CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP79T00975A006600130001-4
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
T
Document Page Count:
14
Document Creation Date:
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date:
March 7, 2003
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
September 17, 1962
Content Type:
REPORT
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP79T00975A006600130001-4.pdf | 898.44 KB |
Body:
Approved For leaseTOP/1 S EC R?TT0097W06600130001-4
~ /~10 0
i
11 ell
25X1
25X1
17 Sept 62
---
Copy No.
State Dept.
Approved For ReleasE7Op/15EICRET00975A006600130001-4
completed
GROUP 1
Excluded from automatic
downgrading and
declassification
25X1 Approved For Release 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO06600130001-4
Approved For Release 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO06600130001-4
)nniinA147 t-1A ono7wrnnoy n n 4 1 nn n4 A
CIO= 1JM_UA1J1J
17 September 1962
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
CONTENTS
4. Communist China: Chinese want emergency meet-
ing with Ambassador Cabot to deliver "urgent mes-
sage. 11 (Page. iv)
Laos - South Vietnam: Saigon plans to break rela-
tions with Vientiane when Hanois envoy arrives.
7. West New Guinea: Djakarta taking steps to ensure
Papuans will choose permanent Indonesian control.
(1,agu 0)
8. USSR - Iraq: Moscow to provide five surface-to-
air missile installations. (i,aoe
11 ont*n 0)
25X1
25X1
25X1
Approved For Rel aseZUUJIU4/11 : U1A-KUF1%UF 5A JUUUl -4
AM
!//////DO'!%O///O////////////////////////%~/////////////////////~~""'~/~~///////O/O~//O~/O/D~~//O/~/O///O/O///O///O/O///O///////O///.////.~%'~
ApprQ Q'For Rellase 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79TOg975A006600130001-4
17 September 1962
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
CONTENTS
(Continued)
10. Cuba - British Guiana: Jagan regime to supply
1,000 workers for Cuban sugar harvest early
next year.
11. Spain: Liberalization of state-controlled labor
syndicates in prospect.
12. Chile: Threatened split among center-right co-
alition parties favors pro-Castro candidate in
1964 presidential elections. 1 7 t> i
j
f
A roved For Rel se 200/04117 ? CIA-RDP79T009 5A 0130001-4
pp Q
25X1 Approved For Release 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO06600130001-4
Next 4 Page(s) In Document Exempt
Approved For Release 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO06600130001-4
Approved For a se 2003/04/17: CIA-RDP79T00 5 90130001-4
25X1
0
U
0
Communist China: [Chinese Communist Ambas-
sador. Wang in Warsaw has requested an emergency
meeting with. US Ambassador Cabot in order to deliver
an "urgent message." No hint of the subject of the
message was given, but it is likely that it will expand
on Chinese Communist charges of US "aggressive in-
tent" against the mainland in the wake of the, downing
of a Chinese Nationalist U-2 a week ago1`
The Chinese Communists have been bending every
effort to pin responsibility for the flight on the US, and
in an editorial in the 15 September People's Daily said
that the plane's intrusion.. exposed as ~phonyll US state-
ments that "disapproved" of an invasion of China by
Chiang Kai-shek. The paper declared that the over-
flight was an important step in US active preparations
for aggression against China.``
be tolerated."
Fin addition, the Chinese ambassador may again
bring up the question of US naval patrols off Tsingtao.
At the last regular meeting of the two ambassadors
Wang said tha such operations have "gone too far. to
25X1
25X1
.17 Sept 62 DAILY BRIEF
Approved For Release - 5AQJ66O0130001-4
"
L5h
I
ii
Approved For Re a se 2003/04/17. CIA-RDP79T00 7~ 600130001-4 j
25X1
West New Guinea: The Sukarno government is
making intensive preparations to ensure permanent In-
donesian control of West New Guinea. The Dutch-
Indonesian agreement of 15 August provides for self-
determination of the area before the end of 1969-'
Papuans fail 1
"sterner measures" if his efforts to win over the
autonomy. Sukarno has implied that he will authorize
bers of Javanese in West New Guinea over a five-year
period in order to overwhelm any native sentiment for
dent Sukarno is also counting on settling large num-
winning the loyalties of the native Papuans through
propaganda and basic economic development. Presi-
L= j itial Indonesian efforts will be directed toward
17 Sept 62 DAILY BRIEF
M ~~NNr V V U rvr r~Gi aa" cvVJIV41 I I . t.IM-rwr VU I vva p"I vvvv I wvv I-4
Ar~r~rr , rl Gr r nln cn 9AA2/AA/17 r IA_DIlD7QTAA 7c Ann14nnn1_A
25X1
USSR-IRAQ: The USSR is to provide Iraq with
five surface-to-air missile (SAM) sites. One is to
be used for training purposes, and the other four ap-
parently will be to defend Baghdad. Equipment for
the training site is scheduled for delivery this year,
while that for the other sites is to be supplied next
year.
Soviet missile experts have been in Iraq since
early this summer establishing the training site and
conducting surveys for the locations of the four com-
bat sites. The Iraqi Government has recently requi-
sitioned the only apartment house "suitable for West-
ern occupancy" in Baghdad, reportedly for use by
Soviet personnej
LUnder its third military assistance agreement
with Iraq--signed in September 1961--the USSR also
has agreed to provide air-to-air missiles for the 0
Fishbed (MIG-21) jet fighters to be delivered later
this year. In addition, the agreement includes anti-
tank guided missiles. This is the first known instance
in which Moscow has agreed to supply these missiles
to a non-bloc country.
17 Sept 62 DAILY BRIEF
25X1
25X1
ApproveoFRr1Re ase 2003/04/17 CIA-RDP79T00 5A006600130001-4
///////////////00//////////////////////////////////////O/
25X1 Approved For Release 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO06600130001-4
Approved For Release 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79T00975AO06600130001-4
Approved For a se 2003/04/17. CIA-RDP79T00 7506600130001-4 j
I
j
j
25X1
Cuba - British Guiana: Under an agreement ne-
gotiate during the recent vii to Cuba of British
Guiana's Trade Minister Hubbard, up to 1,000 skilled
sugar workers from the British colony will be sent to
Cuba for next year's sugar harves7
CT,he agreement not only will help alleviate the in-
creasing unemployment problem in British Guiana, but
also will provide an additional channel for bloc influence
there. The arrangement was foreshadowed in Premier
Cheddi Jagan's public address last month when he said
his government hoped to send unemployed workers to
Cuba "to help the Cubans and to help ourselves." The
shortage of experienced cane-cutters has been one of
Cuba's biggest problems during the harvest period
which generally extends from January t May
25X1
17 Sept 62 DAILY BRIEF viii
25X1
Approved For Rel ase 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79TOO97 5AO06600130001-4
0
ME
ME
j
!I X
25X1
Aonroved For Rel - 75 O~U130001-4
Approved For Rel - 75 04130001-4
Spain: )Major steps will be taken "in the very
near future" toward converting Spain's state-controlled
national labor syndicates into a genuine free trade
union organization, according to sources of the US Em-
bassy in Madrid
Francisco Gimenez Torres, a high official of the
Ban'`k""''of Spain and formerly the syndicates' national
secretary general, said he was told by Vice President
Munoz Grandez that the syndicates should be freed im-
mediately from state control and that all labor officials
should be elected by workers. Gimenez Torres also
predicted further cabinet changes, including dismissal
of the present head of the s ndicates, who has opposed
labor organization reforms.
QC,imenez Torres is visiting in the United States.
He said he had been authorized by Franco to contact
AFL CIO leaders for advice and su ort.
SEE Chile: The unstable center-right government of
j President Alessandri appears to have foundered again
in its efforts to stabilize the economy. The four cabi-
net members of the centrist Radical Party tendered
their resignations on 14 September to protest a pro-
posed currency devaluation. Unless a compromise is
reached, Alessandri will retain only the support of two
rightist parties. If the rightist-centrist split continues,
victory in the mid-1964 national elections would almost
certainly go to the Communist-dominated Popular Front
and its presidential candidate pro-Castro Senator Sal-
25X1
ep DAILY BRIEF ix
j Approved For Rel ase 2003/0417"1"11111 1111111779TOO975 00 130001-4
Approve
Cabinet Resignations Threaten Chile's Coalition
Government
President Alessandri has not yet accepted the
resignations of the four Radical Party cabinet mem-
bers, and a compromise is still possible. However,
the difficulties he has experienced with a cabinet of
politically diverse members may lead him to attempt
to govern with a cabinet of technicians from his own
Conservative Party (PCU).
The middle-of-the-road Radical Party was in-
vited to join the governing coalition of the PCU and the
rightist Liberal Party in 1959 to forestall a move by
Radical congressmen to override Alessandri's veto
of wage-raise bills. Leaders of the Conservative and
Liberal parties favor the currency devaluation, des-
pite the loss of political support it would entail. The
Radicals, however, have consistently opposed the
move ever since it was proposed by the International
Monetary Fund during last December's financial crisis.
Divisions in the Conservative- Liberal-Radical
coalition will surely be exploited by the ebullient left,
particularly the Communist-dominated Popular Front
(FRAP). If the Radicals abandon the government now,
the chances of healin the breach before the 1964 elec-
tions will be slim.
25X1
25X'
25X1
Approved Fot Release 9003104117 ? rein-Rnp7QT009MA006800130001-4
17 Sept 62 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN Page 1
Approved For
THE PRESIDENT
The Vice President
Executive Offices of the White House
Special Counsel to the President
Military Representative of the President
The Special Assistant for National Security Affairs
The Scientific Adviser to the President
The Director of the Budget
The Director, Office of Emergency Planning
The Director, National Aeronautics and Space Administration
The Department of State
The Secretary of State
The Under Secretary of State
The Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
The Deputy Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
The Counselor and Chairman of the Policy Planning Council
The Director of Intelligence and Research
The Treasury Department
The Secretary of the Treasury
The Under 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 Secretary of Defense
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, Defense Intelligence Agency
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
Approved For Release 2003/04/17 : CIA-RDP79T00975A006600130001-4
25X1
25X1
Approved For lease'p175 y
Approved For Release 09/4/17 ? W P 00975A006600130001-4