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  • -1964, and•• Aaaiatant US Arrq Attaohe in Warsaw 19 1956. Currently engaged 1n production ot National and Defense intelligence eatimatea and etlld1•• pertnninC to area ot reapona1b111ey. Speaka, reads and write ■ Ruaa1an. Graduate ot us M111t
  • . It was reasoned, on this basis, that the Liberation Front night win some twenty-odd seats in the Assembly and might; therefore, be accorded four or five non-critical cabinet port­ folios. It has been noted that there were opportunities at Rangoon which the US team
  • , Honorable Rutherford Mr. Benjamin H. Read Mr. Richard ............... USA ..................... M. Poats ................. JCS (SACSA) . ........................... C. Steadman ........................ General Maxwell D. Taylor, USA
  • by reading the material which JWGAassembles. this includes information related to salient issues, and questions. is rein­ Generally, problems b. This process is continued in team meetings, during game play, as new facts and opinions are exchanged
  • , Suggestions for reading -- studies, intclligcmcc. reports, plans (both official and unofficial), books, and other pertinent source material. (2) Suggestions on persons to be interviewed. Ideas for introduction into the .initial scenario or for use during
  • projections any time a geographic point or name is used. The scenarios, when read in offices and away to complete from the JWGAwall maps, need the map references the story. Reference is made to the types of maps included in the Defense Intelligence Agency