Word: titos
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Germany should lose the war. Bulgaria could give her material aid: in Rumanian-held Bessarabia, now in the path of the Red Army, was a potential fifth column of over 150,000 Bulgars; in Yugoslavian Macedonia, Bulgarian troops were doing German guard duty against pro-Russian Marshal Tito's Partisans (some Bulgars had already joined his ranks...
Next day she died and Vladimir dug her a shallow grave with a pocketknife. Her service revolver he took as a souvenir. Militsa is now a ward of Marshal Tito...
...with a front-page lead and two pages inside, recognized the Partisans of Yugoslavia (TIME, Dec. 14, 1942, et seq.). In Cairo, where Correspondent C. L. Sulzberger filed the epic dispatch, once-hostile British censors passed a flood of encomiums to the Partisans, to their commander, Marshal Josip Broz ("Tito"), and to a party of Partisan officers who had come to Egypt. One booster even spread the report that Marshal Broz's favorite books are War & Peace and Pickwick Papers...
...airfields of Foggia. The General's implication: these, more than any other prize, put Anglo-American forces in position for a flank attack on southern France and/or the Balkan Adriatic coast. Presumably from Foggia's web of runways last week, Allied planes thrust an arm over Marshal Tito's troops, hammered the Nazi rail junction at Sofia and dromes near Athens...
...General, pinned down at least 27 German divisions. The General did not specify that only twelve of the 27 divisions actually stood in the Italian line. The remainder were a reserve held in northern Italy and recently tapped to reinforce the Wehrmacht in the Balkans. Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito and his ragged, resolute Liberation Army engaged more Germans (at least 14 divisions) than the British and Americans together engaged in Italy...