0009
Document Title | 1. J.I.C. Weekly Intelligence Review (Europe) for S.H.A.P.E.; 2. Review of the Situation Round the Soviet and Satellite Perimeter; 3. Chiefs of Staff Meeting with Lord Tedder; 4. Atomic Energy and Guided Weapons Programmes-Downgrading of Top Secret Documents; 5. Visit of D.N.I. to Rome; 6. Review of the State of Our Intelligence and Measures Recommended to Improve It; 7. Port Energency Planning; 8. Exchange of Intelligence with India and Pakistan; 9. Tripartite Military Staff Talks on the Defence of South-East Asia; 10. Requests by Yugoslavia for Special Equipment; 11. Short Term Effects of Air Attack Against Supply Bases and Communications in Manchuria |
Reference | CAB 159/9 |
Document Date | 10 May 1951 |
Conflicts | Cold War |
Themes | Intelligence Gathering and Surveillance, Weapons Technology and Nuclear Warfare, Military Intelligence and Operations |
Regions | Atlantic, East Asia, Europe, North America, South Asia |
Countries | Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Burma, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Germany, Holland, Hungary, India, Italy, Korea, Malaya, Netherlands, North Korea, Pakistan, Poland, Romania, Russia, Siam, Soviet Union, Sweden, United Kingdom, United States of America, Yugoslavia |
Document Type | Meeting Minutes |
Organisations | Chiefs of Staff, Foreign Office, Joint Intelligence Bureau, Joint Intelligence Committee (Far East), Joint Intelligence Staff, Joint Planning Staff, Ministry of Defence, Security Service, United Nations, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee |
People | John Gardiner, Dante Hodgson, Stewart Menzies, Neill Ogilvie-Forbes, Patrick Reilly, Arthur Shortt, Percy Sillitoe, Kenneth Strong |
Keywords
intelligence reports, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee duties, intelligence channels, intelligence distribution, information sharing, allies, Iron Curtain, Eastern Bloc, Soviet foreign policy, Soviet satellite states, war preparations, threat of war with the USSR, predicting enemy intentions, assessing enemy strength, mobilisation, military operations, military situation reports, air warfare, aircraft, former colonies, defence, foreign policy, Chinese Civil War, Chinese Nationalists, personnel, Anglo-American relations, American intelligence services, atomic warfare, missiles, technology, weapons development, intelligence services responsibilities, British intelligence organisation, intelligence gathering, ports, contingency planning, secrecy, security, Anglo-French relations, French intelligence services, conferences, photographic reconnaissance, aerial reconnaissance, intelligence requirements, Yugoslav armed forces, equipment, radar, invasion threat, anti-aircraft defence, training, staff colleges, military strength, alliances, Western Bloc, propaganda, troop movements