May 1947 crises
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Communism in Italy |
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In the May 1947 crises, also referred to as the exclusion crises, the
In Italy
In
The Italian political crisis and anti-communist movement were dependent on Mafia violence. The Mafia made deep connections with the Christian Democrats in the mid-1940s through figures such as Calogero Vizzini, who was also an operative for the US military. The politicized Mafia employed terror as a tactic against the labor movement and the Communist Party, killing dozens of leftists in this period. The 1 May massacre by Salvatore Giuliano is often alleged to be one of these Christian Democrat-associated events.[6][7] According to Peter Robb, "The mafia had commissioned the crime for the politicians...just as it was picking off individual communists, socialists, and trade unionists. Another dozen had been killed that same year of 1947...The mafia was making itself useful to its new political protectors by dispatching its enemies, a pattern that was to continue for decades." Prior to his mysterious killing in state custody, Guiliano lieutenant Gaspare Pisciotta implicated the DC directly for the massacre through Ministry of the Interior Mario Scelba.[8] Writers such as Gaia Servadio and Peter Dale Scott believe there was US involvement through an intelligence-mafia network run by William J. Donovan.[9] While specific accusations are controversial, there is consensus that Giuliano "was being used as a vanguard in a domestic political battle with the Communists."[10]
In France
In France, conflicting policies of members of the governing Tripartisme coalition, which included the democratic socialist French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), the French Communist Party (PCF) and the Catholic Popular Republican Movement (MRP), created tensions, and economic conditions were dire under the presidency of Paul Ramadier. The French Communist Party (PCF) had the support of one in every four voters, polling the largest percentage of votes of any party between 1946 and 1956.[11] Ramadier received warnings from the US Ambassador Jefferson Caffery that the presence of Communists in the government would lead to the blocking of American aid, or perhaps worse. ("I told Ramadier," Caffery wrote in his diary, "no Communists in gov. or else").[12] Ramadier began looking for a pretext to purge them. As the great French strikewave of 1947 began, a rumor circulated among the ministers in Ramadier's party, the SFIO, that the Communists were plotting a coup for 1 May, and the military was secretly mobilized.[13] The Communist ministers opposed Ramadier in a vote on wages policies, and, on 5 May 1947, he expelled them from the government. The following year, the US rewarded France with hundreds of millions of dollars in Marshall Plan aid.[14] No evidence of coup plot was ever found, and it was confirmed that the PCF had initially opposed the April strikes. The Communist Party's absence from government in France lasted well beyond the fall of the Fourth Republic, and the effect of this absence upon the party system and the stability of government have prompted historians such as Maynard Williams to describe 5 May 1947 as 'the most important date in the history of the Fourth Republic'.[15]
Related events
Communist ministers were dismissed from several other European governments in 1947
At the same time as Communist ministers were being dismissed from Western governments, the Soviets were consolidating their hold over what would become the
See also
Sources
- Ginsborg, Paul (2003). A History of Contemporary Italy: Society and Politics, 1943-1988, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 1-4039-6153-0
- Williams, Philip Maynard (1972). Crisis and Compromise: politics in the Fourth Republic, Longmans
References
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- ^ "The Communists - Historical events in the European integration process (1945–2014) - CVCE Website". University of Luxembourg.
- ISBN 978-0-7190-1083-5.
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- ^ Part 2: Communist take-over, 1946-1949 The Institute for the History of the 1956 Revolution.
- ISBN 978-0-521-85766-6.
- ISBN 978-963-9241-80-0.
- ^ "The History of the Soviet Bloc 1945–1991 - A CHRONOLOGY - PART 1 - 1947". www.coldwar.hu.
- ^ ISBN 978-963-9241-80-0.