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~URSDAY, TANUARY 20, 1549
soviets Marshal Forces
Eor Showdown With Tito
peditor's Note: The’intlm*
of the following exelfim‘
NEA Foreign Service dis
patch has interpreted 2:»09)_!1-
munist aims in Europe: with
uncanny aceuracy. ‘His dis
pateh from Paris reporting a
gplit in the Politburo receiv
od confirmation from Presi
dent Truman. His report that
Moscow had ordered an end
{o the French miners’ strike
was confirmed by events, His
report from Rome of an im
pending Stalin effort to un
«eat the rebel Red Tito is bas
ed on equally r'eliz;ble sources.
BY LEON DENNEN
NEA Special Correspondent
m,.‘,;hf«(NEA)——ltalxan labor
circles in close contact with the
yugoslav situation fear, that the
ceething Balkan powderkeg is
about to explode again, .
A Soviet-engiheered coup d'etat
against the “Red Rebel,” Marshal
Tito, is imminent, theésy: believe,
and both sides are marchalling
troops and secret police for the
showdown.
The “Tito threat” was the sub
iect of prolonged discussion at a
special meeting of the Cominform
held recently at Sofia*after the
Bulgarian Communist Congress.
Among those present, in addition
to representatives from the Com
munist parties of Great Britain
France, ltaly and the satellite
countries, were the Russian Sec
retary of the Cominform; Yudin,
| as well as the Soviet General
sidor Artemovich Kovpak'and the
leuder of the anti-Tito faction in
Trieste, Vittorio Vidaii.
Kovpak, 56-year-oldy partisan
fighter and military confidant -of
Stalin, is an old hand at Balkan
Lgnung.
Vidali, under the alias.of: Sor
menti, was active during‘the last
waar as Moscow’s agent in the
United States and Mexico. 'He is
said to have been the man who
engineered the assasinatiohs of
Leon Trotsky and Carle Tresea.
Vidali is a bitter persenal foe of
Tito. :
Immediately after the . Sofia
meeting, Cominform ‘agents 'in
creased their pressure to upset the
lito regime from within. At the
same time, Hungariam..and Bul
sarian troops, augmented by pro-
Cominform Yugoslav ‘deserters
and Macedonian Irredentists, were
held in readiness on the Yugos
lav frontiers while General-Kov
pak, their commander-in-chief
went to Albania to participate in
a large-scale purge of pro-Tito
.Communists.
{ Count Carlo Sforza, Italian For
eign Minister, recently accused
EBulgaria and Hungary of violat
ing the peace treaty limitations
#for their armed forces. Despite
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|official satellite denials, observers
arriving in Rome from Sofia re
‘_podt increased Bulgarian troop
activity on the Yugoslav border,
Likewise, the Hungarian border
with Yugoslavia is now being re
inforced with substantial num
bers of regular and N. K. V. D.
troops under Soviet officers.
Reports from Yugoslavia indi-
I cate Tito is preparing to meet the
attack. The purge of pro-Comin
form elements in Yugoslavia ex
ceeds even that of the satellite
countries. An ex - Soviet agent
himself, Tito, in the view of per
sons who have recently been in
personal contact with him, will
not be calight off guard. After a
brief period of hesitation he now
realizes that as far as the Krem
lin is concerned he has burned
all his bridges behind him.
Tito is now gently preparing his
followers not only for a political
but also for a complete ideologi
cal break with Stalinism. As yet
to be sure, he has shown no sign
that he wishes to be reconciled
'with the ‘capitalis'”” West. How
ever, he has been making over
]tures to Italian socialist, whom he
hitherto regarded as the ‘“agents
of capitalist imperrialism.”
A broad hint that Tito may use
;the Marxist but violently anti
' Communist Social Democrats as a
i back door to the West was con
"tained in his New Year’s broad
i cast to the people of Yugoslavia
{in which he derided the political
theory that “the end justifies the
means.”’ :
“Great things,” he said, “can
jnever be muilt by foul means and
|in a dishonest way.”
Although new for Tito, this
theory has been preached by So
cial Democrats ever since the Bol
sheviki seized power in Russia by
violence and represents a sharp
break with orthodox Leninist-
Stalinism thinking.
’ A leading Itallan Socialist fa
miliar with Yugoslav events told
this correspondent: “Tito, like all
manatical Communists, must learn
the hard way. His conversion to
Social Democracy will not resur
rect the thousands of men and
women he destroyed ruthlessly
in the name of the theory which
he now deplores. Nevertheless,
[the fact that, on the surface at
least, he now rejects violence rep
tresents a significant step for
ward.”
( The quarrel between Tito and
Stalin has its humorous side.
"Shortly before his break with the
| Cominform, Tito signed a con
‘,tract with - Czechoslovakia for
|coke. After the break, the Czechs
zrefused to deliver. After prolong
ied negotiations, the Czechs beset
by their own economic troubles,
i consented to ship the coke to Yu
goslavia — at prices double those
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This, ladies and gentlemen, is a
house dress, 1949 style. The off
the-shoulder model, worn by
Royce Kane, was shown at the
National Association of House
Dress Manufacturers’ A meeting
in New York. Note that Royce
‘is wearing gloves. " Very chic for
dish-washing,
originally asked. Tito’s agents ap
proached the Geneva office of the
European Economis Mission of the
United Nations which immediate
ly supplied Yugoslavia with coke
from Belgium and the Ruhr at
one-thord the price demanded by
Czechoslovakia. The Czechs then
accused the European Economic
Mission of ‘“sharp capitalist prac
tices.” ' o el
It is estimated that 97 per cent
of people ‘who live beyond mid
life develop bone and joint changes
characteristic of arthritis and
rheumatism.
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PAGE THREE-A