510 Notes to Pages 358–364
- PA, B 42, Band 1343.
- It stated that if a nation recognized East Germany, then it could not have diplo-
matic relations with West Germany. - BA, DY 30/1 IV 2/2 A-1.277; Dušan Nečak, “‘Ostpolitik’ Willyja Brandta in
Jugoslavija (1966–1974): Ponovna vzpostavitev diplomatskih stikov,” in Slovenija-
Jugoslavija: Krize in reforme 1968/1988, ed. Zdenko Čepič (Ljubljana: Inštitut za novejšo
zgodovino, 2010), 221–23. - Willy Brandt, Erinnerungen (Berlin: Ullstein, 2003), 42.
- Ibid., 237.
- NSK, Arhiv Bakarić, Kutija 20.
- Ljubograd Dimić, “Josip Broz Tito, Yugoslav Policy and the Formation of the
Concept of European Security, 1968–1975,” in From Helsinki to Belgrade: The First CSCE
Follow-Up Meeting and the Crisis of Détente, ed. Vladimir Bilandžić, Dittmar Dahlmann,
and Milan Kosanović (Bonn: Bonn University Press, 2014), 69. - Kavčič, Pot v osamosvojitev, 274, 275.
- Božo Repe and Jože Prinčič, Pred časom: Portret Staneta Kavčiča (Ljubljana:
Modrijan, 2009), 135–65. - Smole, Pripoved komunista novinarja, 140, 141.
- Stane Kavčič, Dnevnik in spomini: 1972–1987 (Ljubljana: Časopis za kritiko zna-
nosti, 1988), 430. - Franc Šetinc, Vzpon in sestop (Ljubljana: Cankarjeva založba, 1989), 67.
- AS, Dedijer, t. e. 233.
- Dabčević-Kučar, ’71: Hrvatski snovi, 1:117, 118, 137, 363.
- Ibid., 1:431.
- Ibid., 2:788, 794.
- Bilandžić, Povijest izbliza, 7 6.
- AJ, KPR, II-4-a, K 166.
- Dabčević-Kučar, ’71: Hrvatski snovi, 1:119, 120.
- Matunović, Titova sovladarica, 551.
- Dabčević-Kučar, ’71: Hrvatski snovi, 1:123, 147, 156; 2:808, 827.
- Ćosić, Piščevi zapisi, 2:27.
- Milosavljević, Činjenice i tumačenja, 101.
- Ridley, Tito, 391.
- Kavčič, Pot v osamosvojitev, 225.
- PA, B 12, Band 547.
- Dabčević-Kučar, ’71: Hrvatski snovi, 2:803.
- Bilandžić, Povijest izbliza, 94.
- TNA, FCO 28/1629/ENU 175.
- PA, B 12, Band 547.
- AS, Dedijer, t. e. 233.
- Dabčević-Kučar, ’71: Hrvatski snovi, 2:754.
- TNA, FCO 28/1630/ENU 1/1.
- TNA, FCO 28/1627/ENU 1/3.
- Kardelj, Spomini, 243.
- L. Perović, “Kako su se izražavali.”
- Trying to mimic Piedmont’s feat of unifying Italy under its own king in the mid-
nineteenthth century.