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Document Title | 1.; 2. Visit of the Director of Military Intelligence to Germany; 3. Co-Ordination of Intelligence in the Middle East; 4. Present State of our Intelligence on the Soviet Union the European Satellites and China and Measures to Improve it; 5. Importance of Possible Scientific and Technical Developments in China; 6. Review of the Situation Round the Soviet and Satellite Perimeter and other Sensitive Areas; 7. Intelligence on the Far East from U.S. Sources |
Reference | CAB 159/10 |
Document Date | 20 December 1951 |
Conflicts | Cold War |
Themes | Intelligence Organisation and Administration, Military Intelligence and Operations, Foreign Policy and International Relations |
Regions | Africa, East Asia, Europe, Middle East, North America, South Asia |
Countries | Austria, Burma, China, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, France, Germany, India, Indochina, Korea, Morocco, North Korea, Pakistan, Persia, Poland, Russia, Soviet Union, Sudan, Syria, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States of America |
Document Type | Meeting Minutes, Reports |
Organisations | Chiefs of Staff, Communist Information Bureau, Foreign Office, Joint Intelligence Bureau, Joint Intelligence Committee (Middle East), Ministry of Defence, Secret Intelligence Service, Security Service, United Nations, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee |
People | Anthony Buzzard, John Gardiner, Eric Jones, Stewart Menzies, Patrick Reilly, Eric Searight, Arthur Shortt, Percy Sillitoe, Kenneth Strong |
Keywords
political pressure for peace, scientific experts, propaganda, security, occupied Germany, British intelligence organisation, intelligence channels, intelligence distribution, Arab world, intelligence services responsibilities, personnel, intelligence gathering, Soviet satellite states, Eastern Bloc, scientific research, technology, training, Chinese communists, transportation, submarines, aircraft, Soviet air force, threat of war with the USSR, predicting enemy intentions, American intelligence services, information sharing, Anglo-American relations, disarmament, Soviet foreign policy, anti-aircraft defence, defence, evacuation, uranium, troop movements, military dispositions, female workers, military operations, armistice, exchange of prisoners, prisoners of war, Soviet army, Chinese army, First Indochina War, colonial independence movements, military strength, manpower, Burmese politics, Anglo-Egyptian relations, Suez Canal, Syrian politics, Iranian politics, communism, oil, Indo-Pakistani relations, demilitarisation, foreign policy