CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T00975A005600010001-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
T
Document Page Count: 
14
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 13, 2002
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 1, 1961
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79T00975A005600010001-8.pdf631.14 KB
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Approved For least 1/2SEC TT00975U0 25X1 DIA and DOS review(s) completed. TOP SECRET 1 March 1961 Copy No. Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975A005600010001-8 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Approved Fogel ase 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975A 05600010001-8 25X1 2. 1 March 1961 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN CONTENTS USSR- UN: Contrary to previous report, Gromyko will attend resumed General Assembly session in March. (Page it) 3. Mali: Bloc offers to purchase entire 1960-61 pea- nut crop. (Page t t) j j 0 g 5. Israel - Arab States: Forthcoming Israeli test mo- bilization may be used by Nasir as occasion to de- nounce Israel. (Page i i t) 6. USSR: Comment on Kalchenko's dismissal. (Page tit) 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 j ? ME Approved Fol ase 2003/01/29: CIA-RDP79T0097 05600010001-8 *USSR-UN:) The designation of Foreign Minister Gromyko to head Soviet delegation to the General Assembly which resumes on 7 March apparently marks a change in Soviet plans. Khrushchev may wish to, show that despite his harsh attacks on Hammarskjold and Western policy in the Congo, he has not lost interest in improved relations with the US and a meeting with the IN IN j 25X1 25X1 sive effort by the Soviet UN delegates to confine General Assem- 25X1 bly debate to a few items so as not to hinder restoration of "nor- mall' US-Soviet relations.' 25X1 was still willing to. come to the US for talks with the President. One of Gromyko's purposes may be the arrangement of such a meeting. The decision to send Gromvko coincides with an inten- President. Gromyko told the Finnish foreign minister in mid- February that neither he nor Khrushchev would return to New York for this session of the UN but indicated that Khrushchev peanut crop--about 50,000 metric tons--for approximately on a joint Soviet=Czech offer to purchase Mali's entire 1960-61 Mali-Bloc:GNlali is reportedly engaged in negotiations based $20,000,000. Since this single commodity accounts for about attracted by the willingness of the bloc countries to make a 25- percent payment in US dollars and by the prospect of sharply re- toward the bloc. France has offered to continue taking Mali's peanuts at premium prices, but Mali's leaders are apparently 90 percent of the country's export earnings, consummation of th deal would lead to an early reorientation of the Malian economy F Mali's economic dependence on France. 1 Mar 61 DAILY BRIEF Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 25X1 25X1 25X1 r-%NNI VvG\d I VI Mp" TQJG Lvv.J,w I,LA VIA-1\Vr , vv~/,.7~[w.wvvv I vvv I-a# 25X1 Israel - Arab States'. A surprise test mobilization of Israel's armed forces is scheduled to take place shortly after 2 March. Jordan has been informed of the impending test through UN arm- i missa o rainian remier c en o or agri- culturaita.ures emphasizes Khrushchev's determination to achieve a sharp improvement in Soviet agriculture this year, and serves notice on officials responsible for agricultural performance at all levels that they stand to lose their jobs if they fail to get results. isis over the avon aff men %1A air and to strengthen Ben-Gurion s Ma ai 1 of the test, is nevertheless likely to use it as an occasion to de- -ii nounce Israel during his current campaign to generate more en- thusiasm in Syria for the union with Egypt. The scheduling of the test at this time is probably designed by the Tel Aviv. government l to unify the country following the disruption caused by a govern- 25X1 T Numerous lesser officials have been fired on similar grounds since Q IC January, when the party central committee aired the agricultural problem. Kalchenko, who has been government chief in the Ukraine since 1954, has been replaced by Vladimir Scherbitsky, one of the Ukrainian party secretaries. Many more members of the party central committee may be involved in the weeding out process be- fore a new committee is elected by the next party congress in Oc- tober. (Backup, Page 6) 1Mar61 DAILY BRIEF ri Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975A005600010001-8 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Approved Fjr Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975Ap05600010001-8 Mali In the five months of its existence Mali has established diplomatic relations with six bloc countries, including the USSR and Communist China, received a large number of visiting bloc delegations, and sent a number of special mis- sions to bloc countries. Except for one rather vague eco- nomic agreement with Czechoslovakia signed last November, these contacts have so far produced few overt results. Nevertheless, the way seems to be open for the bloc to pen- etrate Mali as it has done in neighboring Guinea. The USSR is known to have been developing a comprehensive plan for the industrial development of Mali, while the Czechs have evinced interest in Mali's civil aviation, industrial develop- ment, and geological surveys. Malian Minister of Commerce Ndourd stated last week that he was "inundated" with bloc economic proposals, adding that he was under heavy politi- cal pressure to accept such offers without delay. Mali's Marxist-influenced one -party regime is moving to reduce French influence. The regime, motivated by a militant anticolonialism, considers such a reduction a necessary prerequisite to the attainment of its proclaimed goal of "total" political and economic independence. At the same time Malians continue to resent the part they believe French elements played in neighboring Senegal's secession from its former federation with Mali last summer. After finally accepting the federation's demise, M R's leaders declared their country's dissociation from the French Com- munity and began to institute measures aimed at undercut- ting French commercial interests. Regime spokes- men have left little doubt that ur-Mer moves to reduce French influence--especially in the economic sphere-- would be forthcoming. A decision to shift the bulk of Mali's 25X1 1 Mar 61 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 3 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Approved FoIG.e ease 2003/01/29: CIA-RDP79T00975A0 5600010001-8 - 25X1 ? AREAS CLAIMED BY CHINA IN BHUTAN MILES, 300 30942 25X1 1 Mar 61 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Map Page Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975A005600010001-8 Approved For elease 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975'_ 05600010001-8 2X1 export trade to the bloc would suggest a possible early break with the French franc currency zone. 1 Mar 61 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 4 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 25X1: 25X6 25X' 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 25X1 Approved Fo lease 2003/01/29: CIA-RDP79T00975 05600010001-8 High Soviet Official Dismissed for Agriculture Failures Khrushchev showed strong dissatisfaction with the condition of Ukrainian agriculture early in the central committee meeting in mid- January when he interrupted the speech of Ukrainian party chief Podgorny, a member of the ruling party presidium, with sharp criticism. The first sign that Kaichenko was personally in trouble, came only a few days later when Khrushchev, in his own speech, accused the Ukrainian Premier of panicking with disastrous re- sults, during a drought in 1956. "There he sits," said Khrushchev, "a member of the central committee and everything. rolls off him as water does off a duck's back. It doesn't matter to him that he made a mistake." Vladimir Matskevich, like Kalchenko a former subordinate of Khrushchev's in the Ukraine, was fired as Soviet agriculture minister in December. Their ousters and Podgorny's precarious position are further signs that the Ukraine and Khrushchev's old associates can no longer expect special treatment from Moscow The new premier, Vladimir Shcherbitsky has been a secre- tary of the Ukrainian party organization since late 1957, special- izing in industrial matters. He is one of several younger party administrators who have been brought recently into prominence. A party member only since World War II, Shcherbitsky got started in the Ukrainian party organization during the early 1950's and became party boss in the industrial center of Dnepropetrovsk in 1954. He attracted the attention of the Moscow leadership, and was given a seat on the party's Central Auditing Commission at the Twentieth Party Congress in Moscow in 1956. 1 Mar 61 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 6 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO05600010001-8 Approved Fo lease 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T009 05600010001-8 THE PRESIDENT The Vice President Executive Offices of the White House The Special Assistant for National Security Affairs The Scientific Adviser to the President The Director of the Budget The Director, Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization The Director, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Chairman, Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities The Department of State The Secretary of State The Under Secretary of State The Director, International Cooperation Administration The Deputy Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs The Deputy Under Secretary of State for Administration The Counselor The Assistant Secretary of State for Policy Planning The Director of Intelligence and Research The Treasury Department The Secretary of the Treasury The Department of Defense The Secretary of Defense The Deputy Secretary of Defense The Secretary of the Army The Secretary of the Navy The Secretary of the Air Force The Assistant Secretary of Defense (International Security Affairs) The Assistant to Secretary of Defense (Special Operations) The Chairman, The Joint Chiefs of Staff Chief of Naval Operations, United States Navy Chief of Staff, United States Air Force Chief of Staff, United States Army Commandant, United States Marine Corps U.S. Rep., Military Committee and Standing Group, NATO Supreme Allied Commander, Europe Commander in Chief, Pacific The Director, The Joint Staff The Director for Intelligence, The Joint Staff The Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Department of Army The Director of Naval Intelligence, Department of Navy The Assistant Chief of Staff, Intelligence, Department of the Air Force The Department of Justice The Attorney General The Federal Bureau of Investigation The Director The Atomic Energy Commission The Chairman The National Security Agency The Director The United States Information Agency The Director The National Indications Center The Director 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/01/29 : CIA-RDP79T00975A005600010001-8 Approved Fo~Release~~R/29~~~0975A005600010001-8 Approved For Release 2003101/29`: