CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY

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CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1
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October 18, 1999
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Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 COPY NO.,-"- -- OCI NO. 1684/59 23 April 1959 140 CHANGE tN CLASS. ^ ? DECLASSIFIED ~..,~ IcLASS. CHANGED To: T. ` C NEXT REVIEW DATE: I --- AUTH: H 70 OAT VIEWER CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY 11I OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE State Dept. review completed CONFIDENTIAL (CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY CONFIDENTIAL Sam n Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 THIS MATERIAL CONTAINS INFORMATION AFFECT- ING THE NATIONAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE ESPIONAGE LAWS, TITLE 18, USC, SECTIONS 793 AND 794, THE TRANSMIS- SION OR REVELATION OF WHICH IN ANY MANNER TO AN UNAUTHORIZED PERSON IS PROHIBITED BY LAW. The Current Intelligence Weekly Surnmary has been prepared primarily for the internal use of the Central Intelligence Agency. It does not represent a complete coverage of all current situations. Comments and conclusions represent the immediate appraisal of the Office of Current Intelligence. Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 f'f M rI r r MTI A I Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST EAST-WEST NEGOTIATIONS . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page I The USSR is stepping up its effort to soften the Western position and set the stage for its own proposals at the forthcoming East-West negotiations. Moscow has charged in notes to Washington and Bonn that measures to equip West German forces with nuclear weapons are de- signed to confront the "conferences" with a fait accompli. The notes are aimed at placing the USSR in a position to blame the West for any failure of the talks and to claim that such failure would give Moscow no choice but to pro- ceed with unilateral actions regarding Berlin and a sepa- rate peace treaty with East Germany. Moscow will probably use the 27 April conference of ministers of the Warsaw Pact and Communist China to demonstrate bloc strength and solidarity. MIDDLE EAST HIGHLIGHTS . . ? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 4 Additional Communist-sponsored mass demonstrations in Iraq are maintaining the momentum of the local Com- munist effort toward full control of the country. There are persistent reports that avowed Communists will soon join the Iraqi cabinet. Additional anti-Communists have gone into exile or have been arrested. The Imam of Yemen is undergoing medical treatment in Italy; Crown Prince Badr is taking special security measures to prevent the overthrow of his regency. The persistence of tension and disagreement within the top army council which governs the Sudan appears to make further government changes al- most inevitable. TIBET SITUATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 7 Chou En-lai says that Tibet now is completely under Chinese control but that mopping-up operations continue. Peiping has abandoned its reticence to attack India di- rectly and has accused "Indian officials" of abetting "vicious attacks on China." Nehru has criticized the Chinese as "brutal" and believes that Peiping's Tibetan policy has failed--with a profound effect on Indian and CONFIDENTIAL i THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 kbww SECRET NOW( CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 PART I (continued) Asian opinion--but is unwilling to support th lai Lama's anal of Tibetan independence. The Dalai Lama is determined to establish a Tree Trioetan gov erii aen , an work for Tibetan independence, even if this means he must seek asylum outside India. NOTES AND COMMENTS KHRUSHCHEV REACHES SIXTY-FIVE . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . Page 2 Praise for Khrushchev in a greeting sent him by the party presidium on his 65th birthday is reminiscent of the "cult of personality" adulation which surrounded Stalin. The Soviet premier apparently was not in good health dur- ine his visit to East Germany last month. KHRUSHCHEV LIEUTENANT APPARENTLY DEMOTEI) . . . . . . . . Page Khrushchev appears to be carrying his quiet shake-up of Soviet officialdom into the highest :Levels of the party. Nikolay Ignatov, who had become a member of both the party presidium and secretariat since Khrushchev's rise to power, has been given the relatively inconsequential job of titu- lar president of the Russian Republic, probably signifying a sharp setback in his high party career. This move fol- lows closely the demotion of several high-ranking offi- cials, including Soviet planning boss Iosif Kuzmin. SECRET THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 %INV SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 PART II (continued) PEIPING'S NATIONAL PEOPLE'S CONGRESS . . . . . . . . . . Page The Second National People's Congress and Peiping's new budget for 1959 have reaffirmed Communist China's intentions to continue the "leap forward" in economic development and social reorganization. Chou En-lai's foreign policy statements were moderate in tone but showed no yielding on substantive issues. The congress was pre- sented with a picture of a booming economy, which had scored unprecedented advances last year and was bound to make bigger end better gains this year. NORTH KOREAN - JAPANESE REPATRIATION TALKS . . . . . . . . Page Representatives of the Japanese and North Korean Red Cross societies have been engaged in talks since 13 April at Geneva on the Japanese plan to repatriate Koreans in Japan to North Korea. The major problem is to negotiate a formula which will overcome North Korean objections to screening repatriates to make sure they are returning of their own free will. The Kishi government has asserted .' at Koreans will not be sent back involuntarily. SOVIET TACTICS TOWARD JAPAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 7 The USSR is carrying on a campaign to convince the Japanese that a "neutral" policy would bring Tokyo sub- stantial trade and fishing benefits and greater security against the threat of nuclear war. In a letter replying to questions by a Japanese newsman on 20 April, Khrushchev reiterated previous proposals for a denuclearized zone in the Far East and offered to "guarantee" Japan's neutrality. At the same time Ambassador Fedorenko, with an eye on the important elections impending in Japan, has energetically propagandized for Japanese neutrality in speeches through- t t ou he country. The Kishi government does not intend at present to answer the Soviet proposals. TITO PREPARES FOR LONG SIEGE IN DISPUTE WITH BLOC . . . . Page 8 Yugoslavia is digging in for a long struggle with the bloc. Now that the opposing ideological positions have crystallized, Tito sees in the controversy many of the same irreconcilable differences and Stalinist methods that characterized the 1948 dispute. Belgrade is taking the initiative more frequently, and Tito is attempting to use the dispute to restore flagging party unity and enthusiasm. Tito has recently laid out the future course of the party, confidently assuring its members that their struggle with the bloc "will be recorded in history as a shining example n f +t, a ...,, ... a? _. r .,. _ L , ~ _ _ '- s _ _ - international labor movement." SECRET iii THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 PART II (continued) OPENING OF THE FRENCH PARLIAMENT . . . . . . . . . . Page French Premier Debrg's government will face the test of parliamentary responsibility for the first time since De Gaulle came to power when the spring legislative ses- sion convenes on 28 April. Despite Debre's efforts to avert a strong resolution on Algerian integration, depu- ties from Algeria may force the issue by arguing that the current municipal elections there show the necessity for integration. Parliament is also expected to give Debr6 trouble on the economic austerity program. De Gaulle, however, has threatened to dissolve Parliament if it tries to reassert its previous dominant role. BELGIAN POLITICAL CRISIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page King Baudouin last week took the unusual step of vetoing the Belgian cabinet's nominee for new governor general of the Congo. This move has undermined the pres- tige of generally progressive Congo Minister Maurice Van H emeir.jk;. and increased the problems of the Eyskens gov- ernment in carrying out the policy announced last January for increasing the territory's autonomy by definite stages. The veto may also revive latent hostility toward the mon- archy which has been dormant since Kind; Leopold abdicated in 1950 because of his World War II record. THE EUROPEAN COAL-STEEL COMMUNITY . . . . . . . . . Page A major test of the supranational powers of the Coal- Steel Community (CSC) may occur at the meeting of its council of government representatives on 4 May. In an effort to alleviate the present coal glut, the CSC High Authority--the executive body staffed by international civil servants--is determined to press for production quotas effective throughout the six-nation community, a plan which the council may reject. Defeat of the High Authority would be a blow to the prestige of the EURATOM and Common Market commissions and would encourage those critics who want to revise the CSC treaty. RIGHTIST REVOLUTIONARY OUTBREAK IN BOLIVIA . . . . . . Page The revolutionary attempt on 19 April by Bolivia's perennially plotting rightists apparently was prompted by the division of the governing Nationalist Revolutionary Movement over the protracted economic crisis. The criti- cal economic situation is likely to continue generating tensions which may be reflected in sudden new outbreaks of violence by either rightist or leftist elements. However, the government's swift defeat of the rebels and its decla- ration of a state of siege may enhance its prestige and improve its control of subversion. SECRET iv THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 PART II (continued) NEW GOVERNMENT TO BE FORMED SOON IN NEPAL . . . . . . . . Page 13 Nepal's first government under the constitution pro- claimed in February will be formed by the left-of-center Nepali Congress party, which won a two-thirds majority in the recently completed parliamentary elections. The new government, maintaining a close relationship with New Delhi, is likely to pursue modified socialist policies internally and to take a neutralist position in foreign affairs. 25X1 INDIAN CONGRESS PARTY LOSES POPULAR SUPPORT . . . . . . . Page 14 Prime Minister Nehru's Congress party apparently is losing popular support, despite the major economic advances India has achieved since 1951 under Congress leadership of its First and Second Five-Year Plans. Recent municipal elections in various parts of the country have shown a strong trend away from the party, notably in Madras and Punjab states, where the Congress party made a good showing in the national elections of 1957. INDONESIA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 16 President Sukarno's departure on a two-month world tour has given rise to new rumors of political changes and maneuvers which would take advantage of his absence. Should significant opposition develop to Sukarno's call for readoption of the 1945 constitution, Sukarno with the army's backing may impose the constitution by executive decree. Meanwhile, Indonesian negotiations Torizino- Soviet bloc military and economic aid continue. SECRET THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 PART II (continued) PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES SOCIALIST AND SOCIALIST-INCLINED PARTI39S IN LATIN AMERICA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 1 Socialism has considerable appeal in Latin America, where widely supported national parties have made pro-. labor legislation and extensive state participation in the economy a major part of their programs. In five countries, national revolutionary parties have gained the allegiance of almost all elements which the Commu- nists seek to cultivate, and most of them have acquired a decided anti-Communist orientation. CHANGES IN THE USSR MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS . . . . . Page 9 During the past six years the USSR Ministry of For- eign Affairs has been refurbished into a more effective agency for extending Soviet influence throughout the world. A drastic reshuffling of ministerial personnel has been carried out by the regime, and a large number of former high-level party and government careerists from other departments assigned to leading posts within the ministry. Efforts have also been made to expand diplo- matic relations. Unlike his two predecessors, Foreign Minister Andrey Gromyko is a foreign policy technician rather than a policy maker. He is not a member of the party presidium and has apparently stayed aloof from factional politics. SECRET vi THE WEEK IN BRIEF Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST EAST-WEST NEGOTIATIONS Moscow is stepping up its effort both publicly and pri- vately to soften the Western position and set the stage for its proposals at the forthcoming East-West negotiations. In similar notes to Washington and Bonn on 21 April, the Kremlin charged that measures to equip West German forces with nuclear weapons are designed to confront the "conferences" with a fait accompli. By focusing attention on this controversial issue, the Soviet leaders are seeking to sharpen differences among the Western Allies on the eve of the 11 May foreign ministers' conference. The warning that negotia- tions will be doomed to fail- ure if Bonn persists in its rearmament program is another step in Moscow's effort to es- tablish in advance the rationale and justification for unilat- eral actions regarding Berlin and a separate peace treaty with East Germany in the event the talks fail. Recent private statements by Soviet officials reflect the Kremlin leaders' continuing de- termination to gain Western ac- ceptance of a summit conference regardless of the outcome of the foreign ministers' meeting. CONFIDENTIAL OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 1 of 8 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Nwe SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 The Soviet counselor in Paris told an American official on 20 April that one possible solution of the Berlin problem would be to reaffirm the rights of the three Western powers to remain in West Berlin but to withdraw all foreign troops from the city or reduce them .to token forces. Under this formula, the East Germans would exercise physical control of access routes, in accordance with a four-power'guarantee of free access. This same Soviet diplomat made similar suggestions to French and American officials in January and February in which he minimized the changes that would occur after the USSR with- draws from East Berlin and im- plied that East German controls would not be far-reaching, He told an American official on 27 January that the Western powers could keep their troops in Ber- lin under an international con- trol commission. The first secretary of the Soviet Embassy in Bonn attrib- uted Adenauer's decision to seek the presidency to the chancellor's conviction that he could no longer impose his "inelastic" policy on his West- ern allies. This interpreta- tion and the official.;'s allusion to a relationship between Ger- man Foreign Minister Brentano's return from Washington and Ade nauer's decision to resign the chancellorship., suggest Soviet confidence that the Western powers, under pressure of pub- lic; opinion, will move toward an accommodation with Moscow on Berlin and Germany. The announcement of Vice President Nixon's forthcoming trip to the USSR, according to the Soviet press, has been fa- vorably received in the USSR. TASS commented that leading circles in the Soviet Union expect the visit to serve the further development of personal contacts between government heads and improve US-Soviet understanding. Moscow has resumed propa- ganda attacks on the high-al- titude American flights in the Berlin air corridor, calling them deliberately provocative vio- lations of flight regulations and "blackmail aimed at aggra- vating the international situ- ation" on the eve of the foreign ministers' conference. Pravda added that such acts will -not be permitted to go unpunished. In line with the Kremlin's professed desire to create a favorable atmosphere'for ne- gotiations, Soviet propaganda had :refrained from exploiting the air corridor incidents in the 'two-week period following the Soviet note of protest of 4 April. The resumption of propaganda attacks and Pravda's implied warning constitute a attempt by Moscow to use this issue to exploit differences among the Western powers and may indicate an intention to claim, credit if the flights are discontinued. The USSR has announced that the foreign ministers of SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST nacrm 7 of 8 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMWARY 23 April 1959 the Warsaw Pact powers and Com- munist China will meet in Warsaw on 27 April to review questions to be discussed at the East-West foreign ministers' conference. Moscow will probably use the conference to demonstrate bloc strength and solidarity with the aim of bolstering the Soviet position at the 11 May Geneva conference. Nuclear Test-Cessation Talks Moscow apparently wishes to avoid any developments:'in the nu- clear test-cessation talks in Geneva which might affect ad- versely the Soviet posture of seeking to create a favorable atmosphere for forthcoming ne- gotiations on the Berlin-German problem. The American chief del- eghte believes the Soviet dele- gation is attempting to create the impression of progress in the negotiations by gradual ac- ceptance of noncontroversial ar- ticles introduced by'the_United States and Britain, while care- fully skirting all the difficult issues. The conference now has agreed to ten. draft articles and a draft preamble. Moscow probably believes it can avoid detailed discussion of the American plan for an agree- ment limited to atmospheric and underwater tests, unequivocal re- jection of which would detract from the Soviet posture of de- siring compromise on East-West issues. East Germany Speaking to the East German parliament on 16 April, Premier Grotewohl categorically rejected any solution-. of the Berlin prob- lem which would include East Ber- lin in a free city under interna- tional control. In line with previous Soviet and East German official statements, he said ac- ceptance of such proposals would violate the "sovereignty" of the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Grotewohl's announcement that the GDR "representatives" at the foreign ministers' meet- ing in Geneva will include For- eign Minister Bolz is clearly intended to support'.the East German claim to full and equal participation in the conference. The large size and high level of the 50-man delegation which will reportedly accompany Bolz--in- clueling Deputy Foreign Minister Otto Winzer and Peter Florin, head of the party central com- mittee's foreign policy depart- ment;--underline the puppet re- gime's attempt to present an appearance of "sovereignty" at the meeting. On 17 April the GDR Minis- try of Transport requested its West; German counterpart to au- thorize the transit of an East German train, presumably to carry its delegation to Geneva at the beginning and end of the confer- ence!. The East Germans also re- quested overflight rights for one GDR plane to fly daily be- tween Geneva and Berlin-Schoene- feldi airport during the confer- ence. In conformity with quad- ripartite views on the matter, the West German Transport Minis- try has approved both requests. The West Germans also intend to inform the East German airline, Interf lug, that the Federal Re- public will ask the three Allied powers for permission to author- ize East German planes to fly the Berlin air corridor in view of the special circumstances. Public criticism of the Soviet proposal to finalize the Oder-Neisse frontier has persisted in East Germany, both by the gen- eral public and party members. SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 3 of 8 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 i%ol SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 19,59 Britain In the interest of achiev- ing Western harmony, Britain is endeavoring to soften the clash between its own position and those of its allies. In the working group discussions in London, the British have sought principally to keep open the way for a pilot inspection plan in central Europe. British ideas on the controversial spe- cial security zone nevertheless remain unclear--presumably to allow for maximum Western flex- ibility in East-West negotia- tions. West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt has in- formed American officials that he is satisfied with the general situation In West Berlin. He said that unemployment is con- siderably lower than last year MIDDLE EAST Iraq Additional Communist-spon- sored mass demonstrations are maintaining the momentum of the Iraqi Communist effort toward ,full control of the country. ,The end of the Peace Partisans meetings in Baghdad last week was marked by a well-controlled parade of an estimated half- million marchers, and another series of mass rallies in Bagh- dad and other centers has been called for 24 April to commemo- rate the "struggle against im- and that there has been no sig- nificant removal of people,cap- ital, or industry from the city. He emphasized that morale is primarily dependent on belief in US firmness in retaining garrisons and free access, by force if necessary. Adenauer's decision to run for president has had no visi- ble effect on Berlin morale. Most Berliners doubt there will ,be any changes in Bonn's for- eign policy, and some regard an anticipated introduction of "tactical flexibility" as a "positive" development. Ber- lin's political leaders do not expect Adenauer's successors to do less for Berlin than the chancellor--an attitude which reflects their belief that US policy is the determini atg fac- tor in Berlin's futures HIGHLIGHTS perialism." These demonstrations are being organized in the first instance by the Communist-direct- ed youth organizations, but the udual swarm of labor, women's, writers', and other groups is taking part. The demonstrations are phys- ically managed by individual or- ganizers,each of whom directs a specaLal segment of the marchers, while traffic and general crowd control is being handled largely by the Communist-dominated Poplar Resistance Force. The regular police and the army seem SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Pacrp 4 of 8 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 in many cases to have abdicated internal security functions. Should these demonstra- tions result in any attacks on Westerners or their prop- erty, the action would al- most certainly be deliberate on the part of the demonstra- tions' organizers rather than a by-product of excessive en- thusiasm. Reports persist that a cabinet shake-up is imminent, involving both the replace- ment of some ministers and the appointment of new ones. one o the prospective casual- ties is said to be Finance Min- ister Hadid, an intellectual Marxist but also a wealthy in- dustrialist who has been at odds with Economics Minister Kubba, the cabinet's outstand- ing pro-Communist:, Another pro-Communist, Health Minister Shawwaf, announced last week that the USSR, rather than Western Europe, will hence- forth be the locale for special medical treatment for Iraqis, and that private hospitals and clinics in Iraq will be nation- alized. An American mission hospital was taken over some time ago by the government. Baghdad has announced that Kamil Chadirchi, leader of the left-wing National Democratic party and until recently Prime Minister Qasim's principal civil- 25X1 ian political adviser, will go 1:6 Moscow for medical treatment. Chadirchi's de- parture from Iraq, for what- ever reason, will remove the only non-Communist influence ever known to have really had Qasimm's ear. Nasir's latest propaganda attacks have continued to stress the anti-Communist theme rather than hit Qasim directly, and UAR propaganda officials now are seeking "hard" anti-Communist ma- terials to use in their campaign. Arab Petroleum Congress No surprises thus far have come out of the Cairo-sponsored First Arab Petroleum Congress which began on 16 April. Most SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST par= ti of 8 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 *404 ~Nw SECRET... . 23 April 1959 of the Arab papers presented have been versions of earlier proposals. Lebanon's EmilBustani, for example, again submitted his plan for the oil-producing Arab countries to set aside 5 percent of their profits for the benefit of the "have-not" states,, Besides Lebanon, the "have-nots' include the UAR and Jordan. Al- though Bustani claimed to have the support of Kuwait, the re- sponse to his speech was not warm. A UAR delegate apparently made the only "political" speech, aimed at the United States and charging Washington with trying to control the Middle East be- cause of American oil companies. Other UAR addresses were note- worthy for their lack of recrim- ination and fairly businesslike character. A mild stir and some con- cern was generated by Frank Hen- drix, an American who is Saudi Arabia's top legal adviser on oil matters. Hendrix sought to lay a legal foundation for uni- lateral Arab modification or elimination of existing petro- leum concession agreements. The presentation of his thesis, which was quickly challenged by both Arab and oil-company of- ficials, appeared to be largely a Saudi skirmish with the Ara bian--American Oil Company and. was generally unwelcome to the con- gress as a whole. Saudi Arabia's energetic director of Petroleum affairs, Abdulla Tariki, and Venezuela's minister of mines and. hydrocar- bons, Dr. Juan Pablo Perez Al- fonzo, appear to have dominated the congress. Tariki pressed hard for a new, Arab-owned pipeline which would carry Per- sian Gulf oil, probably except- ing Iraq and Iraq, to the Med- iterranean by a route largely paralleling the existing Tapline. Tar:iki publicly agreed that there were "grounds" for an oil price and production agreement between the Middle East and Ven- ezuela but did not think action could be taken during the con- gress. The Imam of Yemen has ar- 25X6 rived in Rome and is under treat- ment by Italian doctors for his various ailments. SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Pa.1-7e 6 of S Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 Crown Prince Badr, who has been left in charge of the Yemeni Government as chairman of a four- or five-man council, has taken a number of unusual security precautions. Considerable maneuvering almost certainly will develop in Yemen in the Imam's absence. A previous report that tribal leaders opposed to Badr had pledged -that they would remain quiet has been denied, and un- less the crown prince moves cau- tiously he could be faced with a revolt. In what may be an ef- fort to reduce foreign influ- ences--both Western and Soviet-- the Yemeni Government reportedly intends to close diplomatic and consular establishments in Sana and Taiz and conduct all rely tions in Cairo. The long-dor- mant United Arab State--the year-old Union of Yemen and the UAR--presumably would be used as the technical vehicle to justify this move. Sudan Persistence of tension and disagreement within the top army council which governs the Sudan appear to make further govern- ment changes almost inevitable. Premier Abboud is again reported preparing to retire from the scene in the f ace of the rest- lessness of junior officers whose spokesman is the leader of the "semicoup" last March, Brigadier Shannan. A Soviet economic delega- tion left Khartoum on 16 April without reaching any major agree- ments despite two months of ne- gotiations, The Soviet delegation refused to deviate from the es- tablished pattern of Soviet aid programs, which the Sudanese re- jected because of concern over the presence of bloc personnel TIBET SITUATION Premier Chou En-lai told the National People's Congress in Peiping that Tibet now is completely under .Chinese con- trol. He admitted, however, that mopping-up operations were continuing in "remote" areas. Peiping later reported that Chinese forces control the whole Tibetan frontier north of the Himalayas. The Peiping press on 23 April dropped its reticence to attack New Delhi direct- ly and accused "Indian of- ficials" of abetting "vicious attacks on China" by re- leasing the Dalai Lama's first statement denying he had been abducted from Ti- bet. SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 7 of 8 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 Although embarrassed and undoubtedly bitter over Nehru's sympathy for the Dalai Lama, the Chinese have so far avoided formal actions or statements which would further antagonize the Indians and to which Nehru would be forced to respond on a government-to-government ba- sis. Chou En-lai,speaking be- fore the congress, had toned down earlier charges that Kal- impong in India's West Bengal State was the Tibetan rebels' command center o He also hailed 2,000 years of friendship with India and said there was no rea- son why such friendship should be shaken by a "handful" of rebels. Nehru is convinced Peiping will not reverse its policy of total repression in Tibet, and he believes the eventual return of the Dalai Lama is out of the question. India will try to keep the Dalai Lama relatively quiet. Nehru again told Parliament on 20 April that the Dalai Lama Is free to conduct religious activities, but "Political 25X1 activities are not carried on from one country against another," Nehru probably will put considerable pressure on the Dalai Lama to prevent him from carrying out political ac- tivities from within India, and is likely to ask him to seek asylum elsewhere if he persists in his present plans. High-level committees are being set up in India and else- where to handle the expected flow of Tibetan refugees. Al- though insignificant thus far, the exodus probably will in- crease and pose further prob- lens The Chinese Nationalists may become more determined than ever to demonstrate their ability to play an active role in the Tibetan revolt as a re- sult of the Dalai Lama's fail- ure! to mention Nationalist China in his 18 April press statement or to respond to Chiang Kai--shek's offer of future "self-determination," Any increased support for the Tibetan revolt, however, would probably be limited primarily to a step-up in Nationalist propaganda efforts against the mainland, such as a resumption l e a s SECRET PART I OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST Page 8 of 8 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 KHRUSHCHEV REACHES SIXTY-FIVE Khrushchev's 65th birthday on 17 April coincided with an unprecedented volume of reports and speculation on the state of his health, and with strik- ing evidence that adulation of Khrushchev is beginning to re- semble closely "the cult of personality" which surrounded Stalin. Khrushchev has been on va- cation, first in Sochi and lat- er in Yalta, since about 25 March. Late last summer and early in the fall he was on va- cation for six weeks; he appar- ently also took time off for about two weeks in January of this year. A pattern seems to be developing of longer, more frequent and probably quieter, more restful vacations. Khrushchev leadership aura was advanced markedly on 19 April when the Soviet press pub- lished an unprecedented birthday greeting sent to him by the party presidium. Soviet leaders' 65th birthdays are not normally noted with party greetings. Some of the words chosen for the congratulatory message were last used to describe Stalin at the height of the "cult of personality" period. The message was signed by all full and candidate members of the presidium ex- cept M. G. Pervukhin, ambassador to East Germany--probably signifying that he is no longer a candidate member. The presidium members called Khrushchev "elder comrade and friend" who ""dedicates all your seething energy, wealth of po- litical experience, wisdom, and daring initiative to the build- ing of Communism and the consol- idation of the might of the So- viet state.... "" They credited to Khrushchev's initiative and direction the major political and economic innovations taken by the ceftral committee in re- cent years and acknowledged SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS 2 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Nwo SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 "the farsighted,, flexible., and principled Soviet foreign poli- cy, to which you dedicate so much energy and skill." Perhaps for the benefit of the Chinese Communists, Khrushchev's speeches and re- The "election" on 16 April of Nikolay Ignatov, a member of both the party presidium and secretariat, as chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Republic (RSFSR) appears to be part of a general shake-up of Soviet party and government officials which has been going on for several months. Since last December, a number of high-ranking fig- ures have lost their jobs. These include party and government leaders in the Turk- men, Uzbek, and Belo- russian republics and Moscow Oblast, as well as Soviet plan- ning chief Iosif Kuzmin. In "proposing" Ignatov for a hereto- fore largely ceremo.- hial and politically insignificant post, party secretary and cadre specialist Awerky Aristov stressed ports were credited with "dis- playing models of creative en- richment of the theory of Marxism-Leninism, especial- ly on questions of build- ing socialism and Commu- nism. " since his new post is a full-time job. Aristov's remarks suggest some increase in the responsi- bilities of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet Presidium. In addition, Igr.Latov will probably be called on to represent the Soviet Union in place of ailing President Voroshilov, and he will be in line to succeed Voro- shilov when the latter dies or has to retire. Even so, Ignatov's new responsibilities do not appear commensurate with those he enjoyed as party secretary, and he has probably suffered a political reverse. Ignatov, now 58, had held high party posts for many years. He did not enter the highest levels of the hierarchy until after Khrushchev's rise to ;power, however, He the "great tasks which the Su- preme Soviet of the RSFSR is called on to decide" and stated that the party central commit- tee had recognized that it is "necessary for the RSFSR Supreme Soviet Presidium to be headed by a member of the presidium of the Soviet party central com- mittee." Ignatov thus appears certain to remain on the party presidium but will probably be released from the secretariat, was made a member of the party presidium in June 1957, follow- ing the ouster of the "antiparty" group, and was brought into the secretariat from an important provincial party post in Decem- ber 1957. He apparently has been party secretary responsible for agriculture. There had been no previous indications of a decline in Ignatov's standing, SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Pace 3 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY- 23. April 1959, There has been no indica- tion of a new assignment for Mikhail Tarasov, Ignatov's predecessor as RSFSR Pre- sidium chairman and a candidate member of the party central committee. PEIPING'S NATIONAL PEOPLE'S CONGRESS Communist China's Second National People's Congress-- which opened in Peiping on 18 April and is scheduled to meet for ten days--has heard a re- statement of current policy in the major report by Premier Chou En-lai and economic and budget plans for 1959. Chou's 30,000-word report reaffirms Peiping's intentions to continue its "leap forward" in economic development and social reorgan- ization and moderates the tone of Peiping's foreign policy statements. The "election" of the new government--including Mao Tse-tung's successor--will probably not take place until the closing sessions of the con- gress. Mao, meanwhile, is receiv ing homage as. the guiding spirit of the regime's past and present programs. Foreign Relations On the subject of China's foreign relations, Chou's grand display of forbearance--a sharp contrast with statements in 1958 --was clearly intended to dispel the notion in the bloc as well as the West that the Chinese Communists are Stalinists of the East. He hoped the peace area "already formed" in Southeast Asia would last "forever" and noted that despite forays into China by Surma-based National- ist irregulars, Peiping has done no more than guard the frontier and "remain patient," waiting for "friendly" Burma to handle the situation on its own. Chou's effort to quiet international criticism of restrictions on freedom in China included a call for "hundred flowers" in science and art, but he added the significant qualification that the policy must "serve socialism." Chou's moderate tone re- flects no yielding on substan- tive issues dividing Communist China and the West. He applied to all countries a principle which recently appeared in Peiping's propaganda on Japan-- that is, "so-called" diplomatic relations with Taipei must be severed before formal relations with Communist China can be established, He made it clear Peiping continues to regard the United States as its major enemy, citing a belligerent state- merit of Mao that "the enemy rots with each passing day." Turning to Tibet, Chou to]:.d the congress that the area now is completely under Peiping's control but admitted that mopping- up operations were continuing in "remote"regions. The Economy The congress was presented with a picture of a booming econ- omy, which had scored unprece- dented advances last year and was bound to make bigger and better gains this year. The 1959 plan gives every in- dication of having been bared on Peiping's question- able 1958 production claims, It is described as "both SECRET PART 11 NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 4 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 - SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 grand and arduous" but entirely capable of being fulfilled. It retains the high targets for steel, coal, food grains,and cotton first advanced last December and schedules an in- crease in total value of in- dustrial and agricultural output larger in absolute terms than last. year's. Speakers at the congress have cautioned that many im- portant materials, energy sources, and transport lag be- hind the demand, and that, de spite the fact that efforts this year are to be concentrated on these shortages, it is impos- sible to bring about a quick and radical change. Chou En-lai, directing his remarks to one extreme of party opinion, argues that it is "quite impractical" to expect that the percentage increase in output must be higher in each succeeding year. He warned that in the course of continuous leaps Toward there might even be decreases in production, particularly in agriculture. He insisted, as far as the 1959 plan is concerned, that if every worker, peasant,.and.intellectual is mobilized;:"ideologically and politically,." the .1959 plan will "certainly be fulfilled" NORTH KOREAN - JAPANESE Representatives of the Japanese and North Korean Red Cross societies have been en- gaged in talks since 13 April on the Japanese plan to repa- triate Koreans in Japan to North Korea? The Japanese Government on 13 February announced its decision to act on the The 1959 budget, described as "bold and well founded" by Finance Minister Li Hsien-nien, schedules expenditures and rev- enues balanced at a record $21.4 billion. Even so the increases do not appear to re- flect fully the levels of pro- duction and construction said to :have been achieved last year. Li said that most of the 24-per- cent increase in revenues would come out of increased profits and taxes on state enterprises, They will account for almost 90 percent of revenues this year. Budget spending will go up 27 percent. Direct allocations for defense are to increase by only 16 percent but constitute 11.x; percent of total expendi- tures, the smallest percentage since the Chinese Communists came to power. Additional spending on defense is of course hidden in other budget cate- gories. The largest increases in spending will be a 26-percent rise in construction investment, a near doubling of the budget outlay for bank credits, and an increase of more than 200 percent in allocations for foreign aid. The budget also sets aside some $400,000,000 for investment in communes with "poo:rer economic conditions " REPATRIATION TALKS repatriation question, in re- sponse to mounting domestic political pressure and in view of lack of progress in normaliz- ing relations with South Korea, Some 117,000 of the 600,000 Korean residents in Japan sub- sequently signed petitions stat- ing their desire to go to North Korea, but the majority of sig- natures were apparently obtained by leftist coercion, SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS paaa 5 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 The International Commit- tee of the Red Cross (ICRC), wary of Japan's initial propos- al that the ICRC screen the Korean residents to confirm their wishes, invited repre- sentatives of the Japanese and North Korean societies to confer in Geneva. North Korea accepted, probably seeing in the talks an opportunity for enhanced international standing and a chance to exacerbate Sleuth Korean - Japanese relations. At the conference table, Pyong- yang initially rejected the Japanese Red Cross proposal for even limited !CRC screening, and by 20 April a Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman had decided that agreement was unlikely. Since then, however, the North Koreans have dem- onstrated a greater flexibility on the issues to be negotiated. While it is probable that North Korea will eventually modify its position on ICRC screening, it may not seek an early settlement, since im- plementation of any agreement would reveal that contrary to Pyongyang's claims, only a small proportion of the Koreans in Japan wish repatriation to North Korea. It would also settle a grievance which North Korea has long used to berate the Kishi government. For Toyko, the crux of the matter apparently is to devise a formula which would overcome repeated North Korean objections to any screening procedure and yet not contra- vene the Kishi government's assertion that none of the Korean residents would be re- patriated involuntarily. Kishi is anxious to demonstrate to the Japanese public prior to the upper-house elections in June that progress is being made toward an agreement. The Japanese public has long sought the removal of as many as possible of the Korean residents, who are considered an undesirable minority. Somewhat in contrast to the seeming fle1zi- bility of the Japanese Red Cross negotiators in Geneva, Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Yamada has reiterated that ICRC screen- ing remains an "absolute condL- tion" for a repatriation agref.- ment and has indicated that Tokyo may break off the Geneva talks unless Pyongyang drops its opposition on this point.. South Korea claims that the status of Koreans in Japan can be resolved only through bilateral negotiation for an over-all settlement of out- standing differences between Seoul and Tokyo--negotiations which Seoul broke off when Tokyo announced it would permit the 'voluntary repatriation of Koreans in Japan to North Korea. Seoul has called for a resump- tion of the talks, but it has since insisted that Tokyo first break off the Geneva talks. Should Tokyo permit the re- patriation of Koreans to North Korea, Seoul might be provoked into rash counteraction. Prime Minister Kishi has indicated that a way could be found to shelve the repatria- tion plan indefinitely, pro- vided South Korea adopts a reasonable position on the problems of the "Rhee line,, and detained Japanese fisher- men, but President Rhee has given no indication that he is prepared to modify his conditions for an over-all settlement. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Pace 6 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET 23 April 1959 The USSR is carrying on a campaign to convince the Japanese that a "neutral" pol- icy would bring Tokyo substan- tial trade and fishing benefits and greater security against the threat of nuclear war. Soviet Premier Khrushchev on 20 April reiterated earlier Soviet proposals for a denu- clearized zone in the Far East and offered to "guarantee" Japan's neutrality. In a letter replying to questions by a Japanese newsman, he said an agreement to this effect could be negotiated by Communist China, Japan, and the USSR, and that the USSR would not op- pose the entry of the United States into such an arrangement. The Soviet premier's pro- posals, which support Soviet propaganda efforts to arouse concern in Japan over the cur- rent US-Japanese security treaty negotiations, are in line with Moscow's vague proposals over the past several years for a Far Eastern conference. Prime Minister Kishi commented on 21 April that he found "nothing new" in Khrushchev's statements, and Tokyo thus far is ignoring the proposals. Soviet Ambassador Fedorenko, with a view to influencing the important elections impending in Japan, is attempting to build up Soviet prestige in Japan.. In an effort to counter the un- popular effect new Soviet-im- posed curbs on Japanese fishing would have, he is attempting to divert blame to the Kishi gov- ernment. Fedorenko has sought every opportunity to extol the benefits of neutrality and has breathed new life into the Communist-dominated Japan-Soviet Society. Soviet spokesmen have vigorously stressed the oppor- tunities for trade expansion and have repeatedly held out the possibility of Japanese participation in the develop- ment of Siberia. Fedorenko stated on 27 March that the USSR is ready to sign a long-term trade agreement with Tokyo in order to place their trade re- lations on a more solid basis. Fedorenko's personal cam- paign for "neutralization" was launched by a Soviet note of 2 December which advocated Japa- nese neutrality and warned that small countries with dense popu- lations would be annihilated in case of atomic war, a warning repeated in Khrushchev's letter of 20 April to the Japanese news- man. His renewed references to this note are probably designed to provoke a reply which could be exploited by Communist prop- aganda during the current se- curity negotiations with the United States. On 21 April, Foreign Minister Fujiyama stated that for the time being Japan does not need to reply to the note. Fedorenko's emphatic af- firmation of the Kremlin's firm position on the territorial issue and a peace treaty, how- ever., as well as his solicitude. for the Japanese Socialist party, are clearly intended to illus trate that Soviet concessions to the pro-Western Kishi govern- ment will not be forthcoming. Moscow can be expected to follow Khrushchev's proposals with further moves designed' to contrast Kishi's policies with the advantages of a neutral- ly oriented regime. SECRET Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 TITO PREPARES FOR LONG SIEGE IN DISPUTE WITH BLOC Yugoslavia is digging in for a long struggle with the bloc. In a recent speech to his central committee and in a press interview, both commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Yugoslav Communist party, Presi- dent Tito laid out the future course of the party, confidently assuring its members that their struggle with the bloc "will be recorded in history as a shining example of the party's obliga- tions toward its own people and the international labor move- ment." Tito has claimed that no real efforts have been made by the bloc to discuss its theoret- ical differences with him. In fact, both sides have further justified their positions in terms of Marxism-Leninism, which has widened the breach even fur- ther. Khrushchev declared at the Soviet party's 21st congress that "socialism cannot be built" in a country outside the Commu nis"t bloc and that Yugoslavia's separation from the bloc endan- gers its socialist achievements. The Yugoslavs, who believe that all nations are moving toward socialism but away from blocs, aver that "socialism is nobody's monopoly," and that Moscow's aliti-Yugoslav campaign damages only "the Communist camp." The Yugoslavs do not, how- ever, take a negative view to- ward everything in the bloc. They believe that all socialist countries are facing common prob- lems of breaking away from the methods of state bureaucratism-- Stalin's perversion of Marxism-- "which have continued ... in other ... people's democracies." Thus they interpret Khrushchev's decentralization program as a positive step, but complain that the bloc has unjustly labeled as "'revisionism" Yugoslavia's solution of tiese same problems. While Belgrade denies it is proselyting, its position implies that the bloc countries should study Yugoslavia's road for so- lutions, to their own difficulties. The Yugoslav leaders are using the bloc's anti-Yugoslav campaign and their own "prin- cipled positions" as a rallying point to bolster flagging party unity and enthusiasm. This tactic has been particularly evident in recent weeks at party congresses in the various repub- lics, where party leaders have claimed that Yugoslavia's program "has thrown new coals into the ideological fire of Marxism which has been dying since Lenin's death." This theme probably will be emphasized further at the four other congresses scheduled be- tweeri now and June, as well as in the various celebrations of the party's 40th anniversary which, will take place throughout the year. Tito pledged in early March merely to answer the bloc's at- tacks "blow for blow," but in recent weeks Belgrade has fre- quently been taking the initia- tive. Yugoslavia took Nasir's side in his dispute with the Arab Communist parties, and it charged Communist China with causing the Tibetan revolt and thus causing damage to the "cause of socialism." Tito him- self reportedly urged Nehru to take it strong stand against Communist China's suppression of the Tibetan revolt. Belgrade also criticized Khrushchev's 21st congress thesis on eco- nonIc competition between the two "camps" as a call for con- tinuation of the cold war. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS uft~_, n Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET =,00 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 OPENING OF THE FRENCH PARLIAMENT The first legislative ses- sion of the new French Parlia- ment, which convenes on 28 April, will confront Premier Debr6 with several major is- sues--particularly Algeria, eco- nomic austerity, and the church- school question. Any of these could disrupt several parties and imperil the premier's coal- ition. President de Gaulle's threat to dissolve the assembly if it threatens his program, however, will probably discour- age any early move by the dep- uties to reassert parliament's traditionally domi- nant role. Composition of the new Senate is still to be -doter- mined by elections scheduled for 26 April, and some re- grouping of party alignments in the as- sembly is already be- ing discussed. A number of deputies will probably shift affiliation as party positions on the ma- jor issues become clearer. Although assembly action on economic matters is limited both by constitutional restric- tions and by President de Gaulle's recent warning that he would dis- solve Parliament if any serious efforts to undermine his economic austerity program are made, the Socialists are planning a strong attack. The Popular Republicans are avowedly uneasy over the effects of austerity on labor and the peasants, while numer- ous vested interests hurt by the program--such as the winegrowers--are powerfully FIGURES ARE TENTATIVE PENDING FINAL ALIGNMENTS as sua a11STS (SF10) UNION FOR A NEW REPUBLIC * "Administrative formations" (for purposes of participation on assembly committees). fl) Mostly Radical-Socialists and Democratic Resistance Union. (2) Mostly conservative Radicals. (3) Includes Georges Bida,ilt (formerly in MRP) and overseas deputies. 90421 3 23 APRIL 1959 The Algerian is- sue may be posed early in the session if the deputies from Algeria and the Sahara disregard Debre's warning that his govern- ment cannot accept a strong res- olution in favor of integration. Early returns of the Algerian municipal elections of 19-26 April are inconclusive, but whatever the final results, they will be interpreted by set- tler representatives and ele- ments of the army as reinforcing their contention that the gov- ernment's failure to adopt in- tegration endangers France's ability to retain Algeria. represented in the Independ- ent party. Debr6 may also introduce proposals designed to settle the church-school issue, the traditional left-right political divider in France. Even though a majority of the assembly now appears to favor state aid to church schools, a government bill on the subject would auto- matically alienate many other- wise conservative Radicals and drive them and the Socialists closer to the Communist party. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 9 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 woor SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 BELGIAN POLITICAL CRISIS King Baudouin last week took the unusual step of veto- ing the Belgian cabinet's nom inee for a new governor general of the Congo. This move has undermined the prestige of the generally progressive Congo min- ister, Maurice Van Hemelrijk, and increased the problems of the Eyskens government in carry- ing out the policy announced last January for increasing the territory's autonomy by definite stages. Van Hemelrijk, who has had the strong personal support of the prime minister, has been pressing ahead with the new Congo policy--at times quite independently of the cabinet. Liberals within the coalition think he is going too far too fast, while the opposition So- cialists attack the policy for not going far enough. His at- tempt to replace the present governor general was part of his effort to strengthen his own control over the Congo adminis- tration and expedite implemen- tation of his program. Van Hemelrijk's reform policies have stimulated wide- spread political interest in the Congo': the white settler minority fears for its future position, while the Africans expect rapid evolution. If Brus- sels seems to waver in support of the new policy or if Hemel- rijk is eventually forced to retire, it would convince the natives that the Belgian Govern- ment is incapable of living up to its promises and increase the danger of African nationalist disturbances. The first "Afri- can Political Congress," in fact, recently called for a Con- golese government by late 1961. A government usually re- signs after a royal veto, but Eyskens did not do so in this case, and apparently.'persuaded Van Hemelrij.k to withdraw his resignation. The antimonarchist Liberals and the Socialists, v howeer, may stir up further political controversy among cab- inet members. Former governor general and Conga Minister Petillon, a palace intimate, Who was "dumped" last year and who has since been dis- pleased with Van Hemelrijk's independent course, evidently SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 10 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET 23 April 1959 persuaded ex-Sing Leopold to. use his considerable influence on his son to intervene. Although constitutional, the royal veto in this case appears political- ly dangerous. Hostility toward the monarchy has been only slightly below the surface since 1950, when the Socialists and Liberals forced Leopold to abdicate because of his World War II record. They have remained suspicious of his influence over Baudouin. THE EUROPEAN COAL-STEEL COMMUNITY A major test of the su- p?anational powers of the Coal- teel Community (CSC) may oc- cur at the meeting of its coun- cil of government representa- tives on 4 May. The CSC High Authority--the executive body of international civil servants --is determined to press its plan for a community-wide solu- tion to the present coal glut --a plan which requires major- ity approval by the council, including the vote of either France or West Germany. A de- feat for the High Authority would encourage those critics wishing to revise the CSC treaty, and possibly reflect adversely on the EURATOM and Common Market commissions as well. The High Authority's four- point program would cut commu- nity production by 3.5 percent, reduce imports by 45 percent, freeze stocks of unsold coal at existing levels, and support miners' wages during the cur- rent recession. The High Au- thority claims that otherwise member countries will act uni- laterally, and that further 'mport restrictions not linked to production quotas would jeop- ardize the standing of the CSC in international trading circles. Critics of the plan contend that the problems of the coal in- dustry are largely confined to Belgium and West Germany, and that less drastic remedies are provided for in the treaty. In recent weeks, however, opposition to the High Author- ity':s program has become increas- ingly nationalist and political. At the 10-16 April session of the European Parliamentary As- sembly, one faction, spearheaded by the French Gaullists, intro- duced a resolution which recom- mended that the High Authority invoke only those provisions of the treaty which require unan- imous consent of the council. Vigorously opposed by President Finet, this motion was defeated at the last minute by the Chris- tian Democrats and the Social- ists when it became apparent to the former that the Gaullists were attacking the supranation- al. concept as a whole. An inkling of what could happen if the High Authority's plan were rejected by the SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENT'S Page 11 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 19,519 ORGANIZATION OF EUROPEAN COAT.-STEEL COMMUNITY MEMBER COUNTRIES LUXEMBOURG NETHERLANDS WEST GERMANY EUROPEAN PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY* 124 members chosen by national parliaments, later to be popularly elected. ? Debates annual report of High Authority, passes advisory resolutions. ? May censure High Authority by two-thirds vote and force its resignation. CSC HIGH AUTHORITY 8 members chosen by agreement among the governments, the 9th member by the High Authority itself. *Responsible for fulfillment of the objectives of the treaty. ? Levies taxes, issues decisions and directives, makes recommen- dations, imposes fines. CSC COUNCIL OF MINISTRIES 6 members representing the member countries. ? Harmonizes High Authority and government policies. ? Makes decisions by simple or qualified majority, or unanimously. ? Empowers the High Authority to act in certain matters. L CONSULTATIVE COMMITTEE 51 members, representing producers, workers, con- sumers, dealers, chosen by the Council. ? Advises the High Authority. COURT OF JUSTICE* 7members chosen by agreement among the governments. ? Interprets the CSC treaty. ? Hears suits or appeals by member states or enterprises, may require redress or indemnity. *Preforms similar functions in EURATOM and the European Economic Community. - Selected by -Responsible to ----Gives advice to ----Acts as "watch-dog" over. council was contained in a speech during the assembly session by the French minister of industry. Referring to recent statements by Premier Debr6.on the "need for European unity transcending national states," he urged that the CSC treaty be revised to in- elude escape clauses such as those in the Common Market treaty andto give the member states con- tinuing jurisdiction over im- ports of non-CSC coal. Such changes would weaken the CSC. SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENT'S Pare 12 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 RIGHTIST REVOLUTIONARY OUTBREAK IN BOLIVIA The revolutionary attempt on 19 April by Bolivia's peren- nially plotting rightists may have been prompted by the deep division of the governing Na- tionalist Revolutionary Move- ment (MNR) over the protracted economic crisis. The rightists have tried repeatedly to over- throw the MNR government since it came to power in 1952. The 19 April attempt, which resulted in several dozen deaths includ- ing that of the rightist leader, appears to have been better or- ganized than other recent ef- forts. The group evidently hoped to profit from the split with- in the MNR caused by President Siles' efforts to carry out the economic reforms--particularly in the tin mines--which have been a prerequisite for further US aid. About half the armed miners had refused to accept the reform decree, and the situ- ation became more serious on 16 April when government oil workers--employees of the only relatively solvent major eco- nomic enterprise in Bolivia-- also defied the government and declared a strike. The rightist threat tended to reunite the government party. Oil workers called off their strike. Militias of factory workers, progovernment miners, and the La Paz party organiza- tion appear to have been the primary defenders of the govern- ment, but at least some of the uniformed forces--whose loyalties had been considered doubtful-- were also used. The coup attempt also per- mitted the government to declare a state of siege which gives it powers of summary arrest for a period of 90 days. Rightist plotting and leftist defiance of government decisions had in- creased notably since the expir- ation of the last state-of-siege decree on 19 January. 80 percent of their salaries. The critical economic sit- uation, however, is likely to continue generating tensions which may be reflected in new outbreaks of violence. The Central Bank's foreign-exchange position shows a deficit of about $2,800,000, while the country's export earnings on an annual basis are not running substantially above last year's $65,000,000. Because of the virtual suspension of US aid dur- ing the past two months, the administration since 1 January has paid public employees only Nepal's first government under the constitution proclaimed in February will soon be formed by the left-of-center Nepali Congress party, now greatly strengthened as a result of winning a two-thirds majority in the recently completed parli- amentary elections. The new government, guided by the ex- ample of the Indian Congress party, is likely to pursue modi- fied socialist policies internal- ly and to take a neutralist po- sition in foreign affairs. The Nepali Congress has won 73 out of 108 seats in the new parliament, with only one seat remaining undecided. The countrywide support received by the Congress--Nepal's oldest, largest, and best-organized party--probably resulted from SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 13 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 its reputation as leader of the 1950-51 rebellion which over- threw the autocratic Rana re- gime. The party's chief leader, B. P. Koirala, will most likely be called on by King Mahendra to form a government, although the King might nominate General Subarna Shumshere, Congress leader who headed the 1958-59 interim cabinet. The parliamentary opposi- tion will be dominated by the conservative Gurkha Parishad, which holds 19 seats. The Com- munist party was able to secure only four seats and may concen- trate its future efforts on in- filtrating the Nepali Congress rather than operating independ- ently. King Mahendra probably will find the Congress government, with, an overwhelming mandate from the people, more difficult to control than previous coali- tion cabinets. Party unity is likely to be weakened, however, by internal rivalries and policy conflicts. Moreover, the King retains ultimate authority under the new constitution. Despite long-standing anti- Indian sentiment in Nepal, the new government probably will maintain a close and cooperative relationship with New Delhi. The Indians apparently backed the Nepali Congress in the elec- tions. Furthermore, general reaction in Katmandu to events in Tibet continues to be highly critical of Peiping. Reports of border incursions by Chinese troops in pursuit of fleeing refugees are likely to intensify concern in Nepal over Peiping's intentions and to increase Kat- mandu's reliance on Indian Run- port. INDIAN CONGRESS PARTY LOSES POPULAR SUPPORT Prime Minister Nehru's ruling Congress party apparent- ly is losing popular support, despite the major economic ad- vances India has achieved since 1951 under Congress leadership of its First and Second Five- Year Plans. This trend, which appears in by-elections to the national Parliament and the state assemblies, is best illus- trated by the results of recent municipal elections in various parts of the country. In March and early April, the Congress party lost control of Madras city and most large towns in Madras State,although the party organization in that SECRET PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS iD c 14 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET %NO CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 area is one of the most active and imaginative in India. Apathy on the part of the middle and upper classes apparently was the major factor which resulted in large gains by the Dravidian Progressive Federation, a Hindu communal party of the lower classes. This party opposes domination of South India by the "Aryan" north, attacks rule by the Brahmin class, resents imposition of Hindi as the na- tional language, and reflects south-north racial friction. In Punjab State, in north- ern India, where the Congress party had done well in the na- tional elections of 1957, the party recently won less than a third of 391 seats at stake in municipal elections. During 1958 the Congress lost heavily to various opposition groups in municipal elections throughout Uttar Pradesh State, in Rajasthan State, and. 16 of 18 munici- palities in the north- ern part of Bombay State. The party now has lost control of three of the four largest cities in the country--New Delhi, Bombay, and Madras-- and controls the fourth--Calcutta--by a bare majority. Congress party leaders have been aware since 1956 of the need for rejuve- nating the party or- ganization and for restoring grass-roots contacts. Continued awareness of the problem is shown by the fact that, since the most recent elec- tions, party president Indira Gandhi has postponed a sched- uled trip to Mexico and declined an invitation to London. She reportedly intends to tour In- dia on an urgent basis, presum- ably to urge an end to factional- ism and apathy among party workers. Despite the exhortations of the party leadership, how- ever, the Congress rank and file is not yet "running scared." Neither is it captital.izing po- litically on the Nehru govern- ment's major achievements in economic development. In Madras State, where the trend toward the opposition was most recently illustrated, the Congress party government has the best record of any state in the country in implementing economic develop- ment plans. AFGHANISTAN KASHMIR SECRET IfDIA PART II NOTES AND COMMENTS PatP 15 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1951 President Sukarno's formal request on 22 April for a re-. turn to the "1945 constitution," which would increase executive powers and reduce those of parlia- ment, may meet with obstructive tactics in the Constituent Assembly. Sukarno has departed on a two-month tour of Europe and Latin America, leaving the army to act as his watchdog. If significant assembly opposi- tion to his plans develops, Su- karno with army backing may im- pose the constitution by execu- tive decree. Sukarno's?departure has given rise to new rumors of po- litical changes and maneuvers which would take advantage of his absence. Army Chief of Staff General Nasution has stated that although various groups may attempt action, he believes the army is sufficient- ly alert to prevent any develop- ments. He strongly implied to American officials that he is still working closely with Su- karno and, although continuing controls on Communist activi- ties, has no immediate plans fora decisive move against the Communists. Indonesian purchases and aid programs from the Sino- Soviet bloc continue. An army purchasing mission, which has been shopping in the West and Yugoslavia since early March, is believed now in Czecho- slovakia. Since the mission probably could not obtain in the West either the liberal credit terms or the quantities of materiel it was instructed to request, the bulk of its pur- 25X1 chases probably will come from Yugosla is Czechoslovakia, and PolaLnd . An Indonesian mission to Communist China left for Peiping on 21 April to discuss utiliza- tion of $20,000,000 of a $40,000,- 000 credit extended by China last year. Approximately $11,- 500,000 of the loan has been spent for textiles, and the amount now under negotiation has also been earmarked for the textile industry. Prime Minister Djuanda plans to visit the Soviet Union in late June or early July, at the invitation of Moscow. Although this appears to be pri- marily a courtesy visit, Djuanda is reported planning to discuss present and future aid programs. In Sumatra, the Atjehnese rebels--a long-standing Moslem guerrilla group--are being wooed by both the army and the so- called Revolutionary Republic of Indonesia (PRRI), with both groups claiming to have extracted promises of cooperation from the Atjehnese. Complicating the sit- uation for both the army and the PRfI is the fact that Atjehnese leaders are involved in a power 25X1 struggle among themselves which makes an early decision on over- all Atjehnese alignment unlikely. SECRET NOTES AND COMMENTS Page 16 of 19 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 UViV I IYfT ' CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SU tY 23 April 1959 PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES SOCIALIST AND SOCIALIST-INCLINED PARTIES IN LATIN AMERICA Socialism has considerable appeal in Latin America, where widely supported national par- ties have made prolabor legisla- tion and extensive state par- ticipation in the economy a major part of their programs. In five countries, national rev- olutionary parties have gained the allegiance of almost all ele- ments which the Communists seek to cultivate, and most of them have acquired a decided anti- Communist orientation. Only a few small parties are formally designated Socialist, however, and these--unlike their Euro- pean counterparts--are fre- quently Communist aligned. Colorado and Radical Parties In Uruguay, Argentina, and Chile, there are important so- cialist-inclined parties which had for many years a generally laissez-faire attitude toward social and economic questions and adopted a socialist orienta- tion only in this century. In part because of these parties' historic position, they have been accepted politically by the national armies, which have a conservative bias and tend in Latin America to be the arbiters of.the political process. Uruguay's Colorado party, which controlled the executive power for almost a century, is generally pro-West and anti- Communist but determinedly "in- dependent" within this frame- work. The party advocates elaborate labor laws, generous pensions, and government owner- ship and operation of enter- prises serving the public. Its failure to provide for rational economic development, however, caused a general deterioration of the country's finances, and the party was recently ousted by its conservative opponents. The Radical parties in Argentina and Chile theoret- ically advocate a socialist policy but neither on reaching power has followed a strongly socialist program. The Chilean Radical party, the largest single party in Chile and dom- inant there from 1938 to 1952, has advocated evolutionary state socialism since 1931. These par- ties draw considerable support from the middle class, and their efforts to gain labor strength have been largely nullified by extremist groups, especially the Peronistas in Argentina and the Communists, who have effective parties in both countries. The Radicals--like other long-established Latin Amer- ican political parties--have accepted support from the Com- munists to win an election, but as victors have broken with them and cooperated with the United States. The Argentine Radical program, for instance, has since 1951 stressed nation- alization of the petroleum and meat-packing industries and public utilities, and President Frondizi accepted Communist elec- toral support. Since his inau- guration,however, he has turned on the Communists and stressed the need for private enterprise, increased foreign investment, and reduced state controls over the economy. National Revolutionary Parties The national revolutionary parties draw their support mainly from the lower urban and rural classes, although most party leaders come from the middle or upper classes. They are parties based in part on a body of prin- ciples and a program rather than exclusively on a "cult of lead- ership" which is often the case with Latin American political parties. CONFIDENTIAL PART ITT PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Pave 1 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET. CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 Although they recognize affinity with one another, there-is no common "party line," other than that elections should not be so fraudulent or the franchise so limited as to contradict the will of the great ma- jority of the people. They seek to learn from each other's ex- perience, but each is based on a strong sense of national identity and does not necessarily copy another's strategy or tactics. The na- tional revolutionary parties, either by use of force or by threat of force, have compelled the army to accept civilian au- thority. Bolivia and Mex- ico: The Bolivian rev- olution of 1952 and the Mexican revolu- tion beginning in 1910 gave a virtual monopoly of polit- ical power to na- tional revolutionary parties in these coun- tries. Unlike the typical Latin Amer- ican revolution, these upheavals al- tered the way of liv- ing of all classes in Revolutionary socialist-inclined parties Other socialist-inclined parties Formally Socialist parties am c. " 7 Lii?,aragua National Liberation' Party (PLN) SOCIALIST AND SOCIALIST-INCLINED PARTIES IN LATIN AMERICA 9`-nttoo Brazil the country. In Mexico, civil war was almost constant for ten years, while in Bolivia the ac- tual fighting was over in three days. In both, however, the leaders had the same object: to integrate the largely Indian rural population into the life of the nation by giving it land, education, and the vote. In both countries, the single most important economic enterprise--tin in Bolivia, oil in Mexico--was expropriated as politically suspect private investment. Nationalization was limited in Bolivia but was far more inclusive in Mexico. Both foreign and domestic private investments have been encouraged in Mexico, however, since World War II and have played a large part in its re- cent rapid economic progress. Both regimes have empha- sized economic development, although economic expansion came in Mexico after virtually all the fundamental social trans- formation had been accomplished, SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 2 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET Noe CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 whereas in Bolivia economic de- velopment activities have been carried on concurrently with the work of redistributing the land and rewriting the country's con- stitution. Both the Bolivian and the Mexican revolutionary parties initially emphasized the dangers of rightist subversion far more than the dangers of Communism. The leaders of both parties have recently become alarmed, however, by the apparent success of Communist labor leaders in breaking government party dom- ination of key labor unions. Both Bolivian and Mexican party leaders are as opposed to So- viet as to any other foreign intervention in domestic affairs. Costa Rica, Peru, Venezu- ela: Costa Rica, Peru, and Venezuela have national revolu- tionary parties which play key roles in these countries but they have no monopoly of polit- ical power. The three parties are friendly to the United States, although all have crit- icized alleged US support for Latin American dictators. The Peruvian party in its initial program in 1924 was strongly opposed to the United States; this position was reversed dur- ing the 1930s, in part because of a common antipathy to the rise of Nazism in Germany. Each of the three parties is hostile to the Communists and has defeated them for dom- inant control of organized la- bor. The Costa Rican and Peruvian parties have consist- ently refused to work with the Communists on any level and the Costa Rican party fought Commu- nist-supported forces in the civil war of 1948. In Venezuela, students linked with the party cooperate with Communist stu- dents, but nevertheless the election of the party's chief, Romulo Betancourt, to the pres- idency last December has pro- duced a significant stiffening against the Communists. The parties believe that an underdeveloped country requires substantial state guid- ance. Their basic concern for economic development shows it- self in realistic modifications of socialist programs. In Peru, the party has long emphasized nationalization, but supported the 1952 petroleum law--which favors foreign investment--when conservative landholders op- posed it for fear it would drive wages upward. In Costa Rica, party prom- ises to gain considerable con- trol over the United Fruit Com- pany were modified--after the party came to power--~to.increas- ing the government's income from the company. In Venezuela, the implementation of the na- tional revolutionary party's plans to set up a government- owned oil company has been postponed until the economic drain caused by the government- owned enterprises set up by the preceding regime can be min- imised. Attitude Toward Communism The national revolutionary parties have attracted most of those who were strongly dissat- isfied with a semifeudal social and economic organization in their countries and who might otherwise have been attracted by Communism. Those parties which achieved a near political monopoly--as in Bolivia and Mex:Lco--were so successful in this, at least until recently, that Communist parties were very small, and specifically anti- Communist activity appeared un- necessary to the national rev- olutionary governments. In Costa Rica, Peru, and Venezuela, where the parties have been somewhat less suc- cessful, certain opponents of the national revolutionary parties look on the Communists as allies. The national revolu- tionary parties have, consequent- ly, acquired a strong basic anti- Comununist orientation through bitter infighting in such polit- ical groups as labor and student organizations. SECRET PART IIT PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 3 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 The similar orientation of the parties in these three coun- tries is highlighted by their cooperation in the Latin American drive against dictators which received new impetus with Fidel Castro's overthrow of Cuba's Batista on 1 January 1959. Their anti-Communist slant is indi- cated by the known concern of Costa Rican and Venezuelan party leaders--probably shared by the Peruvians--over Castro's dem- agoguery and his support for pro-Communist groups of anti- dictator revolutionaries. Avowed Socialist Parties In seven Latin American countries, there are political parties which are formally called Socialist and inscribed as such on national electoral registers. All are essentially European in ideological origin, and two of them are affiliated with the Socialist Internation- al. Except for the Chilean and Ecuadoran parties, they are of minor political importance. In both Chile and Ecuador the Socialist parties, in coali- tion with other political par- ties including the Communists, backed the runner-up in the last presidential election and have significant congressional representation. In both coun- tries Socialists and Communists together in recent years have dominated the country's only important national labor SECRET orgELnization. The small inef- fective Socialist parties of Brazil and Peru also tend to be Communist-aligned in labor, stu- dent, and political affairs. In Argentina, the Socialist party is anti-Communist. It has no congressional representation because of peculiarities in the Argentine electoral system. Socialist influence is strong among urban skilled workers, although the party's former dominance was reduced by the Peron regime's dictatorial labor practices. The Vene- zuelan Socialist party, which tends toward anti-Communism, polled less than 1 percent of the total vote in the December 195EI elections. The Uruguayan Socialist party is badly split on the issue of cooperation with Communists in labor; it agrees in international affairs in ad- vocaLting a "third-force" posi- tiort, showing considerable hos- tility to the United States. The party tries to attract the Montevideo working classes, but a practical program to appeal to these groups has always been a monopoly of Uruguay's long- dominant Colorado party. Here as in most of the Latin Amer- ican countries the political parties which owe their exist- ence to European political trends seem likely to give way before parties able to empha- size a sense of national iden- tity. PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 4 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Next 3 Page(s) In Document Denied Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 ~We SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 CHANGES IN THE USSR MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS The USSR Ministry of For- eign Affairs during Stalin's latter years was keyed to the negativism of cold war diplomacy and was a poor instrument for influencing nations and making friends for the Soviet Union. The process of refurbishing the diplomatic machinery began al- most immediately with the dic- tator's death. A drastic re- shiiffling of ministerial per- sonnel was carried out, and a large number of former party SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 9 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 *we SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 and government careerists from other departments were assigned to leading posts within the min- istry. Efforts were also made to expand diplomatic relations with other countries. These measures have proved generally successful, and the ministry has become an effective agency in extending Soviet 'influence throughout the world. Organizational Structure The headquarters staff of the ministry consists of 13 USSR MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS 1 MARCH 1953 15 APRIL 1959 Deputy Minister Ya. A. Malik Deputy Minister G.M.Pushkin Collegium Member V.N. Pavlov Deputy Minister F.T. Gusev Lati_; A':i,rica'; Cou-tries D.A. Zhukov Collegium Member F.I. Elaranenkov Collegian Member .ecretariat FUNCTIONAL DIVISIONS Press Yu. P. Frantsev Treaty & Legal G.I. Tunkin Consular A.P. Vlasov Economic A. A. Arutyunyan T Administrative I ? I Personnel ? 2nd European V.M. Pavlov 4th European P.F. Strunnikov Deputy Minister V.A. Zorin Deputy Minister B.F. Podtserob Collcgium Member N. T. Fe:'orenko FOREIGN MISSIONS Balkan Countries V.A. Valkov Southeast Asia N.V. Roshchin 28 Embassies (3 posts vacant) 14 Legations (3 posts vacant) High Commission (Austria) Political Representation (Austria) Control Commission (Germany) Diplomatic Mission (East Germany) FUNCTIONAL DIVISIONS Protocol Treaty & I "Finn Press M.A. Kharlamov 1st Deputy Minister V.V. Kuznetsov Deputy Minister V.A. 2orin Deputy Minister G. M.1usbkin Collegium Member M.V. Zimyanin Collegium Member A.A. Soldatov International Or anizations Collegium Member I.I. Tugarinov Collegium Member 8Tsarapkin International Economic.Orgs. P.M. Chernyshev American Countries A.A. Soldatov 1st European ? 2nd European N.D. Belokhvostikov 3rd European r ---------i Economic ? Administrative ? Personnel ((F.I. Baranenkov?)I 5th European P.S. Dedushkin Near East Countries ,_. x e y South East Asia V.I. Likhachev =Br-ought into ministry since Stalin's death - -- Presumed to exist Acting head SECRET U iA G.P. Arka:lyev 1st European M.G. Sergeyev* 3rd European M.G. Gribanov* 5th European P.D. Orlov Near & Middle East Countries S.T. Bazarov Deputy Minister N.P. Firyubin Deputy Minister Semenov ` 4th European A.I. Gorchakov Scandinavian Countries Middle East Countries A+: Pavlov Far Eastern M.V. Zimyanin FOREIGN MISSIONS United Nations A A. Sobolev 53 Embassies (1 post vacant) do 19 Ambassadors 4 Legations (1 post vacant) PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 10 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 ......SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 25X11 INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS DESK E UNITED STATES MEXICO -Jd='`+Y.'`-~ E ARGENTINA -Embassy -Legation -High Commission Political Representation -Control Commission -Diplomatic Mission 0413 GEOGRAPHICAL DESK RESPONSIBILITIES - 15 APRIL 1959 (Countries with which the USSR has diplomatic relations) SAN ESK( -.., N1.EARY/ GREAT BRITAIN ;' K RESPONSIBILITIES - GEOGRAPHICAL DES FIRST EUROPEAN DESK E ARGENTINA E MEXICO L URUGUAY E BELGIUM E FRANCE E ITALY LUXEM- BOURG E NETHER- LANDS SWITZER- LAND SECOND EUROPEAN DESK E AUSTRALIA E CANADA E GREAT BRITAIN L NEW ZEALAND THIRD EUROPEAN DESK H&P AUSTRIA C&D FASr GERMANY geographic divisions or'.desks with responsibility for specific groups of countries or inter- national organizations; several functional divisions dealing with such matters as protocol, legal questions, and press re- lations; a secretariat; and the collegium, or directing staff of the ministry. The collegium, chaired by the minister, includes all deputy ministers and a few of the more important division chiefs. Over- all supervisory chores within the ministry presumably are di- vided among the deputy ministers, with the first deputy acting in a general capacity as the min- ister's right-hand man. Specific responsibilities of the present deputy ministers, however, cannot be determined. In fact, the critical importance 1 MARC H 1953 FOURTH FIFTH BALKAN NEAR AND SOUTHEAST FIRST EUROPEAN EUROPEAN DESK MIDDLE EAST ASIAN FAR EASTERN DESK DESK DESK DESK DESK E CZECHO- L DENMARK L ALBANIA E AFGHAN- E BURMA E CHINA SLOVAKIA E POLAND L FINLAND L ICELAND E NORWAY E BULGARIA E GREECE E HUNGARY ISTAN L EGYPT L ETHIOPIA E IRAN F INDIA E PAKISTAN L THAILAND E MONGOLIA F NORTH KOREA E SWEDEN E RUMANIA E YUGO- L IRAQ SLAVIA L LEBANON L SYRIA of the Berlin crieis may have made the usual delegation of supervisory responsibilities rel- ativelly.. meaningless. At least three of the four deputy minis- ters are probably concentrating heavily on the German problem. Both Pushkin and Semenov have specialized on German affairs for many years, and Zorin has been ambassador to Bonn. The few organizational changes that have taken place within the ministry since Sta- lin's death reflect for the most part the expansion of Soviet dip- lomatic interests. The only net contraction was the merger of the US and Latin American desks. A separate division was created for international econom- ic organizations; Scandinavian affairs were separated from Aus- tro-German affairs; responsibili- ty for Near East and Middle East SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 11 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 IRW "~? SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 countries was divided; and there is a strong possibility that, with the recent establishment of diplomatic relations with Guinea and Ghana, a new African division has been created. The Soviet Union now main- tains 53 embassies, four lega- tions, and permanent repre- sentation to the United Nations. The sharp increase in the num- ber of foreign missions was the product of a coordinated cam- paign, instituted shortly after Stalin's death, to regularize, improve, and expand diplomatic relations. Ambassadors or min- isters plenipotentiary were ap- pointed to countries where So- viet intransigence or strained relations had left the top diplo- matic post vacant, and existing legations were upgraded to em- bassies wherever possible, At the present time the only vacancies in top Soviet diplomatic posts are in New Zealand and Australia--a result of the defection of Vladimir Petrov in 1954. Relations with Australia have been re-estab- lished, however, and the appoint- ment of an ambassador, probably to hold both the Australian and New Zealand posts simultaneously, may soon be made. The Soviet Union has almost abandoned the legation form of diplomatic representation. Le- gations are now maintained only in New Zealand, Uruguay, Yemen, and Luxemburg, and these would probably be upgraded to embas- sies if agreement could be reached with the countries con- cerned. During the past six years the Soviet Union has added 14 countries to those with which it exchanges diplomatic repre- sentation. Most of this expan- sion has been among the newly independent countries of Afri- ca--Libya, Sudan, Morocco, Guinea, and Ghana--and in South- east Asia--Indonesia, North Vietnam, Cambodia, Nepal,and Ceylon. Very little progress has been made in Latin America, where relations are maintained with only three countries--Ar- gentina, Uruguay, and Mexico. Soviet officials reportedly are expecting diplomatic recognition from Costa Rica and possibly several other Central American republics. The Ministry in Politics Basic foreign policy and the principal tactical moves in implementing that policy are de- termined by the party presidium. The Foreign Ministry is only the executor of the specific policy tasks assigned it, although it presumably has certain advisory functions as well. The intense personal interest of all members of the top party leadership in foreign relations has served to keep the ministry under close scrutiny and helped to isolate its operating personnel from factional pressures. Apparently few, if any, of the ministry's personnel became embroiled in the political maneuvers of either former Foreign Ministers Molotov and Shepilov. Unlike his two predeces- sors, Andrey Gromyko is a foreign policy technician rather than a policy maker. He is not a member of the party presidium and has apparently stayed aloof from factional poli- tics. His role in the formula- tion of basic foreign policy is probably limited to technical advice and information. In this connection, Gromyko is known sometimes to attend presidium meetings. The average Soviet career diplomat not only has steered clear of top party politics, he has also been generally success- ful in adapting to the demands of the regime. Most of the im- portant career diplomats dis- placed in the post-Stalin shake- up and subsequent reassignments have been appointed to other posts within the ministry without SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 12 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 apparent loss of status. Career developments, routine reassign- ment, and the shifting locus of problems requiring depth of dip- lomatic experience appear to be among the most important rea- sons for these transfers of ca- reer personnel. On the other hand, the in- flux of outsiders into high-level positions in the ministry which accompanied, and in some cases may have precipitated, the trans- fer of career diplomats, appears to have involved somewhat dif- ferent reasons. During the past six years about 40 former high party officials and government administrators have been assigned to top diplomatic posts over the heads of career workers in the ministry. Some of these sub- sequently left the ministry for other work, died, or simply dropped out of sight. The 27 who remain, however, constitute a sizable bloc of the ministry's top personnel. No single explanation cov- ers all the cases of party or government careerist turned dip- lomatic. A few, undoubtedly victims of high-level inter- nal power politics or policy differences, were assigned to the ministry to get them out of the way. On the other hand, re- vitalization of the foreign serv- ice probably demanded new bloods The regime also appears to have re-evaluated its bloc dip- lomatic requirements and to have instituted a policy of assigning to bloc countries men with party or government administrative experience rather than men trained in the diplomatic service. In a number of cases the necessity to exile some party or govern- ment figure from the arena of power struggle and policy con- troversy coincided with a need within the ministry for someone with party or government experi- ence. Most of the "outsiders", were assigned to bloc countries or the headquarters staff of the ministry. A few, however, have been assigned to nonbloc coun- tries, notably Menshikov to India, to the United States; Pegov to Iran; and Ryzhov to Turkey. Revitalization of the min- istry has been accompanied by an enhancement in the prestige of diplomatic service. To a certain extent this was a by- product of the assignment of high-level party officials to the ministry, but it has also been fostered as deliberate pol- icy by the regime. In Stalin's time comparatively few Soviet diplomats were members of top party bodies. At the time of his death only eight were so honored, and of these only Full Members of the Central Committee A. Ya. Vyshinsky Minister Candidate Members of the Central Committee Ya. A. Malik Deputy Minister Member of the Collegium and Chief of the 2nd European Desk A. S. Panyushkin Ambassador to China A. A. Gromyko Ambassador to Great Britain G. N. Zarubin Ambassador to United States Auditing Commission Members B. F. Podtserob Deputy Minister V. S. Semenov Political Advisor to the Chairman of the Soviet Control Commission in Germany Full Members of the Central Committee A. A. Gromyko Minister V. V. Kuznetsov let Deputy Minister P. F. Yudin Ambassador to China I. T. Grishi Ambassador to Czechoslovakia M. G. Pervukhln Ambassador to East Germany I. A. Benediktov Ambassador to India N. M. Pego, Ambassador to Iran A. M. Puzanov Ambassador to North Korea Candidate Members of the Central Committee N. P. FiryuDin Deputy Minister V. A. Zorin Deputy Minister Ya. A. Mali ...c Ambassador to Great Britain Ye. I. Gromov Ambassador to Hungary A. A. Yepishev Ambassador to Rumania M. A. Menshikov Ambassador to United States 1. K. Zamchevsky Ambassador to Yugoslavia Auditing Commission Members G. M. Pushkin Deputy Minister V. S. Semenov Deputy Minister M. V. Zimy inin Member of the Collegium and chief of the Far East Desk S. A. Vinogradov Ambassador to France SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 13 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 SECRET CURRENT INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY SUMMARY 23 April 1959 Vyshinsky was a full member of the central committee3 At the 20th party congress in February 1956, six full members were named, and today 19 enjoy the prestige of high party rank, eight of them as full members of the cen- tral committee, Personnel Policy Major personnel assignments within the ministry are the pre- rogative, not of the ministry itself, but of the party, exer- cised by the foreign departments in the apparatus of the central committee. The most important assignments undoubtedly receive the direct attention of Khru- shchev and the party presidium. The usual procedure is for the minister to propose a candidate to the central committee for consideration. If the candidate were unacceptable to the party department concerned, Gromyko could appeal the decision to the party presidium. Ambassadors and ministers plenipotentiary, since they are legal representatives of the Soviet state, are formally appointed by decree of the Su- preme Soviet Presidium. Decrees on other top assignments in the ministry are issued by the Coun- cil of Ministers. The Soviet diplomatic serv- ice has apparently been divided into two parts--bloc and nonbloc. Personnel rotate within each service but seldom go from one to the other. All top positions in the bloc service are staffed by former party and government officials, and all but two of these--Molotov, ambassador to Mongolia, and Yury Prikhodov, ambassador to Bulgaria--entered the Foreign Ministry after Sta- lin's death. Desk chiefs and in some cases deputy desk chiefs have the same rank as foreign mission chiefs, and it appears to be a matter of policy to rotate top personnel from one position to the other. Soviet career dip- lomats are generally trained as area specialists, but an effort is made to broaden their experi- ence. During the course of their careers they may expect assign- ments in several different parts of the world interspersed with varied headquarters respon- sibilities. There does not seem to be any standard length of time for a. tour of duty for top diplomats. Appointments terminated during the past six years ranged from a few months to nearly nine years. Ambassador Malik, who has been in London for six years, is the diplomat currently the longest in his post, but six others have been at their current posts over five years. Present Soviet pol- icy, however, seems to call for somewhat shorter tours than was the case under Stalin. Soviet diplomats carry their ranks with them and collectively form a pool of talent available for specific assignments as the need arises. Quite often a high- ranking diplomat will be reas- signed to Moscow and not be inden- t if :ied for many months or even several years, only to reappear subsequently in a new post with no apparent diminution in sta- tus, It may be assumed that their services have been uti- lized on special commissions, ad hoc committees, or in other ways which do not normally receive press attention. Ambassador Push- kin, for example, recalled from East Germany in February 1958 and appointed deputy foreign minister in March 1959, in the interim quite likely helped chart Soviet tactics on Berlin. SECRET PART III PATTERNS AND PERSPECTIVES Page 14 of 14 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 25X1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927AO02200070001-1 Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1 CONFIDENTIAL CONFIDENT IA CONFIDENTIAL. Approved For Release 2007/10/23: CIA-RDP79-00927A002200070001-1