- Timetable - organisational structure - participants - tasks - about the 3 conferences - dissolution of the Cominform
As early as 27 May 1946, at a meeting with the Yugoslav government delegation led by Tito, Stalin had presented a plan in the Kremlin for the creation of the Cominform.
From 22 to 27 September 1947, the founding conference of the Kominform took place in the Polish town of Szklarska Poreba. The Kominform was officially founded on 30 September 1947.
The second conference of Kominform was held in Bucharest - Romania in June 1948.
The third conference of the Kominform met in Budapest - Hungary in November 1949.
There were also 4 meetings of the Kominform Secretariat.
All minutes on decisions were allegedly (!) checked by the CC of the CPSU (B) and Stalin personally.
The First Conference of the Cominform took place in Poland
from 22 to 27 September 1947
Chair: Gomulka
Wladsylaw Gomulka lost his post as General Secretary of the Polish Labour Party in the summer of 1948 (!). After a comprehensive 'self-criticism' he lost all offices, is expelled from the government and sits in prison from 1950 to September 1954. So at the head of the founding conference of the Cominform was a traitor !!!! But Gumulka was by no means an isolated case. From beginning to end, the Cominform was composed of modern revisionists who had feigned their devotion to Stalin and the Soviet Union in order to follow their path to the end after his death into the deepest social fascism.
Participants in the First Conference:
From Poland Gomulka and Minc (both revisionists).
Minc, Hilary (1905-1974), Polish economic theorist
[Report of the Soviet delegates to Stalin: "the Poles are cowards and do not want to associate"]
from Yugoslavia: Kardej and Djilas (Titoists) [the Soviet delegation passed the following message to Stalin: "the reports of Kardej and Djilas made a very good impression"]. (This message to Stalin, this adulation of the Titoists must be read on the tongue!!).
Kardelj, Edvard (1910-1979); CP member since 1928; trained at the party school in Moscow; 1941 organiser of the partisan war in Slovenia; member of the Supreme War Council; after 1945 in the CC and Politburo, close collaborator of Tito 1948-1954 Foreign Minister
from Romania Dej and Anna Pauker Dej was a collaborator with the West; Anna Pauker was expelled from the Romanian Party with Stalin's approval as a member of an anti-party group and imprisoned in 1953. She was a delegate to the 7th World Congress).
from Hungary: Farkas and József Révai (both revisionists) - [ Report to Stalin: "In general Revai's report was good"].
Revai, Jozsef (1888-1959), founding member of the CP in 1918; emigrated to the CSR after the fall of the soviet republic; member of the exiled CC; returned to Hungary in 1930 and arrested; from 1933/34 in the USSR worked for the ECCI apparatus; 1937-1939 illegal party work in Prague; from 1940 in the propaganda department of KOMINTERN; returned to Hungary in 1944; 1945-1948 CC secretary in Budapest; 1945-1953 Minister of National Education; later ousted from the PB .
from France Duclos, Fajon, Georges Cogniot ( all three revisionists; Duclos= delegate to the 7th World Congress)
from Italy Longo and Reale, Longo became General Secretary of the revisionist Italian CP, Reale was also a revisionist) [communication to Stalin: "Longo's report made a painful impression on the majority of the participants"].
YOU ARE READING
ON THE COMINFORM
Historical Fiction70th anniversary of the Cominform-Bureau founded on 23rd of September 1947 published on occasion of the 109th birthday of comrade Enver Hoxha written by Wolfgang Eggers, 16th of October, 2017
