TITO'S STRATEGY: MAKE INVADERS PAY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170146-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 11, 2012
Sequence Number: 
146
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 27, 1980
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170146-5.pdf130.06 KB
Body: 
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170146-5 'V ARTICLE APPRARZD ON PAG3_2Z___, THE WASHINGTON POST 27 January 1980 Tack Anderson Tito's Strategy: Make Invaders Pay None of the aging, ailing communist leaders has been the subject of more Kremlin watching and waiting in re- cent years- than, has President Josip Broz Tito -of Yugoslavia. The Soviet hierarchy obviously has been hoping to use Tito's demise to restore its hold on his strategic Balkan stronghold. But the old partisan fighter-a thorn in the Russian bear's paw for virtually-' the entire threeand-a-half decades of his;- rule-may, have, succeeded in dashing the Kremlin's high hopes one last time. Several secret US. intelligence reports decribe the apparatus set up by Tito in the past 10 or 12 years to prevent Soviet domination of Yugoslavia after his dew, If his plans work out-and US. analysts think there's a good chance they will-the maverick communist leader will give his antique adversaries in Moscow a posthumous poke in the eye. The heart of Tito's grand plan is the as- surance that an Afghanistan style adven- ture by the Kremlin would exact a fear- ful toll. This assurance, in Tito's view, would be enough to dissuade the Soviets from embarking on such an adventure. One secret report, prepared by the. Defense Intelligence Agency, analyzes- Tito's overall strategy this way:'- "Tito--has'-._ continued a two-faceted policy toward the U.S.S.R..... which reflects a sensitivity to Soviet interests in Yugo- slavia without- yielding -Yugoslav inde- pendence. Tito appeared,' for example;.' to want to balance dependence on for.-- eign weapons sources between the United States and the U.S.S.R. At the. , same time, Yugoslav military exercises . ... clearly advertise resolve and capa-' bilities to defend the homeland."`, A top-secret CIA report notes that the Yugoslavs at one point took their con -terse direr It to the .. ambassador m Ae "Senior military cers told, the U.S: ambassador. that Yugoslavia is' interested in closer military relations," the report states. "One officer played down the regime's occasional assertions that. the West posed a threat to Yugo-. slavia as merely a political maneuver. ` .. As for the effect of Tito's strategy on the Kremlin, the DIA analysis says:. "Such careful orchestration of Yugo- slavSoviet relations [by Tito] probably reduces the likelihood of overt Soviet. meddling in Yugoslavia, but not Soviet desires to increase its influence there." Here's how the defense intelligence, experts assess the chances, of Soviet domination after Tito's death: "Without Tito's guiding hand, the Soviets might expect a larger measure of success... but we estimate that "-The-Yugoslav Federation will-sur- vive in spite` of internal- problems that ,will seriously threaten it.- ^ =:. .. - U.SS.R, is unlikely to invade a cohesive- Yugoslavia, and the Yugoslav military will, serve as an effective and possibly the primary unifying force." In recent Years. Tito worked fever- ishly to strengthen his nation's military capability. His success in t His crud venture was measured in a U.S. intelli- gence ocumen whose utle says i a l: "Yugoslavia's Strategy s to Make Any Invader Pay a Heavy Price. Yugoslavia has a standing army and air force of 250,000, bolstered by more than a million trained reservists known as "territorials." U.S. ` intelligence analysts had this. to say about the role of the reserves: . "Yu oslavia's defense system places great emphasis on the territorial force. . a nationwide artisan force ... organ .ized and trained at the local level. The territorial force, an outgrowth of Yugo- slav concerns over the Soviet invasion _ o fC C z e c h c . L s l o v a k i a in 1968. i adg u of both men and women... . 'The national defense law of 1968, strengthened in 1974, makes every citi- zen responsible for resisting foreign at-- tack.... The government and military take every opportunity to demonstrate that-an attack on the country would in-- volve.e a:potential--aggressor. -in- a_ protracted, bloody conflict." The Kremlin watched closely as the partisan ..,network ; took shape. And - -I whilethe Soviets-publicly pooh-poohed the creation of guerrilla forces, one in-1 telligence report notes, `Belgrade has strongly criticized Moscow for belit- tling these partisan accomplishments.'-' 1 The citizen soldiers would 'be Yugosla- via's second line of defense. A secret U.S. report explains that, as Tito planned it, the country's defense "would rest ini- tially on the regular army, which would engage the enemy along the borders and delay the advance until the territorials could be mobilized." ;The big flaw in the'partisan system,' my associate -Bob Sherman was told, is, that the Yugoslav territorials are poorly armed, and- only. a small percentage of them have seen military service in re-,- cent years. `They're equipped primarily, with small arms, mostly.old weapons cast; off by regular, units," a source noted. Still, U.S. analysts feel, the Yugoslavs are equipped, by. terrain,, tradition and temperament, towage the kind.of' guer-. rills warfare that could seriously disrupt' the Red Army just as Yugoslav (and. Russian) partisans harassed the, Nazi war machine during World War, 11. The key to Tito's hoped-for legacy of continued independence is an orderly. succession to power after his death, and eternal vigilance against Soviet infiltra tion. A new constitution set up 'a con," plex system of collective leadership, and the Communist Party apparatus- was revamped for tighter discipline. And in, 1974, a DIA report noted, Tito purged his top military leadership of pro-Soviet elee, ments. Tito's power as head of state will pass to two deputies after his death. They have been making decisions at the aging partisan's bedside since a renewed. illness threatened his liferr+i Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170146-5