CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP79T00975A006700210001-4
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
T
Document Page Count:
14
Document Creation Date:
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date:
April 1, 2003
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 23, 1962
Content Type:
REPORT
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23 November 1962
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
CONTENTS
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2. Pakistan: All says Pakistan has no alternative
but to support US. (Page iii)
NE,
4. USSR: Moscow may make "compromise" nuclear
test-ban proposal. (Page v)
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7. France: Communists make local electoral agree-
ments with Socialists to block Gaullists. (Page viii)
8. Portugal: Azores base extension agreement to in-
clude rental payment provision. (Page ix)
9. Dominican Republic: President Bonnelly urged to
curb growing power of Trujillo assassins Imbert
and Amiama. (Page x)
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*Pakistan: Pakistani Foreign Minister Moham-
mad Ali private y informed US Ambassador Mc-
Conaughy that while his government was disturbed
by Washington's current policy in the subcontinent,
it had no sound alternative but to support the United
States as free world leader. In public, however, the
Pakistani Government remains unyielding, and, in
the absence of an Indian commitment to negotiate on
Kashmir, continues to encourage the outcry against
Western arms aid to India.
hammad Ali has reportedly accepted an invi-
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tatidn from Chou En-lai to visit Peiping. Pakistan
feels vulnerable to Chinese attack along its section
of the undefined Himalayan border and apparently
hopes to take advantage of the present Sino-Indian bor-
der war to hasten conclusion of a Sino-Pakistani bor-
derdemarcation agreement, presently under negotia-
tion.
li's acceptance is probably also intended to dem-
onstx" awe Pakistan's independence and to put further
pressure on New Delhi to agree to negotiate on Kash-
mir.
23 Nov 62
DAILY BRIEF iii
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USSR: 1~,MIoscow may present a "compromise"
planTo-rbanning nuclear tests when the Geneva dis-
armament talks resume on 26 NovembJ
is needed to remove the last obstacles to agreemenE.
closer" together. They say that only a small impetus
loc spokesmen have recently professed to find
the p[B:o: ~Iions of the US, Britain, and the USSR "much
(I Soviet UN delegates recently hinted that Moscow
might-make a moratorium proposal. Izvestia com-
mentator Matveyev suggested on 20 November that
the new moratorium proposal might be for a fixed pe-
riod of limited duration while negotiations continue on
a treaty banning underground tests.'7~
Polish UN delegate Lachs told a British delegate
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of a relatively small number of on-site inspections
on'4ff November that he "surmised" the Soviets might
present a proposal combining the "black boxes" scheme--
suggested recently by Soviet First Deputy Foreign Min-
ister Kuznetsov to Ambassador Dean--with acceptance
pulsory on-site inspections on Soviet territory.
([~Lachs implied that the proposal might modify the
Soviet position that the eight-nation memorandum pro-
vided for voluntary rather than obligatory on-site in-
spections. However, the Soviet delegate to the Geneva
nuclear test-ban subcommittee and Soviet propagand-
ists have continued to express opposition to any com-
~_Soviet leaders probably believe that the new "com-
promise" proposal would gain considerable support
from the nonaligned countries and would bolster Mos-
cow's current poktrayal of Khrushchev as the leading
advocate of peace.r)\
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France: Th Communist Party (PCF) has reached
agreements the Socialists in a number of localities
in an effort to block Gaullist candidates on the 25 No-
vember second ballot for National Assembly seats
(The failure of the anti-Gaullist coalition formed
by Me-non- Communist parties has forced many Social-
ists to salvage what they can by accepting PCF support.
Withdrawals by non-Gaullist right and center candidates
on the second ballot are likely to favor the Gaullists,
and a tendency toward polarization of forces around the
Gaullis and the Communists may occur in the new as-
sembly
The PCF candidate was either in first place or sec-
ond my to the UNR candidate in some 80 electoral dis-
tricts. The government will have no difficulty coping
with the PCF parliamentary group, but PCF long-range
strategy is aimed at exerting broader influence. In many
districts, it has thrown its second-round support to other
leftist candidates whose parties consequently will find it
difficult to eturn to their pre-election policy of isolat-
ing the PCF. hl
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Portugal: `the Portuguese for the first time have
explicitly stated that an extension of the Azores base
agreement- -which expires on 31 December--would
have to include anprecedented provision for rental
payment by the US. )
Feign Minister Nogueira told the US ambassa-
dor 20 November that Lisbon does not feel it can
make the base facilities available on the same terms
as before. He indicated that, in addition to rent, var.=
ious unspecified political conditions would be imposed.
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In other recent conversations Nogueira has added
to th n mber of other points at issue with the US which,
he has indicated, would have tQ be resolved. before any
new agreement can be reached.
Nogueira has also refused to give a firm assurance
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that an interim extension would be allowed if the base
negotiations continue into 1963, saying only that a de-
cision to grant a temp ary extension would be "easy"
to take on short notice.
FEE
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*Dominican Republiq. J President Bonnelly is being
urged to take action agai e growing power of An-
tonio Imbert and Luis Amiama, members of the seven-
man ruling Council of State and the only two survivors
of the group which assassinated Rafael Trujillo,
The Dominican foreign minister told Ambassador
Ma, non 20 November that the situation is "explosive."
Bonnelly has asked for an expression of US support
Imbert and Amiama arguing that a change of re-
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giving them any actual authority.
gimp might leave them unprotected against Trujillo
vengeance, have obtained. appointments naming them
army generals and "supervisors" of the armed forces.
They now want the appointments broadened to give them
formal control of the 8,000-man police force, already
responsive to Imbert's influence. Armed forces lead-
ers agreed to give the pair military rank, but oppose
The police recently attacked the headquarters of
minister of commerce and industry.
a pff - astro party which Imbert is suspected. of trying
to take over for his own purposes. Several cabinet mem-
bers on 16 November formally demanded that the Coun-
cil of State repudiate the police attack and investigate
charges of large-scale graft by Imbert's cousin, who is
Bonnelly is not anxious for such a showdown. Fail-
ure us far of Bonnelly and other government leaders
to curtail the Imbert-Amiama power drive probably
stems partly from concern that Council discord would
disrupt the 20 December presidential and congressional
elections, and partly from actual fear of the power al-
ready wielded by Imbert and Ami a.
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NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE ESTIMATE
The ? United States Intelligence Board, on 21, No-
veinber 1962, roved the following national intelli-
gence estirnatL.V
(NIE 91-62: "The Si uation and Prospects in Ar-
gentina"
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ME
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THE PRESIDENT
The Vice President
Executive Offices of the White House
Special Counsel to 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
Commander in Chief, Atlantic
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
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