Background Guide

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Background Guide _____________________________________________NewMUN 2019: The Berlin Crisis of 1961 ​ Index Letter from the Secretary-General 2 Letter from the Director 3 Letter from Nikita Khrushchev 3 History of Committee 5 Prelude to the Crisis of Berlin 5 The Formation of the NATO 5 The Formation of the Warsaw Pact 6 The Use of Proxy Wars in the Cold War 7 The Korean War 7 West and East Germany 8 West and East Germany Economy 8 Emigration and Defection Crisis 9 The Construction of the Berlin Wall 10 Current Situation 11 Reignition of Khrushchev’s Berlin Ultimatum 11 Characters 12 Bloc Positions 21 The Cold War 21 The Interest of the Warsaw Pact in Berlin 21 Committee Objectives 22 Bibliography 23 ____0____ ​ _____________________________________________NewMUN 2019: The Berlin Crisis of 1961 ​ Letter from the Secretary-General Dear Delegates and Faculty Advisors, networking and negotiating skill from delegates. Welcome to NewMUN 2019! Before anything, I would like to wish you the best I will just like to leave you the message, of luck in this two-day conference which that the only way to be successful is to is going to bring together the best MUN give your best. As Eric Thomas once said: delegates from Lima. I am sure that I will "You will be successful when you want witness the highest level of debate at this something as hard as you want to conference. breath". More than as a MUNer, but as a I wish you the best of luck in your responsible citizen, I understand that the committees and hope you have an global issues in our world must be solved amazing time in NewMUN 2019! by the international community. I also understand that MUN delegates don't Sincerely, have the capabilities to take the decisions Santiago Bustamante to change the world, but at least we have Secretary-General the capacity to outrage ourselves when seeing that something is not working for our well being. That capacity to go out and speak for your beliefs, to stand up and raise the flag of your country demanding for consensus, demanding for peace, demanding for the well being of everyone. That capacity is the only way in which countries can move forward, and it is the only way in which we will contribute to building a better world. Maybe a little visionary, but is the truth. This year, the Newton team has decided to increase the number of committees in order to have a MUN conference of the best quality. The topics that we have chosen tackle issues from the past, present, and future, therefore presenting a challenge for delegates to combine their knowledge and application to reach solutions. In many of the committees, Directors have been prepared to take the flow of the committee to a maximum moment of crisis in order to assess the ____1____ ​ _____________________________________________NewMUN 2019: The Berlin Crisis of 1961 ​ Letter from the Director Dear Delegates, The Crisis of Berlin of 1961 is a complex subject. Not because of the conflict itself. It is my honor to be your Director The Ultimatum introduced by Nikita committee for this edition of Newton Khrushchev is straight forward. However, Model United Nation Conference 2019. the intentions or reasons why and what This year we will be hosting the topic of would be the consequences of accepting the Crisis of Berlin of 1961 between the it or not is what is intriguing. Back in 1961 NATO and Warsaw Pact cabinet. shocked the world. Gladly, there was a pacific ending towards it. However, it is If you are reaching to read this letter, up to you to decide the course of history. great! You have accomplished something that most people in MUN haven’t done. I wish you the best, So I appreciate that. At the time of arriving to the committee, ask for a hug or a high five. Sebastian Alvino At the time of writing this, I am Newton Director of the Committee College alumni who has currently been accepted to the University of Buckingham, Glasgow, Groningen and Loughborough for the BSc program of Psychology. As a person myself who struggle with mental illnesses, I preach for understanding from both of you as individuals and as coworkers for this conference. After I have participated in 30 conferences, this would be the 31, I can say firmly that the excitement or the rush of adrenaline, at least at the time of entering to a conference never goes away. However, and this is my tip in this letter, always remember that feeling goes away as you enter the conference. It's you who tries to look for the solution and talk with the delegates representing different ideologies or interest. Be yourself as many of them can or will become your friends. After 6 or 7 years being in MUN has kept me going. Many of them have become close friends of mine. And I wish the same for you as delegates. ____2____ ​ _____________________________________________NewMUN 2019: The Berlin Crisis of 1961 ​ Letter from Nikita Khrushchev Dear Invited Representatives of the Nonetheless, even after my harsh words Warsaw Pact, have been laid, it is not our intention to start a belic conflict in middle of Since the October Revolution, the prosperity. The effects of the Third Reich Russian population stood together still ring in the memories of the soviet against the vile tsarist autocracy. The first people. But seeing the effects of the movement in its kind since the French American Empire and its allies resemble Revolution. However, unlike France, we the actions of the late Adolf Hitler against did not become an empire to conquer all the prosperity of the Warsaw Pact with Europe but a unified nation who has been anti-communist ideology and spread able to spare the words of Lenin and propaganda from the heart of their council Marx across all the world for the better of and congress to the ears of people who the mankind. trust blindly in their governments without really knowing the actions that they are Nevertheless, the capitalist empire planning to commit. But, we must not let embodied by the NATO and represented that the NATO throw us to the ground and by the United States has stopped the kick us until we bleed. It is necessary, we process of the humankind by invading must take action. That is why I call a countries and forcing their government summit of the Warsaw Pact this 13rd of into capitalist system without giving them August of 1961. the option of choosing. That is what happened in Nicaragua in 1927. That I wish you the best and that the spirit of what happened in South Korea in 1953. Lenin and Stalin feels your heart with the That is what happened in Haiti in 1913. strength to take the appropriate decision That is not the activity of a country that is seeking the improvement and the Nikita Khrushchev prosperity of democracy but a council of First Secretary of the Communist Party of men with interest and clearing their the Soviet Union agenda. This is why we are asking the allied forces to retire their armed forces from West Berlin. It is a weak point to us, Socialist Countries. By having LIVE OAK forces in the heart of the German Democratic Republic is a danger to the GDR population and a clear weak point for a future NATO invasion. Not just that but working with defectors by not improving their border security and admitting illegal immigrants is an offense to the entire Warsaw Pact. They know that the strength of us is our population and unity. ____3____ ​ _____________________________________________NewMUN 2019: The Berlin Crisis of 1961 ​ History of Committee Prelude to the Crisis of Berlin because of the amount of territory that the USSR had in control at the time of the The Formation of the NATO conference. This resulted in the division of Germany between the allied occupied From the remainings of the debris left by territory, West Germany, and the the fight between the Allied Forces and Soviet-occupied land, East Germany or the Axis Powers, humanity already knew the German Democratic Republic (GDR). that if the same methods. traditionally used were implemented, it would inevitably lead to another mass destruction conflict. World War II was an example of this: how the allied forces implemented unreasonably harsh sanctions in Germany, initiating one of the darkest years in German history not just breaking its economy but the morale of the German people, giving to birth a Fig 1. Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill and Henry resentful nationalist wave that would put Truman shaking hands at the Potsdam Conference Adolf Hitler in the history books. in 1945 After World War II, there were two newly In the meantime, anti-communist implemented superpowers: the United propaganda was massively distributed by States and the Soviet Union. The political figures inside of the United States presence of the Soviet Union and the and the United Kingdom. While in the communist ideology and economy started United States the Truman Doctrine1 and to spray all over Europe. An inherent the Marshall Plan2 was out loud spoken rivalry between these two superpowers and spread like fire, the strong emerged as a result of mutual distrust and anti-communist point of view of Churchill the American effort to exclude the Soviet was hardly missed. With his famous Iron Union from the international community Curtain Speech, he marked the first as their expansion was seen as a threat. instance of the intentions of the Soviet This fear was not irrational. Union trying to divide Europe under communist control.
Recommended publications
  • RUNNING HEAD: Paramilitary Police Paramilitary Police Organizations
    RUNNING HEAD: Paramilitary Police Paramilitary Police Organizations Abstract After providing the reader with examples of paramilitary structures and formalizing a definition of paramilitary, this manuscript analyzes the literature available and discusses several important themes, including: the rise of police militarization, international perspectives, community policing, hierarchy, subculture, and training. As the topic of community policing reemerges, the philosophical appeal remains, despite its use as a form of face saving and as a means to fund tactical units. On a subtler level, this study proposes that police subculture in the United States contrasts the general populace significantly, which could explain tensions between the police and public. Examination of the characteristics of this subculture shed some light onto the policing paradigm and on how communication unfolds inside and outside of police organizations. Through this synthesis, the appropriateness of a quasi-military paradigm and its resulting structure, language, and behavior, is brought into question. PARAMILITARY POLICE 2 “Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action and choice, is thought to aim at some good; and for this reason the good has rightly been declared to be that at which all things aim.” (Aristotle, 2009, p. 3) Introduction Law enforcement is one of the most interactive pieces of government with the public. Most people, across all cultures, have some notion of what policing is and some opinion of what it should be. In the past three decades a rise in the militarization of policing in the United States has been speculated, observed, and critiqued by many scholars in academia and professionals in law enforcement.
    [Show full text]
  • The Foreign Trade Regime in the Comecon Countries Today
    THE FOREIGN TRADE REGIME IN THE COMECON COUNTRIES TODAY KAzmuExz GRzmows~i* I. THE ScoPE OF REFORM Recently, in three important aspects, foreign trade techniques in socialist Europe were changed significantly. Economic expan- sion, the growing sophistication of national economies in the en- tire area and the need for closer cooperation, both among the members of the Council for Mutual Economic Aid (hereinafter Comecon) and with the free economy countries, have rendered the system of artificial separation of import and export activities from the production of goods obsolete. Accordingly, foreign trade has been made largely the responsibility of the producers again in an effort to involve them directly in more efficient competition for foreign consumers.' Second, in the effort to promote growing effi- dency within the Eastern Bloc, the General Conditions of Delivery of 19582 and the international code of sales and deliveriess were * Professor of Law and Political Science, Duke University. This article is part of a forthcoming book entitled, East-West Economic Relations, to be published by the author in 1972. 1. See generally K. Grzybowski, Soviet Private International Law 46 (1965); K. Grzybowski, The Socialist Commonwealth of Nations: Organizations and Institutions 29, 57 (1964); S. Pisar, Coexistence and Commerce: Guidelines for Transactions between East and West 243-816 (1970); Hoya, The Comecon Gen- eral Conditions-A Socialist Unification of International Trade Law, 70 Colum. L. Rev. 253 (1970). 2. Obshchie Usloviia Postavok Tovarov mczhdu Vneshnetorgovymi Organi- zatsiiami Stran-Uchastnits Soveta Ekonomicheskoi Vraimopomoshchi (General Conditions for the Delivery of Goods Between Foreign Trade Organizations of Member-Countries of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance), in Mnogos- toronnee Ekonomicheskoe Sotrudnichestvo Sotsialisticheskikh Gosudantv 121, 297 (Institut Gosudarstvi Prava Ak-ademii Nauk SSR 1967).
    [Show full text]
  • Documents of Contemporary Art: TIME Edited by Amelia Groom, the Introduction Gives an Overview of Selected Writings Addressing Time in Relation to Art
    “It is important to realize that the appointment that is in question in contemporariness does not simply take place in chronological time; it is something that, working within chronological time, urges, presses and transforms it. And this urgency is the untimeliness, the anachronism that permits us to grasp our time in the form of a ‘too soon’ that is also a ‘too late’; of an ‘already’ that is also a ‘not yet.’ Moreover, it allows us to recognize in the obscurity of the present the light that, without ever being able to reach us, is perpetually voyaging towards us.” - Giorgio Agamben 2009 What is the Contemporary? FORWARD ELAINE THAP Time is of the essence. Actions speak louder than words. The throughline of the following artists is that they all have an immediacy and desire to express and challenge the flaws of the Present. In 2008, all over the world were uprisings that questions government and Capitalist infrastructure. Milan Kohout attempted to sell nooses for homeowners and buyers in front of the Bank of America headquarters in Boston. Ernesto Pujol collaborated and socially choreographed artists in Tel Aviv protesting the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians. Indonesian artist, Arahmaiani toured the world to share “HIS Story,” performances creating problematic imagery ending to ultimately writing on her body to shine a spotlight on the effects of patriarchy and the submission of women. All of these artists confront terrorism from all parts of the world and choose live action to reproduce memory and healing. Social responsibility is to understand an action, account for the reaction, and to place oneself in the bigger picture.
    [Show full text]
  • Programmatic Theses of the Communist Organization CONTENT
    Programmatic Theses of the Communist Organization CONTENT 3 The Flame of Communism Burns On! 4 Our Worldview 5 Class society 7 The State 8 Imperialism 10 Fascism and anti-fascism 12 Proletarian internationalism 14 Proletarian women’s movement 15 The communist party 17 Socialism and Communism 20 The revolutionary strategy 22 Revolutionary Practice 24 The Fight against Opportunism and Revisionism 28 Closing Words 2 The Flame of Communism Burns On! It has been a full century since the October Revolution ushered in the first suc- cessful socialist revolution and changed the world, costing imperialism its first great defeat. Under Lenin‘s leadership in 1917, the actions of the Bolsheviks beca- The Flame of Communism Burns On! me a spark that spread like wildfire, heralding in a new epoch of revolution. Our Worldview The victory of the counter-revolution of 1989/90, the destruction of socialism, and the worldwide solidification of capitalism cost the workers movement and Class society communism greatly. Communist parties, once proud and influential - anchored in the masses and accepted as their revolutionary leadership – disappeared into The State the shadows of history. Our organizations were demolished, they lost their mass influence, they assimilated into the system under the influence of revisionism or Imperialism dissolved. A revolutionary spark as powerful as that of the October Revolution seems far from reach today. Fascism and anti-fascism Still we say: the flame of communism burns on! The ruling status quo is today Proletarian internationalism just as unbearable as it was then. Capitalism produces unimaginable wealth for the few and poverty, misery, and hardship for the many.
    [Show full text]
  • ACTA UNIVERSITATIS UPSALIENSIS Skrifter Utgivna Av Statsvetenskapliga Föreningen I Uppsala 194
    ACTA UNIVERSITATIS UPSALIENSIS Skrifter utgivna av Statsvetenskapliga föreningen i Uppsala 194 Jessica Giandomenico Transformative Power Challenged EU Membership Conditionality in the Western Balkans Revisited Dissertation presented at Uppsala University to be publicly examined in Brusewitzsalen, Gamla Torget 6, Uppsala, Saturday, 19 December 2015 at 10:15 for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. The examination will be conducted in English. Faculty examiner: Professor David Phinnemore. Abstract Giandomenico, J. 2015. Transformative Power Challenged. EU Membership Conditionality in the Western Balkans Revisited. Skrifter utgivna av Statsvetenskapliga föreningen i Uppsala 194. 237 pp. Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. ISBN 978-91-554-9403-2. The EU is assumed to have a strong top-down transformative power over the states applying for membership. But despite intensive research on the EU membership conditionality, the transformative power of the EU in itself has been left curiously understudied. This thesis seeks to change that, and suggests a model based on relational power to analyse and understand how the transformative power is seemingly weaker in the Western Balkans than in Central and Eastern Europe. This thesis shows that the transformative power of the EU is not static but changes over time, based on the relationship between the EU and the applicant states, rather than on power resources. This relationship is affected by a number of factors derived from both the EU itself and on factors in the applicant states. As the relationship changes over time, countries and even issues, the transformative power changes with it. The EU is caught in a path dependent like pattern, defined by both previous commitments and the built up foreign policy role as a normative power, and on the nature of the decision making procedures.
    [Show full text]
  • TOWI Nw866 O Uj
    TOWI Nw866 o uJ HAIII: 9 THE DECHOUKAOE HAS ONLY JUST BEOUN! PERU: IHIT BLOOD THAT HAS BEEI{ SPITT SHAtt NEUER BE FORGOIIE]II F{r**ffiffi sliti;::l$ 1986t6 Hoiti The Dechoukage Has Only Just Begun! Crisis in Haiti and the Tasks of Revolutionaries by the Haitian Internationalist Revolutionary- Group A Call to the Haitian Revolutionary Movement by the Haitian Revolutionary Internationalist Group and the Haitian Workers Party t6 People Are Disposed to Take Care of Business - Talks with Haitian Workers Party l8 Peru This Blood That Has Been Spilt Shall Never Be Forgotten 34 Flames Leap to Puno 37 Support for People's War in Peru Echoes on Every Continent 39 Excerpts From Worldwide Campaign Speech Five Years of People's War in Peru 44 RIM Committee Greets Peru Campaign 46 A "Shining Trench of Combat" Statement on the Massacre of Our Comrades in Peru's Prisons by the RIM Committee 28 "Day of Herois111" - Statement by the PCP Central Committee- 32 Forward Along the Path Charted by Mao Tsetung!42 Interview with Afghan Revolutionary 48 Romania: From Goulash Communism to Capitalist Austerity 58 The Weapon of Criticism: Book Reviews 64 A llorld to I,I4n is a quarterly published by World to Win, whose address is: BCM world to win London WCIN 3XX. U.K. This issue was printed by Russell Press, Bertrand Russeil House, Forest Road West, Nottingham, U.K. AUGUST, I986. Subscribe to A World to Win From Kurdiston to Colombio - people oll oround the world reod A World to Win Avoiloble in English, 'a.,ry%i_*{ Forsi, Sponish, ltolion, ond Turkish.
    [Show full text]
  • The Beginning of the Berlin Wall Erin Honseler, Halie Mitchell, Max Schuetze, Callie Wheeler March 10, 2009
    Group 8 Final Project 1 The Beginning of the Berlin Wall Erin Honseler, Halie Mitchell, Max Schuetze, Callie Wheeler March 10, 2009 For twenty-eight years an “iron curtain” divided East and West Berlin in the heart of Germany. Many events prior to the actual construction of the Wall caused East Germany’s leader Erich Honecker to demand the Wall be built. Once the Wall was built the cultural gap between East Germany and West Germany broadened. During the time the Wall stood many people attempted to cross the border illegally without much success. This caused a very unstable relationship between the government of the West (Federal Republic of Germany) and the government of the East (German Democratic Republic). In this paper we will discuss events leading up to the construction of the Berlin Wall, the government that was responsible for the construction of the Wall, how it divided Germany, and how some people tried to escape from the East to the West. Why the Berlin Wall Was Built In order to understand why the Berlin Wall was built, we must first look at the events leading up to the actual construction of the Wall in 1961. In the Aftermath of World War II Germany was split up into four different zones; each zone was controlled by a different country. The western half was split into three different sectors: the British sector, the American sector and the French sector. The Eastern half was controlled by the Soviet Union. Eventually, the three western occupiers unified their three zones and became what is known as the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG).
    [Show full text]
  • John F. Kennedy and Berlin Nicholas Labinski Marquette University
    Marquette University e-Publications@Marquette Master's Theses (2009 -) Dissertations, Theses, and Professional Projects Evolution of a President: John F. Kennedy and Berlin Nicholas Labinski Marquette University Recommended Citation Labinski, Nicholas, "Evolution of a President: John F. Kennedy and Berlin" (2011). Master's Theses (2009 -). Paper 104. http://epublications.marquette.edu/theses_open/104 EVOLUTION OF A PRESIDENT: JOHN F. KENNEDYAND BERLIN by Nicholas Labinski A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School, Marquette University, in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Milwaukee, Wisconsin August 2011 ABSTRACT EVOLUTION OF A PRESIDENT: JOHN F. KENNEDYAND BERLIN Nicholas Labinski Marquette University, 2011 This paper examines John F. Kennedy’s rhetoric concerning the Berlin Crisis (1961-1963). Three major speeches are analyzed: Kennedy’s Radio and Television Report to the American People on the Berlin Crisis , the Address at Rudolph Wilde Platz and the Address at the Free University. The study interrogates the rhetorical strategies implemented by Kennedy in confronting Khrushchev over the explosive situation in Berlin. The paper attempts to answer the following research questions: What is the historical context that helped frame the rhetorical situation Kennedy faced? What rhetorical strategies and tactics did Kennedy employ in these speeches? How might Kennedy's speeches extend our understanding of presidential public address? What is the impact of Kennedy's speeches on U.S. German relations and the development of U.S. and German Policy? What implications might these speeches have for the study and execution of presidential power and international diplomacy? Using a historical-rhetorical methodology that incorporates the historical circumstances surrounding the crisis into the analysis, this examination of Kennedy’s rhetoric reveals his evolution concerning Berlin and his Cold War strategy.
    [Show full text]
  • Ftaketettflugplafc Berlin
    A 1015 F MITTEILUNGEN DES VEREINS FÜR DIE GESCHICHTE BERLINS GEGRÜNDET 1865 88. Jahrgang Heft 1 Januar 1992 Rcisbifoliofhek ig der Ber!!f»r StodtbiWiathe» Der „Bogenschütze" im Schloßpark von Sanssouci, Parterre der Neuen Orangerie, Aufnahme November 1990 (Foto: Schmidt) Plastiken in Berlin: Der „Bogenschütze" von Ernst Moritz Geyger Ein Berliner Bildhauer und sein populärstes Werk Von Martin H. Schmidt Nur schwer läßt sich die gigantisch erscheinende Skulptur des „Bogenschützen" von Ernst Moritz Geyger im Schloßpark von Sanssouci übersehen. Seit 1961 steht der — von dem Potsda­ mer „Blechner" Gustav Lind1 in Kupfer getriebene — nackte Jüngling im Parterre der Neuen Orangerie; er hatte ursprünglich (seit 1902) im Sizilianischen Garten und zwischenzeitlich (1927—1960) in der Nähe des Hippodroms Aufstellung gefunden. Folgende Bemerkungen seien zunächst dem Schöpfer des „Bogenschützen" gewidmet: Der Künstler Ernst Moritz Geyger — Sohn eines Schuldirektors2 — wurden am 9. November 1861 in Rixdorf (heute Berlin-Neukölln) geboren. Mit sechzehn Jahren begann er seine künst­ lerische Ausbildung in der Malklasse der Kunstschule in Berlin und setzte sie von 1878 bis 1883 an der akademischen Hochschule fort. Wie auf viele junge Künstler übte sein Lehrer, der Tier­ maler Paul Meyerheim, auf die früh entstandenen Gemälde und Graphiken des Eleven einen unübersehbaren Einfluß aus.3 Trotz positiver Erwähnungen aus den Reihen zeitgenössischer Kritiker scheiterte Geygers Versuch, im Atelier des staatstragenden Künstlers der Wilhelmini­ schen Ära, Anton von Werner, unterzukommen. Als Geygers Hauptwerk in der Gattung der Malerei gilt das große Ölgemälde „Viehfütterung" von 1885. Ein breites Publikum erreichte der Künstler mit satirischen Tiergraphiken; die Radierungen, Kranich als „Prediger in der Wüste", „Elephant bei der Toilette" oder „Affen in einem Disput über den von ihrer Sippe ent­ arteten Menschen", riefen bei jeder öffentlichen Präsentation „das Entzücken der Laien wie der Kenner in gleichem Maße hervor.
    [Show full text]
  • THE BERLIN-KOREA PARALLEL: BERLIN and AMERICAN NATIONAL SECURITY in LIGHT of the KOREAN WAR Author(S): DAVID G
    THE BERLIN-KOREA PARALLEL: BERLIN AND AMERICAN NATIONAL SECURITY IN LIGHT OF THE KOREAN WAR Author(s): DAVID G. COLEMAN Reviewed work(s): Source: Australasian Journal of American Studies, Vol. 18, No. 1 (July, 1999), pp. 19-41 Published by: Australia and New Zealand American Studies Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41018739 . Accessed: 18/09/2012 14:16 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Australia and New Zealand American Studies Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Australasian Journal of American Studies. http://www.jstor.org AUSTRALASIAN JOURNALOF AMERICAN STUDIES 19 THE BERLIN-KOREA PARALLEL: BERLIN AND AMERICAN NATIONAL SECURITY IN LIGHT OF THE KOREAN WAR DAVID G. COLEMAN The Korean War had a profoundimpact on the ways in which American policymakersperceived the Cold War.Nowhere was thismore fact evident than in the case of Berlin. Despite the geographicalseparation between the two countries,policymakers became concernedwith what theyidentified as the 'Berlin-Koreaparallel.' Holding the Soviet Union responsible for North Korea's aggression,Washington believed that in NorthKorea's attackit was witnessing a new Sovietcapability that could give theUSSR a decisiveedge in the Cold War.
    [Show full text]
  • November 18, 1947 Record of the Meeting of Comrade I.V. Stalin with the Secretary of the CC French Communist Party Thorez
    Digital Archive digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org International History Declassified November 18, 1947 Record of the Meeting of Comrade I.V. Stalin with the Secretary of the CC French Communist Party Thorez Citation: “Record of the Meeting of Comrade I.V. Stalin with the Secretary of the CC French Communist Party Thorez,” November 18, 1947, History and Public Policy Program Digital Archive, Mikhail Narinskii, "Torez, 944-1947: Noviie materiali," Novaia i noveishaia Istoriia, no. 1, January-February 1996, pp. 26-30 (APRF, f. 45, op. 1 , d. 392, p. 83-106). Translated by Vladislav Zubok. https://digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org/document/134385 Summary: Stalin and Thorez discuss the status of the French Communist Party in the post-war world, as well as the ongoing struggle between communists and other left-wing groups in France. Original Language: Russian Contents: English Translation Record of the Meeting of Comrade I.V. Stalin with the Secretary of the CC French Communist Party Thorez Moscow, 18 November 1947. Present: Molotov, Suslov. [Thorez began the conversation with expression of respect and gratitude to com. Stalin on behalf of all members of French communist party and the CC FCP] Com. Stalin asks jocularly if Thorez is thanking him for the fact that in Warsaw [at the meeting of the Cominform in September 1 94 7] the French communists were berated. [rugali]. Thorez responds that the Communist Party of France is all too grateful for having been told about its shortcomings ... Thorez said that the estimate of the situation presented at the conference of nine communist parties is being brilliantly corroborated in France.
    [Show full text]
  • YUGOSLAVIA's FIRST POST-TITO PARTY CONGRESS Part I: Problems on the Agenda
    YUGOSLAVIA'S FIRST POST-TITO PARTY CONGRESS Part I: Problems on the Agenda by Dennison I. Rusinow 1982/No. 39 Europe [DIR-2-'82] The first post-Tito Party Con- been signs since the congress that gress emphasized continuity, this may happen sooner rather than later, but it had been clear for some despite the obvious fact that months before the comrades Tito's own guiding hand has assembled in Belgrade that it would been replaced by collective not happen then or without a few leadership. The political prob- more hard knocks from "life itself," lem attendant to this change in as Marxists are fond of calling the a conflict-prone multinational ultimate confounder of even best- society is equaled and reinforced laid schemes.- woes, by Yugoslavia's economic Continuity as the theme of the Con- gress was still unavoidable in June 1982 for a regime whose slogan since its founder's death has been "Continuity" was unavoidably, if "After Tito--Tito," and whose inappropriately, the name of the leaders have been unable to agree game for the Twelfth Congress of on reforms that they also fear would the League of Communists of be interpreted as the beginning of a Yugoslavia ("the Party") which met general "de-Titoization." in Belgrade from June 26 through It is generally and probably correctly 29, 1982. In the light of economic believed that even a widespread problems so grave that they ought suspicion that a general overhaul of to have serious social and political "Titoist" principles and institutions repercussions and the experience of is on theway would be singularly de- other countries after the passing of stabilizing.
    [Show full text]