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Foreign relations of Yugoslavia

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Not to be confused withForeign relations of Serbia and Montenegro.
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Map of Yugoslavia from 1945 until 1992

Foreign relations of Yugoslavia (Serbo-Croatian:Vanjski/Spoljni odnosi Jugoslavije,Вањски/Спољни односи Југославије;Slovene:Zunanji odnosi Jugoslavije;Macedonian:Надворешните односи на Југославија) wereinternational relations of theinterwarKingdom of Yugoslavia and theCold WarSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. During its existence, the country was the founding member of numerous multilateral organizations including theUnited Nations,Non-Aligned Movement,International Monetary Fund,Group of 77,Group of 15,Central European Initiative and theEuropean Broadcasting Union.

History

[edit]

Kingdom of Yugoslavia

[edit]

The Kingdom of Yugoslavia, ruled by the SerbianKarađorđević dynasty, was formed in 1918 by the merger of the provisionalState of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (itself formed from territories of the formerAustria-Hungary, encompassing Bosnia and Herzegovina and most of Croatia and Slovenia) andBanat, Bačka and Baranja (that had been part of theKingdom of Hungary within Austria-Hungary) with the formerly independentKingdom of Serbia. In the same year, theKingdom of Montenegro also proclaimed its unification with Serbia, whereas the regions ofKosovo andVardar Macedonia had become parts of Serbia prior to the unification.[1] The first country in the world to officially recognize the new state was theUnited States.[2] After thecreation of Yugoslavia the newly formed state was astatus quo state inEurope which was opposed torevisionist states.[3] In this situation the country prominently was a part of theLittle Entente and the firstBalkan Pact.Yugoslav accession to the Tripartite Pact resulted inYugoslav coup d'état and ultimately theInvasion of Yugoslavia.

World War II

[edit]

During the2nd World War the country was formally represented by theYugoslav government-in-exile whileYugoslav Partisans headed byJosip Broz Tito progressively gainedsupport of the Allies. At the same time theAnti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia challenged the authority of the government in exile and among other issues proposed a review of country's international legal obligations with the aim of annulment or re-negotiation.[4] The new foreign policy was based on the pre-war and war era foreign policy positions of theCommunist Party of Yugoslavia which included support for theSoviet Union,Bavarian Soviet Republic,Hungarian Soviet Republic,Yugoslav support for the Spanish Republic, rejection ofAnschluss and vocal support forCzechoslovakia’s independence afterMunich Agreement.[4] The new socialist Federal Executive Council of Josip Broz Tito was formed on 7 March 1945, recognized byUnited Kingdom on 20 March 1945, and the Soviet Union and the United States a week after that.[4]

Socialist Yugoslavia

[edit]
Federal Executive Council building inNew Belgrade

During the first post-war years new Yugoslav state was closely aligned with the Soviet Union and involved into dispute over theFree Territory of Trieste and theGreek Civil War. In May 1945, 4,650 Greek refugees, mostly male members ofELAS, settled in the village ofMaglić with the help of Yugoslav government. From 1945 to 1948, it was asui generis case of Greekextraterritorial jurisdiction.[5] This period was sharply ended in 1948 after theTito–Stalin split.

Yugoslavia initially pursued development of relations among non-blocneutral European states as a way to avoid isolation and preserve certain level of independence without alienating major powers. In this period Yugoslavia joined theSecond Balkan Pact.Belgrade however perceived that in deeply divided Europe there was shrinking maneuvering space for neutral countries and followed the development of what will be called process ofFinlandization with great concern. In 1956 theBelgrade declaration ended the period of significant dependence on theWestern bloc. The Declaration guaranteed noninterference in Yugoslavia’s internal affairs and legitimized right to different forms of socialist development in different countries.[6] While the declaration failed in achieving lasting rapprochement between the two countries (result of the Yugoslav anxiety over theHungarian Revolution of 1956) it had an effect on Yugoslav disengagement from theBalkan Pact withNATO member states ofTurkey andGreece.[7]

Yugoslavia subsequently discovered new allies among former colonies and mandate territories beyond Europe.[8] Yugoslavia supportedEgypt during theSuez Crisis. Yugoslavia developed its relations withIndia beginning with the time of their concurrent mandate at theUN Security Council from the end of 1949 onward.[9] Yugoslavia was one of the founding members of theNon-Aligned Movement which enabled this comparatively small and underdeveloped country to play one of the most prominent diplomatic role during the Cold War.

Yugoslav crisis which escalated intobreakup of the country andYugoslav Wars turned into one of the major policy and security issues in the first decade after the end of the Cold War.

Federal Secretaries of Foreign Affairs

[edit]

Foreign relations

[edit]

Africa

[edit]
CountryIndependenceFormal Relations BeganNotes
Algeria5 July 1962[10]2 July 1962[10]
Angola11 November 1975[10]1975[10]
Benin1 August 1960[10]1962[10]
Botswana30 September 1966[10]1970[10]
Burkina Faso5 August 1960[10]1968[10]
Burundi1 July 1962[10]1962[10]
Cameroon1 January 1960[10]1960[10]
Cape Verde5 July 1975[10]1975[10]
Central African Republic13 August 1960[10]1960[10]
Chad11 August 1960[10]1966[10]
Democratic Republic of the Congo30 June 1960[10]1961[10]
Republic of the Congo15 August 1960[10]1964[10]
Djibouti27 June 1977[10]1978[10]
Egypt28 February 1922[10]1 February 1908 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[10]
Equatorial Guinea12 October 1968[10]1970[10]
Ethiopianever colonized in a classical sense (temporary Italian occupation)[10]1952[10]
Gabon17 August 1960[10]1960[10]
Gambia18 February 1965[10]1965[10]
Ghana6 March 1957[10]1959[10]
Guinea2 October 1958[10]1958[10]
Guinea-Bissau10 September 1974[10]1975[10]
Ivory Coast7 August 1960[10]1968[10]
Kenya12/20 December 1963[10]1963[10]
Lesotho4 October 1966[10]1972[10]
Liberia26 July 1847[10]1959[10]
Libya24 December 1951[10]1955[10]
Madagascar26 June 1960[10]1960[10]
Mali22 September 1960[10]1961[10]
Mauritania28 November 1960[10]1961[10]
Morocco2 March 1956[10]2 March 1957[10]
Mauritius12 March 1968[10]1969[10]
Mozambique25 June 1975[10]1975[10]
Namibia21 March 1990[10]1990[10]
Nigeria1 October 1960[10]1960[10]
Rwanda1 July 1962[10]1971[10]
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic28 November 1984[11]
Sao Tome and Principe12 July 1975[10]1977[10]
Seychelles29 June 1976[10]1977[10]
Senegal20 August 1960[10]1961[10]
Sierra Leone27 April 1961[10]1961[10]
Somalia1 July 1960[10]1960[10]
Sudan1 January 1956[10]1956[10]
Swaziland6 September 1968[10]1968[10]
Tanzania1961, 26 April 1964 (unification)[10]1961[10]
Togo27 April 1960[10]1960[10]
Tunisia20 March 1956[10]1957[10]
Uganda9 October 1962[10]1963[10]
Zambia24 October 1964[10]1964[10]
Zimbabwe18 April 1980[10]1980[10]

Americas

[edit]
CountryFormal RelationsNotes
Argentina29 February 1928[12]
Bahamas
Barbados
Bolivia1952[13]
Brazil1938[14]
Canada9 February 1942[15]
Chile1935[16]
Colombia1966[17]
Costa Rica1952[18]
Cuba1943[19]
Dominica
Dominican Republic1 March 1912 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[20]
Ecuador1956[21]
El Salvador1956[22]
Grenada29 June 1978[23]
Guatemala1882 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[24]
Guyana5 November 1968[25]
Haiti1956[26]
Honduras1904 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[27]
JamaicaOctober 1968[28]
Mexico24 May 1946[29]
Nicaragua23 February 1904 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[30]
Panama1953[31]
Paraguay1950[32]
Peru1942[28]

Both countries established diplomatic relations in October 1942, and renewed them in 1968. An embassy was opened in Belgrade that same year, with the firstPeruvian Ambassador arriving in 1969.

Suriname9 July 1976[33]
Trinidad and Tobago1965[34]
Uruguay1950[35]
United States
Venezuela1951[36]

Asia-Pacific

[edit]
CountryFormal Relations BeganNotes
Afghanistan30 December 1954[37]
Australia1966[38]
Bangladesh20 November 1956[39]
Burma29 December 1950[40]
Cambodia15 July 1956[41]
China2 January 1955[42]
Fiji1976[43]
India5 December 1948[44]
Indonesia1954[45]
Iran1945[46]
Iraq1958[47]
Israel19 May 1948[a][48]
Japan
Jordan1951[49]
Kuwait7 May 1963[50]
Laos25 November 1962[51]
Lebanon1946[52]
Malaysia1967[53]
Maldives
Mongolia20 November 1956[54]
  Nepal7 October 1959[55]
New Zealand1951[56]
North Korea30 October 1948
Oman1974[57]
Palestine1989[58][b]
Pakistan18 May 1948[59]
Philippines1972[60]
Saudi ArabiaN/aSaudi Arabia and Yugoslavia did not have diplomatic relations.
Singapore22 August 1967[61]
South Korea27 December 1982
Sri Lanka14 October 1957[62]
Syria1946[63]
Thailand1954[64]
Turkey
Vietnam10 March 1957[65][66]
Yemen1957[67]

Europe

[edit]
CountryFormal Relations BeganNotes
Albania
Austria
Belgium
Bulgaria
Cyprus10 July 1960[68]
Czechoslovakia1918[69]
Denmark1917 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[70]
Estonia
Finland1928[71]
France
Germany
East Germany15 October 1957[72]
Greece
Holy See1920[73][c]
Hungary
Ireland1977[74]
Italy
Latvia1917 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[75]
Lithuania
Luxembourg1927[76]
Malta6 January 1969[77]
Netherlands
Norway26 January 1919[78]
Poland
Portugal19 October 1917 (continued relations of theKingdom of Serbia)[79][d]
Romania
Soviet Union19 December 1945
Spain
Sweden
 Switzerland1919[81]
United Kingdom

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Formal relations were cut in 1967 following theSix-Day War
  2. ^Yugoslavia recognised Palestine on 16 November 1988
  3. ^Concordat signed in 1914[73]
  4. ^Portugal recognised theSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in1974 following theCarnation Revolution[80]
  1. ^"Yugoslavia from a Historical Perspective"(PDF). YU Historija. Retrieved7 December 2020.
  2. ^Steiner, Zara (2005).The lights that failed : European international history, 1919-1933. Oxford: Oxford University Press.ISBN 978-0-19-151881-2.OCLC 86068902.
  3. ^Sheperd, David (1968).Relations between Yugoslavia and Bulgaria, 1918-1941 (Master Thesis).Durham University. Retrieved9 January 2021.
  4. ^abcĐukanović, Dragan; Dašić, Marko (2020). "Effects of the Ideas of the October Revolution in Russia on the Foreign Policy of Yugoslavia in the Period 1945–1947".Journal of Balkan & Near Eastern Studies.22 (2):259–274.doi:10.1080/19448953.2018.1556449.
  5. ^Nemanja Mitrović (3 August 2020)."Tito, Jugoslavija i Grčka: Buljkes, "država u državi" kod Novog Sada".BBC. Retrieved2 February 2021.
  6. ^Milorad Lazić (4 December 2017)."The Soviet Intervention that Never Happened".Wilson Center. Retrieved26 August 2021.
  7. ^Petar Žarković (n.d.)."Yugoslavia and the USSR 1945 - 1980: The History of a Cold War Relationship". YU historija. Retrieved26 August 2021.
  8. ^Trültzsch, Arno."An Almost Forgotten Legacy: Non-Aligned Yugoslavia in the United Nations and in the Making of Contemporary International Law".
  9. ^Mišković, Nataša (2009)."The Pre-history of the Non-Aligned Movement: India's First Contacts with the Communist Yugoslavia, 1948–50"(PDF).India Quarterly.65 (2):185–200.doi:10.1177/097492840906500206.S2CID 154101021. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2022-01-13. Retrieved2021-10-13.
  10. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxayazbabbbcbdbebfbgbhbibjbkblbmbnbobpbqbrbsbtbubvbwbxbybzcacbcccdcecfcgchcicjckclcmcncocpcqcrRadina Vučetić; Pol Bets; Radovan Cukić; Ana Sladojević (2017).Tito u Africi: slike solidarnosti(PDF).Museum of Yugoslavia.ISBN 978-86-84811-45-7.
  11. ^"RECONOCIMIENTOS DE LA RASD - Reconnaissances de la RASD - Recognitions of the SADR".Universidad de Santiago de Compostela. Retrieved13 November 2020.
  12. ^"Bilateral relations - Argentina".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  13. ^"Bilateral relations - Bolivia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  14. ^Teodosić, Dragan (2019).БЕОГРАД – БРАЗИЛИЈА 80 година дипломатских односа/BELGRADE – BRASÍLIA 80 years of diplomatic relations (in Serbian and English).Belgrade:Archives of Yugoslavia.ISBN 978-86-80099-77-4.
  15. ^DeLong, Linwood (2020)."A Guide to Canadian Diplomatic Relations 1925-2019".Canadian Global Affairs Institute. Retrieved25 September 2020.
  16. ^"Bilateral relations - Chile".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  17. ^"Bilateral relations - Colombia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  18. ^"Bilateral relations - Costa Rica".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  19. ^Marina Perović."Izlaganje ambasadora Marine Perović Petrović povodom 70. godišnjice uspostavljanja diplomatskih odnosa Srbije i Kube, augusta 1943".The Embassy of the Republic of Serbia in Havana. Retrieved23 February 2021.
  20. ^"Bilateral relations - Dominican Republic".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  21. ^"Bilateral relations - Ecuador".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  22. ^"Bilateral relations - El Salvador".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  23. ^"Bilateral relations - Grenada".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  24. ^"Bilateral relations - Guatemala".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  25. ^"Bilateral relations - Guyana".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  26. ^"Bilateral relations - Haiti".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  27. ^"Bilateral relations - Honduras".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  28. ^abForeign Assistance and Related Agencies Appropriations for 1972: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, Ninety-second Congress, First Session.U.S. Government Printing Office. 1971. p. 840.
  29. ^"MANUAL DE ORGANIZACIÓN DE LA EMBAJADA DE MÉXICO EN LA REPÚBLICA DE SERBIA"(PDF). Director General de Programación, Organización y Presupuesto. Retrieved13 November 2020.
  30. ^"Bilateral relations - Nicaragua".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  31. ^"Bilateral relations - Panama".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  32. ^"Bilateral relations - Paraguay".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  33. ^"Bilateral relations - Suriname".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  34. ^Glassner, Martin Ira (1970)."The Foreign Relations of Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, 1960-1965".Caribbean Studies.10 (3):116–153.JSTOR 25612327. Retrieved1 November 2020.
  35. ^"Bilateral relations - Uruguay".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  36. ^"Bilateral Issues: Venezuela".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  37. ^"Bilateral relations - Afghanistan".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  38. ^"Serbia country brief".Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Retrieved22 November 2020.
  39. ^"Bilateral relations - Bangladesh".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  40. ^"Bilateral relations - Myanmar".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  41. ^"Bilateral relations - Cambodia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  42. ^"Bilateral relations - China".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  43. ^"Bilateral Issues: New Zealand".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  44. ^Jakovina, Tvrtko."Yugoslavia on the International Scene: The Active Coexistence of Non-Aligned Yugoslavia". YU Historija. Retrieved1 November 2020.
  45. ^"Bilateral Issues: Indonesia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved29 August 2020.
  46. ^Jelena Maksimović (9 January 2020)."Iran i Srbija: Odnosi srdačni, ali skromni uz izvesne diplomatske usluge".BBC. Retrieved20 February 2021.
  47. ^"Bilateral relations - Iraq".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  48. ^"Virtual Jewish World: Yugoslavia".Jewish Virtual Library. 2008. Retrieved29 December 2020.
  49. ^"Bilateral relations - Jordan".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  50. ^"Bilateral relations - Kuwait".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  51. ^"Bilateral relations - Laos".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  52. ^"Bilateral relations - Lebanon".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  53. ^"Bilateral Issues: Malaysia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  54. ^"Bilateral relations - Mongolia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  55. ^"Bilateral relations - Nepal".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  56. ^"Bilateral Issues: New Zealand".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  57. ^"Bilateral relations - Oman".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  58. ^"Bilateral relations - Palestine".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  59. ^Marko Jelić."Обележен Национални дан Пакистана у Београду". Kuća dobrih vesti. Retrieved25 September 2020.
  60. ^"Bilateral relations - Philippines".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  61. ^"Bilateral relations - Singapore".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  62. ^"Bilateral relations - Sri Lanka".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  63. ^"Bilateral relations - Syria".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  64. ^"Bilateral relations - Thailand".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  65. ^"Bilateral relations - Vietnam".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  66. ^"Vietnam values traditional ties with Serbia: PM".People's Army Newspaper. 9 September 2017. Retrieved5 December 2020.
  67. ^"Bilateral relations - Yemen".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  68. ^"The Embassy". Embassy of The Republic of Cyprus in Belgrade. 2019. Retrieved23 August 2020.
  69. ^"Bilateral Issues: Czechia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved8 March 2022.
  70. ^"Bilateral Issues: Denmark".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved8 March 2022.
  71. ^"Bilateral Issues: Finland".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Archived fromthe original on 15 January 2020. Retrieved25 August 2020.
  72. ^Akrap, Gordan (2011)."Suradnja izvještajno-sigurnosnih sustava DDR-a i SFRJ".National Security and the Future.12 (1–2):11–33.
  73. ^abNinčević, Marjan Marino (2016)."Diplomatski odnosi Vatikana i Kraljevine Jugoslavije: konkordat iz 1935. godine".Nova prisutnost: časopis za intelektualna i duhovna pitanja.XIV (2):299–307. Retrieved9 February 2021.
  74. ^"Bilateral Issues: Ireland".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved8 March 2022.
  75. ^"Bilateral Issues: Latvia".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved8 March 2022.
  76. ^"Bilateral Issues: Luxembourg".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved8 March 2022.
  77. ^"Bilateral Issues: Malta".Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved7 March 2022.
  78. ^Latinović, Goran (2014)."Југословенско-норвешки односи (1920–1941)" [Yugoslav-Norwegian Relations (1920-1941)](PDF).Tokovi Istorije (in Serbian) (2):47–54.
  79. ^Gerhard Schulz (1972).Revolutions and peace treaties, 1917-1920. Methuen. p. 35.
  80. ^Lester A. Sobel, Christ Hunt (1976).Portuguese revolution, 1974-76. Facts on File. p. 76.ISBN 0-87196-223-3.
  81. ^"Bilateral relations Switzerland–Serbia".eda.admin.ch.Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved7 March 2022.
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