" Soviet strategy for the world Commu- nist movement. In particular, there was a "heated argu- ment" about Soviet views on the noninevitability of war, with the Chinese insisting that the bloc should be willing to undertake and to support local wars. In the course of this discussion, Teng reportedly reaffirmed the Chinese position that Peiping should be given nuclear weapons and rejected the idea that the Soviet Union should have a con- trolling voice in the defenses of other bloc countries:3 EThe Chinese further attacked the USSR for having with- drawn technicians from China. Moscow countered that the technicians had been withdrawn because Peiping had tried to indoctrinate them-4 [In the last of the discussions, Soviet spokesman Suslov criticized the Chinese at considerable length, both on sub- stantive issues and for their derisive attitude toward the "right of a majority," i. e. those supporting the Soviet party. Suslov argued that the decisions supported by the majority should be made unanimougj [The delegates attempted, with only limited success, to work out the draft of a document that would presumably be the] SECRET CE 9 Nov 60 kITD AI IkITCI I 11-�ckirc DI II I CTII�I Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Page 1 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 SECRET Noe Nemo C6asis of the communique' to be released after the No- vember meeting. China and the USSR are said to have reached agreement on wording to cover, the issue of disarmament and to have arrived at compromise for- mulas on some other issues, such as the character of the present epoch and the relative dangers of revision- ism and dogmatism. On other central issues in the dis- pute, however�especially questions related to war-- not even superficial agreement could be reached. The Chinese delegation reportedly insisted that the only ab- solute guarantee against war was the victory of socialismTi Cburing the discussions, the Albanians were the only outspoken supporters of the Chinese, although the repre- sentatives of all the Asian parties�except the Indian and possibly the Indonesian�supported Peiping at least in part. At a banquet following the meetings, Khrushchev and Teng Hsiao-ping quarreled "violently" about the nature of Soviet leadership of the world Communist movemenei (it is doubtful that there is yet an agreed draft resolu- tion to be issued at the end of the Moscow conclave begin- ning this week. Even if Moscow and Peiping do manage to paper over the dispute, this report provides additional evi- dence that serious disagreements will continues' --SECRET-- 9 Nov 60 rrkIrrri A I 116.11'Inl I IFkI ni 11 I rrikt `-'Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Page 2 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 �SEeRET The Situatioiti. the Congo *ape The likelihood of a full-dress UN debate on the Congo has brought a reiteration by Tshombe and Lu- mumba of their respective positions. On 7 November, Lumumba endorsed the current UN role in the Congo and applauded the criticism of Brussels and the Mobutu government contained in the report of UN representative Dayal. {Also on 7 November, Tshombe. passed a memorandum to the American Consulate in Elisabethville expressing hope that Congolese and Katangan leaders would agree on a "new" formula for political association�presumably a confedera- tion--which would be "in conformity with the regional pecu- liarities" of the Congo area. Tshombe has periodically in- dicated he would accept some form of political association with the Congo, provided it involved a sufficient degree of provincial autonomq In contrast with the political lull in Leopoldville, the power struggle in Orientale Province between pro- and anti- Lumumba elements continues unabated. CA recent shipment of automobile parts from Czechoslovakia to Stanleyville was reported to include arms for pro-Lumumba forces there. Elements sympathetic to Lumumba, led by his leftist vice premier, Antoine Gizenga, have maintained the initiative in Orientale Province and have imprisoned or placed under, house arrest numerous supporters of Colonel Mobutu. however, the Congo Army garrison at Watsa�in northeast Orientale Province--has threatened to march on Stanleyville if imprisoned army officers there are not re1eased:7 Elsewhere, there are indications that many Congolese are sensitive to the need for a restoration of political stability. In two areas of Kivu Province--one of them a Lumumba strong- hold�minor officials and businessmen recently spoke to an American official concerning the need for a restoration of popular confidence and for the return of Belgian employers. Several expressed apprehension concerning the effect of a re- turn to power by Lumumba. SECRET 9 Nov 60 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 3 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 SECRET The Situation' in Laos (yormer Premier Phoui Sananikone, who has just returned to Laos after an absence of several months, is in Lu ng Prabang assessing the situation with an eye toward ttempting to reconcile non-Communist elements in Laos. Phoui is a conservative, old-guard politician who shared the leadership of the probably now moribund Rally of the Lao People with Souvanna Phouma. In the past he took a somewhat harder line toward the Communist-dominated Pathet Lao than did Souvanna. Phoui could conceivably serve as a bridge between the v rious factions which have arisen since Captain Kong Le's August coup, although his usefulness may be impaired by bitterness stemming from the conflict with the King and General Phoumi's Committee for Defense of National Interests which led to Phoui's fall from power early last Januarya tiPhoui will presumably consult in Luang Prabang with Souvanna Phouma, who is on another fence-mending tour of the northern provinces. Phoui has already concluded that it is necessary to encourage opposition to the Pathet Lao and Kong Le in Vientiane itself, rather than to rely solely on build- ing up anti-Pathet forces in Luang Prabang and Sav nn khet. Souvanna and his moderate supporters have for some time been trying to pursue such a policy, but with only marginal effect 3 an a statement to the National Assembly on 7 November-- just prior to his departure for the north--Souvanna is reliably reported to have informed the deputies that nothing had been achieved in the nearly four weeks of talks with the Pathet Lao. He claimed the government had rejected Pathet demands for inclusion in a coalition government, while the Pathet Lao had stalled on the government's demand for a supervised cease-fire between opposing forces in the field. A Pathet Lao negotiator is said to have gone to Sam Neua to get a decision from Prince) SECRET 9 Nov 60 CFNTRAI INTFI I inFt.irF RI III FTIN Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Page �4 Approved for Release:, 2020/03/13 CO2977808 RET SE LSouphannouvong on the question of a cease-fire. Quinim Pholsena, Souvanna's extreme leftist minister of informa- tion, is also in Sam Neua for talks with Souphannouvong:I. CAt the same session, the assembly reportedly appointed a delegation to enter into negotiations with General Phoumi's Savannakhet Revolutionary Committee. The delegation re- portedly will seek talks with Phoumi's representatives at some neutral site, since it fears it will be arrested if it goes to Savannakhet. The chances of success in this venture are highly uncertain, although a settlement worked out by the assembly might possibly be attractive to both Souvanna and Phoumi as a face-saving means of reaching a settlement without the necessity of a direct personal confrontation. -SECRET_ 9 Nov 60 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 5 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 SECRET Awe moir "Guided Democracy" in Indonesia President Suk,arno's appointment of leaders of the 610- member People's Consultative Congress on 8 November com- pletes the reorganization of the Indonesian legislature under the reinvoked 1945 constitution. His choice of the congres- sional leaders, drawn from the three major parties and the army with a nonparty leftist as acting chairman, is continued evidence that the president is still trying to integrate all po- litical elements under "guided democracy." The two-house legislature will be a rubber-stamp organiza- tion, as evidenced by activities of the Council of Representatives. The Communists control about 25 percent of the members of both houses. The or nizational trappings of "guided democra- cy" also include the Supreme Advisory Council,which is expected to ensure political guidance, and the National Planning Board to provide economic direction. Yet to be formed is the National Front, a mass organization to function through a multilevel structure ranging from a central board in Djakarta to village organizations throughout the nation; as yet, only the central board has been appointed. Sukarno's stated ambition is to create an administration un- hampered by political dissension which can direct all its energies toward national fulfillment. He regards the various councils, all of which include Communists, as an important step toward his goal. In practice, the congress and councils are largely facades behind which Sukarno, assisted by the cabinet and the army, governs the country. Although the army continues to obstruct the Communists in a fairly effective manner, it has failed to influence Sukarno against the Communist party or against the acceptance of large amounts of bloc aid. he Indonesian cabinet is reported, as of 1 November, to have decided to proceed with a Soviet loan offer of over $400,000,000 for naval equipment4 -SEGREW-- 9 Nov 60 CENTRAi INTF1110.FKICP RI II I FTIK1 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Page 6 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 11 1 I 1.-11-..1!Y I I1t L. 'moue THE PRESIDENT The Vice President Executive Offices of the White House Special Assistant for National Security Affairs Scientific Adviser to the President Director of the Budget Director, Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization Director, National Aeronautics and Space Administration .Special Assistant for Security Operations Coordination Chairman, Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities Special Assistant for Foreign Economic Policy Executive Secretary, National Security Council The Treasury Department The Secretary of the Treasury The Department of State The Secretary of State The Under Secretary of State The Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs The Deputy Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs The Deputy Under Secretary of State for Administration The Counselor Director, International Cooperation Administration The Director of Intelligence and Research The Department of Defense The Secretary of Defense The Deputy Secretary of Defense Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs The Secretary of the Army The Secretary of the Navy The Secretary of the Air Force The Chairman, The Joint Chiefs of Staff The Director, The Joint Staff Chief of Staff, United States Army Chief of Naval Operations, United States Navy Chief of Staff, United States Air Force Commandant, United States Marine Corps Assistant to Secretary of Defense for Special Operations Director for Intelligence, The Joint Staff Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Department of Army Director of Naval Intelligence, Department of Navy Assistant Chief of Staff, Intelligence, Department of the Air Force Supreme Allied Commander, Europe Commander in Chief, Pacific The Department of Commerce The Secretary of Commerce Federal Bureau of Investigation The Director Atomic Energy Commission The Chairman National Security Agency The Director National Indications Center The Director CONFIDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 Approved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808 ��84# virf TOP SECRET //1 ZApproved for Release: 2020/03/13 CO2977808f ././/