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Tito–Stalin split

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Cold War schism between communist states

The Eastern Bloc countries (marked ★) at the time of the Tito–Stalin split; theFree Territory of Trieste and the borders of theoccupation zones of Germany andAustria are not shown

TheTito–Stalin split[a] or theSoviet–Yugoslav split[b] was the culmination of a conflict between the political leaderships ofYugoslavia and theSoviet Union, underJosip Broz Tito andJoseph Stalin, respectively, in the years followingWorld War II. Although presented by both sides as an ideological dispute, the conflict was as much the product of a geopolitical struggle in theBalkans that also involvedAlbania,Bulgaria, and thecommunist insurgency inGreece, which Tito's Yugoslavia supported and the Soviet Union distanced itself from.

In the years following World War II, Yugoslavia pursued economic, internal, and foreign policy objectives that did not align with the interests of the Soviet Union and itsEastern Bloc allies. In particular, Yugoslavia hoped to admit neighbouring Albania to the Yugoslav federation. This fostered an atmosphere of insecurity within the Albanian political leadership and exacerbated tensions with the Soviet Union, which made efforts to impede Albanian–Yugoslav integration. Yugoslav support of the communist rebels in Greece against the wishes of the Soviet Union further complicated the political situation. Stalin tried to pressure Yugoslavia and moderate its policies using Bulgaria as an intermediary. When the conflict between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union became public in 1948, it was portrayed as an ideological dispute to avoid the impression of a power struggle within the Eastern Bloc.

The split ushered in theInformbiro period of purges within theCommunist Party of Yugoslavia. It was accompanied by a significant level of disruption to the Yugoslav economy, which had previously depended on the Eastern Bloc. The conflict also prompted fears of an impending Soviet invasion and even a coup attempt by senior Soviet-aligned military leaders, a fear fueled by thousands of border incidents and incursions orchestrated by the Soviets and their allies. Deprived of aid from the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc, Yugoslavia subsequently turned to theUnited States for economic and military assistance.

Background

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Tito–Stalin conflict during World War II

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See also:World War II in Yugoslavia

DuringWorld War II, the relationship betweenYugoslav Partisan leaderJosip Broz Tito and Soviet leaderJoseph Stalin was complicated by the Soviet Union's alliances, Stalin's desire to expand theSoviet sphere of influence beyond the borders of the Soviet Union, and the confrontation between Tito'sCommunist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ) and theYugoslav government-in-exile headed by KingPeter II of Yugoslavia.[1]

TheAxis powersinvaded theKingdom of Yugoslavia on 6 April 1941. The country surrendered 11 days later, and the government fled abroad, ultimately relocating to London.Nazi Germany,Fascist Italy,Bulgaria andHungary annexed parts of the country. The remaining territory was broken up: most of it was organised as theIndependent State of Croatia (NDH), a puppet state garrisoned by German and Italian forces, while the capital Belgrade remained in theGerman-occupied territory of Serbia.[1] The Soviet Union, still honouring theMolotov–Ribbentrop Pact, broke off relations with the Yugoslav government and sought, through its intelligence assets, to set up a new Communist organisation independent of the KPJ in the NDH. The Soviet Union also tacitly approved the restructuring of theBulgarian Workers' Party. In particular, the party's new organisational structure and territory of operation were adjusted to account for theannexation of Yugoslav territories by Bulgaria. The Soviets only reversed their support for such actions in September 1941—well after the start of theAxis invasion of the Soviet Union—after repeated protests from the KPJ.[2]

In June 1941, Tito informed theComintern and Stalin about his plans for an uprising against theAxis occupiers. However, Stalin considered the prolific use ofCommunist symbols by Tito's Partisans to be problematic.[3] This was because Stalin viewed his alliance with theUnited Kingdom and theUnited States as necessarily contrary to the Axis destruction of "democratic liberties". Stalin thus felt that Communist forces inAxis-occupied Europe were actually obligated to fight to restore democratic liberties—even if temporarily. In terms of Yugoslavia, this meant that Stalin expected the KPJ to fight to restore the government-in-exile. Remnants of theRoyal Yugoslav Army, led byColonelDraža Mihailović and organised asChetnik guerrillas, were already pursuing the restoration of the Yugoslav monarchy.[4]

Photograph of a sitting audience looking at a point off-camera
In 1943, the Yugoslav Communist leadership transformed theAVNOJ into a new Yugoslav deliberative body.
Photograph of a destroyed tank in a street
TheRed Army, supported by theYugoslav Partisans,captured Belgrade in October 1944.

In October 1941, Tito met Mihailović twice to propose a joint struggle against the Axis. Tito offered him the position ofchief of staff of the Partisan forces, but Mihailović turned down the offer.[5] By the end of the month, Mihailović concluded that the Communists were the true enemy. At first, Mihailović's Chetniks fought the Partisans and the Axis simultaneously, but within months, they began collaborating with the Axis against the Partisans.[6] By November, the Partisans were fighting the Chetniks while sending messages to Moscow protesting Soviet propaganda praising Mihailović.[5]

In 1943, Tito transformed theAnti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ) into an all-Yugoslav deliberative and legislative body, denounced the government-in-exile, and forbade King Peter's return to the country. These decisions ran against explicit Soviet advice instructing Tito not to antagonise the exiled monarch and his government. Stalin was at theTehran Conference at the time and viewed the move as a betrayal of the Soviet Union.[7] In 1944–1945, Stalin's renewed instructions to Communist leaders in Europe to establish coalitions with bourgeois politicians were met with incredulity in Yugoslavia.[8] This shock was reinforced by Stalin's revelation of thePercentages Agreement to the surprisedEdvard Kardelj, vice president of the Yugoslavprovisional government. The agreement, concluded by Stalin and BritishPrime MinisterWinston Churchill during the1944 Moscow Conference dividedEastern European countries into British and Sovietspheres of influence—splitting Yugoslavia evenly between the two.[9]

Territorial dispute in Trieste and Carinthia

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In the final days of the war, the Partisans captured parts ofCarinthia inAustria and started to advance across pre-war Italian soil. While the Western Allies believed Stalin had arranged the move,[10] he actually opposed it. Specifically, Stalin feared for the Soviet-backedAustrian government [de] ofKarl Renner, and was afraid that a wider conflict with theAllies overTrieste would ensue.[11] Stalin thus ordered Tito to withdraw from Carinthia and Trieste, and the Partisans complied.[12]

Nevertheless, Yugoslavia maintained its claims against Italy and Austria. The territorial dispute in the northwest part ofIstria and around the city of Trieste caused theTreaty of Peace with Italy to be delayed until 1947, and led to the establishment of the independentFree Territory of Trieste. This did not satisfy Tito as he sought revisions of the borders around Trieste and in Carinthia, prompting the Western Allies to keep a garrison in Trieste to prevent a Yugoslav takeover. Tito's continued insistence on the acquisition of Trieste was also seen by Stalin as an embarrassment to theItalian Communist Party.[13]

Political situation in Eastern Europe, 1945–1948

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In the immediate aftermath of World War II, the Soviet Union sought to establish its political dominance in foreign countries captured by theRed Army, mostly by establishing coalition governments in Eastern European countries.One-party Communist rule was generally difficult to achieve because Communist parties were usually quite small. The Communist leaders saw the strategic approach as a temporary measure until circumstances allowing for sole Communist rule improved.[14] Contrary to most Communist parties in Europe, the KPJ and theAlbanian Communist Party (PKSH) enjoyed significant popular support stemming from Tito's Partisan movement in Yugoslavia and Albania'sNational Liberation Movement.[15] While Tito'sFederal People's Republic of Yugoslavia was under Soviet influence in the final months of the war and the first few post-war years, Stalin declared it outside the Soviet sphere of interest on several occasions,[16] treating it like asatellite state.[17] The contrast with the rest of Eastern Europe was underscored ahead of a Soviet offensive in October 1944. Tito's Partisans supported the offensive, which ultimately pushed theWehrmacht and its allies out of northern Serbia and led to thecapture of Belgrade.[18]MarshalFyodor Tolbukhin's Third Ukrainian Front had to request formal permission from Tito's provisional government to enter Yugoslavia and had to accept Yugoslav civil authority in any liberated territory.[19]

Deteriorating relations

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Yugoslav foreign policy, 1945–1947

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Map of zones of control the Free Territory of Trieste
TheFree Territory of Trieste was a nominally independent territory centered on theAdriatic city ofTrieste. It was claimed by Italy and Yugoslavia, and became a source of conflict between Yugoslavia and the Western Allies. Prior to its dissolution, the territory consisted of Zones A and B, administered by the Western Allies and Yugoslavia, respectively. The Yugoslav zone was ultimately divided between the federated republics ofCroatia andSlovenia.[20]

The Soviet Union and Yugoslavia signed a friendship treaty when Tito met with Stalin in Moscow in April 1945.[11] They established good bilateral relations despite differences in how to bring about a communist or socialist society.[21] In 1945, Yugoslavia relied onUnited Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration aid as it experienced food shortages, but it gave much greater internal publicity to comparably smaller Soviet assistance.[22] On 10 January 1945, Stalin called Yugoslavia's foreign policy unreasonable because of itsterritorial claims against most of its neighbours,[23] including Hungary,[24] Austria,[25] and the Free Territory of Trieste, which had been carved out of pre-war Italian territory.[26] Tito then delivered a speech criticising the Soviet Union for not backing his territorial demands.[22] The confrontation with the Western Allies became tense in August 1946 whenYugoslav fighter aircraft forced aUnited States Army Air ForcesDouglas C-47 Skytrain to crash-land nearLjubljana and shot down another aboveBled, capturing ten and killing a crew of five in the span of ten days.[27] The Western Allies incorrectly believed that Stalin encouraged Tito's persistence; Stalin actually wished to avoid confrontation with the West.[12]

Tito also sought to establish regional dominance over Yugoslavia's southern neighbours—Albania, Bulgaria, andGreece. The first overtures in this direction occurred in 1943 when a proposal for a regional headquarters to coordinate national Partisan actions fell through. Tito, who saw the Yugoslav component of the Partisans as superior, declined to go ahead with any scheme that would give other national components equal say. The pre-war partition ofMacedonia intoVardar,Pirin, andAegean Macedonia—controlled by Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and Greece respectively—complicated regional relations. The presence of a substantial ethnic Albanian population in theYugoslav region of Kosovo further impeded relations. In 1943, the PKSH had proposed the transfer of Kosovo to Albania, only to be confronted with a counterproposal: incorporating Albania into afuture Yugoslav federation.[28] Tito and PKSH first secretaryEnver Hoxha revisited the idea in 1946, agreeing to merge the two countries.[29]

After the war, Tito continued to pursue dominance in the region. In 1946, Albania and Yugoslavia signed a treaty on mutual assistance and customs agreements, almost completely integrating Albania into the Yugoslav economic system. Nearly a thousand Yugoslav economic development experts were sent to Albania, and a KPJ representative was added to the PKSH Central Committee.[30] The two countries' militaries also cooperated, at least in themining of the Corfu Channel in October 1946—an action which damaged twoRoyal Navy destroyers and resulted in 44 dead and 42 injured.[31] Even though the Soviet Union had previously indicated it would only deal with Albania through Yugoslavia, Stalin cautioned the Yugoslavs not to pursue unification with haste.[30]

In August 1947, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia signed afriendship and mutual assistance treaty in Bled without consulting the Soviet Union, leading Soviet Foreign MinisterVyacheslav Molotov to denounce it.[32] Despite this, when theCominform was established in September to facilitate international Communist activity and communication,[33] the Soviets openly touted Yugoslavia as a model for theEastern Bloc to emulate.[34] From 1946, internal reports from the Soviet embassy in Belgrade began to portray Yugoslav leaders in increasingly unfavourable terms.[35]

Integration with Albania and support for Greek insurgents

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The Soviet Union began sending its own advisors to Albania in mid-1947, which Tito saw as a threat to the further integration of Albania into Yugoslavia. He attributed the move to a power struggle within the PKSH Central Committee involving Hoxha, the interior ministerKoçi Xoxe, and the economy and industry minister,Naco Spiru. Spiru was seen as the prime opponent of links with Yugoslavia and advocated closer ties between Albania and the Soviet Union. Prompted by Yugoslav accusations and urged on by Xoxe, Hoxha launched an investigation into Spiru. A few days later, Spiru died in unclear circumstances; his death was officially declared a suicide.[36] Following Spiru's death, there were a series of meetings of Yugoslav and Soviet diplomats and officials on the matter of integration, culminating in a meeting between Stalin and KPJ officialMilovan Đilas in December 1947 and January 1948. By its conclusion, Stalin supported the integration of Albania into Yugoslavia, provided it was postponed for a more opportune time and carried out with the consent of the Albanians. It is still unclear if Stalin was sincere in his support or if he was pursuing a delaying tactic. Regardless, Đilas perceived Stalin's support as genuine.[37]

Yugoslav support to theCommunist Party of Greece (KKE) and KKE-ledDemocratic Army of Greece (DSE) in theGreek Civil War indirectly encouraged Albanian support for closer ties with Yugoslavia. The civil war in Greece reinforced the Albanian perception that the Yugoslav and Albanian borders were threatened by Greece.[38] Furthermore, the DSE promised to cede Aegean Macedonia to Yugoslavia in return for the Yugoslav support when it comes to power in Greece.[39] There was a United States intelligence-gathering operation in the country.[40] In 1947, twelve BritishSecret Intelligence Service-trained agentswere airdropped in central Albania to start an insurrection, which did not materialise.[41] The Yugoslavs hoped that the perceived Greek threat would increase Albanian support for integration with Yugoslavia. Soviet envoys to Albania deemed the effort successful in instilling Albanians with a fear of Greeks along with a perception that Albania could not defend itself on its own,[38] although Soviet sources indicated there was no actual threat of a Greek invasion of Albania.[42] Tito thought, since many DSE fighters wereethnic Macedonians, cooperating with the DSE might allow Yugoslavia to annex Greek territory by expanding into Aegean Macedonia even if the DSE failed to seize power.[38]

Shortly after Đilas and Stalin met, Tito suggested to Hoxha that Albania should permit Yugoslavia to use military bases nearKorçë, close to the Albanian–Greek border, to defend against a potential Greek and Anglo–American attack. By the end of January, Hoxha accepted the idea. Moreover, Xoxe indicated that the integration of the Albanian and Yugoslav armies had been approved. Even though the matter was supposedly conducted in secrecy, the Soviets learned of the scheme from a source in the Albanian government.[43]

Federation with Bulgaria

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In late 1944, Stalin first proposed a Yugoslav–Bulgarian federation, involving a dualist state where Bulgaria would be one half of the federation and Yugoslavia (further divided into its republics) the other. The Yugoslav position was that a federation was possible, but only if Bulgaria were one of the seven federal units and ifPirin Macedonia was ceded to the nascent Yugoslavfederal unit of Macedonia. Since the two sides could not agree, Stalin invited them to Moscow in January 1945 for arbitration—first supporting the Bulgarian view—and days later switching to the Yugoslav position. Finally, on 26 January, the British government warned the Bulgarian authorities against any federation arrangement with Yugoslavia before Bulgaria signed a peace treaty with the Allies. The federation was shelved, to Tito's relief.[44]

Three years later, in 1948, when Tito and Hoxha were preparing to deploy theYugoslav People's Army to Albania, the Bulgarian Workers' Party leaderGeorgi Dimitrov spoke to Western journalists about turning the Eastern Bloc into a federally organised state. He then included Greece in a list of "people's democracies", causing concern in the West and in the Soviet Union. Tito sought to distance Yugoslavia from the idea, but the Soviets came to believe that Dimitrov's remarks were influenced by Yugoslavia's intentions in the Balkans. On 1 February 1948, Molotov instructed the Yugoslav and Bulgarian leaders to send representatives to Moscow by 10 February for discussions.[45] On 5 February, just days before the scheduled meeting with Stalin, the DSE launched its general offensive, shellingThessaloniki four days later.[46]

February 1948 meeting with Stalin

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Photograph of Joseph Stalin seated
Soviet leaderJoseph Stalin met Yugoslav officials in Moscow in February 1948, shortly before the split.

In response to Molotov's summons, Tito dispatched Kardelj and President of theExecutive Council of the People's Republic of CroatiaVladimir Bakarić to Moscow, where they joined Đilas. Stalin berated Yugoslavia and Dimitrov for ignoring the Soviet Union by signing the Bled Agreement, and for Dimitrov's call to include Greece in a hypothetical federation with Bulgaria and Yugoslavia. He also demanded an end to the insurrection in Greece, arguing that any further support for the Communist guerrillas there might lead to a wider conflict with the United States and the United Kingdom.[46] By limiting his support to the DSE, Stalin adhered to thePercentages Agreement, an informal deal Stalin and Winston Churchill had struck in Moscow in October 1944, which placed Greece in the British sphere of influence.[47]

Stalin also demanded an immediate federation consisting of Bulgaria and Yugoslavia.[48] According to Stalin, Albania would join later. At the same time, he expressed support for similar unions of Hungary and Romania and of Poland andCzechoslovakia. Yugoslav and Bulgarian participants in the meeting acknowledged mistakes, and Stalin made Kardelj and Dimitrov sign a treaty obliging Yugoslavia and Bulgaria to consult the Soviet Union on all foreign policy matters.[49] The KPJ politburo met in secret on 19 February and decided against any federation with Bulgaria. Two days later, Tito, Kardelj, and Đilas met withNikos Zachariadis, the general secretary of the KKE. They informed Zachariadis that Stalin was opposed to the KKE's armed struggle but promised continued Yugoslav support, nonetheless.[50]

TheKPJ Central Committee met on 1 March and noted that Yugoslavia would remain independent only if it resisted Soviet designs for the economic development of the Eastern Bloc.[51] The Soviet Union viewed the Yugoslav five-year development plan unfavourably because it did not align with the needs of the Eastern Bloc but prioritised development based solely on local development needs.[52] The Central Committee also dismissed the possibility of a federation with Bulgaria, interpreting it as a form ofTrojan horse tactic, and decided to proceed with the existing policy towards Albania.[51] Politburo member and government ministerSreten Žujović, who was not present at the meeting on 19 February, attended the 1 March meeting and informed the Soviets.[35]

In Albania, Xoxe purged all anti-Yugoslav forces from the PKSH Central Committee at a plenum of 26 February–8 March.[53] The PKSH Central Committee adopted a resolution that official Albanian policy was pro-Yugoslav. The Albanian authorities adopted an additional secret document detailing a planned merger of the Albanian and Yugoslav armies, citing the threat of a Greek invasion and arguing that having Yugoslav troops at the Albanian-Greek border was an "urgent necessity".[35] In response to these moves, Soviet military advisers were withdrawn from Yugoslavia on 18 March.[53]

Stalin's letters and open conflict

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First letter

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On 27 March, Stalin sent his first letter addressed to Tito and Kardelj, which formulated the conflict as an ideological one.[54] In his letter, Stalin denounced Tito and Kardelj, as well as Đilas,Svetozar Vukmanović,Boris Kidrič, andAleksandar Ranković, as "dubiousMarxists" responsible for the anti-Soviet atmosphere in Yugoslavia. Stalin also criticised Yugoslav policies on security, the economy, and political appointments. In particular, he resented the suggestion that Yugoslavia was more revolutionary than the Soviet Union, drawing comparisons to the positions and the fate ofLeon Trotsky. The purpose of the letter was to urge loyal Communists to remove the "dubious Marxists".[55] The Soviets maintained contact with Žujović and the former minister of industryAndrija Hebrang and, in early 1948, instructed Žujović to oust Tito from office. They hoped to secure the position of the general secretary of the KPJ for Žujović and have Hebrang fill the post of theprime minister.[56]

Tito convened the KPJ Central Committee on 12 April to draw up a letter in response to Stalin. Tito repudiated Stalin's claims and referred to them as slander and misinformation. He also emphasised the KPJ's achievements of national independence and equality. Žujović was the only one to oppose Tito at the meeting. He advocated making Yugoslavia a part of the Soviet Union, and questioned what the country's future position in international relations would be if the alliance between the two countries was not maintained.[57] Tito called for action against Žujović and Hebrang. He denounced Hebrang, claiming that his actions were the primary reason for Soviet mistrust. To discredit him, charges were fabricated alleging that Hebrang had become a spy for the Croatian ultra-nationalist and fascistUstaše movement during his captivity in 1942, and that he was subsequently blackmailed with that information by the Soviets. Both Žujović and Hebrang were apprehended within a week.[58]

Second letter

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On 4 May, Stalin sent the second letter to the KPJ. He denied the Soviet leadership was misinformed about the situation in Yugoslavia and claimed that the differences were over a matter of principle. He also denied Hebrang was a Soviet source in the KPJ but confirmed that Žujović was indeed one. Stalin questioned the scale of KPJ's achievements, alleging that the success of any communist party depended on Red Army assistance—implying the Soviet military was essential to whether or not the KPJ retained power. Finally, he suggested taking the matter up before the Cominform.[59] In their response to the second letter, Tito and Kardelj rejected arbitration by the Cominform and accused Stalin of lobbying other communist parties to affect the outcome of the dispute.[60]

Third letter and Cominform Resolution

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On 19 May, Tito received an invitation for the Yugoslav delegation to attend a Cominform meeting to discuss the situation concerning the KPJ. However, the KPJ Central Committee rejected the invitation the next day. Stalin then sent his third letter, now addressed to Tito and Hebrang, stating that failure to speak on behalf of the KPJ before the Cominform would amount to a tacit admission of guilt. On 19 June, the KPJ received a formal invitation to attend the Cominform meeting inBucharest two days later. The KPJ leadership informed the Cominform that they would not send any delegates.[61]

The Cominform published its Resolution on the KPJ on 28 June exposing the conflict and criticising the KPJ for anti-Sovietism and ideological errors, lack of democracy in the party, and an inability to accept criticism.[62] Moreover, the Cominform accused the KPJ of opposing the parties within the organisation, splitting from the united socialist front, betraying international solidarity of the working people, and assuming a nationalist posture. Finally, the KPJ was declared outside the Cominform. The resolution claimed there were "healthy" members of the KPJ whose loyalty would be measured by their readiness to overthrow Tito and his leadership—expecting this to be achieved solely because of Stalin's charisma. Stalin expected the KPJ to back down, sacrifice the "dubious Marxists", and realign itself with him.[62]

Aftermath

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Main article:Informbiro period
Photograph of a small rocky island at a short distance from the mainland shore
A prison camp was built on theGoli Otok to detain people convicted of supporting Stalin after the split from the Soviet Union.

Faced with the choice of resisting or submitting to Stalin, Tito chose the former, likely counting on the KPJ's wide organic base, built through the Partisan movement, to support him. It is estimated that up to 20 percent of the KPJ's membership supported Stalin instead of Tito. The party's leadership noticed this, and it led to wide-ranging purges that went far beyond the most visible targets like Hebrang and Žujović. These purges came to be referred to as theInformbiro period, meaning the "Cominform period". The real or perceived supporters of Stalin were termed "Cominformists" or "ibeovci" as a pejorative initialism based on the first two words in the official name of the Cominform—the Information Bureau of the Communist and Workers' Parties. Thousands were imprisoned, killed, or exiled.[63] According to Ranković, 51,000 people were killed, imprisoned, or sentenced to forced labour.[64] In 1949, special-purpose prison camps were built for male and female Cominformists on the uninhabited Adriatic islands ofGoli Otok andSveti Grgur respectively.[65]

U.S. aid to Yugoslavia

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Photograph of Dean Acheson facing the camera
Secretary of StateDean Acheson recognised that it was in the United States' interest to provide aid to Tito in the early years of theCold War.

Yugoslavia faced significant economic difficulties as a result of the split since itsplanned economy had depended on unimpeded trade with the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc. Fear of war with the Soviet Union resulted in a high degree of military spending—rising to 21.4 percent of thenational income in 1952.[66] The United States regarded the split as an opportunity to score aCold War victory, but it employed a cautious approach, uncertain if the rift would be permanent or if Yugoslav foreign policy would change.[67]

Yugoslavia first requested assistance from the United States in the summer of 1948.[68] In December, Tito announced that strategic raw materials would be shipped to the West in return for increased trade.[69] In February 1949, the U.S. decided to provide Tito with economic assistance. In return, the U.S. demanded the cessation of Yugoslav aid to the DSE when the internal situation in Yugoslavia allowed for such a move without endangering Tito's position.[70] Ultimately,Secretary of StateDean Acheson took the position that the Yugoslav five-year plan would have to succeed if Tito was to prevail against Stalin. Acheson also argued that supporting Tito was in the interest of the United States, regardless of the nature of Tito's regime.[71] The American aid helped Yugoslavia overcome the poor harvests of 1948, 1949 and 1950,[72] but there would be almost no economic growth before 1952.[73] Tito also received U.S. backing in Yugoslavia's successful 1949 bid for a seat on theUnited Nations Security Council,[74] despite Soviet opposition.[72]

In 1949, the United States provided loans to Yugoslavia, increased them in 1950, and then provided large grants.[75] The Yugoslavs initially avoided seeking military aid from the U.S., believing it would provide the Soviets with a pretext for invasion. By 1951, the Yugoslav authorities became convinced that a Soviet attack was inevitable irrespective of military aid from the West. Consequently, Yugoslavia was included in theMutual Defense Assistance Program.[76]

Soviet actions and military coup

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Photograph of a group of uniformed men posing for a photo
Protagonists of the split cooperated closely at Tito's wartime headquarters inDrvar in 1944, days beforeOperation Rösselsprung: Tito (furthest right),Žujović (next to Tito),Kardelj (centre), andJovanović (far left in the background)

When the conflict became public in 1948, Stalin embarked upon a propaganda campaign against Tito.[77] The Soviet Union's allies blockaded their borders with Yugoslavia; there were 7,877border incidents.[78] By 1953, Soviet or Soviet-backed incursions had resulted in the deaths of 27 Yugoslav security personnel.[79] It is unclear whether the Soviets planned any military intervention against Yugoslavia after the split. Hungarian Major GeneralBéla Király, who defected to the United States in 1956, claimed that such plans existed.[80] Later research by Hungarian historian László Ritter disputed Király's claim.[81] Ritter based his opinion on the absence of any former Soviet or Warsaw Pact archival material documenting such plans, adding that the Soviet and Hungarian armies made plans expecting an attack by the Western allies through Yugoslavia, potentially supported by Yugoslav forces. A major component of those preparations was the construction of large-scale fortifications along the Hungarian–Yugoslav border.[82] The Yugoslavs believed that a Soviet invasion was likely or imminent and made defensive plans accordingly.[83] A message Stalin sent toCzechoslovak PresidentKlement Gottwald shortly after the June 1948 Cominform meeting suggests that Stalin's objective was to isolate Yugoslavia—thereby causing its decline—instead of toppling Tito.[84] In an effort to discredit Tito, the Soviets helped Bulgaria establish three intelligence operations posts along the country's border with Yugoslavia – inVidin,Slivnitsa, andDupnitsa. Their purpose was to establish channels for the distribution of propaganda materials against Tito and maintain connections with Cominform supporters in Yugoslavia.[85] It is also possible Stalin was dissuaded from intervening by the United States' response to the outbreak of theKorean War in 1950.[86]

In the immediate aftermath of the split, there was at least one failed attempt at a Yugoslavmilitary coup supported by the Soviets. It was headed by theChief of the General Staff, Colonel GeneralArso Jovanović, Major GeneralBranko Petričević Kadja [sr], and ColonelVladimir Dapčević. The plot was foiled and border guards killed Jovanović nearVršac while he was attempting to flee to Romania. Petričević was arrested in Belgrade and Dapčević was arrested just as he was about to cross the Hungarian border.[87] In 1952, the SovietMinistry of State Security planned to assassinate Tito with abiological agent and a poison codenamed Scavenger, but Stalin died in 1953, before the plot could be implemented.[88][89]

InEastern Bloc politics, the split with Yugoslavia led to the denunciation and prosecution of allegedTitoists, designed to strengthen Stalin's control over the bloc's communist parties. They resulted inshow trials of high-ranking officials such as Xoxe, General Secretary of the Communist Party of CzechoslovakiaRudolf Slánský, Hungarian interior and foreign ministerLászló Rajk, and General Secretary of the Bulgarian Workers' Party Central Committee,Traicho Kostov. Furthermore, Albania and Bulgaria turned away from Yugoslavia and aligned themselves entirely with the Soviet Union.[90] Irrespective of the DSE's reliance on Yugoslavia, the KKE also sided with the Cominform,[91] declaring its support for Yugoslavia's fragmentation and the independence of Macedonia.[92] In July 1949, Yugoslavia cut off support to the Greek guerrillas and the DSE collapsed almost immediately.[93][91]

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^Serbo-Croatian:Raskol Tito–Staljin,Раскол Тито–Стаљин
  2. ^Russian:Советско-югославский конфликт,romanizedSovetsko-i͡ugoslavskiĭ konflikt

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^abBanac 1988, p. 4.
  2. ^Banac 1988, pp. 4–5.
  3. ^Banac 1988, pp. 6–7.
  4. ^Banac 1988, p. 9.
  5. ^abBanac 1988, p. 10.
  6. ^Tomasevich 2001, p. 142.
  7. ^Banac 1988, p. 12.
  8. ^Reynolds 2006, pp. 270–271.
  9. ^Banac 1988, p. 15.
  10. ^Reynolds 2006, pp. 274–275.
  11. ^abBanac 1988, p. 17.
  12. ^abTomasevich 2001, p. 759.
  13. ^Judt 2005, pp. 141–142.
  14. ^Judt 2005, pp. 130–132.
  15. ^Perović 2007, p. 59.
  16. ^Perović 2007, p. 61.
  17. ^McClellan 1969, p. 128.
  18. ^Ziemke 1968, pp. 375–377.
  19. ^Banac 1988, p. 14.
  20. ^Josipovič 2012, pp. 40–42.
  21. ^Perović 2007, pp. 36–37.
  22. ^abRamet 2006, p. 176.
  23. ^Banac 2008, p. xl.
  24. ^Klemenčić & Schofield 2001, pp. 12–13.
  25. ^Ramet 2006, p. 173.
  26. ^Judt 2005, p. 142.
  27. ^Jennings 2017, pp. 239–240.
  28. ^Perović 2007, pp. 42–43.
  29. ^Banac 1988, p. 219.
  30. ^abPerović 2007, pp. 43–44.
  31. ^Kane 2014, p. 76.
  32. ^Perović 2007, p. 52.
  33. ^Judt 2005, p. 143.
  34. ^Perović 2007, p. 40.
  35. ^abcPerović 2007, p. 57.
  36. ^Perović 2007, pp. 46–47.
  37. ^Perović 2007, pp. 47–48.
  38. ^abcPerović 2007, pp. 45–46.
  39. ^Ramet 2006, p. 174.
  40. ^Lulushi 2014, pp. 121–122.
  41. ^Theotokis 2020, p. 142.
  42. ^Perović 2007, note 92.
  43. ^Perović 2007, pp. 48–49.
  44. ^Banac 1988, pp. 31–32.
  45. ^Perović 2007, pp. 50–52.
  46. ^abBanac 1988, p. 41.
  47. ^Banac 1988, pp. 32–33.
  48. ^Banac 1988, pp. 41–42.
  49. ^Perović 2007, p. 55.
  50. ^Perović 2007, p. 56.
  51. ^abBanac 1988, p. 42.
  52. ^Lees 1978, p. 408.
  53. ^abBanac 1988, p. 43.
  54. ^Perović 2007, p. 58.
  55. ^Banac 1988, pp. 43–45.
  56. ^Ramet 2006, p. 177.
  57. ^Banac 1988, pp. 117–118.
  58. ^Banac 1988, pp. 119–120.
  59. ^Banac 1988, p. 123.
  60. ^Banac 1988, p. 124.
  61. ^Banac 1988, pp. 124–125.
  62. ^abBanac 1988, pp. 125–126.
  63. ^Perović 2007, pp. 58–61.
  64. ^Woodward 1995, p. 180, note 37.
  65. ^Banac 1988, pp. 247–248.
  66. ^Banac 1988, p. 131.
  67. ^Lees 1978, pp. 410–412.
  68. ^Lees 1978, p. 411.
  69. ^Lees 1978, p. 413.
  70. ^Lees 1978, pp. 415–416.
  71. ^Lees 1978, pp. 417–418.
  72. ^abAuty 1969, p. 169.
  73. ^Eglin 1982, p. 126.
  74. ^Woodward 1995, p. 145, note 134.
  75. ^Brands 1987, p. 41.
  76. ^Brands 1987, pp. 46–47.
  77. ^Perović 2007, p. 33.
  78. ^Banac 1988, p. 130.
  79. ^Banac 1988, p. 228.
  80. ^Perović 2007, note 120.
  81. ^Mehta 2011, note 111.
  82. ^Laković & Tasić 2016, p. 116.
  83. ^Perović 2007, pp. 58–59.
  84. ^Perović 2007, p. 60.
  85. ^Laković & Tasić 2016, pp. 116–117.
  86. ^Ramet 2006, pp. 199–200.
  87. ^Banac 1988, pp. 129–130.
  88. ^Ramet 2006, p. 200.
  89. ^Jennings 2017, p. 251.
  90. ^Perović 2007, pp. 61–62.
  91. ^abBanac 1988, p. 138.
  92. ^Judt 2005, p. 505.
  93. ^Judt 2005, p. 141.

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