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CHAIRMAN MAO ZEDONG'S SPEECH AT THE 24TH SESSION OF THE CENTRAL PEOPLE'S GOVERNMENT COUNCIL;
"OUR GREAT VICTORY IN THE WAR TO RESIST U.S. AGGRESSION AND AID KOREA AND OUR FUTURE TASKS"

After three years we have won a great victory in the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea. It has now come to a halt.

To what was this victory due? Just now fellow members put it down to correct leadership. Leadership is one factor; nothing can succeed without correct leadership. But we won mainly because ours was a people's war, the whole nation gave it support and the people of China and Korea fought shoulder to shoulder.

We fought U.S. imperialism, an enemy wielding weapons many times superior to ours, and yet we were able to win and compelled it to agree to a truce. Why was the truce possible?

First, militarily the U.S. aggressors were in an unfavourable position and were on the receiving end. If they had not accepted the truce, their whole battle line would have been broken through and Seoul would have fallen into the hands of the Korean people. This situation became evident in the summer of last year.

Each belligerent calls his own battle line a bastion of iron. Ours is truly a bastion of iron. Our soldiers and cadres are resourceful and brave and dare to look death in the face. In contrast the U.S. aggressor troops are afraid of death, and their officers are rather rigid, not very flexible. Their battle line is not solid and is anything but a bastion of iron.

The problems facing our side were first whether we could fight, then whether we could hold our lines, later whether we could ensure the flow of supplies, and finally whether we could foil the germ warfare. These four problems came one after the other and were all solved. Our troops grew from strength to strength in fighting. This summer, we were already able to break through an enemy position with its front of twenty-one kilometres within an hour, fire several hundred thousand shells in a concentrated attack and penetrate the enemy area up to eighteen kilometres. If we had kept this up and mounted two, three or four more attacks, his whole battle line would have been cut to pieces.

Second, politically the enemy had many insoluble internal contradictions, and the people the world over demanded peace.

Third, economically the enemy spent vast sums in the war of aggression against Korea, and his budgetary revenues and expenditures were not balanced.

All these causes combined to force the enemy to come to terms. The first was the primary cause, and in its absence a truce with the enemy would have been difficult. The U.S. imperialists are very arrogant; if at all possible, they always refuse to talk reason, and will do so after a fashion only when driven into a tight corner.

In the Korean war the enemy suffered 1,090,000 in killed and wounded. Naturally we paid a price too. Nevertheless, our casualties were far fewer than anticipated and they became still fewer after tunnels were built. We grew stronger and stronger through fighting. The Americans failed to undermine our positions; on the contrary, their units were always wiped out by us.

Just now you all mentioned the factor of leadership. In my view, leadership is one factor, but the most important factor is the contribution of ideas by the masses. Our cadres and soldiers thought up all sorts of ways to fight the enemy. Let me give one example. In the first month of the war our losses in trucks were tremendous. What was to be done? While the leadership devised counter-measures, we relied mainly on the masses to come up with ideas. Over ten thousand people were posted on both sides of the highway to fire signal shots to warn of approaching enemy planes. On hearing these signals, our drivers would dodge or find places in which to hide their trucks. In the meantime the roads were widened and many new ones built so that trucks could run in both directions unimpeded. Thus the losses in trucks dropped from 40 per cent at the beginning to less than 1 per cent. Later on, underground storehouses and even underground auditoriums were built. While enemy bombs fell from overhead, we went on with our meetings underground. When they picture the Korean battlefield, people living in Peking feel it must have been very dangerous. True, there was danger, but it was not so terrible as long as everyone contributed ideas.

Our experience is that reliance on the people together with a fairly correct leadership enables us to defeat a better-equipped enemy with our inferior equipment.

The victory in the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea is a great one and has major significance.

First, together with the Korean people we have fought our way back to the 38th Parallel and held on there. This is very important. If we had not fought back to the 38th Parallel and our front lines had remained along the Yalu and Tumen Rivers, it would have been impossible for the people in Shenyang, Anshan and Fushun to carry on production free from worry.

Second, we have gained military experience. The ground, air and naval forces, the infantry, artillery, engineer, tank, railway, air defence and signal corps and also the medical and logistic units, etc. of the Chinese People's Volunteers have all gained practical experience in fighting the U.S. aggressor troops. This time we have taken the measure of the U.S. armed forces. If you have never taken them on, you are liable to be scared of them. We have fought them for thirty-three months and got to know them for what they are worth. U.S. imperialism is not terrifying, nothing to make a fuss about. Such is our experience, indeed an invaluable piece of experience.

Third, the people of the whole country have heightened their political awareness.

From the above three points a fourth can be deduced: a new imperialist war of aggression against China and a third world war have been put off.

The imperialist aggressors ought to bear this in mind: the Chinese people are now organized, they are not to be trifled with. Once they are provoked to anger, things can get very tough.

The enemy may resume the war, and even if he doesn't, he is sure to make trouble in all sorts of ways, such as by sending in secret agents to carry out wrecking activities. He has set up a vast network of secret services in places like Taiwan, Hongkong and Japan. But we have gained experience in the movement to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea, and so long as we mobilize the masses and rely on the people, we know how to cope with the enemy.

For us the present situation is different from that in the winter of 1950. Were the U.S. aggressors then on the other side of the 38th Parallel? No, they were not. They were on the other side of the Yalu and Tumen Rivers. Did we then have any experience in fighting the U.S. aggressors? No, we did not. Did we then know much about the U.S. troops? No, we did not. Now, all this has changed. Supposing U.S. imperialism does not put off its new war of aggression and says: "I'll fight!", then we can cope with it by relying on the first three points. But supposing it says: "I'll not fight!", then the fourth point will hold good. Here is proof of the superiority of our people's democratic dictatorship.

Are we going to invade others? No, we will invade no one anywhere. But if others invade us, we will fight back and fight to a finish.

The Chinese people adhere to this stand: we are for peace, but are not afraid of war; we are ready for both. We have the support of the people. In the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea, people fell over each other to join up. The conditions for enrolment were stiff, only one in a hundred was chosen. People said the conditions were stricter than those for choosing a husband for one's daughter. If U.S. imperialism wants to resume the fighting, we will take it on again.

War costs money. Yet the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea did not cost us too much. It went on for several years, but the expenses incurred were less than a single year's industrial and commercial taxes. Of course, it would have been better if we had not had to fight the war and spend this money. For construction in the country today calls for expenditure and the peasants still have difficulties. Last year and the year before last, the agricultural tax was a shade on the heavy side, and so this set some friends talking. They demanded a "policy of benevolence", as if they represented the interests of the peasants. Did we favour this view? No, we didn't. At that time we had to do our utmost to win victory in the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea. For the peasants, for the people of the whole country, which was in their interest? To endure austerity for the time being and strive for victory? Or not to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea and so save a few coppers? Undoubtedly winning the war was in their interest. It was because the war required money that we collected a bit more in agricultural tax last year and the year before. This year it is different. We have not increased the agricultural tax and have put a ceiling on its volume.

Speaking of the "policy of benevolence", we are of course for it. But what was the policy of maximum benevolence? To resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea. To carry out this policy of maximum benevolence sacrifices had to be made, money spent and more collected in agricultural tax. Just because more was collected, some people raised an outcry. They even claimed to represent the interests of the peasants. I just don't approve of such talk.

To resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea was to implement the policy of benevolence, and to carry on industrial construction today is likewise to implement this policy.

Policies of benevolence are of two kinds. One is concerned with the people's immediate interests. The other is concerned with their long-term interests, such as resisting U.S. aggression and aiding Korea and building heavy industry. The first is a policy of lesser benevolence and the second a policy of greater benevolence. Both must be taken into consideration and it is wrong not to do so. Where then is the emphasis to be placed? On the policy of greater benevolence. At present the emphasis in our policy of benevolence should be on the construction of heavy industry. Construction takes money. Therefore, much as the livelihood of the people needs to be improved, this cannot be done to any great extent for the time being. In other words, while we have to improve the people's livelihood, we must not try to do too much, and while we have to make some allowance for it, we must not make too much. To make allowance for the policy of lesser benevolence at the expense of the policy of greater benevolence is to go off the right track.

Now some friends put lop-sided stress on the policy of lesser benevolence; in effect, they wanted us to give up the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea, and now they want us to give up the building of heavy industry. We must criticize this erroneous view. It is also to be found in the Communist Party; we came across it in Yenan. In 1941 we collected 200,000 piculs of grain in the Shensi-Kansu-Ningsia Border Region, and some people began to yell that the Communist Party was not being considerate of the peasants. A few leading cadres in the Party also brought up this issue of the policy of benevolence. I criticized this view even then. What was the policy of maximum benevolence at that time? To overthrow Japanese imperialism. If we had slashed the amount of grain to be collected from the peasants, we would have had to cut down the size of the Eighth Route and New Fourth Armies. That would have been to the advantage of Japanese imperialism. So those who held this view were actually speaking on behalf of Japanese imperialism and doing it a service.

Now the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea has come to a halt. If the United States wants to resume the war, we will fight on. In that case, we will have to collect grain from the peasants, do work on them and persuade them to make their contribution. To act thus would be truly to serve the interests of the peasants. To raise outcries would actually be to serve the interests of U.S. imperialism.

There are major as well as minor principles. The people's standard of living in the whole country should be raised yearly, but not too much. If it had been raised too much, we could not have fought the war to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea, or at least not in such grim earnest. We have fought this war resolutely and earnestly and with all our might. Whatever was available at home the Korean front could have for the asking. That has been the case for the last few years.
 
-- Höchst Vertraulich --
Memorandum of the Ministries of Finance, Workers’ & Farmers’ Inspection and State Planning to the Council of Ministers, commissioned by Vorsitzender des Ministerrats, Genosse Otto Grotewohl:

FKXqnCnmvrdeqQzD_rrtgCK2fw66kedyJxfEGLTZDIncWm04QpW9NI2WrttU4IgwrSClnRhW6TV88m0pZdQ-1jrQwnA3sR03lU1qjSFLc2ea75R8H7jW-LKmDDTBmDAH3WQ7Awsu


Neue Wissenschaftliche & Heimische Sozialistische Wirtschaft
New Scientific & Home Socialist Economy

Published in Berlin, Deutsche Demokratische Republik, 1953
The current areas in which the German Socialist Economy demands thorough innovation and improvement:

1. Although our nation has only recently throughly started its march towards communism with socialism; the reconstruction of Germany after the war years has lead to inefficient intervention by bureaucratic systems without socialism at its core in the German economy. We need to reduce the hierarchical systems that stand in the way in our achieving full communism.

2. Socialism is the first step to the abolition of the state, which is a vital part of achieving full Communism, it is therefore the policy of the Government to abolish all ineffective extensions of the state that do heckle our achievement of full communism.

3. The German Socialist Economy is too focused on quorums and improving practical production that it has lost its greatest asset, technological advancement, to improve and sustain a socialist economy, the advancement in technology should be encouraged by and introduced to State and Industry.

The New Scientific & Home Socialist Economy has three organisational pillars:

1. Socialist New Course (Sozialistischer Neuer Kurs, SNK); or home socialism; The ownership of the means of production by the workers is the ultimate aim of communism and socialism. However, this cannot, in the short term, be achieved in all fields of the economy without harming solidarity. It is therefore that wherever SNK is achievable it shall be applied. This shall be in the field of agriculture, small business and small industry, where home socialism is far more achievable and practical than state socialism. To this end farmers may hold up to 25 hectares of land per person and the excess farmland will be owned by farmer cooperatives and agricultural companies or local communities. These could sell and buy the right to produce on this land, as well as give it to people in perpetual lease. Small time ownership of the means of production shall be allowed to employ up to fifteen people per owner. The Government shall assist in the transition period between the New Course and the SNK to maintain economic and personal stability of the population.

2. Socialist Self-Management (Sozialistische Selbstverwaltung, SSV); Organisations owned by Cooperatives, whose managers were supervised by worker councils, which were made up of all employees, with one vote each. The Worker Councils shall appoint the management by secret ballot. The Government shall assist in the transition period between the current system and the SSV to maintain economic and personal stability of the population. The Government shall further establish ties between SSV and technological innovation and its duties shall include the betterment and establishment of SSV in the DDR. SSV shall be leading in small and medium industries and shall, if successful, be allowed to expand and be established in new fields of production and science.

3. Meritocratic Innovative Socialism (Meritokratischer Innovativer Sozialismus, MIS); Heavy and medium industry is the backbone of any socialist country and none can thrive without state support and continuing innovative practices. The abolition of the quorum and the primary measure of success being created capital for the work force and further innovation, will encourage the competition of scientific practices in the workplace for the betterment of society and the workforce. The Government will therefore strengthen the links between science and technology and the industries, but shall endow the responsibilities of running the factories to meritocratic systems where good work and good cooperation is rewarded.

Other Practical Changes to Government Policy:

1. The Establishment of a National Minimum Wage and National Youth Minimum Wage, which adequately covers all goods a citizen may need to survive and room for self-improvement.

2. The strengthening of ties between industry and research by establishing apprenticeships and increasing ties between polytechnic schools and industry. Further investing in research that may profit society as a whole.

3. The abolition of quorums, and the establishment of profitability, which signals her ability to answer the needs of the proletariat in the Socialist Society and create capital for the work force and further innovation, as the primary measure of success.

4. The establishment of a Pricing System to control inflation, when need be:

1. Fixed prices: material and basic intermediate goods. The price are fixed because of the good’s impact on the economy and the overall need to ensure stability. The prices are to be determined by ministries.
2. Limited prices: particular products or products in some product group for which there were no substitutes, such as bread. It was applied on the average price over a period or a window within which prices were free to fluctuate.
3. Free prices: goods that formed small parts of individual expenditures or were regarded as luxuries
5. Greater interest in the Public Opinion and well-being, through tackling inefficiencies in the system and addressing immediate issues the public might have, including removing the most unpopular and ineffective leaders when need be.

6. New Public Employment Effort, consisting out of three parts:

1. Public Labour Exchanges, to improve employment and job productivity by disseminating information on vacancies.
2. Training schemes, such as classes and apprenticeships, help the unemployed improve their vocational skills and hence increase their employability.
3. Public Works, traditional public work programs to battle unemployment and improve the society in general.
 
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Jamil al-Midfai, Prime Minister in the military-backed emergency cabinet.

Iraq and the Iranian Crisis
The escalation of the Iranian political crisis and the subsequent coup against Mossadegh into a full-blown civil war came as a great shock to the Baghdad political establishment, opposition movements and the Iraqi commoners. Suddenly, most of the opposition movements officially working in constitutional framework denounced unconstitutional means of advocating reforms and distanced themselves from the underground opposition and reformist movements such as the communists. After the Soviet invasion of northwestern Iran these fears were even further reinforced, with al-Istiqlal and other staunchly rightist movements taking to the streets to protest against the Soviets and communism in general. Arab nationalists coming from the hardliner wing of al-Istiqlal and from student circles influenced by the nascent al-Ba’ath also took to the streets, voicing their fears about the position of the Arab citizens of Ahwaz caught in the middle of the crisis. In order to prevent a second intifada influenced by the sudden growth of the Iranian Tudeh, troops were ordered to the south of the country, officially to check a potential surge of refugees while in reality the goal was to prevent the escalation of new protests planned by the Iraqi Communist Party. Luckily, the crackdowns of late 1940s and early 1950s had greatly disorganized the party and Baghdad was certain about remaining in control of the events, especially when the opposition parties were co-operative. The claims that Iraqis had involved themselves in the assassination of Mossadegh were largely ignored by the public and collectively denied by the government.

The government of Jamil al-Midfai, an ex-officer of the Sharifian army of the Arab revolt and a staunch supporter of the Hashimiyyun family who had also served in the post four times before during the 1940s and 1950s, stayed in power despite of earlier plans to hand over the prime ministry to a civilian later in 1953. Likely candidates had been Nuri al-Said, Ahmad Muhtar Babar and Tawfiq al-Suwaydi, but now it seemed that the emergency military rule would continue until situation across the long eastern border stabilized. The internal political situation in Iraq was further complicated by the majority of King Faisal II, who was officially crowned in May. Despite of this, much of the power of the royal court remained in the hands of the regent ‘Abd al-Ilah, who wanted to increasingly involve himself with state affairs, often finding himself in disputes with the cabinet or the strongman Nuri al-Said. The hopes of change entertained by the effendiyya and common people over the crowning of Faisal II quickly faded, as the young king seemed unable to let his voice be known in the politics of the nation, as the government displayed general inactivity and the palace establishment remained in his uncle’s hands.
 
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October 1, 1953
Mutual Defense Treaty Between the United States and the Republic of Korea

Preamble

The Parties to this Treaty,

Reaffirming their desire to live in peace with all peoples and governments, and desiring to strengthen the fabric of peace in the Pacific area,

Desiring to declare publicly and formally their common determination to defend themselves against external armed attack so that no potential aggressor could be under the illusion that either of them stands alone in the Pacific area,

Desiring further to strengthen their efforts for collective defense for the preservation of peace and security pending the development of a more comprehensive and effective system of regional security in the Pacific area,

Have agreed as follows:

Article I

The Parties undertake to settle any international disputes in which they may be involved by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security and justice are not endangered and to refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations, or obligations assumed by any Party toward the United Nations.

Article II

The Parties will consult together whenever, in the opinion of either of them, the political independence or security of either of the Parties is threatened by external armed attack. Separately and jointly, by self help and mutual aid, the Parties will maintain and develop appropriate means to deter armed attack and will take suitable measures in consultation and agreement to implement this Treaty and to further its purposes.

Article III

Each Party recognizes that an armed attack in the Pacific area on either of the Parties in territories now under their respective administrative control, or hereafter recognized by one of the Parties as lawfully brought under the administrative control of the other, would be dangerous to its own peace and safety and declares that it would act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes.

Article IV

The Republic of Korea grants, and the United States of America accepts, the right to dispose United States land, air and sea forces in and about the territory of the Republic of Korea as determined by mutual agreement.

Article V

This Treaty shall be ratified by the United States of America and the Republic of Korea in accordance with their respective constitutional processes and will come into force when instruments of ratification thereof have been exchanged by them at Washington.

Article VI

This Treaty shall remain in force indefinitely. Either Party may terminate it one year after notice has been given to the other Party.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned Plenipotentiaries have signed this Treaty.

DONE in duplicate at Washington, in the English and Korean languages, this first day of October 1953.

_______________________________________________________________________________________

[X] BYEON YEONG-TAE

Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea

[X] JOHN FOSTER DULLES

Secretary of State of the United States of America
 
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Mutual Defense Treaty Between the United States and the Republic of Korea

JOHN FOSTER DULLES

Secretary of State of the United States
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The United Kingdom and her Empire in the year 1953

600px-British_Empire_1921.png

The British Empire at its peak in the year 1921.

The demise of Stalin left Churchill as the last of the wartime "Big Three" alive. He used his status to bully and cajole his way back into the halls of power. The British Empire he presided over was diminished in comparison to 1945. Withdrawal from South Asia has reduced Britain's global presence and had not created the foundations for peace in the Indian subcontinent. The newly independent states of India and Pakistan were far from maintaining fraternal relations within the Commonwealth of Nations. Indian Partition had exacerbated ethnic and religious tensions and created a new front for the Americans and Soviets to wage their "Cold War." In spite of the loss of India, Churchill and the Tories believed that Britain's position as a world power relied on the continued existence of the remainder of the global empire. Aside from the Gold Coast, most African territories lacked the indigenous middle class to take on the role of political leadership necessary for a modern parliamentary democracy to function. With continued control of the Suez Canal, Britain could maintain its pre-eminent position in the Middle East in spite of the loss of India. Thus the British saw the loss of India as a shift in colonial priorities rather than a sign the Britain's global role was outdated in the post-war context.

The first cracks in such smug assumptions came in the Persian Gulf. The United States placed great pressures on Britain to end its blockade of Iranian oil. The nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company by the government of then Prime Minister Mossadegh was seen by Churchill as an affront to British national interests and he sought to use every means to remove Mossadegh from power. The Americans were more concerned with keeping Iran friendly to larger Western interests and helped to nudge along a deal splitting the AIOC's interests between Iran and Britain in exchange for ending the blockade. The deal almost immediately backfired when Mossadegh choose to overthrow the Shah; in response the Shah eliminated Mossadegh from the mortal plain of existence but unfortunately his chosen blunt force instrument--General Taghi Riahi--declared himself President of Iran and threw his lot in with the Soviets, who at that point decided to earn the dubious distinction of the first member of the newly minted United Nations to violate the sovereignty of a fellow member by sending in hundreds of uniformed troops and armor to occupy Iranian Azerbaijan.

Whitehall and the British political establishment were aghast and to use that Yankee phrase "getting hot under the collar." There was now a real possibility a Soviet client state would touch the Persian Gulf and threaten British hegemony in the Middle East. Churchill would use this crisis as an opportunity to teach his protégée, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, the limits of diplomacy and force a discussion of the future contours the British Empire.

Before the Second World War the British Empire had been a net benefit to the coffers of the United Kingdom. Indirect rule had quieted the previous centuries of tribal and regional disputes in the various territories and imperial protectorates. Britain had ended the global slave trade among other great humanitarian actions they could be justly credited with. There was also an ugly side to British rule, a patronizing attitude towards the natives who wished to fully partake in British civilization. This unwillingness to concede the ability of local societies to adopt principles of self-government had lost Britain South Asia, Churchill resolved to ensure it would not lose the remainder of the Empire. Simply expecting the Commonwealth of Nations to be a self-sustaining repository of good will towards the "Mother Country" was no longer a safe assumption. The old "white" dominions of Canada, Australia, and New Zealand were increasingly looking towards the United States and not Britain for leadership, only South Africa remained firmly in the British sphere but the specter of apartheid loomed large over relations between Britain and that dominion. Meanwhile, the new dominions of India, Pakistan, and Burma were going in their own directions, only Ceylon remained attached to the British and this was more of a function of the revenues brought in by the naval base at Trincomalee and the air station at China Point; the last remnants of Britain's heavy military presence in South Asia.

It was Churchill's Minister of Labour, Walter Monckton, that would write the initial white paper outlining thoughts on revised reform of the British Empire. The paper had two major conclusions, 1) that only military force or true majoritarian rule would preserve British institutions in the colonies in the long term; 2) and rapid independence would not produce the same level of mature political structures, ethos, or respect for law in presumptive new dominions. Aside from the Gold Coast, which had a developed and politically active middle class that engaged with the larger mass of society, the rest of the Empire in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia was ruled according to traditional power structures. Maintaining those traditional power structures by granting domestic autonomy would buy time to create mature political structures, which would ensure the continuity of British-style institutions in the future. While Britain's reputation globally was undiminished a policy of "Imperial Federalism" to be created and implemented was recommended.

Helping this process along was the split in the Labour opposition between followers of Hugh Gaitskell and Aneurin Bevan. When Labour was in power in 1951, the Prime Minister Atlee, facing the need to increase military spending was convinced by Gaitskell to imposed National Health Service charges on dentures and spectacles, prompting the leading left-winger Bevan to resign from the Cabinet. Gaitskell advocated for a mixed economy, Keynesianism, and a broad welfare state and on the whole did not differ from his Tory colleagues in what later generations would call the "post-war consensus," namely guarantees made by the then coalition government during the Second World War, headed by Churchill and Attlee, signed off on a series of white papers that promised Britain a much improved welfare state after the war. The promises included the national health service, and expansion of education, housing, and a number of welfare programs. It included the nationalization of weak industries. The Tories holding to the consensus undercut support for Labour and especially the left of Labour represented by Bevan.

Conscious of the need to gain ground on the Tories, Gaitskell's great pet project was the deletion of Clause IV from the Labour Party constitution which read, "To secure for the workers by hand or by brain the full fruits of their industry and the most equitable distribution thereof that may be possible upon the basis of the common ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange, and the best obtainable system of popular administration and control of each industry or service." While he was in favor of a commitment to nationalization were it would serve the needs of a mixed economy, Gaitskell was concerned that Clause IV's wording intoned the principles of Marxist-Leninism which would negatively impact Labour's chances in future elections because of strong public aversion to the Soviet Union; the USSR's invasion of Iran had not made this fear of Russian world conquest--a fear which dated from the days of the Central Asian Great Game between Tsarist Russia and Victorian Britain--dissipate and was in fact being used by the anti-Communist elements in the media to promote an anti-Red line.

With the consensus anchoring Churchill's domestic front and with the crisis in Iran giving a second wind behind a new policy to reinvigorate the British Empire, the Churchill cabinet moved towards formalizing Monckton's recommendations on reform on a colony-by-colony basis.
 
The Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1953

225px-Royal_Coat_of_Arms_of_the_United_Kingdom.svg.png
225px-Coat_of_arms_of_Kingdom_of_Egypt.svg.png

Firstly, the High Contracting Parties recognize that the Suez Maritime Canal is a waterway of economic, commercial and strategic importance, and express their determination to uphold the 1888 Convention guaranteeing the freedom of navigation of the Canal.

Secondly, the High Contracting Parties agree that the stationing of British troops, under Article 8 of the 1936 Anglo-Egyptian Treaty, shall be extended a further thirty years from the date of signature (1953).

(i) The numbers of forces to be maintained in the vicinity of the Canal shall not exceed, of the land forces, 5,000, and of the air forces, 200 pilots and all necessary aircraft, together with the needed ancillary personnel for administrative and technical duties. These numbers do not include civilian personnel, e.g., clerks, artisans and labourers, which shall be limited to 2,000.
(ii) The distribution of British forces to be maintained in the vicinity of the Canal will be in accordance with the 1936 Anglo-Egyptian Treaty.
(iii) Current British force levels in the Suez Canal Zone will be brought down to the levels stipulated in this treaty over a period of two years.

Thirdly, the High Contracting Parties agree to reallocate their responsibilities towards the Sudan on the basis of a territorial division, based upon the map contained in Annex A;

(i) The withdrawal of British troops from Northern Sudan shall take place over a period of twelve months from the date of signature.
(ii) For the benefit of the Nile valley both High Contracting Parties agree develop plans for waterworks to control the flow of the Nile, to be located at Aswan, with funding and technical assistance to be partially provided by the United Kingdom.
(iii) Egypt may exercise the option to integrate North Sudan into Egypt if deemed necessary. All residual Egyptian claims to South Sudan are abandoned, as are all British claims to North Sudan.

Finally, at any time after the expiration of a period of twenty-five years from the coming into force of the treaty, the High Contracting Parties will, at the request of either of them, enter into negotiations with a view to such revision of its terms by agreement between them as may be appropriate in the circumstances as they exist. In case of the High Contracting Parties being unable to agree upon the terms of the revised treaty, the difference will be submitted to the General Assembly of the United Nations for decision. With the consent of both High Contracting Parties, negotiations may be entered into at any time after the expiration of a period of fifteen years after the coming into force of the treaty.

Annex A:
232px-Sudan_and_South_Sudan_blank.svg.png

Signed,
For the HM's Government, [X]
For the Egyptian Government, [X]
 
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The Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1953

225px-Royal_Coat_of_Arms_of_the_United_Kingdom.svg.png
225px-Coat_of_arms_of_Kingdom_of_Egypt.svg.png

Firstly, the High Contracting Parties recognize that the Suez Maritime Canal is a waterway of economical, commercial and strategic importance, and express their determination to uphold the 1888 Convention guaranteeing the freedom of navigation of the Canal.

Secondly, the High Contracting Parties agree that the stationing of British troops, under Article 8 of the 1936 Anglo-Egyptian Treaty, shall be extended a further thirty years from the date of signature (1953).

(i) The numbers of forces to be maintained in the vicinity of the Canal shall not exceed, of the land forces, 5,000, and of the air forces, 200 pilots and all necessary aircraft, together with the needed ancillary personnel for administrative and technical duties. These numbers do not include civilian personnel, e.g., clerks, artisans and labourers, which shall be limited to 2,000.
(ii) The distribution of British forces to be maintained in the vicinity of the Canal will be in accordance with the 1936 Anglo-Egyptian Treaty.
(iii) Current British force levels in the Suez Canal Zone will be brought down to the levels stipulated in this treaty over a period of two years.

Thirdly, the High Contracting Parties agree to reallocate their responsibilities towards the Sudan on the basis of a territorial division, based upon the map contained in Annex A;

(i) The withdrawal of British troops from Northern Sudan shall take place over a period of twelve months from the date of signature.
(ii) For the benefit of the Nile valley both High Contracting Parties agree develop plans for waterworks to control the flow of the Nile, to be located at Aswan, with funding and technical assistance to be partially provided by the United Kingdom.
(iii) Egypt may exercise the option to integrate North Sudan into Egypt if deemed necessary. All residual Egyptian claims to South Sudan are abandoned, as are all British claims to North Sudan.

Finally, at any time after the expiration of a period of twenty-five years from the coming into force of the treaty, the High Contracting Parties will, at the request of either of them, enter into negotiations with a view to such revision of its terms by agreement between them as may be appropriate in the circumstances as they exist. In case of the High Contracting Parties being unable to agree upon the terms of the revised treaty, the difference will be submitted to the General Assembly of the United Nations for decision. With the consent of both High Contracting Parties, negotiations may be entered into at any time after the expiration of a period of fifteen years after the coming into force of the treaty.

Annex A:
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For the HM's Government, [X]
For the Egyptian Government, []

[x] Prime Minister Naguib
 
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The United States votes FOR U.N. Resolution A/PV.430.

HENRY CABOT LODGE JR.
United States Ambassador to the United Nations

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The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia votes FOR U.N. Resolution A/PV.430.

- Sheikh Asad Al-Faqih, Permanent Representative to the United Nations
 
The Noble House, Part II.

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A typical street scene in Wan Chai District.

The news announced by BBC Empire Service, over the radio, that the British and Egyptian governments had come to an agreement to both peacefully divide the Sudan, and maintain a continued British military presence along side the Suez Canal for at least the next three decades were causes for celebration. While a few quipped that the Free Officers could not be trusted, most were happy that the vital connection between Britain and the Far East which the Suez represented would not be cut. It had suddenly become easier to attract credit from the metropolis once more and not a moment too soon; Hong Kong was experiencing vast growing pains that could only be solved by economic expansion.

The 1950s in Hong Kong had began against the chaotic backdrop of the resumption of British sovereignty after the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong ended in 1945, and the renewal of the KMT-CCP Civil War in mainland China. Civil war prompted a large influx of refugees from the mainland, causing a huge population surge; from 1945 to 1951, the population grew from 600,000 thousand to 2.1 million. The colonial government struggled to accommodate these immigrants. Continuing unrest in China also prompted businesses to relocate their assets and capital from Shanghai to Hong Kong.

As the Communists drew near to victory in early 1949, there were fears that Hong Kong was to be invaded by Mao's hordes. Great Britain was determined to keep Hong Kong as a beacon of capitalism to hold back the Communist shadows engulfing China proper. As the 1950s began and the Communist government consolidated its hold, the garrison was reinforced and plans of emergency evacuation to Australia were made. However, the People's Liberation Army were ordered to stop advancing at the Shenzhen-Hong Kong border and Hong Kong remained a British colony. Hong Kong was a valuable trade center at the mouth of China and hoped that by retaining this connection doing business with the new government in Beijing would be easier. To give up Hong Kong to the Communists without a fight would be seen as a national weakness in the face of the growing communist threat in Europe and Asia.

With as many as 100,000 people fleeing to Hong Kong each month the growth of shanty towns were inevitable. When fire destroyed the Shek Kip Mei shantytown of immigrants from Mainland China that had fled to Hong Kong, leaving 53,000 people homeless the governor, Sir Alexander Grantham, launched a public housing program for the immigrant population living there. The new structures offered fire-and flood-resistant construction to previously vulnerable shanty dwellers living on mudslide prone hillsides and muggy flatland. The program involved demolishing the rest of the makeshift houses left untouched by the fire and the construction of the Shek Kip Mei Low-cost Housing Estate in their stead. The apartments were small, only about 300 square feet and could house five people. Each building had a capacity of 2,500 residents. The rent was HK$17 per square foot per month, while the rent for a commercial store downstairs was HK$100 per month. Some foreigners visiting the apartment complexes referred to them as "prisons."

Whatever the case was, the Hongs profited greatly from the government building programs and none more generously than the Noble House. Gardener Connaught had many subsidiaries and the Kowloon Land Investment and Agency Company Ltd. turned their expertise at financing shopping arcades on reclaimed land to building council housing for the colonial government. Building upon the Shek Kip Mei projects other developments were designed to house as many and as fast as possible to deal with the immigration crisis. Every floor in each standardized building would contain a communal room, washroom, and toilet facility dormitory-style. Kowloon Land would also be involved in redeveloping schools throughout the colony, expanding facilities as the school age population grew with each refugee wave. The colonial government emphasized government-run education in an attempt to reduce reliance on private facilities that could be infiltrated by the Communists; an internal government paper indicated about 34 schools in the urban area were classified as controlled by the Communists, including 24 in the New Territories. Another 32 schools were run by leftist elements. A new ordinance had been passed in 1952 to allow any director of education to shut down a school believed to be controlled by political indoctrination and soon these schools would be replaced by government-run schools as well as parochial education.
 
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SHAH FLOWN OUT OF IRAN
ARRIVES IN MIAMI
Miami - In an unprecedented turn of events, the Miami Evening Herald can now report that the aircraft carrying Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and Princess Soraya of Iran has landed in Miami this evening, after the Shah had made an escape via United States military aircraft to Iraq, where the royal couple proceeded to Spain, before flying to Miami. The Shah and his top generals left after increased pressure from republican forces who declared his monarchy to be defunct, and amidst the middle of a Soviet invasion of northwestern Iran, which had begun only a week and one half ago. Reporters for the Herald attempted to get a statement from the Shah, but little more than a refusal to renounce the throne was received. With the Shah in the United States, it is very hard to imagine the triumph of his forces, and this could be a sign that the United States has accepted the communist-lead takeover of that country. Florida Senator Spessard Holland has demanded the President brief Congress on the ongoing situation in Iran, as we are likely to see yet another country fall to Communism in Asia.
 
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The Puerto Rican Nationalist Party
Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico

La Patria es valor y sacrificio -- The Homeland is valor and sacrifice

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Don Pedro Albizu Campos, JD
President of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party

Founder: José Coll y Cuchí
Ideology: Puerto Rican Nationalism
Youth wing: Cadets of the Republic
Armed wing: The PNPR as a whole advocates armed struggle and participates in the same, having refused to participate in elections for 20 years
Number of members: Estimates vary from a few hundred to a couple thousand depending on the source

Internal affairs of the Party:
Memoranda of the Party:
 
TOP SECRET

CIA REPORT NO. [...]


DOD DISTRIBUTION AUTHORIZED


Review of recent developments in Soviet equipment. Executive summary.


The USSR continues to use late WW2 era tanks in most tank and rifle regiments. The T-34 is being phased out, but the T-34/85 remains the workhorse tank model. Units judged to be more important operate the newer T-54 tanks. Heavy tank units continue to use the IS series tanks.

There are two noteworthy developments: 1) the deployment of T-10 heavy tanks to regiments stationed in Europe, and 2) improvements made to the T-54 tank. The T-10 appear to be a new generation of the IS tanks equipped with a new gun and wheelbase. Production has been ramped up, and it is likely to become an important part of the Soviet armored component. Information made on the improvements to the T-54 tank is less clear. A model fitted with a new engine appears to have the designation Object 137H2. Possibly the same model incorporates a vertical-plane gun stabilizer. Neither model, if there are two, has entered serial production.

The 2K1 tactical missiles are believed to have been deployed to Europe. The number of the missile complexes is unclear. They are believed to be able to deliver a high-explosive or nuclear warhead at a range of 10 miles. Whether any missiles are armed with nuclear warheads is unknown.


The MiG-17 has entered service with some Soviet air units. It is a development of the MiG-15 familiar to us from the Korean War. It is known that the MiG design bureau is working on another aircraft under the designation SM-9. It is likely a further development of the MiG-15 series.

The USSR continues to try to develop a domestic strategic bomber. Currently, the Tu-4, a copy of the B-52, is used in this capacity. It is believed the Soviets are close to a domestic design, although initial tests of the M-4 aircraft are seemingly unsatisfactory. There are at least two other designs of the Tupolev bureau under consideration.

Work appears to have stopped on Project 41 destroyer. It is believed the Soviets found the design to bee to complex and expensive for mass production. There is some confusion, but it is believed work is ongoing on another design, either Project 56 or Project 36bis.

The USSR appears to have tested a ballistic missile in April of this year. Details are unclear. It does not appear to be the R-2 missile previously tested. The design is due either to OKB-1 or SKB-385 bureaus, but the secrecy surrounding the missile program makes it difficult to make further determinations.
 
A encrypted cable is sent from London to Trincomalee;

From: Sir Rhoderick Robert McGrigor, First Sea Lord, Admiral of the Fleet
To: Sir Charles Lambe, Commander, Far East Fleet, Vice Admiral

You are to proceed to the Straits of Hormuz with haste. Upon confirmation by the Cabinet, the Imperial General Staff has authorized elements of the Suez Garrison to reinforce our standing deployments in the Persian Gulf. We are dispatching HMS Eagle and her escorts to supplement HMS Centaur and HMS Bulwark; with them, you are to maintain air superiority in the Gulf Protectorates.

Stand-by for additional instructions as they come on-line.

Signed,
[McGrigor, First Sea Lord]
 
Communism in Laos and Cambodia
While the Viet Minh's conflict with the French has taken center-stage in Indochina, other conflicts continue to grow in the various former-colonies of Indochina between pro-French governments and communist agitators. In Laos and Cambodia, two distinct rebel groups emerged that were communist in nature and supportive of both each other and of the Viet Minh. Indeed, one would not be wrong in claiming that the communist forces of Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam were working in unison to expel the French.

In Laos, the communist factions are represented by the Pathet Lao, a rebel organization aimed at displacing the French Union from Laos and asserting total independence of Laos. Their leader is Souphanouvong, the "Red Prince" of Luang Prabang. For sixteen years, Souphanouvong would live in Vietnam, and spend seven of those years with Ho Chi Minh. The Viet Minh would go on to solicit funds for Souphanouvong to form a resistance group to the French, one that would wage war against France in Laos in unison to the war being fought in Vietnam. In 1950, the Viet Minh would appoint Souphanouvong as head of the Pathet Lao, the Lao Nation. Currently, the Pathet Lao and the Viet Minh cooperate to achieve the independence of their respective nations.

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(The Red Prince)

In Cambodia, a similar situation unfolded. In 1945, the Khmer Issarak was formed to wage war in the name of Cambodian independence from the French. The Issarak though was a coalition of various bands of communist and non-communist nationalist rebel groups operating under what seemed to be a coalition banner. However, as with Laos and Vietnam, the communist elements within the Khmer Issarak began to take over the movement. The most prominent of these communist groups was the United Issarak Front. Their leader, Son Ngoc Minh, has been able to utilize the UIF to secure vast swaths of Cambodian territory from the French. In 1950, Son Ngoc Minh claimed he had control over a third of the country. As of 1953, that claim was raised to over half of the country. The Viet Minh have been working with the UIF as they did with the Pathet Lao in securing independence. In fact, in February of 1953, the UIF and Viet Minh cooperated in the assassination of the governor of Prey Veng in Cambodia. The UIF have claimed this as a massive moral and propaganda victory for themselves.

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(The flag of the UIF)
 
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Royal Titles Act 1953
1 & 2 Eliz. 2 c. 9

An Act to provide for an alteration of the Royal Style and Titles. [26th March 1953]

Whereas, it is expedient that the style and titles at present appertaining to the Crown should be altered so as to reflect more clearly the existing constitutional relations of the members of the Commonwealth to one another and their recognition of the Crown as the symbol of their free association and of the Sovereign as the Head of the Commonwealth:

And whereas it was agreed between representatives of Her Majesty’s Governments in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, Pakistan, and Ceylon assembled in London in the Month of December, nineteen hundred and fifty-two, that there is need for an alteration thereof which, whilst permitting of the use in relation to each of those countries of a form suiting its particular circumstances, would retain a substantial element common to all:

1. The assent of the Parliament of the United Kingdom is hereby given to the adoption by Her Majesty, for use in relation to the United Kingdom and all other the territories for whose foreign relations Her Government in the United Kingdom is responsible, of such style and titles as Her Majesty may think fit having regard to the said agreement, in lieu of the style and titles at present appertaining to the Crown, and to the issue by Her for that purpose of Her Royal Proclamation under the Great Seal of the Realm.

2. This Act may be cited as the Royal Titles Act 1953.
 
TOP SECRET


CIA REPORT NO. [...]


DISTRIBUTION: NSC ONLY


Political Situation in the USSR following Stalin's death. Executive summary.

Stalin's complete control over the Soviet institutions of power did not allow a successor to be groomed. Anyone who appeared to be consolidating an independent power base was seen as a threat and promptly eliminated. This has left the Soviet political system in a state of crisis following Stalin's death on 5 March of this year.

The power struggle has already claimed its first victim: Lavrenty Beria, Stalin's chief of the security forces. Beria was a candidate to succeed Stalin as ruler of the USSR, but he appears to have been purged sometime in July. The Soviet media announced in December that he was convinced of numerous crimes and executed. This leaves two factions struggling for control of the country: the Old Bolsheviks and the Stalinists.

Due to the ban on factionalism in Soviet politics there are no public discussions of divergent opinions, and the two factions are united more by personalities than politics. The Old Bolsheviks worked together under Lenin's and Stalin's rule and have for a long time occupied many top positions in the USSR. The new Premier, Molotov, is an Old Bolshevik, as is the President, Voroshilov. However, other Old Bolsheviks, such as Kaganovich and Shvernik appear to have been demoted in recent months.

The Stalinists are men who rose through the ranks thanks to their personal loyalty to Stalin. With his death, they must seize power or become irrelevant. Malenkov is the leader of this group, and he is believed to be close to Suslov, Kosygin, and other younger politicians that still remain in their positions after the reshuffle. They are likely to act soon to consolidate their power. Since Stalin purged many of the Old Bolsheviks during his rule, it is likely that the Stalinists enjoy more support than the Old Bolsheviks inside the Communist Party.

There are two unanswered questions. First, is Molotov a caretaker Premier or does he intend to take full power? He is an experienced politician and administrator who has served as Premier previously, and would make sense as a safe choice for a transition. However, he is in danger of being pushed out by the younger politicians, and may chose to seize power for himself. Second, the armed forces may play a role in the confrontation. Bulganin has been named Minister of Defense, and his allegiance is unclear. He is not an Old Bolshevik, but he is not close to Malenkov. Using the armed forces he may try to seize power.

American policy should be prepared for greater instability in the USSR in the coming years. A violent coup is likely, and the armed forces may become involved. In fact, the total collapse of Soviet authority in Eastern Europe and in the USSR is not unlikely, and the USA should be prepared to act on this opportunity.
 
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