CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP85T00875R000800020270-9
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
14
Document Creation Date:
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date:
October 20, 2000
Sequence Number:
270
Case Number:
Publication Date:
December 1, 1972
Content Type:
BULL
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
![]() | 627.49 KB |
Body:
r
i. i . - i;-; .,._ .:~: '; L. 1 0.
13
Approved For Release2005~0610t : CIAO 51-00MR000800 M276-9"
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R00080
No Joreign IXfseni
DIRECTORATE OF
INTELLIGENCE
Central Intelligence bulletin
STATE, NAVY declassification & release instructions on file
Secret
N2 582
1 December 1972
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06JQ9 q.1~4=RpP85T00875R000800020270-9
I I I ll/t1 II11 1 Itd ilt I 11111 1 I I I I t, III 1ulu( I'll IIV Iht' I)nt't 1( .1 ul (:cIIh 11
-li;-n n n, ,~l hr. I,.?I'mI, 111t111i h.I In,!~.'itlnnl t 11;1( fit 111101141'' MA, ht,unnl nn i
ui .I 1111 :- 1" Ihr PI ,"?n),,III Ih' IV.tliutt,tl ',(( linty (:t-llot.II, ,1rti1 Oihwr ,onwr
?I""t I ;t,I?nl Ihi tit .. II r III t,iii; t?(I in , ou-,n1kit [tilt vii 111 111c I)rll,lt lnn'nl, (tl :,t,(IU 111(1
11, i n . ':`llt, n, ht t .1,t' ? ill Ih,, Dint I,n fill , ,1111"In,11c t'>11'?ult,iii ii nth the (I( 'lI II1111?(1( of
t,uu't11 i?, II i':?1',I I ilt~nl; u1 1), )1 liiii?, ihrtru( ?i Ilturiutr1 by Ih^ (:UIII
inl ^li,:rlt,. n,tl~?;1,.', ,Tall 1111.lo,,'tl 111 ht?1t.l;t'L,.
lol,-;ltI,'IIIUUI ,ii if ?1iII (1 1111 (,1111.11 if u1 Ihr, Ittrfit ii.,111( )11 1rill c??cnt inii(Ii li'l I-.1114
I't-himr;,ity vi. vi HI It ;t 111( 1 I ItI it utltlit.,:liun u1 the 1 1111 ni IIIItIICI in(oru1,11io11
::;:tir , ,nnltlrl, ?11;,;1,;?1 ..
u t t ; ! t ? I h t i . n-., i l ? n t . H I I l i i . I n t h h , . . i l i ~ , ; t 1 1 1 , I V h? I I c ' . I t l n t h tl sl)t , (. iIi( IIIV lot nu IIIIIhIi r
un,.ifunl_ nlh,i u1I, Ihr; ni_u tl(1u, u1,i'; ht' ch,.t u1n1,11r(I lulliIt~l, hill only on ,I
ntn,; 1,.1,1?.
11111 if(,( unit III t,mt.)itI, iii lutn1,11n)n ,11fcc(i11tt tilt' t1,lliun1Il (1001 PL' of IIii tJnit.erl5ltltcs,
1111 II,' III i y 111 t 111t~ 1 li(tns 7').1 .111(1 194 of the )h t::tt.lt' ;Ir, ,IIncIIJlc{I. Its
ii Ii ??n~n u1 a v,'I,tf,t)n ~_,I 11 ., runt Ciit? II I o1 Ict.cil)I by ,rni 1if t,urthori,:cr1 F"''.olI k
It1nh;'ttit1111y Ir.V,
i a, ~ i 1 t or,s:
_ia,~~i,t,?r t :~,1~,d 1,11,11.; ..,,_
Approved For Release 2005/06ACrP85T00875R000800020270-9
0 1z ft-
Approved For Release 2005/06/081.',ClA Y85T00875R000800020270-9
No. 0288/72
1 December 1972
Central Intelligence Bulletin
25X6A
25X6A
SOUTH VIETNAM: Saigon continuing preparations for
cease-fire. (Page 1)
BANGLADESH: Awami League officials attack CIA.
(Page 2)
ECUADOR: Quito forcing showdown with foreign oil
inte es is . (Page 3)
PERU: Concerted government campaign to control
labor movement. (Page 4)
YUGOSLAVIA-US-CANADA: Croat emigre demonstrations
may include violent acts. (Page 5)
FEDAYEEN: Broad front group beset with divisions.
(Page,7)
SOUTH AFRICA: Vorster may offer seaports to quasi-
autonomous 'bantustans". (Page 8)
NORTH VIETNAM: Two coastal merchaat ships leave
Haiphong har or (Page 9)
PANAMA: Bus hijacking controversy still unsettled
(Page 9)
Approved For Release 2005/0649: CA- TP85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/0*HM E'f Ip$5T00875R000800020270-9
SOUTH VIETNAM: Government military and civil-
ian security officials are continuing preparations
for a cease-fire.
The Military Security Service is investigating
officers and soldiers with known or suspected con-
nections with the Viet Cong
25X1C
25X1 C
Lasts of the suspects are being
compiled, and some soldiers may be transferred to
other units to avoid concentrations of potential
subve ives. The investigations
25X1C
25X1 C
I
I are mainly intended to pinpoint so diers
most susceptible to enemy blandishments. There will
be no mass arrests.
In almost every province, the South Vietnamese
have been conducting meetings recently at various
administrative levels to explain the government's
position and to prepare for a cease-fire. Direc-
tives have been sent to regional and provincial secu-
rity commands prodding officials to strengthen their
units before the announcement is made. In addition,
cadets from the military schools are being sent into
the countryside to explain the cease-fire and to try
and bolster popular support for the government during
the period of intense political competition expected
to follow. (SECRET NO 2OREIGN DISSEM)
Central Intelligence Bulletin
SECRET
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-R P85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/( ; (0
~,Rfi?P85T00875R000800020270-9
BANGLADESH: Americans suspected of being in-
volvecT wi.t t e CIA are coming under increasing at--
tack by officials of the governing Awami Lear?ae.
In the last few days leaders of Prime Minister
Mujib's party, including his nephew, have repeatedly
accused an American Foreign Service officer of being
a CIA agent and have demanded that he be expelled
from the country for holding "secret" meetings with
a leftist opposition leader. Yesterday the League's
senior vice-president charged that the CIA and other
foreign agents, aiming to cripple the economy, were
responsible for a recent spate of fires in jute
warehouses. The fires were probably set by jute
shippers who, failing to meet shipment deadlines,
frequently resort to arson to obtain insurance
money.
The League seems likely to continue and even
to intensify its attacks in the hope that opposi-
tion leaders can be linked with foreign "subversive"
elements and discredited prior to national elections
scheduled for next March. Additionally, foreigners
in Bangladesh are handy targets to blame whenever
undesirable .vents, such as the fires, occur. (CON-
FIDENTIAL NO FOREIGN DISSEM)
1 Dec 72 Central Intelligence Bulletin
Approved For Release 2005/06g ,(i4+FJDP85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 - A5T00875R000800020270-9
ECUADOR: Quito is forcing a showdown with
foreign l interests while simultaneously attempt-
ing to resolve an internal dispute over its petroleum
policy.
Minister of Natural Resources Jarrin has ordered
foreign companies to pay rentals on concession areas
by 30 November. Texaco-Gulf, the largest investor,
is not involved because it has already made the pay-
ments. Although most companies are expected to ac-
cede to the ultimatum, the US-owned Minas y Petroleos
Cia may risk an annulment of its concession contract
rather than pay the rentals. If the contract is an-
nulled, the company is likely to claim expropriation
and seek recourse in the US against the Ecuadorean
Government.
Quito has nullified a concession in the Gulf
of Guayaquil, granted to a consortium of US com-
panies in 1968. The consortium, which has invested
some $25 million to date, is hopeful that its con-
cession can be converted into a service contract,
in accordance with a new Ecuadorean petroleum law.
Negotiations apparently will be conducted with the
more conciliatory manager of the state oil company,
Colonel Duenas, who is Jarrin's main opponent in a
struggle for control over Quito's oil policy.
An unsatisfactory resolution of these separate
conflicts could jeopardize new foreign participation
in developing Ecuador's petrcleum resources. Most
of the companies have been less successful than
Texaco-Gulf in exploratory drilling, and the threat
of more stringent contractual terms could prompt
many to abandon their concessions. (CONFIDENTIAL)
Central Intelligence Bulletin
Approved For Release 2005/06/0 : & )1bp85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/0-I_ R,85T00875R000800020270-9
PERU: The Velasco regime's recent creation
of a iaa5~ r confederation is the first overt move
in a concerted government campaign to gain control
of the labor movement.
The military government wants to eliminate ex-
isting labor confederations, including the Commu-
nist-dominated organization it has favored as well
as the group controlled by its archenemy, APRA.
The plan is to substitute a new group controlled
through Sinamos, the "social mobilization" appara-
tus designed to build an independent base of sup-
port for the regime and to ensure the permanence
of its programs. The Communists have supported
the government, but oppose its encroachment into
the labor field. In a speech cleared at the high-
est official levels, the head of Sinamos recently
castigated the Communists for their attitude and
pointedly reminded them that traditional political
parties "cannot become the political heirs of the
revolution."
The government's next move will be to offer
individual unions various inducements to cut their
ties to other confederations and join the new group.
If this strategy is unsuccessful, a labor law which
would abolish the old confederations reportedly
will be issued early next year. If the strategy
seems to be working, however, promulgation of the
law may be delayed. (SECRET NO FOREIGN DISSEM)
1 Dec 72 Central Intelligence Bulletin
SECRET
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/09GJbWiD5T00875R000800020270-9
YUGOSLAVIA-US-CANADA: Croat emigre demonstra-
tions in the US and Canada--planned for today and
tomorrow--will draw sharp protests from Belgrade
if there is violence or excessive harassment of
Yugoslav consular personnel.
The Chicago-based emigre journal Danica has
called for demonstrations to commemorate the na-
tionalist student strike in Zagreb last year. Pro-
testers are expected at Yugoslav consulates in New
York, Pittsburgh., Cleveland, Chicago, and San Fran-
cisco as well as in Toronto.
On 28 November, the Yugoslav Foreign Ministry
called in a US Embassy officer to ask that the
demonstrations be discouraged, if not prohibited,
by local officials. Belgrade is aware of the legal
impossibility of meeting such a request, and is
probably laying the groundwork for a strong protest
if there is violence or disorderliness. The Yugo-
slavs specifically warned that some of the expected
participants also took part in violent acts against
their consular personnel in New York last month.
Unlike similar situations in the past, the
Yugoslavs will expect Washington to act if the
emigres violate the new federal law on protection
of foreign diplomats. (CONFIDENTIAL)
Central Intelligence Bulletin
Approved For Release 2005/06/WQR]T'P85TOO875R000800020270-9
25X6
61 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/09~f 1 5TO0875R000800020270-9
FEDAYEEN: A Palestinian congress held in
Beirut on 27 and 28 November has established a
broad pro-fedayeen front, but it is already beset
with serious divisions.
Organized by several. fedayeen groups and Arab
political parties, the conference was attended by
representatives of a variety of "progressive" po-
litical groups, including a Viet Cong delegation.
Uruguay's Tupamaros were invited but did not come.
Deep divisions quickly emerged among the con-
ferees. Led by a Palestine Liberation Organization
representative, most fedayeen rejected a peaceful
settlement of the Middle East conflict and demanded
that the conferees denounce UN Resolution 242.
Less radical conferees--placed in a delicate posi-
tion because of their governments' acceptance of
negotiations and specifically the UN resolution--
urged the formulation of a platform which would not
rule out a peaceful solution. This was ultimately
accomplished by the adoption of a front platform
rejecting "all capitulatory plans."
The front, dubbed the "Arab Front for Partici-
pation in the Palestinian Revolution," will have a
46-man central, committee composed of Arab partici-
pants in the congress, as well as an 11-man perma-
nent secretariat headquartered in Beirut. Kamal
Jumblatt, a leftist Lebanese politician who was
largely responsible for engineering the compromise
platform, has been elected secretary-general.
The idea for the front was originally con-
ceived at conferences of the Lebanese Communist
Party and of the fedayeen early this year and is
one of several attempts, so far largely futile, to
unite the fedayeen. (CONFIDENTIAL)
Central Intelligence Bulletin
Approved For Release 2005/06/OEe 85T00875R000800020270-9
RET
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : Mfffr00875R000800020270-9
25X1 C
25X1 C
25X1 C
SOUTH AFRICA: Prime Minister Vorster has pri-
vately held out the prospect that his government
will cede seaporto to two of South Africa's eight
hantustans. He apparently intends to make the offer
as an inducement for the leaders of these -Tuasi-
autonomous "African homelands" to negotiate "in-
dependence" without fully realizing their demands
for additional land.
Durin ani interview
last week, Vorster said that he had
told Chief Matanzima of Transkei and Chief Buthelezi
of Kwazula that independence settlements might in-
clude the cession of white-occupied ports on the
Indian Ocean. The first, Port St. Johns, is a tiny
white enclave in Transkei. territory. The second,
Richards Bay, is situated amid several Kwazulu re-
serves; Pretoria is pursuing extensive plans to con-
struct modern industrial Port facilities there for
industry. Vorster told that he
definitely offered Port St. Johns to Matanzima, but
merely suggested to Buthelezi that Richards Bay
might be negotiable.
Both Matanzima and Buthelezi :lave repeatedly
asserted the need of their respective homelands for
a seaport and also for additional land. All the
homeland leaders also expect considerable economic
aid from Pretoria. Vor?ter's government has not
hitherto shown much responsiveness to such demands.
The area now allotted to eight bantustans amounts
to some 13 percent of South Africa's total terri-
tory, and lifting the bantustans out of their sub-
sistence economy would be prohibitively costly.
Independen^e for the black "homelands" is basic to
the ruling National Party's policy of apartheid,
and the government is anxious to persuade at least
one bantustan leader to ask for independence.
(continued)
1 Dec 72 Central Intelligence Bulletin
25X1.C
Approved For Release 2005/06/095 J J 5T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 S th 5T00875R000800020270-9
Substantial concessions to either chief would
reinforce similar demands from hitherto less articu-
late bantustan leaders. There would also be bitter
outcries from whites who oppose any "giveaways' to
non-whites.
It is doubtful that cession of the seaports
would dissuade Matanzima or Bu',*-"helezi from insisting
that additional land be included in an independence
settlement. In any event, Vorster would be hard
pressed to persuade his white constituents that he
had not paid too high a price for inducing ivlatanzima
and Butheiezi to begin negotiations for independence.
Perhaps for that reason, Vorster's comments may be
only a trial balloon. (CONFIDENTIAL)
Cer'al Intelligence Bulletin
Approved For Release 2005/06/0934A85T00875R000800020270-9
Approved For Release 2005/06/owl' C7 lEP85T00875R000800020270-9
25X6A
PANAMA: The seizure of 17 Canal Zone buses 1a;
week remains a pro:;lem, although the government, in
an apparent gesture of good will, has returned seven
of the buses. The government appears to have tied
its settlement of the issue to a US agreement pro-
viding immunity from prosecution for the men involved,
including those accused of using arms in the hijacking
of two busea on 21 November. The US-owned bus company,
meanwhile, has agreed to sell out to a Panamanian firm.
Details of that agreement may depend in part on the
prior settlement of the immunity issue. (CONFIDENTIAL
NO FOREIGN DISSEM)
The main channel into Haiphong, is still mined and
could not.be used by ocean going ships. (SECRET)
NO'T'1:S
NOW`.'II VIETNAM: Two North Vietnamese coastal
merchant shfp_ s Piave eluded the mines around Haiphong
and have been recently seen by the US Navy in Chinese
waters. Both were photographed in Haiphong harbor as
late as 20 November. These are the first two merchant
ships to depart Haiphong since the harbor was mined in
r-.ay. Both ships are relatively small and, if they
left the port empty, could have taken advantage cf
high tides in late November to skirt the minefields.
Central Intelligence Bulletin
SECRET
Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP85T00875R000800020270-9