Description

A finalist of Non-Fiction Category of THE PEOPLE’S BOOK PRIZE (2011/2012).

Grasping the opportunity of the new information recently come to light, some of which he contributed, the author reveals how Britain’s staunchly anti-communist Prime Minister was deceived into giving his full backing to the communist Tito and cutting all aid to the anti-communist forces resisting the Germans in Yugoslavia. But for that decision, the author argues, Tito would not have overcome his political opponents and have emerged as the country’s undisputed ruler after the war.

Churchill relied on information provided by two trusted advisors, Fitzroy Maclean and William Deakin, who passed on without verification what Tito told them. The deception was compounded by a communist mole at SOE headquarters in Cairo who withheld or doctored information from liaison officers with the anti-communist leader, Draza Mihailovic.

The author explodes the myth of Tito as the heroic Partisan leader, plucked from obscurity by Churchill, who, unlike the rest of occupied Europe, fought the Germans throughout the war, liberating his country virtually unaided. The evidence is otherwise:

  • Tito used the munitions received from the British and Americans, not to kill Germans as promised to Churchill, but mostly to eliminate his political rivals.
  • He accused his political opponents of accepting weapons from the Italians while he was proposing joint action to the Germans to resist an Allied landing in the Balkans.
  • The Partisans’ pestering of the Germans did little to hinder Hitler’s utilisation of the local abundance in oil and minerals, so vital to the German war machine.
  • The German retreat from Yugoslavia was largely unharassed by Tito’s Partisans, to Churchill’s intense chagrin.
  • It was the Red Army which really freed Yugoslavia, not Tito’s Partisans.
  • At the end of the war he massacred in cold blood countless thousands of anti-communist Yugoslavs handed over to him by the British in good faith
  • Within weeks of his much-vaunted ‘difference of opinion’ with Stalin in June 1948 Tito was keenly trying to rejoin the Soviet camp.

That it has taken so long for the full story to emerge, the author suggests, is due to a concerted cover-up by a generation who had a vested interest in sustaining the myths surrounding Tito which they had helped to beget. In this the BBC played a controversial part.

In essence, this account is a revisionist biography of Tito, puncturing the wartime myths surrounding the communist leader.

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Author Details
Peter Batty, a newspaper journalist, joined the original BBC TV Tonight team, later becoming its editor. After a spell with ITV he set up his own production company to produce, direct and script for film and TV. Awards include a Grand Prix at the Venice Film Festival and the Silver Dove from the Leipzig Film Festival for his Fall and Rise of the House of Krupp (also a book). He produced and scripted for BBC TV two documentaries on Tito which The Daily Mail found ‘fascinating’, The Sunday Telegraph ‘excellent’ and The Sunday Times ‘a damning investigation into the political dealings of the Yugoslav Partisan leader’. He produced and scripted 6 episodes of the internationally-praised TV series The World at War. Most of his independent productions were shown in the USA, particularly his 5 part series on the American Civil War entitled The Divided Union (also a book) which was distributed in home-video by Reader’s Digest. He is the author of three film tie-in books.

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Reviews
‘a real eye-opener, a real contribution to our understanding of WWII in the Balkans, and a really good read as well. I must congratulate you on an impressive scholarly achievement’
Sir Antony Jay

Did Tito and his partisans deserve all our support, to the exclusion of other resistance fighters? Churchill, misled by viciously biased leftist advisers, concluded he did, and gave it in full. This minutely researched and closely argued tour-de-force of revisionist history clearly demonstrates how wrong Churchill was.’
Sir Jeremy Isaacs

‘Batty’s work is provocative and timely, especially as Yugoslav successor states currently grapple with their histories and, especially Serbia, with Mihailovic’s legacy.’
The Historian

‘The research and referencing for the book is impressive and for any student of the period it will provide a valuable bibliography. A recommended read for any student of WWII and the Cold War.’
Freedom Today

‘This is a long overdue expo of one of Churchill’s darkest secrets – and biggest mistakes – of the Second World War. Peter Batty is a highly respected documentary film-maker … he has an incredible insight into the truth of this sorry tale of deception and blundering. It’s a gripping read too and I highly recommend it to all readers.

Peter Batty’s absorbing book, based on scrupulous and wide ranging research, is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of the dismemberment of former Yugoslavia by the Germans and Italians during the 2nd World War and its temporary reunification under Tito’s brutal dictatorship. It convincingly challenges the myth, still not completely extinct, which credited the Croat/Slovene Communist Tito and his Partisans with providing the key resistance to the German occupation.’
5-star reviews on AmazonFor the full review, click here.