Memorandum from Rear Admiral R. H. Hillenkoetter to President Harry S. Truman
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OCR Page 1 of 2ER086
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
WASHINGTON 25, D.C.
with
29 June 1948
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
The Cominform resolution denouncing Marshal Tito and the
other top Yugoslav Communists may represent a desperate attempt by the
Kremlin to discipline Tito and restore strict international Communist
control over the more nationalist Yugoslav Communist Party. For the
first time, the Kremlin has been obliged to discipline a national
Communist Party which controls all the instruments of power in the
state. Normal Communist Party channels apparently have proved inef-
fectual and the Kremlin has been forced to the distasteful necessity
of airing publicly a loviet-Satellite disagreement. Moreover, through
its public denunciation of Tito, the USSR has confronted Yugoslavia
with the immediate necessity of determining its future relationship
with the Soviet bloc.
Although the possibility exists that Tito and his associates
are in Soviet custody and that the Cominform resolution was designed
to explain his fall from power and complete the destruction of his
prestige, the best available information indicates that Tito and his
clique are still in control in Yugoslavia. It is unlikely that the
Kremlin would have called upon the Cominform if it could have disposed
of Tito from within. Moreover, such a coup within the Yugoslav Com-
munist Party would probably not have been preceded by any publicity.
In determining their reaction to the Cominform action, the
accused Yugoslav Communists are faced with the realization that they
can make no statement which will permanently heal the breach between
them and the Kremlin. Complete admission of guilt by Tito and his
lieutenants would not only do little toward lessening the Kremlin's
determination eventually to eliminate them but would probably accel-
erate the process. On the other hand, Tito is probably reluctant to
risk at this time a complete break with the Kremlin by flatly denying
ARCHIVES
the Cominform accusations.
Consequently, Tito's most probable immediate reaction will be
GOMER
to issue a temporizing statement in order to postpone a final decision.
In the interim, Tito can be expected to (1) take steps to consolidate
his position within Yugoslavia; (2) extend cautious feelers to deter-
mine Western reaction if Yugoslavia should withdraw from the Soviet bloc;
DECLASSIFIED
Authority
NLT- 76.15
SECRET
By He NLT Date 10.4.72
Terms
Subject
Tito, Josip Broz, 1892-1980
Relations
belongs_to