The report introduces Czechoslovak's assistance in the Operation MANUEL after the isolation of socialist Castro regime. Cuba looked for alternative routes in Europe in order to promote and influence the revolutionary movement in Latin America. Czechoslovakia assistance in the operation is of a strictly technical nature and its intelligence service is doing its utmost to protect the interests of the country by securing all technical matters. The report says that terminating the assistance was not possible for both practical and political reasons-- all direct flights between Czechoslovakia and Cuba would be suspended and a drastic cooling off of relations between two governments. Czechoslovak's refusal in assisting the operation would be interpreted as a political decision to suspend assistance to the national liberation movement in Latin America countries. However, the reports says that the assistance of Czechoslovak intelligence service to the operation is in no way amounts to agreeing with its political content and constitutes a minor aspect of intelligence work. The Soviet intelligence was also involved in organizing the operation in Moscow and offered assistance to its Cuban counterpart.
February 10, 1950
Telegram, Mao Zedong to Liu Shaoqi
[...]
Comrade Liu Shaoqi:
(1) It is approved that Su Yu may deploy four divisions in naval operation maneuver.
(2) The first several phrases in the preface of the credit agreement, which mention China's compensation to the Soviet Union, should not be omitted.
(3) The treaty and the agreements should be published by both sides on the same day, and you will be specially informed about the date.
(4) [Chen] Boda has written an editorial for the Xinhua News Agency, which we will look over and send to you tomorrow. Please ask [Hu] Qiaomu to scrutinize it, and then publish it at the same time the treaty is published.
Mao Zedong
5:00 a.m., 10 February [1950]
[...]
Mao Zedong offers instructions on how to publicize the new Sino-Soviet treaty.
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