LETTER TO ROBERT R. BOWIE FROM JOE L. ZARING

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 11, 2010
Sequence Number: 
44
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 27, 1980
Content Type: 
LETTER
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PDF icon CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5.pdf128.56 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/11: CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5 THE DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE 27 August 1980 I am sorry that you will not be with us for the seminar, but here is a copy of the agenda questions -- which are in effect the terms of reference. Be not concerned: we do not intend to address each and all of these questions in the assessment, but I do hope we will have thought about them before it. is finished. Again, many thanks for the lunch, and persuasive though you are, I am still doubtful that economic relations are as effectively used as stick as they are as carrot. Nor do I think the European view of somehow working toward eventually "accommodating" the USSR within the international system (i.e., involving it in a constraining commitment to that system) really equates with "appeasement". You are too stark. Joe L. Zaring . NIO/WE Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/11: CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/11: CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5 ? National Intelligence Council Seminar POLICY ISSUES BETWEEN THE US AND WESTERN EUROPE IN THE 1980s 18 September.1980 10:00-11:15 The shaping economic and social forces in Europe today and tomorrow Discussion leaders: Dr. Amitai Etzioni, Dr. Robert Lieber 11:15-12:30 The international context -- Western Europe's global inter- ests and perspectives in the next decade Discussion leaders: Dr. Andrew Pierre, Dr. George Liska 12:30-1:45 Luncheon: Executive Dining. Room 1:45-3:00 The security dimension -- alternative emphases in West European security policies Discussion leaders: Dr. Stanley Hoffmann 3:00-4:15 Emergent political trends in Europe in the 1980s 4:15-5:30 The prospects for "Europe" -- what kind of Western Europe the US will be dealing with in the next decade-- how .organized it will be in dealing with its own problems and with the US Discussion leaders: Dr. Ronald Inglehart, Dr. Peter Katzenstein 5:30-7:00 Cocktails and Dinner: Executive Dining Room 7:00-9:30 Potential areas of conflict and convergence between the US and Western Europe Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/11: CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/11: CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5 ? POLICY ISSUES BETWEEN THE US AND WESTERN EUROPE IN THE 1980s 18 September 1980 I. The shaping. economic and social forces in Europe today and tomorrow -- will the organization of production, the sharing out of the economic and social product, and economic management have the same overriding importance in the 1980s that they acquired in the 1970s? -- in what ways will the dominating problems (inflation, low growth, access to resources and markets, structural obsoles- cence) and the potential new advantages (better conservation, new technologies, relative social tranquillity) look different, or, remain essentially the same? -- what will be the dominant trends in the search for more effective approaches to these problems: reassertion of free market prin- ciples, social management, neo-corporativism, industrial democ- racy? -- in what significant ways might new social (or cultural) trends impinge on economic management: e.g., aging populations and generational gaps, retreat from consumerism, quality of life movements, environmental enthusiams, etc. -- what major divergences could appear among the Europeans as those trends unfold, and with what consequences? might tradi- tional social and economic idiosyncrasies gain new vigor? how would Europeans respond? II. "The international context.-- Western Europe's global interests and perspectives in the next decade -- in what ways do we see the changing currents in Europe's internal situation translating into fewer, more, or a different set of interests abroad? -- looking both backward and forward, do the Europeans see their evolving relationships with the rest of the free industrialized world becoming more competitive or more cooperative, or both? -- how do the Europeans perceive developments in the US and in their relations with the US affecting the American dimension in global affairs: a declining but still preeminent factor, competitor but essential partner,-recuperable manager of the international system, etc.? p"o ,-CtA- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/11: CIA-RDP87R00529R000200190044-5