0011
Document Title | 1. Birthday Honours; 2. Meeting with H.M. Ambassador, Rangoon; 3. Situation in Burma; 4. Review of the Situation Round the Soviet and Satellite Perimeter and Other Sensitive Areas; 5. Soviet Intentions in Germany; 6. Possible Development of East German Military or Para Military Forces; 7. Review of Middle East and North Africa; 8. Situation in Egypt; 9. United States Air Activity over Manchuria; 10. Campaign Studies Consequent on the Completion of the Report on General Soviet Strategy; 11. Justification of J.I.C. Assessments; 12. Meeting with General Kirkman |
Reference | CAB 159/11 |
Document Date | 6 June 1952 |
Conflicts | Cold War |
Themes | Foreign Policy and International Relations, Military Intelligence and Operations, Intelligence Organisation and Administration |
Regions | Africa, East Asia, Europe, Middle East, North America, Pacific |
Countries | Burma, China, East Germany, Egypt, Formosa, France, Germany, Indochina, Japan, Jordan, Korea, Lebanon, Romania, Russia, Soviet Union, Sudan, United States of America |
Document Type | Meeting Minutes, Reports |
Organisations | Abwehr, Chiefs of Staff, Commonwealth Relations Office, Foreign Office, Joint Intelligence Bureau, Joint Intelligence Committee (Middle East), Joint Intelligence Staff, Joint Planning Staff, Ministry of Defence, Security Service, United Nations, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee |
People | Anthony Buzzard, Francis Fressanges, Guy Liddell, Stewart Menzies, Patrick Reilly, Eric Searight, Arthur Shortt, Percy Sillitoe, Kenneth Strong |
Keywords
personnel, diplomatic officials, Burmese politics, Soviet foreign policy, assessing enemy strength, predicting enemy intentions, Soviet satellite states, occupied Germany, German government, Soviet strategy, intelligence reports, intelligence requirements, German army, foreign policy, Arab world, Egyptian armed forces, military strength, morale, United States Air Force, military operations, air warfare, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee duties, communism, French politics, shipping, politicians, police, political pressure for peace, propaganda, recruitment, Soviet army, training, Romanian government, armistice, peace proposals, prisoners of war, Anglo-Chinese relations, First Indochina War, colonial independence movements, Egyptian foreign policy, Lebanese government, Jordanian government, diplomacy, Indo-Pakistani relations, diplomatic disputes, border disputes