WESTERN EUROPE DIVISION OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND REPORTS DIVISION WEEKLY WORKING PAPER

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79-01090A000400050004-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
5
Document Creation Date: 
November 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 27, 1998
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 13, 1950
Content Type: 
PAPER
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79-01090A000400050004-9.pdf219.46 KB
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--Approved For Relea 1999/09/02 : Cl WESTERN EUROPE DIVISION OFFIC ' OF RESEARCH AND REPORTS CENTRAL IN'PELLIGENCE AGENCY DIVISION WEEKLY For week ending 12 December 1950 13 December 1950 NOTICE: WORKING PAPER This document is a working-paper, not an official issuance, since it has not necessarily been coor- dinated with and reviewed by other components of 0/RR... It represents the formulative thinking of one group of analysts in O/RR and is designed to provide the medium for transmitting their informal views to other intelligence analysts of the US Government who are working on similar or over- lapping problems. It is intended for the use of the addressee alone, and not for further dissemina- tion. COPY FOR : DOCUMENT NO. NO HANGS IN CLASS. [J DECLASSIHED A CHANGED TO: 13 S C NEXT REVIEW DATE: AUT H; H 7 -` nn Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-Q,l PI C .'I X71 VOEFi: '3'7', 044 Approved For Relear1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-0109000400050004-9 WESTERN EUROPE DIVISION WEEKLY SIIr ARY Fpr week ending 12 December 1950 25X6A Approved For Release 1999/09/02': @;lA-RDP79-0109OA000400050004-9 WINN- Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-0109OA000400050004-9 25X6A The .unempPloyment problem in Austria is rapidly reaching c !tic31 proportions and may resu in social un- rest, political tensions and increased Communist disturbances. Reliable estimates indicate that unemployment for the first half of November was already 103,000 persons, 5% of the work- in population, as compared to 69,549, 31% of the working pop- ulation last year. This winter's seasonal peak in January and February may well exceed by about 55,000 last year's total of 195,000 unless emergency measures are adopted. Austria's employment situation is characterized by immobility of workers due to the housing shortage, ineffective training programs, a labor supply increasing beyond the present capacity of the economy to aasoro new job seekers, and increasing seasonal unemployment. Even if the Austrian economy receives supple- mental foreign aid to carry out emergency relief projects now being planned, the situation will be relieved only temporarily. Current trade liberalization efforts and decreasing foreign aid will require adjustments in the economy and effective plan- ning, however, long; range prospects for full employment are not encouraging, and increasingly serious unemployment crises may be expected periodically* Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-0109OA000400050004-9 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-0109,0000400050004-9 SWITZERLAND Growing pessimism as to the ability of Switzer- land to stay out of an new world war is increasingly prompt.. hg the was to plan measures to assure the availability of Swiss resources to the West in such an event. Until they are actually.. attacked, however, the Swiss will probably continue to profess their traditional neutrality. They believe that if the Soviet Union attacks Europe their own country will be by-passe;' initially and that no attempt will be made to invade their territory until Soviet forces have been consolidated in the rest of airope. They feel, therefore, that there is a slim possibility they may once again escape Involvement in war. Nevertheless, the Swiss have become acutely conscious of the fact that their status of neutrality has been seriously weakened through the disappearance of the balance of power be- tween the principal European countries and that as a consequence thoir traditional foreign policy is no longer a guarantee of national security. As a result, although unwilling for the present to ieoDardize their privileged nonition of neutrality. the Swiss are increasingly compelled to admit in their national planning that the survival of Switzerland is clearly identified with the survival of the West. Many Italians are now a rehensive lest the US be- come so occup e in a major war with we OR'nese Communists as to prevent it from effectively participating in the de- fense of Western Europe. Particularly disconcerting to most Italians has been President Truman's stag Ant regarding the possible use of the atom bomb. They fear that the US and the UN have been drawn into an inextricable position In the Far East? and rope tnat the US will be restrained rrom any over- impe tixoua action by the counsel of Western European s tatemen o Should the fears of these Italians be realized, Italy's will to resist agression would be further weakened and observance of its NATO commitments would be jeopardized, even thou;h these Italians fully aware of the present inter- national crisis are emphasizing the need of Western Europe to speed up its own rearmament, Approved For Release I 999/09/ R: -RDP79-O1 O9OAOOO4OOO5OOO4-9 Approved For Releas*1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-010900400050004-9 During the past year Italians have become increas- in;ly skeptical of the ability of the US to protect Western Europe from the USSR. Despite the Italian Government's sup- port of US-UN action in Korea and current efforts of-the Defense Ministry to accelerate the nation's rearmament pro- gram, a substantial sector of the population is war-weary and neutrality-minded. This hope of "sitting out" a clash between the US and the USSR has been assiduously fostered by the peace campaign of the Italian Communists and by various nationalist groups, including a sector of the Christian Demo- cratic Party. The resulting neutrality sentiment might, should the Korean campaign develop into a full-fledged conflict be- tween the US and Corn.uni>at China, become sufficiently strong to force the Government to rescinr`, or at least to delay indefinitely, implementation of its pro-Western policies and particularly its commitments under the NATO. Public pressure might become so insistent as to result in the fall of the Do Gasperi administration and its replacement by a govern- ment possibly dominated by the neutrality-minded Dossetti group, which would seek to assure Italy's non-involvement in a global war through a temporizing policy vis-a-vis the USSR. R E T Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-0109OA000400050004-9