- Balkan Pact (1953)
The Balkan Pact of
1953 (officially: "Agreement of Friendship and Cooperation") was atreaty signed byGreece ,Turkey , andYugoslavia on28 February 1953 . It was signed in Ankara (Turkey).The treaty was to act as a dam against
Soviet expansion in the Balkan area. It provided for the eventual creation of a joint military staff for the three countries.At that time Turkey and Greece were already full-fledged members of
NATO .Communist Yugoslavia, however, did not want to join NATO. The Balkan Pact was a possibility to associate Yugoslavia with NATO in an indirect manner.But the new alliance showed its weakness from the very beginning. A few days after it came into being
Stalin died. As the new Soviet government started to relax its criticism towards Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav communist leadership were more willing to abandon open cooperation with the Western countries.In the course of
1954 and1955 Yugoslavia's overtures to the Soviet Union which resulted in a change of Yugoslav viewregarding the military significance of the Balkan Pact. The visit of Turkish PremierMenderes to Yugoslavia in May 1955 (only three weeks beforeKhrushchev 's visit to Tito) showed the difference between the Yugoslav and Turkish estimates of the international situation. Turkish Premier Menderes was interested in the whole field of cooperation within the Balkan Alliance. Yugoslavia was reluctant to take any steps that might appear to give added significance at that time to the military side of the Balkan Pact.Soon after that, the
Cyprus conflict between Turkey and Greece broke out and became a new danger for the Balkan Alliance.After the
Hungarian Revolution , Tito showed some interest in reviving the alliance. But, because of the Cyprus conflict, Tito's attempt to mediate between Turkey and Greece failed.
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