During the Cold War, Yugoslavia had a specific international position generated by several shifts in its foreign policy. Although it was one of the original members of the Cominform (the Communist Information Bureau),1 Yugoslavia left the Soviet orbit of influence in June 1948, after the resolution which was a consequence of the conflict between the Yugoslav leader Tito (1945–80) and the Soviet leader Stalin (1924–53). The resolution of the Cominform accused the Communist Party of Yugoslavia of violating the unity of the socialist Bloc, betraying Marxist ideas, leading nationalist politics and spreading animosity toward the Soviet communist party, but the real cause was Tito’s intention to lead an independent state politics, without externa...
For a generation of East Europeans, party stalwarts, and Balkanologists raised to view the Yugoslav ...
Tito\u27s journey to Britain in 1953 became his first visit to a Western country since the establish...
Scholars have traditionally looked at the Trieste controversy as an early indicator of Cold War tens...
When Yugoslavia was expelled from the Cominform in 1948, the Western Powers (Britain, the USA, Franc...
In 1945, Yugoslavia constituted itself as a socialist state. Its legitimacy derived from the most su...
After the collapse of Yugoslav – Soviet relations in 1948, Yugoslavia was forced to change its forei...
From 1945 to 1950, the era of the early cold war, most of the nations of the world were in one of tw...
After the split with Stalin (1948), Yugoslavia took a turn in its internal and external policies whi...
The first comprehensive insight into one of the most spectacular episodes of the Cold War – the reco...
The Federal People’s Republic of Yugoslavia, headed by Josip Broz Tito, was the most radical of all ...
Yugoslavia’s faithful adherence to the Soviet Bloc ended in 1948 when the famous Stalin-Tito split g...
Yugoslavia as South Slavic state, initially formed in 1918, under the name of Kingdom of three Slavi...
In the Cold War, Yugoslavia was famous for its non-aligned foreign policy. Non-alignment was a polic...
It remains one of the saddest ironies in the history of conflict in the twentieth century that Yugos...
The thesis chronologically presents the slow improvement of relations between Yugoslavia and the Sov...
For a generation of East Europeans, party stalwarts, and Balkanologists raised to view the Yugoslav ...
Tito\u27s journey to Britain in 1953 became his first visit to a Western country since the establish...
Scholars have traditionally looked at the Trieste controversy as an early indicator of Cold War tens...
When Yugoslavia was expelled from the Cominform in 1948, the Western Powers (Britain, the USA, Franc...
In 1945, Yugoslavia constituted itself as a socialist state. Its legitimacy derived from the most su...
After the collapse of Yugoslav – Soviet relations in 1948, Yugoslavia was forced to change its forei...
From 1945 to 1950, the era of the early cold war, most of the nations of the world were in one of tw...
After the split with Stalin (1948), Yugoslavia took a turn in its internal and external policies whi...
The first comprehensive insight into one of the most spectacular episodes of the Cold War – the reco...
The Federal People’s Republic of Yugoslavia, headed by Josip Broz Tito, was the most radical of all ...
Yugoslavia’s faithful adherence to the Soviet Bloc ended in 1948 when the famous Stalin-Tito split g...
Yugoslavia as South Slavic state, initially formed in 1918, under the name of Kingdom of three Slavi...
In the Cold War, Yugoslavia was famous for its non-aligned foreign policy. Non-alignment was a polic...
It remains one of the saddest ironies in the history of conflict in the twentieth century that Yugos...
The thesis chronologically presents the slow improvement of relations between Yugoslavia and the Sov...
For a generation of East Europeans, party stalwarts, and Balkanologists raised to view the Yugoslav ...
Tito\u27s journey to Britain in 1953 became his first visit to a Western country since the establish...
Scholars have traditionally looked at the Trieste controversy as an early indicator of Cold War tens...