Salami tactics


Salami tactics - to describe the practice of gradual elimination of democratic delegations and the takeover of power by communists in the countries occupied during World War II by the Red Army, and which are now in the zone of Soviet influence. The definition of the Stalinist plan was laid down by Hungarian communist Mátyás Rákosi.

The effectiveness of salami tactics was influenced by the presence of individual Red Army countries, which allowed for the weak organization of those communist parties. The goal was to take full control of the states, so that the communists had transitional coalitions with separate left or center parties, taking over strategic state offices. Then, using propaganda and perfect terrorist apparatus, the Communists accused coalitionists of fascist and anti-Soviet views, combating them and taking over full state power. In 1945-1947, the communist authorities took over in Poland, Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Albania; The communists also strengthened their position in the Soviet occupation zone in Germany. In Czechoslovakia, however, the Communist Party tried to gain power by the legal method; After failing, she made a successful coup in 1948. Bibliography

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