- Collection ID
- CAB158
- Conflict
- Cold War
- Countries
- Afghanistan Albania Algeria Austria Azerbaijan Azores Belgium Bulgaria Burma Cambodia Cape Verde China Crete Cyprus Czechoslovakia Denmark Egypt Estonia Finland Formosa France Germany Gibraltar Great Britain Greece Greenland Hungary Iceland India Indochina Indonesia Iraq Israel Italy Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Korea Kuwait Laos Latvia Lebanon Libya Lithuania Madeira Malaya Mongolia Morocco Nazi Germany Netherlands North Korea Norway Oman Pakistan Palestine People's Republic of China Persia Philippines Poland Portugal Republic of China Republic of Korea Romania Russia Saudi Arabia Siam South Africa South Korea Soviet Union Spain Sudan Sweden Switzerland Syria Transjordan Tunisia Turkey Ukraine United Kingdom United States of America Vietnam West Germany Yugoslavia
- Document Reference
- CAB 158/9/8
- Document Types
- Report Memorandum Map
- File Reference
- CAB 158/9
- Identifier
- 10.1080/swwf.cab158.0009.008
- Keywords
- Contingency Planning Predicting Enemy Intentions Assessing Enemy Strength War Preparations War Materials Soviet Army Soviet Air Force Soviet Navy Soviet Foreign Policy Soviet Satellite States Military Intelligence Strategy Alliances Allies Geographic Intelligence Weapons Development Technology Communications Transportation Air Power Naval Strength Military Strength Threat Of War With The Ussr Resources Defence Security Air Raid Precautions Missiles Rockets Foreign Policy Communism Subversion Fifth Columnists Western Bloc Eastern Bloc Manpower Arab World Military Supplies Military Operations Soviet-chinese Relations Colonies Empire Imperial Defence
- Languages
- English
- Organizations
- Chiefs of Staff Communist Information Bureau Joint Intelligence Staff Ministry of Defence North Atlantic Treaty Organisation United Nations Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee
- Pages
- 73
- Persons Discussed
- John Gardiner Guy Liddell Patrick Reilly Percy Sillitoe Josef Stalin Kenneth Strong
- Published in
- United Kingdom
- Themes
- Military Intelligence International Relations