CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T00975A001000260001-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
T
Document Page Count: 
6
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 9, 2003
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 1, 1953
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79T00975A001000260001-1.pdf243.96 KB
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~~~~/////~/YYY17^se 2GMW0$9T0' .10 2 X1 1 February 1953 Copy No. 5 CURRENT INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN x DATE: AUTH: , , - : NEXT REVIEW AT o DECLASSIFIED CLASS. CHANGED TO: TS E T DOCUMEN N~ . NO CHANCE IN CLASS. ')( Office of Current Intelligence CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY DOS review(s) completed. ---- 0 RfvjF VVER 2:5X1 000 00010 e 2?660A2;S~GGA4W910 .,gppAetl For Release 2003/09/02: CIA-RDP79T00975A001q00260001-1 SUMMARY GENERAL 1. Allied use of Berlin air corridors may be in jeopardy (page 3). SOUTHEAST ASIA 2. Burma may be considering termination of American Point IV aid (page 3). 3. Report of Sino-Viet Minh pact viewed with suspicion (page 4), SOUTH ASIA 4o Madame Pandit denies India is continuing efforts to seek Korean peace (page 4). NEAR EAST - AFRICA 5. Three more Italian tankers chartered to ship Iranian oil (page 5). 6. British Ambassador .sees new barrier to agreement with Egypt on Sudan (page 6). EASTERN EUROPE 7. Yugoslav officials analyze Russian internal events (page 6). 25X1A Approved For Release 2003/09/02 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO01000260001-1 25X1 Appro4 GENERAL 1. Allied use of Berlin air corridors may be in jeopardy: 25X1A 00260001-1 US HICOG officials believe that the 12 January letter of the Soviet air commander in Germany, denying the validity of Allied- Russian air safety rules in the Berlin air corridors presages possible harassment of allied air traffic. Soviet' authorities may unilaterally attempt to limit or eliminate commercial flights to West Berlin. Comment: In a note exchange concerning an air incident last fall, Soviet officials assert that present corridor safety rules are invalid because the Allied-Russian Control Council never approved them. Soviet authorities have consistently taken the position that the air corridors were established for the use of occupa- tion troops in Berlin and not for commercial carriers. While the USSR may deny the validity of the corridor agreements, there are no indications that drastic overt action other than radio-navigational interference will be taken against Western aircraft. SOUTHEAST ASIA 2. Burma may be considering termination of American Point IV aid: 25X1A The American Embassy in Rangoon believes the Burmese Government may be considering ending the Point IV program. Leading offi- cials are apprehensive lest the new American administration require commitments which the Rangoon government will be unwilling to make. They also appear convinced that Burma's favorable financial position will enable them to carry out their own development, program. 25X1A Approve Approve0 Comment: Many members of the dominant Socialist Party resent dependence on foreign aid, and the presence in Rangoon of large numbers of Americans connected with the program has caused widespread irritation. 3. Report of Sino-Viet Minh pact viewed with suspicion: 25X1A The British Foreign Office doubts the veracity of the recently publicized revelation by a de- fector from the Viet Minh that Communist China has a formal agreement to intervene with troops in the event the Viet Minh is threatened with annihilation. The defector, who claims to have been a financial adviser to Ho Chi Minh, has previously "peddled" similar information to Reuters correspondents and the British Consulate in Hanoi. The glibness of the statements causes the Foreign Office to wonder, whether the source may not be a planted Com- munist agent. It is also possible that the French are encouraging him in an effort to gain support for their Indochina policy. Comment: There has been no confirmation of many previous rumors of a formal agreement for Chinese troop inter- vention in Indochina should Viet Minh forces face defeat. A pact of this nature, however, is entirely possible and there are indications that French reluctance to undertake sustained offensive operations in Indochina derives partially from fear of its existence. SOUTH ASIA 25X1A Madame Pandit told Ambassador Bowles on 28 January that she, Prime Minister Nehru and others had been greatly upset over Krishna 25X1A 4. Madame Pandit denies India is continuing efforts to seek Korean peace: Approvedi For Release 2003/09/02 : CIA-RDP79T00975A0010g0260001-1 Menon's statement that India would continue its efforts for a truce in . Korea and that one side or the other must modify its position. She also said that the Minister of External Affairs had decided three days before Menon's statement that his government would take no further steps for the present and would avoid all possible publicity. The decision was reached because the Chinese have deliberately shown resentment toward India. Comment'. Despite these statements, it is believed that India will continue to press for a Korean truce. The Indian Government has a deep-seated conviction that peace in Korea can be achieved and Peiping's relations with the outside world improved if China is made a member of the 'United Nations. NEAR EAST - AFRICA 5. Three more Italian tankers chartered to ship Iranian oil'. 25X1 A The Italian company, EPIM, which attempted to break the British oil blockade with the tanker Rosemary, now impounded in Aden, recently chartered two more tankers for a trip to Abadan, according to a usually reliable shipping source in contact with the American Embassy in Rome. . Another Italian company, SUPOR, which leased the Miriella, now en route from Abadan to Italy, has chartered another tanker in which to carry Iranian oil. Comment: These Italian efforts, coming at a time when the Anglo-Iranian oil negotiations are stalemated, may encourage Prime Minister Mossadeq again to believe that he can sell oil without a settlement with AIOCO -5?- 25X1A Approv4d For Release 2003/09/02 : CIA-RDP79T00975A001010260001-1 25>jbkv 6. British Ambassador sees new barrier to agreement with Egypt on Sudan: 25X1A The British Foreign Office now considers that the most crucial issue in the discussions with Egypt over the Sudan is the time limit for transferring administrative jobs from British officials to Sudanese, according to the British Ambassador in Cairo. He admits that Sudanese leaders will not support the Brit- ish position and fears that disorders will break out if the negotiations fail on this point. Comment.- Britain refuses to agree that all administrative positions must be transferred to the Sudanese within the three-year period between the promulgation of the new constitution and the Sudanese decision on their political future. British insistence on this issue at this stage in the negotiations will strengthen Egyptian belief that Britain is not interested in a settlement. EASTERN EUROPE 7. Yugoslav officials analyze Russian internal events: 25X1A In recent conversations with the American Ambassador in New Delhi, Yugoslav. Deputy Foreign Minister Bebler and party theoret- ician Djilas expressed the opinion that Beria may be in disgrace and that Russia is undergoing crucial internal struggles, probably associated with the choice of Stalin's successor. Comment.- Both Djilas and Bebler, by virtue of their long association with the Russians, are particularly acute observers of Soviet behavior. 25X1A Approved For Release 2003/09/02 : CIA-RDP79T00975A00100Q260001-1