0010
Document Title | 1. J.I.B. Work in the Far East; 2. Visit of Chairman of J.I.C. Germany; 3. Review of the Situation Round the Soviet and Satellite Perimeter and other Sensitive Areas; 4. J.I.C. Weekly Intelligence Review (Europe) for S.H.A.P.E.; 5. Intelligence for Nato.; 6. Likelihood of Total War with the Soviet Union up to the End of 1954; 7. Review of the Present State of our Intelligence |
Reference | CAB 159/10 |
Document Date | 1 November 1951 |
Conflicts | Cold War |
Themes | Intelligence Organisation and Administration, Foreign Policy and International Relations, Military Intelligence and Operations |
Regions | East Asia, Europe, Middle East, South Asia |
Countries | Belarus, Burma, China, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Korea, Nepal, Persia, Poland, Singapore, Soviet Union, United Kingdom |
Document Type | Meeting Minutes, Reports |
Organisations | Chiefs of Staff, Commonwealth Relations Office, Foreign Office, Joint Intelligence Bureau, Joint Intelligence Staff, Ministry of Defence, Security Service, United Nations, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee |
People | John Gardiner, Eric Jones, Guy Liddell, Stewart Menzies, Patrick Reilly, Eric Searight, Arthur Shortt, Percy Sillitoe, Kenneth Strong |
Keywords
Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee duties, British intelligence organisation, intelligence channels, Anglo-American relations, American intelligence services, propaganda, public statements, Chinese communists, peace proposals, armistice, predicting enemy intentions, strategy, troop movements, military operations, military situation reports, transportation, food supplies, aircraft, airfields, fuel, Nepalese politics, First Indochina War, Chinese army, military supplies, colonial independence movements, Chinese foreign policy, Burmese politics, invasion of Tibet, information sharing, alliances, intelligence distribution, intelligence reports, threat of war with the USSR, contingency planning, intelligence gathering, shipping, warships, Soviet navy, occupied Germany, military exercises, training, Polish armed forces, Hungarian armed forces, conscription, weapons production