
- 259 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Tito's Imperial Communism
About this book
Markham writes with indignant sympathy for the mass of the Yugoslav people, who for centuries have endured persecution from almost every national group in Europe and who face the steam roller of communism. To him, Tito and his Moscow-directed communism are not the salvation of Yugoslavia, as many have thought, but a deadly menace to Yugoslav prosperity and peace."THIS book is designed to describe some developments that have taken place in Yugoslavia since the beginning of the Second World War. It is not designed to be a textbook in history, nor to serve chiefly as a chronicle, but rather to point out the most salient features of a sad picture. It is an attempt to reveal the pattern in a tragic and extremely complex situation.The pattern will indicate that the sixteen million South Slavs, inhabiting an area about the size of the state of Oregon, have passed under a ruthless totalitarian dictatorship, exceeding in regimentation and autocracy any regime to which they have been subjected during the last two centuries.Practically every point treated in this book is controversial and may raise doubts in the mind of the reader. To obtain a clearer understanding of the extremely vital conflicts and trends, one would do well to heed the following admonitions: First, it is a fatal mistake to believe that B is good because A was bad. Such an error leads one into hopeless confusion."
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Table of contents
- Title page
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- DEDICATION
- Foreword
- CHAPTER ONE — Who Are the Yugoslavs?
- CHAPTER TWO — Religions in Yugoslavia
- CHAPTER THREE — Mihailovitch Appears
- CHAPTER FOUR — The War Comes to Yugoslavia
- CHAPTER FIVE — Soviet Russia Degrades Prostrate Yugoslavia
- CHAPTER SIX — Mihailovitch Organizes Underground Resistance
- CHAPTER SEVEN — Yugoslavia’s Social Structure
- CHAPTER EIGHT — Yugoslav Communists
- CHAPTER NINE — Mihailovitch and Tito Clash
- CHAPTER TEN — The Serbs Are Massacred
- CHAPTER ELEVEN — Mihailovitch’s Anti-German Tactics
- CHAPTER TWELVE — Tito’s Anti-German Tactics
- CHAPTER THIRTEEN — Tito Organizes a Revolutionary Government
- CHAPTER FOURTEEN — Tito’s Military Contribution
- CHAPTER FIFTEEN — Collaboration and Accommodation
- CHAPTER SIXTEEN — Britain Throws Its Support to Tito
- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN — We Plunge Deeper Into Yugoslavia’s Civil War
- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN — Tito Is Installed
- CHAPTER NINETEEN — Fascists in Tito’s Ranks
- CHAPTER TWENTY — Balkan Pan-Slavism: Tito’s Relations with Bulgaria
- CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE — The Role of Macedonia
- CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO — Has the Federalizing of Yugoslavia Brought Harmony?
- CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE — Tito’s Regime and the Yalta Conference
- CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR — What Is Tito Doing to the Common People?
- CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE — Tito Menaces Balkan Peace