Affiliation:
1. Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Institute for Balkan Studies, Belgrade
Abstract
This paper looks at Nikola Pasic?s views of and contribution to the foreign
policy of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (SCS/Yugoslavia
after1929) during the latest phase of his political career, a subject that
has been neglected by historians. His activities in this field are divided
into two periods - during the Paris Peace Conference where he was the head of
the SCS Kingdom?s delegation and after 1921 when he became Prime Minister,
who also served as his own Foreign Minister. During the peace conference,
Pasic held strong views on all the major problems that faced his delegation,
particularly the troubled delimitation with Italy in the Adriatic. In early
1920, he alone favoured the acceptance of the so-called Lloyd
George-Clemenceau ultimatum, believing that the time was working against the
SCS Kingdom. The Rapallo Treaty with Italy late that year proved him right.
Upon taking the reins of government, Pasic was energetic in opposing the two
restoration attempts of Karl Habsburg in Hungary and persistent in trying to
obtain northern parts of the still unsettled Albania. In time, his hold on
foreign policy was weakening, as King Alexander asserted his influence,
especially through the agency of Momcilo Nincic, Foreign Minister after
January 1922. Pasic was tougher that King and Nincic in the negotiations with
Mussolini for the final settlement of the status of the Adriatic town of
Fiume and the parallel conclusion of the 27 January 1924 friendship treaty
(the Pact of Rome). Since domestic politics absorbed much of his time and
energy, the old Prime Minister was later even less visible in foreign policy.
He was forced to resign in April 1926 on account of his son?s corruption
scandal shortly before the final break-down of relations with Italy.
Funder
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
4 articles.
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