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February 14, 1958

MEMORANDUM
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SUBJECT: Discussion at the 355th Meeting

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of the National Security Council,

Thursday, February 13, 1958

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Present at the 355th NSC meeting were the Vice President of the

United States, presiding; the Acting Secretary of State; the Secre~
tary of Defense; and the Director, Office of Defense Mobilization.
Also present were the Acting Secretary of the Treasury; the Attor_ney General; the Acting Director, Burean of the Budget; the Chair-

man, Atomic Energy Commission (participating in the action on

Items 2 and 3); the Federal Civil Defense Administrator (participating in the action on Item 2); the Chairmen, Interdepartmental

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Intelligence Conference and Interdepartmental Committee on Internal

Security (attending for Item 2); the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of

Staff; the Director of Central Intelligence; The Assistant to the |
President; the Deputy Assistant to the President; the Director,
U. S. Information Agency; the Special Assistants to the Preaident
for National Security Affairs, Science and Technology, and Security
Operations Coordination; the White House Staff Secretary; the NSC

Representative on Internal Security (attending for Item 2); Assis-

tant Secretary of State Gerard C. Smith; Assistant Secretary of Defense Mansfield D. Sprague; the Executive Secretary, NSC; and the
Deputy Executive Secretary, NSC.
There follows a summary of the discussion at the meeting and the
main points taken.

1.

SIGNIFICANT WORLD DEVELOPMENTS AFFECTING U. S. SECURITY

The Director of Central Intelligence pointed out that
Colonel Husein, dissident leader on the island of Sumatra, had
broadcast a demand on February 10 that the Djuanda Government resign within five days. The Government had rejected the demand and
ordered the discharge of Colonel Husein and the other chief leaders
of the dissidents. If, continued Mr. Dulles, the dissidents stick
to their earlier demands, they should proceed to set up a rival
government. However, they are showing reluctance to take this
step, and conversations between them and the Central Government
are more likely. Mr. Dulles said that it was extremely hard to
predict the outcome of the crisis in Indonesia.

Sukarno was ex-

pected to return to Javea in e few days, and it is thought that he

DECLASSIFIED WITH DELETIONS

E.0. 12356, SEC. 3.40)

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