CIA secret document detected, German spying on Yugoslavia's division

The CIA's secret document and the German secret service, which speaks of redealing Yugoslavia's lands and Albanian lands in the region, is discovered. CIA secret document named “CO NFIDENTIAL”, which was drafted in Munich in 1977 between CIA and German agents envisioned Yugoslavia's division in two [...]
The CIA's secret document and the German secret service, which speaks of redealing Yugoslavia's lands and Albanian lands in the region, is discovered.
CIA secret document named “CO NFIDENTIAL”, which was drafted in Munich in 1977 between CIA and German agents predicted Yugoslavia's division in two blocs: the bloc that would pass on German influence and the bloc that would pass under US influence.
And if you look at the current situation, it's clear that everything has worked out that way.
The document that was published by the British newspaper Telegram indicates that the US CIA and Federal Intelligence Service agreement, Germany's BND divides Yugoslavia's Federative Socialist Republic into three “ <xkolon”, i.e. The areas of interest. A similar pattern of separation took place during World War II.
According to this document, great powers would divide Yugoslavia's Socialist Socialist Republic in this way: Slovenia, continental Croatia, Istria, as well as western and northern Bosnia and Herzegovina would become part of German influence; South of Croatia, Dalmatia, Montenegro, Kosovo, part of Raska region; southern Serbia The Valley of Presevo) and Macedonia would meet the United States and would be the area of its influence; Vojvodina saw southern Banat would belong to Hungary and be in its control.

Independent Serbia would receive the territory it has practically today, namely central Serbia saw southern Serbia and part of Vojvodina about Pancevo and Vrcescu.
The CIA had planned the breakup of Yugoslavia since the early 1970s, so 10 years before the death of RSFJ powerful leader Josip Broz Tito.
The CIA has opened some of the old documents to the public since last year, and today many plans and scenarios are open to the public but also to the analysis of historians, journalists, and so on.
The intriguing report of the Cold War attack speaks of strengthening decentralisation in Tito's Yugoslavia and predicts that “stability in the post-Soviet era is not safe”.
We are three years after the adoption of the Constitution of Yugoslavia, where Kosovo was declared the Autonomous Wing and 3 years before the 1981 demonstrations, where the Kosovo “Republika” movement began.
Actually, RSFJ maps have been circulated by secret services since 1981, after Tito's death, because the CIA knew since 1970 that Yugoslavia would collapse. Yugoslavia's split into areas of interest has already become a fact done.
Yugoslavia's split into World War II (1941) was carried out by German, Italian, Bulgarian and Hungarian invading forces. In line with Bosty's forces policy, Yugoslavia was liquidated as a state.
The Germans and Italians formed three state protectorates: Independent state of Croatia, Serbia of Nedic and Independent State of Montenegro, in which Yugoslav peoples maintained a quasi-state form in Hitler's new order, while the peripheral parts of Yugoslavia were simply annexed by neighbouring states: Germany, Italy, Hungary, Bulgaria and Albania (which in itself was part of the Empire of Vittorio Emmanuel III.
After World War II, Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt shared Yugoslavia 50% to 50%. So north was west and south to the Soviet Union. But Stalin did not allow Tito to turn Albania into a Serbian protectorate, what he showed in Politbyro's 1947 letter, which saved Enver Hoxha from the scheme that Koci Xoxe and pro-Yugoslav people had prepared.
The release of these documents sheds light on a plan that seems to have had its references on concrete ground and nothing has been random; that is, from guerrilla groups, to the political movement in Kosovo led by the late Ibrahim Rugova.
Historians are entitled to give the cold, impartial presentation of these facts to analyze the developments of those years as clearly and as well. Without the need for a person to take credit that he did not have or invent traitors.
Archives are already open; Every day comes the crumbs that reveal everything.












