ABSTRACT

The party must display a firm revolutionary vigilance in order to detect disorderly elements, police, informers and investigators, and dismiss them from its ranks. The cases of the traitors Rajk and Kostov revealed the scandalous crimes of these spies and their ringleader, Tito. In 1948 serious disputes arose with the Yugoslavian Communist Party, leading to inadmissible interference on our part in that party’s internal affairs. The party’s central committee was right to undertake steps to resume normal relations with the League of Yugoslavian Communists; the French Communist Party was prompted by the determination to establish contacts and relations with Yugoslavia’s communist organization – contacts which are in the interest of the international workers’ movement and of peace. The Yugoslavians were imbued with revisionist conceptions of the character and development of capitalism. The Communist Party, directed by Tito, called for a national insurrection and led it to the victorious conclusions of a long and glorious war of liberation.