0009
Document Title | 1. Meeting with Mr. L.H. Lamb; 2. Vulnerability Studies; 3. Combined Discussions on Guided Weapons and Electronics; 4. Certain Intelligence Priorities; 5. Developments in Hungary; 6. Information for the Press; 7. Review of the Situation Round the Soviet and Satellite Perimeter; 8. Weekly Discussions on Soviet Preparedness for War and the Communist Threat in the Far East and South-East Asia; 9. Invasion of the United Kingdom |
Reference | CAB 159/9 |
Document Date | 25 January 1951 |
Conflicts | Cold War |
Themes | Intelligence Organisation and Administration, Weapons Technology and Nuclear Warfare, Military Intelligence and Operations |
Regions | East Asia, Europe, North America |
Countries | Austria, Bulgaria, Burma, China, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Indochina, Italy, Korea, Poland, Romania, Russia, Soviet Union, United Kingdom, United States of America, Yugoslavia |
Document Type | Meeting Minutes |
Organisations | Central Intelligence Agency, Chiefs of Staff, Foreign Office, Joint Intelligence Bureau, Joint Intelligence Staff, Joint Planning Staff, Ministry of Defence, Security Service, United Nations, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee |
People | John Gardiner, Stewart Menzies, Patrick Reilly, Arthur Shortt, Percy Sillitoe, Kenneth Strong |
Keywords
military intelligence, war preparations, military objectives, assessing enemy strength, military strength, strategy, intelligence services responsibilities, intelligence gathering, intelligence reports, British intelligence organisation, technology, missiles, weapons development, intelligence requirements, Soviet satellite states, travel restrictions, diplomatic officials, manpower, security, secrecy, Iron Curtain, consular intelligence sources, release of information, press reports, Soviet army, Eastern Bloc, threat of war with the USSR, predicting enemy intentions, contingency planning, mobilisation, resources, Soviet air force, Soviet-Chinese relations, aircraft, invasion threat, propaganda, subversion, imperialism, empire, colonies, defence