STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 1859, sig. 109-5/87 Page 12 · 12 of 21
A SOCIETY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 1859, sig. 109-5/87
English Translation
should undertake not to allow foreign troops to march through their territory, 3, Both countries should commit themselves, no one laughs to allow the establishment of military bases in their territory.The purpose and goal of such agreements is, of course, to be recognized at first sight. Such an agreement would primarily serve the narrow and Turkish interests and favour these two states unilaterally. The individual points are directed against the wishes of Soviet Russia, as it was recently interpreted by Sobolev in Sofia and, of course, also against any plans of Germany towards the Mediterranean Sea and towards Syria, by such an abkomen, in dcs of course also Yugoslavia through an appropriate Bulgarian-Yugoslavian agreement to be built, should to some extent a protective wall be built Russian gsauer can be built and its primary focus is on the work conducted at the head of English engineers, Kavala but liegý so dioht on the Bulgarian border that from here all important points in Bulgaria could be attacked lightly. If the envisaged agreement between Turkey and Bulgaria were to be reached, Bulgaria would, in fact, be unprotected against military action by England. In conjunction with these plans in the Balkans, the request of the Hungarian Foreign Minister Count Csaky in Belgrade was of particular interest, of course, when the intention of this trip became known in Budapest, the well-known anti-German delegation in the Hungarian parliament, Baicsy-Zsilinsky, gave a speech in which he welcomed the fact that the resentment and Yugoslavians, to the attention of 30 million people, now very much to humanize themselves, and to defend their freedom and independence, these statements were especially welcomed and applauded by the representatives of the government party, It must be noted that such insinuations were clearly and decisively rejected by the Yugoslav authorities. But that's where it's going.