The fate of Austria and the Yugoslav territorial claims to it: the position of the USSR in inter-allied relations (June 1941 – May 1945)

Abstract

The article shows the development of the Slovenian-Austrian national-territorial conflict in South Carinthia and the Slovenian border areas of Styria during the Soviet-German war of 1941–1945. The position of the USSR on the events in the region is covered in the framework of Soviet foreign policy priorities and inter-allied relations. The nature and reasoning of the Yugoslav territorial claims to Austria, intermediate results of the conflict are shown.

Authors and Affiliations

Анатолий Петрович Сальков

Keywords

Related Articles

Reunification of Western Belarus with Byelorussian SSR and Western Ukraine with Ukrainian SSR as covered in the Soviet historiography of 1939–1941

The article discusses the fundamental statements of the Soviet historiography of 1939–1941 about the reunification of Western Belarus and Western Ukraine with the Soviet republics. It was discovered that Soviet historiog...

Мяшчанскае домаўладанне і землекарыстанне на тэрыторыі Беларусі (1860-я гг. – пачатак ХХ ст.)

На аснове заканадаўчых і справаводчых крыніц прааналізаваны асаблівасці мяшчанскага домаўладання і землекарыстання на тэрыторыі беларуска-літоўскіх губерняў у 1860-я гг. – пачатку ХХ ст. Выяўлена спецыфіка...

Activities of war prisoners voluntary units in all of the Russian Empire in 1914–1919

The article deals with the process of creation and operation of national voluntary units formed out of prisoners of war. Particular attention is devoted to the Czechoslovak Corps, created as a propaganda element, but eve...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP616313
  • DOI -
  • Views 75
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Анатолий Петрович Сальков (2017). The fate of Austria and the Yugoslav territorial claims to it: the position of the USSR in inter-allied relations (June 1941 – May 1945). Журнал Белорусского государственного университета. История, 0(3), 76-86. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-616313