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Document Title | 1. Mr. S.E.V. Luke; 2. The Employment of the Soviet Navy and Soviet air Forces in the Maritime Role at the Out-Break of General war up to the End of 1956; 3. MIG-15 Aircraft; 4. Review of the Situation Round the Soviet and Satellite Perimeter and other Sensitive Areas; 5. Future of British Intelligence Organisation (Germany); 6. Priorities in Defence Intelligence Requirements; 7. Charter for the J.I.C. (Germany); 8. Russian Postal Censhorship Reports; 9. Provision of Information for Eucom; 10. Intelligence for the Germans after Ratification of the Conn Convention; 11. Operational Planning by Cs-in-C. Germany '55-56; 12. B.I.O.(G) - Personnel; 13. Release of Information to the E.D.C.; 14. Report of the Tripartite Security Working Group 1951; 15. Next Visit of Major General Kirkman |
Reference | CAB 159/13 |
Document Date | 19 March 1953 |
Conflicts | Cold War |
Themes | Military Intelligence and Operations, Intelligence Organisation and Administration, Foreign Policy and International Relations |
Regions | Africa, East Asia, Europe, Middle East, North America |
Countries | Burma, China, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, Germany, Israel, Jordan, Korea, Laos, Oman, Persia, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Siam, Soviet Union, Sudan, United States of America, West Germany |
Document Type | Meeting Minutes, Reports |
Organisations | Chiefs of Staff, Foreign Office, Joint Intelligence Bureau, Joint Intelligence Committee (Germany), Joint Intelligence Staff, Ministry of Defence, Secret Intelligence Service, Security Service, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee |
People | Charles Carstairs, Guy Liddell, Patrick Reilly, Percy Sillitoe, John Sinclair, Josef Stalin, Kenneth Strong |
Notes | Sections of this document have been retained under Section 3(4) of the Public Records Act, 1958. |
Keywords
Soviet navy, Soviet air force, assessing enemy strength, threat of war with the USSR, predicting enemy intentions, contingency planning, shipping, atomic warfare, intelligence reports, intelligence requirements, air power, naval strength, air warfare, naval warfare, military intelligence, military strength, British intelligence organisation, intelligence services responsibilities, geographic intelligence, defence, intelligence gathering, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee duties, intelligence channels, German intelligence services, intelligence distribution, censorship, postal communications, communications interception, Iron Curtain, Eastern Bloc, information sharing, diplomacy, diplomatic intelligence, foreign policy, allies, alliances, operations planning, military organisation, personnel, manpower, release of information, classified documents, security clearance, security, secrecy, Soviet government, public statements, troop movements, Soviet satellite states, Soviet foreign policy, tanks, communism, Anglo-Egyptian relations, press reports, anti-British feeling, Arab world, Arab-Israeli relations, border disputes, airspace, diplomatic disputes