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International Agrarian Bureau

The International Agrarian Bureau (IAB; Czech: Mezinárodní Agrární Bureau, French: Bureau International Agraire), commonly known as the Green International (Zelená Internacionála, Internationale Verte), was founded in 1921 by the agrarian parties of Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Yugoslavia. The creation of a continental association of peasants was championed by Aleksandar Stamboliyski of the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union, but originated with earlier attempts by Georg Heim. Following Stamboliyski's downfall in 1923, the IAB came to be dominated by the Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants in Czechoslovakia, whose member Karel Mečíř served as its first leader. Mečíř was able to extend the IAB beyond its core in Slavic Europe, obtaining support from the National Peasants' Party in Greater Romania; as an ideologue, Milan Hodža introduced the Green International to European federalism.

International Agrarian Bureau
(International Peasant Union)
Four-leaf clover logo as used by the Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants; popularized by the IAB as an agrarian symbol
Countries and regions with IAB members, before 1935
  Founding members (joined 1921)
  Joined by 1927
  Joined by 1934
  Bavarian People's Party (involved in 1921)
  Greek Agrarian Party [el] (joined in 1930, dropped out in 1931)
Note: Shaded areas represent regional parties.
AbbreviationIAB/IPU
FormationNovember 1921; 102 years ago (November 1921)
Dissolved1971; 53 years ago (1971)
TypePolitical international
PurposeAgrarianism
Cooperative movement
Pan-Slavism (to 1927)
European federalism
Pacifism
Anti-communism
Anti-fascism
Location
Region served
Europe (originally)
Central and Eastern Europe (from 1947)
President
Karel Mečíř (first)
Ferenc Nagy (last)
Secretary-General
G. M. Dimitrov (first)
Main organ
Bulletin du Bureau International Agricole
Monthly Bulletin of the International Peasant Union

Hodža also redefined international agrarianism as a "Third Way" movement. The Bureau was thus a key competitor with the Krestintern, or "Red Peasant International", which existed as a proxy of the Communist International (or Comintern). In 1929 to 1934, the IAB also gathered allegiances from parties in other areas of the continent, managing to draw the Croatian Peasant Party away from the Krestintern, and helping to create the French Agrarian and Peasant Party. This drive was interrupted by the spread of fascism, which identified Greens as its enemies—although some sections of the IAB came to favor cooperation with the various fascist movements. From 1933, Nazi Germany also interfered directly in the politics of IAB countries. Germany's occupation of Czechoslovakia, and subsequently its takeover of Continental Europe, put an end to IAB activities, though attempts were still made to revive it from London.

In 1947, the Bureau was reestablished as the International Peasant Union (IPU), grouping agrarianist refugees from the Eastern Bloc. This group incorporated the Polish People's Party and the Hungarian Smallholders Party, whose leaders Stanisław Mikołajczyk and Ferenc Nagy were successively IPU presidents. Primarily anti-communist, this Green International fought a propaganda war against the Soviet Union, exposing its involvement in mass murders and its brutal oppression of agrarian movements.

This new Green International was powerless in effecting political change in Soviet-dominated countries, although its activities attracted the attention of communist regimes, who described the IPU as "fascist". In 1952, authorities in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic indicted a number of political and intellectual figures during a show trial of the Green International; the sentences were overturned in the 1960s. Beset by financial troubles, apathy, and disagreements between its leaders, the IPU itself was inactive from 1971.

IAB edit

Origins edit

The concept of a "Green International" in the service of peasant interests dates back to the 1900s: in 1905, an Italian Socialist Party newspaper voiced hopes that such a movement would be formed around the International Institute of Agriculture.[1] In 1907, an International Confederation of Agricultural Associations was formed in the German Empire, but it failed to survive World War I. It was later partly revived as a Pan-German Peasants' Association, which received memberships from the Low Countries and Scandinavia.[2] The notion of a "Green International" was again explored during the early interwar period, being embraced by Georg Heim of the Bavarian People's Party (BVP). From late 1918, at a height of a revolutionary upheaval in Europe in 1918, Heim worked on the unification of "peasant and conservative forces from all countries."[3] His effort only touched the former Central Powers and countries that had been neutral in World War I: a conference at Berlin in mid 1919 had delegates from Weimar Germany, German Austria, Hungary, and the Netherlands; Swiss and Belgian politicians sent messages of support, although the Dutch delegation itself remained skeptical about the possibility of Heim's movement being successful.[4]

In November 1920, Heim was in Budapest, advocating for a parallel rapprochement between the Hungarian Kingdom, the Austrian Republic, and Bavaria. He also channeled support for the Green International, described by one of his Hungarian disciples as an effective way to combat Comintern influence—since "the so-called 'bourgeois' classes proved incapable of toppling Bolshevism on their own." According to the same source, the International was supposed to diffuse the "ideas of order" among the peasant class, while endorsing the cooperative movement and regulating the market for the benefit of all classes, "not just peasant producers".[4]

The emerging organization was centered on Vienna, selected by Heim because of its location, but also because of his belief that Austria needed to be kept distinct from Germany; another factor was that Austria was governed by the Christian Social Party, whose members were "principally recruited among the peasant masses".[4] Heim earned pledges of support from throughout Central and Eastern Europe; his project therefore superseded a rival attempt by the Farmers' League (BdL) in Sudetenland to form a Pan-German "Congress of Peasants".[3] He was unable to prevent competition by the International Peasant Congress, which was centered on Strasbourg and reserved membership for countries that had also joined the League of Nations—thus excluding Weimar Germany.[3]

This group, itself dubbed a "Green International",[5][6] held its second meeting in Paris in November 1920. During its sessions, Angelo Mauri of the Italian People's Party proposed a merger with Heim's group, which Heim himself welcomed.[3] Reports of the following year suggest that Heim had also earned promises of support from Venstre in Denmark, from the Peasants' League (PB) of the Netherlands, and from the Agrarian Party in Hungary.[3] The Peasants' Party (PȚ) of Greater Romania and the Agrarian Party (ZS) of Yugoslavia were also participants in Heim's exchange.[7] In mid 1921, Hungarian agrarianist János Mayer made an effort to mediate between the French- and German-centered peasant Internationals, but the former adamantly refused.[6] Managed by Swiss farmer Ernst Laur, the International Peasant Congress survived to at least 1929, when its European and American members met in Bucharest. However, it had by then evolved into a non-political movement.[8]

Creation edit

 
Allegory of Aleksandar Stamboliyski's leadership of the peasants. From a 1935 album by his son

Other early efforts to organize peasant representatives into an international lobby were carried by the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union (BZNS), whose leader, Aleksandar Stamboliyski, was the then-Prime Minister of Bulgaria. In May 1920, he declared his intention to establish a form of "agrarian representation" alongside the Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants (RSZML) in Czechoslovakia. He believed that RSZML would also ensure reconciliation between Bulgarians and Yugoslavs, after the nations had been separated by World War I.[9] These attempts achieved public notoriety in February 1921. In that context, Stamboliyski openly described his project as resistance to the red peril, a "peasant dictatorship to oppose the dictatorship of the proletariat". French journalist P. de Docelles also noted that Stamboliyski had "transposed all of Lenin's formulas": "he will oppose the Green International to the Red International; and private property to communism".[10]

While visiting Czechoslovakia earlier that year, Stamboliyski had approached the RSZML directly, announcing that they would form an "International Peasant Union" as a League of Nations subsidiary.[10] Antonín Švehla of the RSZML was to serve as its leader, with Stamboliyski expressing new hopes that this mediation would bring Yugoslav agrarianists into his movement.[9] The original International Bureau, set up in Prague in November 1921,[9] was still limited to three countries in Slavic Europe (including Yugoslavia). It was also briefly joined by White émigrés representing the by-then-defunct Russian Republic.[9] However, in January 1921 Stamboliyski also visited non-Slavic Romania, meeting with the PȚ's Ion Mihalache and Virgil Madgearu, and discussing prospects for regional cooperation.[11]

The new peasant caucus is described by scholar Saturnino M. Borras Jr and colleagues as a continuation of Heim's movement.[12] However, it found itself criticized by Austrian conservative Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, who described the Green International as a front for agrarian socialism, the "peasant-boot dictatorship".[13] On such grounds, Stamboliyski's initiative was well-received by Europe's anti-communist left. Anarchist Augustin Hamon saw it as the peasant's coming of age, noting that agrarian countries had all gone through a land reform. This meant that "capitalists" controlled the "agrarian revolution", but only for a brief moment; Hamon identified an ideological incompatibility between BVP conservatives and Stamboliyski's radicals.[14] According to Hamon, industrial and agricultural workers were natural allies, since "one cannot be strong without the other", meaning that the Green International would find itself "pushed" into an alliance with the Comintern.[14] Similarities between the two bodies were noted by journalist Albert Londres, who called attention to Stamboliyski's "little terror" in Bulgaria, including his institution of compulsory labor.[15] Hamon's sympathetic vision was criticized by Adolphe Hodee, an agricultural trade unionist, who suggested that the "Green International" was fundamentally reactionary, a corollary of Luigi Sturzo's "White International". As Hodee put it: "Stronger and more dangerous than ever, peasant individualism opposes social progress under the communist banner, under the white banner, under the green banner."[16]

Both assessments are dismissed by more modern scholars, who note that Stamboliyski wished to found "an international agricultural league that would serve as protection against both the reactionary 'White International' of the royalists and landlords and the 'Red International' of the Bolsheviks".[7] As argued by the writing duo known as Marius-Ary Leblond, European socialists, their prestige greatly damaged by the Russian Revolution, were no longer able to exercise any influence over the peasant movement and "coalesce [it] against Capital." Leblond proposed that "the Greens in Danubian countries, who are some of the most conscious and determined, alongside those of France and Russia, will form a powerful anti-Red coalition."[17] Historian Bianca Valota Cavallotti believes that the Greens could have been natural allies of the Second International, but also notes that they developed their movement in poorly industrialized countries, where social democracy had no pull.[18]

At the BZNS' 1921 reunion in Sofia, banners read: "Long live the International that will consecrate the fraternity of European peoples and will suppress minority rule!"; and "To the gallows with those responsible for the disaster [of World War I] and with the militarists!"[14] As argued by Docelles, the congress was superficial in its attempt to discuss the "international side of the peasant issue". Though invitations to attend were extended to the BVP and the German Agrarian League, as well as to the RSZML and Balkan agrarianists, "few foreign delegates were able to reach the Bulgarian capital."[10] In June, Prague was announced as the seat of a "Green International Bureau", which was set to gather worldwide affiliations in preparation for the actual establishment of a plenary body.[19] From July of that year, members of earlier initiatives, including Mauri and the BZNS' Nikola Petkov, also joined Adrien Toussaint's International Confederation of Agricultural Syndicates.[3]

In August 1921, scholar Gustave Welter proposed that the Green International would emerge as the strongest one in existence, and would bring about world peace, "since [peasants] are always the first ones to get killed".[20] This hope was contrasted by reality, with Valota Cavallotti defining Stamboliyski's network as "surely one of the least important ones to have emerged on the Continent in the 19th and 20th centuries", a "series of attempts" rather than a coherent movement.[21] The BZNS was able to obtain representation from the RSZML, the ZS, and the Piast Party of Poland.[22]

1923 hiatus edit

 
Other interwar agrarian alliances:
  Bloc of Agrarian Countries
  Maniu Plan for a federal "Little Europe"

The project was disrupted by the BSNS' fall from power in the Bulgarian coup of 1923, during which Stamboliyski was murdered. As noted by journalist Paul Gentizon, these events were intimately related to Stamboliyski's vision of peasant internationalism, since this implied containing old rivalries between Bulgaria and Yugoslavia, while overshadowing the agenda of Macedonian Bulgarians.[23] Agrarian cooperation was also enhanced after the September Uprising, when Mihalache's PȚ organized a relief campaign in support of Bulgarian refugees to Romania.[24] In late 1923, the Comintern's competing agrarian body emerged in Moscow as the Krestintern. Its profile suggested that the new Soviet Union had entered a "uniquely pro-peasant period".[25] The new group was nevertheless hastily created, as "there were practically no peasant organizations on which it could be based", and as such had to recruit among mainstream agrarian groups.[26] Viktor Chernov, the Russian anti-communist, noted in 1924 that Krestintern agents were active "in the same countries as the Green International, an organization which, as a matter of fact, has failed."[27]

By 1924, groups situated on the BZNS' left had formed a tactical alliance with the Krestintern, preparing another ill-fated insurgency against Bulgarian dictator Aleksandar Tsankov; in May 1926, they adhered to the Moscow International, but kept the matter secret, so that the party would not be split apart.[28] By contrast, BZNS right-wingers only looked to the IAB. Red Peasants and Bulgarian Communists made overtures toward the Bulgarian agrarianist exiles in Prague, but the talks were inconclusive.[29] Tsankov then used the Krestintern's documented activities as a pretext to allege that the Green International had always been a Comintern plot, in conjunction with the local Comintern chapters; Tsankov noted that some of Stamboliyski's former ministers had since been co-opted by Moscow.[30]

In Yugoslavia, the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS), led at the time by Stjepan Radić, embraced separatism and agreed to join the Krestintern as a means to advance it.[31] Radić explained at the time that his agrarianism was spectral-syncretic, combining elements of the "revolutionary east" and the "conservative west".[32] His decision upset Yugoslavist intellectuals, with the Obzor group suggesting that the HSS had better join the mainstream Greens.[33] During late 1924, PȚ activists Madgearu and Nicolae L. Lupu visited Radić and discussed with him new forms of agrarian rapprochement; Madgearu also visited the Bureau in Prague, discussing his projects with Švehla, who was serving as Czechoslovak Premier.[34] Such contacts were observed by the Krestintern, which reportedly sent friendly letters to be read at the PȚ's National Congress in 1924. Romanian Peasantists refrained from answering, since Romania had not yet established diplomatic contacts with the Soviets.[35] Comintern sources describe the letters as black propaganda by anti-communist exiles.[36]

Radić was eventually arrested in 1925; his confiscated papers included notes by Grigory Zinoviev, in which the Green International was referred to as a tool for "the rich landowners and the bourgeoisie".[37] Days later, Radić signed a truce with the Yugoslav establishment, and left the Krestintern. The latter was forced to attempt recruitment in other parts of Yugoslavia, and was joined by a numerically smaller Agrarian Democratic Party, while also seeking to infiltrate and influence the HSS' left-wing.[38] From Romania, the PȚ observed and condemned the clampdown in Yugoslavia, before rejoicing at news that the HSS had reconciled with the establishment.[39] Nevertheless, the agrarian movement was again inhibited by the Polish Coup of May 1926, upon which the Piast Party was outlawed.[40] Forced into exile, Piast leader Wincenty Witos moved to Prague as a guest of the IAB.[41]

In the wake of the Bulgarian and Polish coups, agrarianist leaders in Central Europe were absorbed into projects for regional economic cooperation. During this period, the PNȚ's Iuliu Maniu, who became Prime Minister of Romania, proceeded to champion a Danubian Federation, and put effort into creating the rudiments of a Central European single market. His "Maniu Plan" for a "Little Europe", circulated in 1930, proposed the confederation of 8 Central European states. Attempting to reconcile small democracies with Italian fascism, Maniu also argued in favor of including Italy as a ninth member of "Little Europe".[42] Dissatisfied with the World Economic Conference of 1927, which appeared to favor industrialized nations, Poland opened up to such offers; it led regional partners in creating the Bloc of Agrarian Countries, formed at a conference in Warsaw in August 1930.[43] The Bloc also won over Romania's agrarian ideologues, in particular Madgearu.[44]

1927 revival edit

Unofficially overseen by Švehla, and in practice directed by Karel Mečíř, the Bureau put out a trilingual (Czech–French–German) Bulletin.[45] Its first issue, appearing in 1923, included critical analyses of the Russian Revolution, expressing hopes that the New Economic Policy would enshrine peasant property in the Soviet Union, and that "passive peasant resistance to communism" would follow from this.[46] As noted the following year by reviewer André Pierre, the agrarian movement in Europe appeared to have stalled; peasants, he argued, "have very specific national problems to tackle". Pierre proposed instead that the Second International open up an Agrarian Section, to mirror and compete with the Krestintern.[47] Cooperatist doctrinaire G. D. H. Cole similarly argues that Stamboliyski's removal "was the end of the Green International as a serious factor in European affairs and therewith of the peasant revolutionism which, in its Russian manifestation, the Bolsheviks had already subdued to their centralising, industrialist control. This peasant revolutionism never had, I think, much chance of constructive success; but if it had any chance, [Stamboliyski] was the man to lead it."[48]

The IAB relaunched in 1927, after renewed efforts by the RSZML's Milan Hodža. He attended the First Congress of Slavic Peasant Youth in Ljubljana (September 1924), where he spoke of economic liberalism as being "in crisis", and articulated a vision of agrarianism as a "Third Way", rather than as a syncretic policy.[49] This vision was immediately echoed by Witos, who agreed that Polish peasants needed to reject right- and left-wing ideologies.[50] In later interviews, Hodža also argued that "peasant democracy" would reconcile the constituent "races" of Czechoslovakia, including both Czechs and Sudeten Germans, leading to "internal peace from social defense". He wished to export this model for the benefit of "toiling, liberal, peaceful peasants", who rejected all extremes; he also commended the BZNS for having adopted a more "reasonable" stance.[51] In addition, Hodža viewed agrarianism as subsumed to his own take on the Danubian Federation, explaining in 1928: "For the past eight years, I've been searching for a collaborative element for the countries of Central Europe, one that would result in stable equilibrium; I believe to have found it in peasant democracy. If we manage to organize a new Central Europe on this basis, it will then be possible, as an automatic development, to also include Austria".[51]

This ideal coincided with Maniu's plans for economic unification, through the Bloc of Agrarian Countries.[52] Mečíř also contributed, specifically in that he toned down Pan-Slavism, advocating for a purely internationalist line, which welcomed representatives from outside Slavic Europe.[53] However, the notion of Slavic unity was not entirely dropped from IAB statutes, with Švehla declaring that Slavs, as naturally predisposed farmers, were selected to preach a "gospel of land" during a time when, as he saw it, both socialism and liberalism were in crisis.[54] Summits of the Slavic Peasant Youth continued to be held—at Prague, Poznań, and Bratislava; however, Piast delegates were suspicious of such ethnic cooperation, and resented the BZNS's authoritarian tendencies.[50] In October 1926, Mečíř visited Romania and obtained promises that the PȚ would join the IAB as its first non-Slavic member.[55] In fact, later that month, the PȚ fused with the Romanian National Party to become the National Peasants' Party (PNȚ). This stronger and less radical group was finally accepted into the IAB in October 1927.[56]

In 1928, the IAB had made a final change to its name, becoming known as the International Agrarian Bureau.[57] It was still informally the "Green International". Despite being the least agrarian state of the region,[58] Czechoslovakia was still the centerpiece of all agrarian projects, through both the RSZML and the BdL, which represented the Sudeten Germans. The IAB's permanent seat was in Prague, with Švehla serving as IAB Chairman.[59] Among the founding parties, the BZNS remained factionalized, with one wing still attending Krestintern sessions until being expelled by the party mainstream in 1930.[60]

Final expansion edit

In addition to all its other original members, the IAB was able to obtain allegiance from the HSS, as well as from the Dutch PB and the Romanian PNȚ;[22] Piast was eventually replaced by its successor, the Polish People's Party (SL).[61] Other new recruits included four national parties: the Landbund (Austria), the Farmers' Assemblies (Estonia), the Maalaisliitto (Finland), and the Farmers' Union (Latvia); the BdL, ZS and HSS were regional members, as were the Slovene Peasant Party and two Swiss Parties of Farmers and Traders (in Argovia and Bern).[62][63] An additional member was France's Agrarian and Peasant Party (PAPF). Explicit in its praise of Eastern European agrarianism,[64] it was criticized by left-wing journalist Guy Le Normand as inauthentic and makeshift: "Founded by some slick and dodgy 'intellectuals' [...] who knew how to cleverly exploit a desire of the 'Green International', which was to set up a chapter in France".[65] The PAPF's first congress, held at Paris in January 1929, was attended by Mečíř, for the IAB, and Ferdinand Klindera, of the Czechoslovak cooperative movement.[66]

Though Mečíř claimed to have enlisted 17 political parties from all over Europe into his International,[67] entire regions remained uncovered—including the one-party states. It was never able to canvass for support in Hungary, possibly because Hungarian agrarianists viewed the IAB as an instrument for Czechoslovak foreign policy; most Nordic agrarian groups were also glaringly absent.[68] The Maalaisliitto exception showed that Finnish peasants were becoming aware of similarities between their own agricultural markets and those in "new independent states of the eastern half of Europe".[69] During early 1928, the Ukrainian Agrarian Statist Party (USKhD), founded in Berlin by exiled supporters of the Ukrainian Hetmanate, also looked into the possibility of joining the IAB. This project was quickly vetoed from within by M. Kochubei, who underscored ideological incompatibilities: the USKhD viewed itself as anti-intellectualist, anti-democratic, and corporatist, dismissing the Green International as an intelligentsia movement which "[does] not have a sense of homeland". Kochubei described the IAB's commitment to democracy as "pathological".[70]

Meanwhile, Yugoslavia's agrarian movements experienced crisis, triggered by Radić's murder in 1928. The "Dictatorship of January 6" outlawed them and all other political groups, replacing them with the Yugoslav National Party. The opposition continued to organize clandestinely, and, in the Slovene case, maintained a direct link with the IAB.[71] The Second IAB Congress was held at Prague on May 23–May 25, 1929, but officially reunited only delegates from Austria, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Finland, France, Latvia, Romania, and Switzerland; these unanimously reconfirmed Švehla as Chairman.[59] The Congress was also tinged by controversy: earlier that month, Švehla had spoken at the RSZML to describe agrarianism as embracing class conflict and proposing that the political makeup of Czechoslovakia be refined to give peasants a decisive role; such statements were immediately condemned by a majority of Czechoslovak political journals.[72] A RSZML cadre, Karel Viškovský, spoke during the IAB proceedings to reassure the audience that agrarians still believed in class collaboration; by contrast, the BdL's Franz Spina took the rostrum to note that "peasant parties" stood for a "pure community of economic interests", replacing the nationalist allegiances of past decades.[59]

The closing resolution of 1929 "affirmed the necessity of establishing a peasant party in each country, based on the principles of private property and private initiative. [It] demanded the full equality of treatment for all classes in customs policy, the development of credit and cooperative societies, as well as of vocational training. It ends on this phrase: 'Peasant power will bring about world peace'."[59] That year, membership criteria were introduced. Member or candidate parties were expected to endorse agricultural cooperatives, pledge themselves to protecting smallholding, and support the peaceful resolution of international conflicts.[73] By 1932, Paris was home to another "Green International", which, despite the name, was a network of pacifists, "supporting, confronting, publicizing and uniting as one fraternal vision all movements working to organize peace across the world."[74]

Also in 1929, the Krestintern's activities were toned down by Joseph Stalin. The Soviet regime ended in bloodshed its attempt to reach out to the peasantry, inaugurating "Dekulakization".[25] During this process, agrarian theorist Alexander Chayanov was arrested on various charges of treason, including allegations that he had kept in contact with the IAB and with Chernov.[75] A new IAB Congress was held in Prague in October–November 1930; delegates represented the Czechoslovak parties and Swiss parties, the BZNS, PAPF, PB, PNȚ, the Latvian Farmers' Union, and the Agrarian Party of Greece.[76] The core topic for discussion was the Great Depression. In greeting his foreign colleagues, Hodža supported price controls at an international level.[76]

Dissolution edit

Historians Eduard Kubů and Jiří Šouša view the reincarnated IAB as not fully measuring up to its mission: "the scope its action did not exceed the area of professional consolidation and information exchange. [...] As an alternative foreign policy field of the Czechoslovak agrarian movement, it failed."[77] According to French syndicalist Émile Guillaumin, the old Green International continued to exist in Prague in 1932, having established "branches in Nordic and Danubian countries, as well as in Switzerland"; PAPF was its westernmost member,[78] as well as that region's "most active".[73] As noted by economist Paul Bastid, the regulation of wheat prices, as advocated by the IAB and the Bloc of Agrarian Counties, was detrimental to the interest of French peasants, who needed to "calmly analyze" their international commitments.[79] The IAB briefly extended into other countries, enlisting the Belgian Agricultural League of Wallonia; while Greek Agrarianists were no longer IAB members in 1931, the Spanish Agrarian Party (PAE) joined in 1934.[80]

Agrarian initiatives were sabotaged from 1933 by Nazi Germany, whose leadership viewed the entirety of Central Europe as a German Lebensraum.[81] The Bloc of Agrarian Countries held its last conference in Bucharest in June 1933, after which it faded away due to the hostility of great powers and a lack of commitment among Polish statesmen.[82] Although Italy participated in the 1931 Grain Conference, which was a triumph for the small agrarian states,[83] its fascist government singled out peasant internationalists as crucial enemies. In 1934, as part of the Italo–German rapprochement, it maneuvered to have Hungary withdraw from the Bloc of Agrarian Countries.[81] In December of the following year, a piece in Corriere della Sera alleged that a continental conspiracy, comprising both the Red and Green Internationals, was set out to destroy Italy, and, through it, "the order of Europe".[84]

The advent of authoritarian and fascist regimes slowly encroached on the IAB, reducing its representation. Green activists recorded the fascization of some peasant parties, describing the Lapua Movement as incompatible with its agenda, and restated that the IAB remained equally opposed to Nazism and Bolshevism.[85] Eventually, democratic agrarianism was shunned in its countries of origin. Following Radić's assassination, the HSS had drifted into radical right-wing politics.[86] The Landbund supported the notion of an Austrian Corporate State, which dissolved it in early 1934.[87] During the same weeks, agrarianist leaders Konstantin Päts (in Estonia) and Kārlis Ulmanis (in Latvia) staged self-coups to set up personal dictatorships, banning all political groups—including their own. These measures were justified as protection against more radical groups: the Vaps Movement and the Pērkonkrusts (see 1934 Latvian coup d'état).[88] In Latvia, an ideological synthesis was performed, transforming the agrarian youth organization, Mazpulki, along quasi-fascist lines.[89]

In November 1934, asked by Romanian Ion Clopoțel if the IAB had been abandoned, Hodža responded: "No. Not at all. However, the terrifying agricultural crisis which has been unfolding over these past three years made our reunions pointless. Please inform Mr Mihalache of my wish to convene the next international bureau in February or March [1935]."[90] Radicalization, meanwhile, was also embraced by the PAPF, who, at the height of the Stavisky Affair, proposed the death penalty by hanging for politicians found guilty of forgery or embezzlement.[91] The group formed a single caucus with the far-right Comités de Défense Paysanne, and expelled its own left-wing members in 1936.[92] Though a close collaborator of the PAPF, the PAE remained loyal to the Second Spanish Republic, integrating with a family of "right-wing republicans" which also included CEDA.[93] After years of tacit collaboration with the Romanian left,[94] the PNȚ also dealt a serious blow to the development of democracy by sealing a pact with the fascist Iron Guard ahead of national elections in 1937.[95]

On February 28, 1937, Mečíř attended the Ninth PAPF Congress in Compiègne as the IAB overseer.[96] The RSZML had by then entered its own transition toward the far-right. According to historian Roman Holec, the process had begun with Švehla's death in 1933, and was overseen by his successor Rudolf Beran[97] (noted earlier for his support of the IAB).[77] Its size reduced following the Munich Agreement, Czechoslovakia's "Second Republic" was governed by the Party of National Unity, into which the RSZML was dissolved. Most of its activists, including its leader Beran, had belonged to the nationalist right-wing of agrarianism.[98] The decisive movement in this drift to the right was the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938, after which the IAB was no longer active.[73]

The notion of a Green International centered on anti-fascist policies was embraced in 1939 by the HSS' Vladko Maček, who proposed that such an "agrarian autarky", if properly armed by Britain and France, could function as a bulwark against Nazi Germany. A Croat autonomist, Maček also believed that any such arming needed to be conditioned by a Croat–Yugoslav settlement.[99] From 1940, the effective Nazi hegemony in Continental Europe relocated peasant internationalism to London. The IAB was partly reconstructed as the Fabian Society's East European Discussion Group, frequented by the likes of Milan Gavrilović, Jerzy Kuncewicz, and David Mitrany. This initiative produced in July 1942 an International Agrarian Conference, overseen by Chatham House, during which delegates formally pledged themselves to the Atlantic Charter, while restating support for cooperative farming and introducing calls for a planned economy.[100]

IPU edit

Consolidation edit

 
Map of countries nominally represented in the IPU.
  Joined by 1948
  Joined by 1950
  Joined by 1964
  Areas of the Eastern Bloc not represented in the UPU
Note: Shaded areas represent regional parties.

Following the King Michael Coup in Romania and the September putsch in Bulgaria, the PNȚ and BZNS could organize legally. Shortly after, party representatives Mihalache and G. M. Dimitrov announced that they intended to restore a Green International. Their project was put on hold in 1945, when Dimitrov was expelled from Bulgaria by the communist Fatherland Front; from Italy, Dimitrov contacted Stanisław Mikołajczyk and Stanisław Kot of the Polish People's Party (PSL), with whom he discussed plans for an agrarianist counter-offensive in Eastern Europe.[101] Upon moving to the United States in 1946, Dimitrov also obtained pledges from Maček and Gavrilović, who represented the HSS and ZS, respectively, and from Ferenc Nagy of Hungary's Smallholders Party (FK).[102] The IAB was ultimately revived as the International Peasant Union (IPU). It grouped only parties from the Eastern Bloc and the former Baltic states, represented by political exiles to the United States. The constitutive session was held at Washington, D.C., on July 4, 1947, producing the "Independence Day Declaration". This document specifically linked the IPU to the interwar IAB; it also described the IPU as a legitimate representative of the Eastern European peasants, and restated support for the cooperative movement, viewed as a decent alternative to the "red feudalism" of collective farming.[103]

The four founding sections (BZNS, FK, HSS, ZS) were joined by the PNȚ later in 1947—that is, shortly before leaders Maniu and Mihalache were imprisoned in what became known as the "Tămădău Affair". The decision to "participate in all manifestations" of the IPU was taken by Grigore Gafencu. Although estranged from the PNȚ, he contacted its members in the diaspora, arguing that Alexandru Cretzianu had a mandate from Maniu to represent the party in exile; Gafencu was also impressed that the IPU had spontaneously protested against the PNȚ's outlawing.[104] A delegation of the PSL was also admitted in January 1948; six parties were thus represented at the First IPU Congress in May 1948.[105] All these groups made up the original IPU Presidium. Mikołajczyk was elected President, and Dimitrov General Secretary; the four Vice Presidents were Maček (the only IPU leader to have served in the higher echelons of the IAB), Gavrilović, Nagy, and the PNȚ's Augustin Popa.[106] By 1948, the Vice Presidents had been grouped into a Central Committee, and Popa had been replaced by Grigore Niculescu-Buzești.[107]

During the same period, with the revival of Czechoslovak independence, the RSZML found itself unable to organize: indicted as a pro-Nazi organization, it was banned by the National Front of Czechs and Slovaks. As a result, its activists gravitated toward the smaller Democratic Party of Slovakia.[108] Two rival parties claiming to represent the RSZML were formed in Paris and London—respectively led by Josef Černý and Ladislav Feierabend. After a series of failed attempts at merger, Feierabend lost his prestige, and his followers joined Černý's party, which had achieved IPU recognition.[109] Discussions about joining the IPU were then initiated by Martin Hrabík, who was still skeptical about Mikołajczyk's ability to shape Western policies.[110]

The project received initial grants from the United States Department of State and the National Association of Manufacturers, before obtaining stipends from the National Committee for a Free Europe (NCFE) starting in June 1949.[111] The new International continued to view itself as a regional rather than universal body, and, unlike the IAB, never recruited in Western Europe. Here, the IAB economic agenda was also revived by an International Federation of Agricultural Producers.[112] In that context, Maček openly argued that the Eastern-Bloc peasantry was not just a separate social class, but in fact a singular "people", whose values (including traditionalism and religiosity) made it stand apart from all other components of society, while largely distinguishing them from Western counterparts.[113] From 1953, the IPU began publishing Hodža's manuscripts on Central European federalism.[114]

By 1950, the IPU had also taken in delegates from the RSZML, including Černý, who became IPU Vice President.[115] Bohumil Jílek, once a leader of the Czechoslovak Communists, was co-opted as well and, from 1954, was a member of the IPU Secretariat.[116] Also joining in 1948–1950 were the Slovak Democrats, the Albanian League of Peasants, the Estonian Settlers, the Lithuanian Popular Peasants' Union.[117] By 1952, the IPU was also seeking a rapprochement with the FK's national rival, the Hungarian National Peasant Party, whose former Secretary Imre Kovács had escaped to the United States.[118] Like the IAB, the IPU had problems obtaining support from the Ukrainian diaspora. The contentious issue was its apparent endorsement of the territorial status quo. As noted in 1953 by Yaroslav Stetsko of the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations, "whoever sympathizes with the 'Green International', is sympathizing with an indivisible Russian Empire."[119] Roman Smal-Stotskyi's Ukrainian Agrarian Party finally joined the IPU in 1964.[120] The IPU was never interested in representing the agrarian anti-communists of East Germany. An affiliate magazine, Agrarpolitische Rundschau, was published irregularly in West Germany.[121] Overall, however, postwar Greens remained proudly Germanophobic, as noted by the PSL's Stanisław Wójcik in 1954.[122]

Despite being ideologically linked to Eastern European agrarianism, IPU leaders maintained a working relationship with France's National Centre of Independents and Peasants, as well as with Italy's Christian Democracy and Coldiretti, and established contacts in Latin America, as well as in South and East Asia.[123] IPU congresses were reportedly attended by peasant delegates from Taiwan.[124] From 1948, the Greens declared European federalism as an ultimate goal of anti-Soviet policies.[107] IPU sections were still organized in Western Europe; however, the IPU was mired by financial difficulties, and by 1954 was forced to contain its outreach efforts—particularly so under Democratic administrations, which reduced federal grants for anti-communist groups.[125]

Decline edit

Overall, the IPU was effectively powerless in opposing communism, as membership remained symbolic, and entirely cut off from the source countries.[126] In their countries of origin, all participating groups were depicted using lines of criticism first tested by the Krestintern, as "pro-fascist, bourgeois, and counterrevolutionary".[127] State propaganda consistently accused the IPU branches of having collaborated with Nazism—charges which, as noted by scholar Miguel Cabo, were almost universally groundless.[128] The IPU's own propaganda works highlighted Nazi and communist state terrorism as used against Nikola Petkov, Wincenty Witos, and other "peasant martyrs for democracy".[129] Soon after being set up, the group began a large-scale awareness campaign about the status of peasants in communist countries. One of its memorandums was drafted for the United Nations Security Council in April 1948, but went unheard due to being vetoed by the Soviet delegation.[130]

From 1952, the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic staged a clampdown against alleged "Green International" cells led by Antonín Chloupek, Josef Kepka, Josef Kostohryz, Vilém Knebort, and Otakar Čapek—the accused were not RSZML members, though most had a background in Beran's Party of National Unity.[131] Kostohryz was indicted for having co-signed a 1949 Memorandum calling for a Western intervention in Czechoslovakia.[132] The prosecution fabricated charges according to which the group were all IPU infiltrators, who wished to dilute Czechoslovak sovereignty into a "European Federation" and an "agrarian colony of the USA."[133] Caving in during the interrogations, Kepka supported this claim, noting that the Greens wished "to create a federal state of 100 million inhabitants", in accordance with Hodža's interwar blueprints.[134] At the end of a show trial, Kepka received the death penalty, while Chloupek and others were sentenced to life in prison.[135] A wave of trials for similar charges resulted in charges for other alleged IPU cells. The prosecution obtained more minor sentences for two former RSZML leaders, Josef Dufek and František Machník—though neither had been politically active after 1948.[136] Sentences were revised during the following decade of De-Stalinization, when the regime acknowledged that confessions were obtained under torture.[137] A smaller trial occurred in the People's Republic of Bulgaria following the September 1954 abduction of two political exiles in Austria, Petar Penev Trifonov and Milorad Mladenov. Both were made to confess that they had left Austria voluntarily, as they "grew disgusted of serving the National Bulgarian Committee, a propaganda organ of the United States, and the 'Green International', which is also subsidized from American coffers."[138]

According to IPU communiques, the cases of Petkov, Maniu and Béla Kovács showed that "peasant movements are main obstacles in the path of Soviet imperialism."[107] The Greens also criticized the Bulgarian regime for its reclamation of Stamboliyski as a cult figure, noting that such practices glossed over his anti-communism.[139] The Greens' agenda was mainly focused on criticizing Western politicians who talked of deescalating tensions with the Soviet Union, referring to such an agenda as "appeasement".[140] Mikołajczyk took on the mission of reminding Westerners about historical issues that the Soviet government had either obscured or denied, including the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and the Katyn massacre, while Nagy popularized "totalitarianism" as an umbrella term for both fascism and communism.[141] David Mitrany and other IPU intellectuals dedicated much study to Marxism's take on agrarian questions, concluding that peasants and Marxists were forever incompatible. This development, Cabo argues, signaled that the Greens were no longer searching for a "Third Way", but rather folded into a standard capitalist vision; the IPU reserved some praise for Nordic agrarianism and highlighted the progress of mechanized agriculture in the West, but refrained from advancing any specific model for future development.[142]

The organization was weakened from within by a conflict between Mikołajczyk and Dimitrov, which flared up as early as 1953 and required arbitration by the NCFE.[111] Erupting shortly after, the Hungarian Revolution lifted hopes of defeating communism, but apathy followed in the wake of its defeat; at the time, American politicians began avoiding the IPU, which they now saw as inefficient.[143] In 1964, following renewed disputes with other IPU leaders, and a decline of his health, Mikołajczyk resigned and Nagy became the IP President; by then, the central office had moved to New York City.[144] The organization remained centered on the Eastern Seaboard, which hosted eight of its nine congresses, down to its last, held in New York City in 1969.[145] Its final activities were directed at condemning the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia and honoring Jan Palach's memory. In 1970, an IPU executive officer, Robert Bohuslav Soumar, deposed a wreath at the Palach Statue in Rome; he also directed the effort to erect a monument to Palach in the West, resulting in the 1973 installation of a sculpture inside Cleveland Public Library.[146]

Despite his efforts to restore the IPU's prestige, Nagy was unable to prevent its demise. Under his watch, high-ranking figures such as Černý, Popa, and Jozef Lettrich no longer made an effort to attend meetings, and "IPU activity was more or less driven only by Bulgarians and Poles."[147] In 1971 the IPU had closed down its bulletin, as well as its offices in New York, though announcing that it remained nominally active from Washington.[148] It is presumed to have been entirely inactive after that moment, though attempts to revive it were made in 1978 and 1986.[149] With the advent of relative liberalization ("Goulash Communism") in the Hungarian People's Republic, Nagy contemplated abandoning his political exile and returning home. He was still undecided at the moment of his death in 1979.[150]

Political symbolism edit

Despite commonplace reference to the "Green International" and its "green banner", that political color was not officially adopted by the organization. In its original, Stamboliyskian incarnation, international agrarianism was visually associated with the color orange. This paradox was noted in 1921 by Albert Londres, according to whom "the Green International has an orange banner".[15] The color was chosen early on to represent "ripe wheat fields", lending its name to the "Orange Guard"; it endured as the main component of BZNS flags until the 1940s, when green was added.[151] Scholar Fabien Conord notes of the IAB (which "historians commonly designate [as] the 'Green International'"): "The color does not in fact show up on the organization's bulletin, whose successive editors never make a point of using the term 'green' in their discourse".[152] However, the Bureau began popularizing the four-leaf clover, usually green, as a universal agrarian symbol.[153]

In 1927, upon being convened by Jan Dąbski, the Polish People's Party used red flags with the IAB logo as the agrarian banner. Both fell into disfavor by 1931, when the party adopted ears of wheat on green as the banner, while still using clovers on member badges.[154] Also in 1931, the PNȚ's newspaper Țara de Mâine informed its readers that "the symbolic color of peasant (or agrarian, agricultural etc.) parties is green."[62] In 1937, Romanian fascist Ion V. Emilian pointed to Mihalache's usage of green flags as a direct homage to the IAB—which, according to Emilian, also stood for a "communist orientation", being "created by the Jews to undermine the unity of Christian nations."[155] The PAPF had been using a green flag with the French tricolor in canton.[156] It popularized green flags and armbands, which appeared during demonstrations in Beauvais (1929) and Chartres (1933), but used as its main symbol the pitchfork, selected for its revolutionary connotations.[157]

Other IAB members also chose clovers, though not always from the same source: a four-leaf clover, adopted by Latvian agrarianists in 1929, was a direct reference to the 4-H movement in the United States; it was displayed on green-and-white flags.[158] A variant (gold on green) was also used in Romania, and seen for instance at a PNȚ rally in 1936,[159] while another one showed up in Czechoslovakia as the main emblem of the RSZML.[160] The four-leaf clover was to be finally selected as the IPU logo.[161]

Notes edit

  1. ^ "La settimana. L'istituto internazionale d'agricoltura", in Il Cuneo. Periodico Socialista, Issue 7/1905, p. 1
  2. ^ Kurnatowski, pp. 81–82
  3. ^ a b c d e f "L'organisation patronale. L'Internationale verte", in Le Peuple. Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme, September 10, 1921, p. 4
  4. ^ a b c Marcel Dunan, "Lettre d'Autriche. L'Internationale Verte", in Le Temps, December 5, 1920, p. 2
  5. ^ Kurnatowski, p. 82
  6. ^ a b "Mayer János Párisba megy a zöld internácionále érdekében", in Zalai Közlöny, July 2, 1921, p. 1
  7. ^ a b Borras Jr et al, p. 174
  8. ^ Kurnatowski, pp. 82–83
  9. ^ a b c d Kubů & Šouša, p. 39
  10. ^ a b c P. de Docelles, "Sous l'égide de la Charrue et de la Bêche. Le Congrès des paysans bulgares", in L'Europe Nouvelle, Vol. 4, Issue 10, March 1921, pp. 308–309
  11. ^ Scurtu, pp. 32–33
  12. ^ Borras Jr et al, pp. 174–175
  13. ^ Francis Stuart Campbell, The Menace of the Herd or Procustes at Large, p. 80. Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Company, 1943
  14. ^ a b c Augustin Hamon, "L'Internationale Verte. La guerre a provoqué une véritable révolution paysanne qui doit rejoindre la révolution ouvrière, malgré les tentatives des capitalistes opposant le travailleur des champs à celui de l'usine", in Le Peuple. Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme, March 21, 1921, p. 3
  15. ^ a b Albert Londres, "Une enquête de l'Excelsior dans les Balkans. L'Internationale Verte", in Excelsior, February 28, 1921, p. 2
  16. ^ Adolphe Hodee, "La réaction mondiale. Les agrariens contre le B.I.T.", in Le Peuple. Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme, June 24, 1921, p. 4
  17. ^ Marius-Ary Leblond, "Les principaux questions extérieures. Le problème des Internationales", in Paris-Midi, May 15, 1921, p. 3
  18. ^ Valota Cavallotti, pp. 297–298
  19. ^ "Dans le Proche Orient. Un mouvement agraire international", in Le Temps, June 14, 1921, p. 2
  20. ^ G. Welter, "Opinions. La victorire du paysan", in Le Confédéré. Organe des Libéraux Valaisiens, Issue 89/1921, p. 3
  21. ^ Valota Cavallotti, p. 286
  22. ^ a b Valota Cavallotti, p. 295
  23. ^ Paul Gentizon, "Lettre des Balkans. Belgrade-Sofia", in Le Temps, November 8, 1923, p. 2
  24. ^ Scurtu, pp. 33–35
  25. ^ a b Borras Jr et al, p. 175
  26. ^ Cimek, p. 211
  27. ^ Viktor Chernov, "Socialisme et Communisme en Orient", in Le Peuple. Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme, September 23, 1924, p. 4
  28. ^ Cimek, pp. 220–222
  29. ^ Cimek, pp. 220–221
  30. ^ "Les événements de Sofia seraient bien d'origine agraro-communiste", in Excelsior, April 19, 1925, p. 1
  31. ^ Borras Jr et al, pp. 175–176; Cimek, pp. 212–216
  32. ^ Holec, pp. 52–53
  33. ^ "Le voyage de M. Raditch à Moscou", in Bulletin Périodique de la Presse Yugoslave, No. 53, July 7, 1924, p. 4
  34. ^ Scurtu, pp. 35–36
  35. ^ Scurtu, p. 36
  36. ^ Les faussaires contre les Soviets. Matériaux pour servir à l'histoire de la lutte contre la Révolution russe, p. 10. Paris: Librairie du travail, 1926
  37. ^ "Les documents saisis chez M. Raditch", in Bulletin Périodique de la Presse Yugoslave, No. 58, March 20, 1925, p. 4
  38. ^ Cimek, pp. 217–219
  39. ^ Scurtu, pp. 36–37
  40. ^ Conord, p. 416; Holec, p. 60; Kubů & Šouša, p. 35; Scurtu, p. 38. See also Gmitruk, pp. 118–119
  41. ^ Hrabík Šámal, p. 121
  42. ^ Costea, pp. 392–395, 400
  43. ^ Costea, pp. 395, 400; Tarnowski, pp. 9–11
  44. ^ Costea, pp. 395, 398–400
  45. ^ Cabo, p. 303; Kubů & Šouša, pp. 37, 38
  46. ^ Nicolas Zvorikine, "La Terre, seule source du bien-être humain", in La Pensée Française, Vol. 4, Issue 70, March 1924, p. 4
  47. ^ André Pierre, "Les dernières publications dans les pays de langues slaves. Bulletin du Bureau International Agricole, Prague, 1923", in L'Europe Nouvelle, Vol. 7, Issue 317, March 1924, p. 336
  48. ^ G. D. H. Cole, Communism and Social Democracy, 1914–1931. Part I, p. 273. London: Macmillan Publishers, 1958
  49. ^ Holec, pp. 53, 59
  50. ^ a b Holec, p. 64
  51. ^ a b Jules Sauerwein, "L'Internationale verte – celle des paysans – prend naissance à Prague. M. Hodza, ministre de Tchéco-Slovaquie nous dit son espoir d'établir grâce à la démocratie paysanne l'équilibre en Europe centrale", in Le Matin, May 27, 1928, p. 1
  52. ^ Costea, p. 395
  53. ^ Borras Jr et al, p. 177; Cabo, p. 303; Kubů & Šouša, pp. 35–37, 39–40
  54. ^ Kubů & Šouša, p. 38
  55. ^ Scurtu, p. 38
  56. ^ Scurtu, p. 39
  57. ^ Cabo, p. 303
  58. ^ Tarnowski, p. 9
  59. ^ a b c d "Le Congrès de l'Internationale Verte", in Bulletin Périodique de la Presse Tchécoslovaque, No. 29, December 11, 1929, p. 7
  60. ^ Cimek, pp. 223–225
  61. ^ Conord, p. 415. See also Gmitruk, p. 119
  62. ^ a b "Biroul Internațional agrar", in Țara de Mâine, Vol. I, Issue 1, March 1931, p. 2
  63. ^ Valota Cavallotti, p. 295. See also Conord, p. 415
  64. ^ Bernet, pp. 29–31; Lynch, p. 56; Passmore, p. 287
  65. ^ Gérard Vée, "Touché!", in Le Midi Socialiste, March 15, 1938, p. 3
  66. ^ "Le Premier Congrès National du Parti Paysan Français", in L'Express du Midi, January 27, 1929, p. 1
  67. ^ Borras Jr et al, p. 177
  68. ^ Cabo, pp. 303–304
  69. ^ Juhani Paasivirta, Finland and Europe: the Early Years of Independence 1917—1939. Societas Historica Finlandiae Studia Historica 29, pp. 262–263. Helsinki: Suomen Historiallinen Seura, 1988. ISBN 951-8915-14-8
  70. ^ Miroslav Tomek, "Ukrajinská monarchistická emigrace v ČSR a organizace agrární strany", in Josef Harna, Blanka Rašticová (eds.), Regionální zvláštnosti politiky agrární strany v období první Československé republiky. Studie Slováckého Muzea; 17/2012, p. 187. Uherské Hradiště: Slovácké Muzeum v Uherském Hradišti, 2012. ISBN 978-80-87671-01-6
  71. ^ Anka Vidovič-Miklavčič, "Zveza slovenskih kmetov v letih 1932–1935", in Zgodovinski Časopis, Vol. 43, Issue 4, 1989, pp. 556–557
  72. ^ "Le congrès du parti agrarien", in Bulletin Périodique de la Presse Tchécoslovaque, No. 29, December 11, 1929, p. 10
  73. ^ a b c Cabo, p. 304
  74. ^ "La vie sociale et corporative. Communications diverses", in Le Peuple. Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme, November 30, 1932, p. 4
  75. ^ Alessandro Stanziani, "Čajanov, Kerblay et les šestidesjatniki. Une histoire 'globale'?", in Cahiers du Monde Russe, Vol. 45, Issues 3–4, July–December 2004, pp. 404–406
  76. ^ a b "La Conference du Bureau International Agraire s'est ouverte a Prague", in Le Petit Journal, October 30, 1930, p. 3
  77. ^ a b Kubů & Šouša, p. 40
  78. ^ Émile Guillaumin, "Lettres de la campagne. Les verts", in Le Peuple. Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme, May 24, 1932, p. 1
  79. ^ "Presses départamentales", in Le Temps, September 4, 1932, p. 2
  80. ^ Cabo, p. 304. See also Conord, p. 415; Rueda Hernanz, p. 310
  81. ^ a b Tarnowski, p. 14
  82. ^ Tarnowski, pp. 11–12, 14–15
  83. ^ Tarnowski, p. 12
  84. ^ "Dernière minute de l'étranger. Le Grand conseil fasciste qui arrêtera la réponse italienne se réunit aujourd'hui", in Paris-Midi, December 18, 1935, p. 3
  85. ^ Conord, pp. 416–417
  86. ^ Holec, p. 53
  87. ^ Sandra Souto Kustrín, "De la paramilitarización al fracaso: las insurrecciones socialistas de 1934 en Viena y Madrid", in Pasado y Memoria, Issue 2/2003, p. 200
  88. ^ Johan Eellend, Cultivating the Rural Citizen. Modernity, Agrarianism and Citizenship in Late Tsarist Estonia. Studia Baltica Serie II: 1, p. 231. Stockholm: Stockholm University, 2007. ISBN 978-91-89315-75-4; Uldis Krēsliņš, "15 May 1934 Coup d'État in Latvia: Regularity of Development of the Existing Parliamentary System or a Breakthrough Called by the Actual Situation. The View of the USA Legation in Latvia", in Latvijas Vēstures Institūta Žurnāls, Issue 3 (108), 2018, pp. 73–76
  89. ^ Kuck, passim
  90. ^ Ion Clopoțel, "D. Dr. Milan Hodza despre problemele economice. 'Vom intensifica raporturile economice cu România chiar cu prețul sacrificiilor', spune ministrul cehoslovac al agriculturii", in Adevărul, November 17, 1934, p. 5
  91. ^ Marius, "La justice expéditive", in Chantecler. Littéraire, Satirique, Humoristique, Issue 99/1934, p. 2
  92. ^ Bernet, pp. 32–34; Lynch, pp. 67–68; Passmore, pp. 287–288, 306, 314. See also Marie-Elizabeth Handman, "Les agriculteurs et la politique depuis Méline", in Après-Demain. Journal Mensuel de Documentation Politique, Issues 94–95, May–June 1967, pp. 14–15
  93. ^ Rueda Hernanz, pp. 303–312
  94. ^ Gh. I. Ioniță, "Succesele forțelor democratice din România în alegerile comunale și județene din anii 1936—1937", in Studii. Revistă de Istorie, Vol. 18, Issue 4, 1965, pp. 785–805
  95. ^ Dennis Deletant, Hitler's Forgotten Ally: Ion Antonescu and His Regime, Romania, 1940–1944, p. 33. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 1-4039-9341-6; Vlad Georgescu, The Romanians. A History, p. 192. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1991. ISBN 0-8142-0511-9; Holec, pp. 57–58
  96. ^ "Le neuvième congrès du Parti agraire s'est tenu hier à Compiègne", in Le Matin, March 1, 1937, p. 7B
  97. ^ Holec, p. 62
  98. ^ Andrej Tóth, "Count János Esterházy (1901–1957) – Short Political Portrait of Leading Figure of Czechoslovak Hungarian Minority in the Thirtieths [sic] of the 20th Century", in Acta Fakulty Filozofické Západočeské Univerzity v Plzni, Vol. 9, Issue 2, 2014, p. 25
  99. ^ M. de Loince, "M. Matchek expose les desiderata croates a notre envoyé special", in Excelsior, April 4, 1939, p. 3
  100. ^ Cabo, p. 305
  101. ^ Cabo, pp. 306–307
  102. ^ Cabo, p. 307; Nekola, p. 109
  103. ^ Cabo, pp. 301–302, 307, 316–317
  104. ^ Grigore Gafencu, Elena Istrătescu, "Credința în fireasca datorie...", in Magazin Istoric, January 1998, p. 29
  105. ^ Cabo, pp. 302, 307–308
  106. ^ Cabo, pp. 308, 323. See also Nekola, p. 110
  107. ^ a b c "L'Internationale verte se développe. Déclaration de la Fédération Internationale Paysanne", in Messager de Pologne, Vol. II, Issue 10, February 1948, p. 2
  108. ^ Hrabík Šámal, pp. 102–107
  109. ^ Hrabík Šámal, pp. 108–114, 121
  110. ^ Hrabík Šámal, p. 120
  111. ^ a b Nekola, p. 110
  112. ^ Borras Jr et al, pp. 177, 178–179
  113. ^ Cabo, pp. 315–316
  114. ^ Vladimír Goněc, "'New Central Europe' in Co-operating and United Europe. Czechoslovak Ideas in 1920s and 1930s and Attempts at Coordination with Austrian and Hungarian Ideas", in Wilfried Loth, Nicolae Păun (eds.), Disintegration and Integration in East-Central Europe. 1919 – post-1989, p. 89. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft & Editura Fundației pentru Studii Europene, 2014. ISBN 978-3-8487-1330-1
  115. ^ Hrabík Šámal, pp. 117, 121
  116. ^ Anev, p. 28. See also Hrabík Šámal, p. 121
  117. ^ Cabo, p. 310
  118. ^ Papp, pp. 338, 340–342
  119. ^ Yaroslav Stetsko, "The Perspective of Our Campaign", in ABN Correspondence, Vol. 4, Issues 3–4, March–April 1953, p. 10
  120. ^ Cabo, pp. 310–311
  121. ^ Cabo, p. 309; Nekola, p. 110
  122. ^ Cabo, pp. 314–315
  123. ^ Cabo, pp. 311–312, 316–317
  124. ^ Nekola, p. 112
  125. ^ Cabo, pp. 309–310
  126. ^ Valota Cavallotti, pp. 298–299. See also Cabo, pp. 302, 322–323
  127. ^ Cabo, pp. 303, 313–314. See also Anev, passim; Hrabík Šámal, pp. 117–118; Papp, pp. 341–342
  128. ^ Cabo, pp. 304, 312–313
  129. ^ Cabo, pp. 312–313
  130. ^ Nekola, p. 111
  131. ^ Anev, pp. 23–27
  132. ^ Anev, p. 27
  133. ^ Anev, pp. 25, 28. See also Hrabík Šámal, p. 118
  134. ^ Anev, p. 28
  135. ^ Anev, pp. 29–30
  136. ^ Anev, pp. 30–33
  137. ^ Anev, p. 34
  138. ^ "Le communisme dans le monde libre. Rapt d'hommes en Autriche", in B.E.I.P.I.: Bulletin de l'Association d'Études et d'Informations Politiques Internationales, Vol. 6, Issue 117, October 1954, p. 9
  139. ^ Cabo, p. 314
  140. ^ Cabo, pp. 318–319
  141. ^ Cabo, pp. 321–322
  142. ^ Cabo, pp. 316–321
  143. ^ Nekola, pp. 112–113
  144. ^ Cabo, p. 326
  145. ^ Cabo, p. 308; Nekola, p. 112
  146. ^ Mary Hrabík Šámal, "The Cleveland Czech and Slovak Community's Heartfelt Protest against the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968", in Kosmas - Czechoslovak and Central European Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2, 2018, pp. 93–97
  147. ^ Nekola, p. 113
  148. ^ Cabo, pp. 326–327
  149. ^ Cabo, p. 327. See also Nekola, pp. 113–114
  150. ^ Papp, p. 351
  151. ^ Manuela Schmöger, "Orange as a Political Colour", in Proceedings of the 25th International Congress of Vexillology, Rotterdam, August 2013, Paper 31, 2013, p. 9
  152. ^ Conord, pp. 415–416
  153. ^ Gmitruk, p. 119
  154. ^ Gmitruk, pp. 119–120
  155. ^ "Aniversarea 'Svasticei de Foc'. Intrunirea din sala Eintracht", in Curentul, November 17, 1937, p. 5
  156. ^ Bernet, p. 31
  157. ^ Lynch, pp. 59–60, 65–66
  158. ^ Kuck, pp. 186, 188, 190
  159. ^ "Ofensiva pentru răsturnarea guvernului liberal", in Românul. Organ al Partidului Național Țărănesc din Jud. Arad, Issue 14/1936, p. 3
  160. ^ Hrabík Šámal, p. 113
  161. ^ Cabo, p. 309; Nekola, p. 109

References edit

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international, agrarian, bureau, czech, mezinárodní, agrární, bureau, french, bureau, international, agraire, commonly, known, green, international, zelená, internacionála, internationale, verte, founded, 1921, agrarian, parties, bulgaria, czechoslovakia, pola. The International Agrarian Bureau IAB Czech Mezinarodni Agrarni Bureau French Bureau International Agraire commonly known as the Green International Zelena Internacionala Internationale Verte was founded in 1921 by the agrarian parties of Bulgaria Czechoslovakia Poland and Yugoslavia The creation of a continental association of peasants was championed by Aleksandar Stamboliyski of the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union but originated with earlier attempts by Georg Heim Following Stamboliyski s downfall in 1923 the IAB came to be dominated by the Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants in Czechoslovakia whose member Karel Mecir served as its first leader Mecir was able to extend the IAB beyond its core in Slavic Europe obtaining support from the National Peasants Party in Greater Romania as an ideologue Milan Hodza introduced the Green International to European federalism International Agrarian Bureau International Peasant Union Four leaf clover logo as used by the Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants popularized by the IAB as an agrarian symbolCountries and regions with IAB members before 1935 Founding members joined 1921 Joined by 1927 Joined by 1934 Bavarian People s Party involved in 1921 Greek Agrarian Party el joined in 1930 dropped out in 1931 Note Shaded areas represent regional parties AbbreviationIAB IPUFormationNovember 1921 102 years ago November 1921 Dissolved1971 53 years ago 1971 TypePolitical internationalPurposeAgrarianismCooperative movementPan Slavism to 1927 European federalismPacifismAnti communismAnti fascismLocationPrague 1921 1938 Washington D C 1947 1964 1971 New York City 1964 1971 Region servedEurope originally Central and Eastern Europe from 1947 PresidentKarel Mecir first Ferenc Nagy last Secretary GeneralG M Dimitrov first Main organBulletin du Bureau International AgricoleMonthly Bulletin of the International Peasant UnionHodza also redefined international agrarianism as a Third Way movement The Bureau was thus a key competitor with the Krestintern or Red Peasant International which existed as a proxy of the Communist International or Comintern In 1929 to 1934 the IAB also gathered allegiances from parties in other areas of the continent managing to draw the Croatian Peasant Party away from the Krestintern and helping to create the French Agrarian and Peasant Party This drive was interrupted by the spread of fascism which identified Greens as its enemies although some sections of the IAB came to favor cooperation with the various fascist movements From 1933 Nazi Germany also interfered directly in the politics of IAB countries Germany s occupation of Czechoslovakia and subsequently its takeover of Continental Europe put an end to IAB activities though attempts were still made to revive it from London In 1947 the Bureau was reestablished as the International Peasant Union IPU grouping agrarianist refugees from the Eastern Bloc This group incorporated the Polish People s Party and the Hungarian Smallholders Party whose leaders Stanislaw Mikolajczyk and Ferenc Nagy were successively IPU presidents Primarily anti communist this Green International fought a propaganda war against the Soviet Union exposing its involvement in mass murders and its brutal oppression of agrarian movements This new Green International was powerless in effecting political change in Soviet dominated countries although its activities attracted the attention of communist regimes who described the IPU as fascist In 1952 authorities in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic indicted a number of political and intellectual figures during a show trial of the Green International the sentences were overturned in the 1960s Beset by financial troubles apathy and disagreements between its leaders the IPU itself was inactive from 1971 Contents 1 IAB 1 1 Origins 1 2 Creation 1 3 1923 hiatus 1 4 1927 revival 1 5 Final expansion 1 6 Dissolution 2 IPU 2 1 Consolidation 2 2 Decline 3 Political symbolism 4 Notes 5 ReferencesIAB editOrigins edit The concept of a Green International in the service of peasant interests dates back to the 1900s in 1905 an Italian Socialist Party newspaper voiced hopes that such a movement would be formed around the International Institute of Agriculture 1 In 1907 an International Confederation of Agricultural Associations was formed in the German Empire but it failed to survive World War I It was later partly revived as a Pan German Peasants Association which received memberships from the Low Countries and Scandinavia 2 The notion of a Green International was again explored during the early interwar period being embraced by Georg Heim of the Bavarian People s Party BVP From late 1918 at a height of a revolutionary upheaval in Europe in 1918 Heim worked on the unification of peasant and conservative forces from all countries 3 His effort only touched the former Central Powers and countries that had been neutral in World War I a conference at Berlin in mid 1919 had delegates from Weimar Germany German Austria Hungary and the Netherlands Swiss and Belgian politicians sent messages of support although the Dutch delegation itself remained skeptical about the possibility of Heim s movement being successful 4 In November 1920 Heim was in Budapest advocating for a parallel rapprochement between the Hungarian Kingdom the Austrian Republic and Bavaria He also channeled support for the Green International described by one of his Hungarian disciples as an effective way to combat Comintern influence since the so called bourgeois classes proved incapable of toppling Bolshevism on their own According to the same source the International was supposed to diffuse the ideas of order among the peasant class while endorsing the cooperative movement and regulating the market for the benefit of all classes not just peasant producers 4 The emerging organization was centered on Vienna selected by Heim because of its location but also because of his belief that Austria needed to be kept distinct from Germany another factor was that Austria was governed by the Christian Social Party whose members were principally recruited among the peasant masses 4 Heim earned pledges of support from throughout Central and Eastern Europe his project therefore superseded a rival attempt by the Farmers League BdL in Sudetenland to form a Pan German Congress of Peasants 3 He was unable to prevent competition by the International Peasant Congress which was centered on Strasbourg and reserved membership for countries that had also joined the League of Nations thus excluding Weimar Germany 3 This group itself dubbed a Green International 5 6 held its second meeting in Paris in November 1920 During its sessions Angelo Mauri of the Italian People s Party proposed a merger with Heim s group which Heim himself welcomed 3 Reports of the following year suggest that Heim had also earned promises of support from Venstre in Denmark from the Peasants League PB of the Netherlands and from the Agrarian Party in Hungary 3 The Peasants Party PȚ of Greater Romania and the Agrarian Party ZS of Yugoslavia were also participants in Heim s exchange 7 In mid 1921 Hungarian agrarianist Janos Mayer made an effort to mediate between the French and German centered peasant Internationals but the former adamantly refused 6 Managed by Swiss farmer Ernst Laur the International Peasant Congress survived to at least 1929 when its European and American members met in Bucharest However it had by then evolved into a non political movement 8 Creation edit nbsp Allegory of Aleksandar Stamboliyski s leadership of the peasants From a 1935 album by his sonOther early efforts to organize peasant representatives into an international lobby were carried by the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union BZNS whose leader Aleksandar Stamboliyski was the then Prime Minister of Bulgaria In May 1920 he declared his intention to establish a form of agrarian representation alongside the Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants RSZML in Czechoslovakia He believed that RSZML would also ensure reconciliation between Bulgarians and Yugoslavs after the nations had been separated by World War I 9 These attempts achieved public notoriety in February 1921 In that context Stamboliyski openly described his project as resistance to the red peril a peasant dictatorship to oppose the dictatorship of the proletariat French journalist P de Docelles also noted that Stamboliyski had transposed all of Lenin s formulas he will oppose the Green International to the Red International and private property to communism 10 While visiting Czechoslovakia earlier that year Stamboliyski had approached the RSZML directly announcing that they would form an International Peasant Union as a League of Nations subsidiary 10 Antonin Svehla of the RSZML was to serve as its leader with Stamboliyski expressing new hopes that this mediation would bring Yugoslav agrarianists into his movement 9 The original International Bureau set up in Prague in November 1921 9 was still limited to three countries in Slavic Europe including Yugoslavia It was also briefly joined by White emigres representing the by then defunct Russian Republic 9 However in January 1921 Stamboliyski also visited non Slavic Romania meeting with the PȚ s Ion Mihalache and Virgil Madgearu and discussing prospects for regional cooperation 11 The new peasant caucus is described by scholar Saturnino M Borras Jr and colleagues as a continuation of Heim s movement 12 However it found itself criticized by Austrian conservative Erik von Kuehnelt Leddihn who described the Green International as a front for agrarian socialism the peasant boot dictatorship 13 On such grounds Stamboliyski s initiative was well received by Europe s anti communist left Anarchist Augustin Hamon saw it as the peasant s coming of age noting that agrarian countries had all gone through a land reform This meant that capitalists controlled the agrarian revolution but only for a brief moment Hamon identified an ideological incompatibility between BVP conservatives and Stamboliyski s radicals 14 According to Hamon industrial and agricultural workers were natural allies since one cannot be strong without the other meaning that the Green International would find itself pushed into an alliance with the Comintern 14 Similarities between the two bodies were noted by journalist Albert Londres who called attention to Stamboliyski s little terror in Bulgaria including his institution of compulsory labor 15 Hamon s sympathetic vision was criticized by Adolphe Hodee an agricultural trade unionist who suggested that the Green International was fundamentally reactionary a corollary of Luigi Sturzo s White International As Hodee put it Stronger and more dangerous than ever peasant individualism opposes social progress under the communist banner under the white banner under the green banner 16 Both assessments are dismissed by more modern scholars who note that Stamboliyski wished to found an international agricultural league that would serve as protection against both the reactionary White International of the royalists and landlords and the Red International of the Bolsheviks 7 As argued by the writing duo known as Marius Ary Leblond European socialists their prestige greatly damaged by the Russian Revolution were no longer able to exercise any influence over the peasant movement and coalesce it against Capital Leblond proposed that the Greens in Danubian countries who are some of the most conscious and determined alongside those of France and Russia will form a powerful anti Red coalition 17 Historian Bianca Valota Cavallotti believes that the Greens could have been natural allies of the Second International but also notes that they developed their movement in poorly industrialized countries where social democracy had no pull 18 At the BZNS 1921 reunion in Sofia banners read Long live the International that will consecrate the fraternity of European peoples and will suppress minority rule and To the gallows with those responsible for the disaster of World War I and with the militarists 14 As argued by Docelles the congress was superficial in its attempt to discuss the international side of the peasant issue Though invitations to attend were extended to the BVP and the German Agrarian League as well as to the RSZML and Balkan agrarianists few foreign delegates were able to reach the Bulgarian capital 10 In June Prague was announced as the seat of a Green International Bureau which was set to gather worldwide affiliations in preparation for the actual establishment of a plenary body 19 From July of that year members of earlier initiatives including Mauri and the BZNS Nikola Petkov also joined Adrien Toussaint s International Confederation of Agricultural Syndicates 3 In August 1921 scholar Gustave Welter proposed that the Green International would emerge as the strongest one in existence and would bring about world peace since peasants are always the first ones to get killed 20 This hope was contrasted by reality with Valota Cavallotti defining Stamboliyski s network as surely one of the least important ones to have emerged on the Continent in the 19th and 20th centuries a series of attempts rather than a coherent movement 21 The BZNS was able to obtain representation from the RSZML the ZS and the Piast Party of Poland 22 1923 hiatus edit nbsp Other interwar agrarian alliances Bloc of Agrarian Countries Maniu Plan for a federal Little Europe The project was disrupted by the BSNS fall from power in the Bulgarian coup of 1923 during which Stamboliyski was murdered As noted by journalist Paul Gentizon these events were intimately related to Stamboliyski s vision of peasant internationalism since this implied containing old rivalries between Bulgaria and Yugoslavia while overshadowing the agenda of Macedonian Bulgarians 23 Agrarian cooperation was also enhanced after the September Uprising when Mihalache s PȚ organized a relief campaign in support of Bulgarian refugees to Romania 24 In late 1923 the Comintern s competing agrarian body emerged in Moscow as the Krestintern Its profile suggested that the new Soviet Union had entered a uniquely pro peasant period 25 The new group was nevertheless hastily created as there were practically no peasant organizations on which it could be based and as such had to recruit among mainstream agrarian groups 26 Viktor Chernov the Russian anti communist noted in 1924 that Krestintern agents were active in the same countries as the Green International an organization which as a matter of fact has failed 27 By 1924 groups situated on the BZNS left had formed a tactical alliance with the Krestintern preparing another ill fated insurgency against Bulgarian dictator Aleksandar Tsankov in May 1926 they adhered to the Moscow International but kept the matter secret so that the party would not be split apart 28 By contrast BZNS right wingers only looked to the IAB Red Peasants and Bulgarian Communists made overtures toward the Bulgarian agrarianist exiles in Prague but the talks were inconclusive 29 Tsankov then used the Krestintern s documented activities as a pretext to allege that the Green International had always been a Comintern plot in conjunction with the local Comintern chapters Tsankov noted that some of Stamboliyski s former ministers had since been co opted by Moscow 30 In Yugoslavia the Croatian Peasant Party HSS led at the time by Stjepan Radic embraced separatism and agreed to join the Krestintern as a means to advance it 31 Radic explained at the time that his agrarianism was spectral syncretic combining elements of the revolutionary east and the conservative west 32 His decision upset Yugoslavist intellectuals with the Obzor group suggesting that the HSS had better join the mainstream Greens 33 During late 1924 PȚ activists Madgearu and Nicolae L Lupu visited Radic and discussed with him new forms of agrarian rapprochement Madgearu also visited the Bureau in Prague discussing his projects with Svehla who was serving as Czechoslovak Premier 34 Such contacts were observed by the Krestintern which reportedly sent friendly letters to be read at the PȚ s National Congress in 1924 Romanian Peasantists refrained from answering since Romania had not yet established diplomatic contacts with the Soviets 35 Comintern sources describe the letters as black propaganda by anti communist exiles 36 Radic was eventually arrested in 1925 his confiscated papers included notes by Grigory Zinoviev in which the Green International was referred to as a tool for the rich landowners and the bourgeoisie 37 Days later Radic signed a truce with the Yugoslav establishment and left the Krestintern The latter was forced to attempt recruitment in other parts of Yugoslavia and was joined by a numerically smaller Agrarian Democratic Party while also seeking to infiltrate and influence the HSS left wing 38 From Romania the PȚ observed and condemned the clampdown in Yugoslavia before rejoicing at news that the HSS had reconciled with the establishment 39 Nevertheless the agrarian movement was again inhibited by the Polish Coup of May 1926 upon which the Piast Party was outlawed 40 Forced into exile Piast leader Wincenty Witos moved to Prague as a guest of the IAB 41 In the wake of the Bulgarian and Polish coups agrarianist leaders in Central Europe were absorbed into projects for regional economic cooperation During this period the PNȚ s Iuliu Maniu who became Prime Minister of Romania proceeded to champion a Danubian Federation and put effort into creating the rudiments of a Central European single market His Maniu Plan for a Little Europe circulated in 1930 proposed the confederation of 8 Central European states Attempting to reconcile small democracies with Italian fascism Maniu also argued in favor of including Italy as a ninth member of Little Europe 42 Dissatisfied with the World Economic Conference of 1927 which appeared to favor industrialized nations Poland opened up to such offers it led regional partners in creating the Bloc of Agrarian Countries formed at a conference in Warsaw in August 1930 43 The Bloc also won over Romania s agrarian ideologues in particular Madgearu 44 1927 revival edit Unofficially overseen by Svehla and in practice directed by Karel Mecir the Bureau put out a trilingual Czech French German Bulletin 45 Its first issue appearing in 1923 included critical analyses of the Russian Revolution expressing hopes that the New Economic Policy would enshrine peasant property in the Soviet Union and that passive peasant resistance to communism would follow from this 46 As noted the following year by reviewer Andre Pierre the agrarian movement in Europe appeared to have stalled peasants he argued have very specific national problems to tackle Pierre proposed instead that the Second International open up an Agrarian Section to mirror and compete with the Krestintern 47 Cooperatist doctrinaire G D H Cole similarly argues that Stamboliyski s removal was the end of the Green International as a serious factor in European affairs and therewith of the peasant revolutionism which in its Russian manifestation the Bolsheviks had already subdued to their centralising industrialist control This peasant revolutionism never had I think much chance of constructive success but if it had any chance Stamboliyski was the man to lead it 48 The IAB relaunched in 1927 after renewed efforts by the RSZML s Milan Hodza He attended the First Congress of Slavic Peasant Youth in Ljubljana September 1924 where he spoke of economic liberalism as being in crisis and articulated a vision of agrarianism as a Third Way rather than as a syncretic policy 49 This vision was immediately echoed by Witos who agreed that Polish peasants needed to reject right and left wing ideologies 50 In later interviews Hodza also argued that peasant democracy would reconcile the constituent races of Czechoslovakia including both Czechs and Sudeten Germans leading to internal peace from social defense He wished to export this model for the benefit of toiling liberal peaceful peasants who rejected all extremes he also commended the BZNS for having adopted a more reasonable stance 51 In addition Hodza viewed agrarianism as subsumed to his own take on the Danubian Federation explaining in 1928 For the past eight years I ve been searching for a collaborative element for the countries of Central Europe one that would result in stable equilibrium I believe to have found it in peasant democracy If we manage to organize a new Central Europe on this basis it will then be possible as an automatic development to also include Austria 51 This ideal coincided with Maniu s plans for economic unification through the Bloc of Agrarian Countries 52 Mecir also contributed specifically in that he toned down Pan Slavism advocating for a purely internationalist line which welcomed representatives from outside Slavic Europe 53 However the notion of Slavic unity was not entirely dropped from IAB statutes with Svehla declaring that Slavs as naturally predisposed farmers were selected to preach a gospel of land during a time when as he saw it both socialism and liberalism were in crisis 54 Summits of the Slavic Peasant Youth continued to be held at Prague Poznan and Bratislava however Piast delegates were suspicious of such ethnic cooperation and resented the BZNS s authoritarian tendencies 50 In October 1926 Mecir visited Romania and obtained promises that the PȚ would join the IAB as its first non Slavic member 55 In fact later that month the PȚ fused with the Romanian National Party to become the National Peasants Party PNȚ This stronger and less radical group was finally accepted into the IAB in October 1927 56 In 1928 the IAB had made a final change to its name becoming known as the International Agrarian Bureau 57 It was still informally the Green International Despite being the least agrarian state of the region 58 Czechoslovakia was still the centerpiece of all agrarian projects through both the RSZML and the BdL which represented the Sudeten Germans The IAB s permanent seat was in Prague with Svehla serving as IAB Chairman 59 Among the founding parties the BZNS remained factionalized with one wing still attending Krestintern sessions until being expelled by the party mainstream in 1930 60 Final expansion edit In addition to all its other original members the IAB was able to obtain allegiance from the HSS as well as from the Dutch PB and the Romanian PNȚ 22 Piast was eventually replaced by its successor the Polish People s Party SL 61 Other new recruits included four national parties the Landbund Austria the Farmers Assemblies Estonia the Maalaisliitto Finland and the Farmers Union Latvia the BdL ZS and HSS were regional members as were the Slovene Peasant Party and two Swiss Parties of Farmers and Traders in Argovia and Bern 62 63 An additional member was France s Agrarian and Peasant Party PAPF Explicit in its praise of Eastern European agrarianism 64 it was criticized by left wing journalist Guy Le Normand as inauthentic and makeshift Founded by some slick and dodgy intellectuals who knew how to cleverly exploit a desire of the Green International which was to set up a chapter in France 65 The PAPF s first congress held at Paris in January 1929 was attended by Mecir for the IAB and Ferdinand Klindera of the Czechoslovak cooperative movement 66 Though Mecir claimed to have enlisted 17 political parties from all over Europe into his International 67 entire regions remained uncovered including the one party states It was never able to canvass for support in Hungary possibly because Hungarian agrarianists viewed the IAB as an instrument for Czechoslovak foreign policy most Nordic agrarian groups were also glaringly absent 68 The Maalaisliitto exception showed that Finnish peasants were becoming aware of similarities between their own agricultural markets and those in new independent states of the eastern half of Europe 69 During early 1928 the Ukrainian Agrarian Statist Party USKhD founded in Berlin by exiled supporters of the Ukrainian Hetmanate also looked into the possibility of joining the IAB This project was quickly vetoed from within by M Kochubei who underscored ideological incompatibilities the USKhD viewed itself as anti intellectualist anti democratic and corporatist dismissing the Green International as an intelligentsia movement which does not have a sense of homeland Kochubei described the IAB s commitment to democracy as pathological 70 Meanwhile Yugoslavia s agrarian movements experienced crisis triggered by Radic s murder in 1928 The Dictatorship of January 6 outlawed them and all other political groups replacing them with the Yugoslav National Party The opposition continued to organize clandestinely and in the Slovene case maintained a direct link with the IAB 71 The Second IAB Congress was held at Prague on May 23 May 25 1929 but officially reunited only delegates from Austria Czechoslovakia Estonia Finland France Latvia Romania and Switzerland these unanimously reconfirmed Svehla as Chairman 59 The Congress was also tinged by controversy earlier that month Svehla had spoken at the RSZML to describe agrarianism as embracing class conflict and proposing that the political makeup of Czechoslovakia be refined to give peasants a decisive role such statements were immediately condemned by a majority of Czechoslovak political journals 72 A RSZML cadre Karel Viskovsky spoke during the IAB proceedings to reassure the audience that agrarians still believed in class collaboration by contrast the BdL s Franz Spina took the rostrum to note that peasant parties stood for a pure community of economic interests replacing the nationalist allegiances of past decades 59 The closing resolution of 1929 affirmed the necessity of establishing a peasant party in each country based on the principles of private property and private initiative It demanded the full equality of treatment for all classes in customs policy the development of credit and cooperative societies as well as of vocational training It ends on this phrase Peasant power will bring about world peace 59 That year membership criteria were introduced Member or candidate parties were expected to endorse agricultural cooperatives pledge themselves to protecting smallholding and support the peaceful resolution of international conflicts 73 By 1932 Paris was home to another Green International which despite the name was a network of pacifists supporting confronting publicizing and uniting as one fraternal vision all movements working to organize peace across the world 74 Also in 1929 the Krestintern s activities were toned down by Joseph Stalin The Soviet regime ended in bloodshed its attempt to reach out to the peasantry inaugurating Dekulakization 25 During this process agrarian theorist Alexander Chayanov was arrested on various charges of treason including allegations that he had kept in contact with the IAB and with Chernov 75 A new IAB Congress was held in Prague in October November 1930 delegates represented the Czechoslovak parties and Swiss parties the BZNS PAPF PB PNȚ the Latvian Farmers Union and the Agrarian Party of Greece 76 The core topic for discussion was the Great Depression In greeting his foreign colleagues Hodza supported price controls at an international level 76 Dissolution edit Historians Eduard Kubu and Jiri Sousa view the reincarnated IAB as not fully measuring up to its mission the scope its action did not exceed the area of professional consolidation and information exchange As an alternative foreign policy field of the Czechoslovak agrarian movement it failed 77 According to French syndicalist Emile Guillaumin the old Green International continued to exist in Prague in 1932 having established branches in Nordic and Danubian countries as well as in Switzerland PAPF was its westernmost member 78 as well as that region s most active 73 As noted by economist Paul Bastid the regulation of wheat prices as advocated by the IAB and the Bloc of Agrarian Counties was detrimental to the interest of French peasants who needed to calmly analyze their international commitments 79 The IAB briefly extended into other countries enlisting the Belgian Agricultural League of Wallonia while Greek Agrarianists were no longer IAB members in 1931 the Spanish Agrarian Party PAE joined in 1934 80 Agrarian initiatives were sabotaged from 1933 by Nazi Germany whose leadership viewed the entirety of Central Europe as a German Lebensraum 81 The Bloc of Agrarian Countries held its last conference in Bucharest in June 1933 after which it faded away due to the hostility of great powers and a lack of commitment among Polish statesmen 82 Although Italy participated in the 1931 Grain Conference which was a triumph for the small agrarian states 83 its fascist government singled out peasant internationalists as crucial enemies In 1934 as part of the Italo German rapprochement it maneuvered to have Hungary withdraw from the Bloc of Agrarian Countries 81 In December of the following year a piece in Corriere della Sera alleged that a continental conspiracy comprising both the Red and Green Internationals was set out to destroy Italy and through it the order of Europe 84 The advent of authoritarian and fascist regimes slowly encroached on the IAB reducing its representation Green activists recorded the fascization of some peasant parties describing the Lapua Movement as incompatible with its agenda and restated that the IAB remained equally opposed to Nazism and Bolshevism 85 Eventually democratic agrarianism was shunned in its countries of origin Following Radic s assassination the HSS had drifted into radical right wing politics 86 The Landbund supported the notion of an Austrian Corporate State which dissolved it in early 1934 87 During the same weeks agrarianist leaders Konstantin Pats in Estonia and Karlis Ulmanis in Latvia staged self coups to set up personal dictatorships banning all political groups including their own These measures were justified as protection against more radical groups the Vaps Movement and the Perkonkrusts see 1934 Latvian coup d etat 88 In Latvia an ideological synthesis was performed transforming the agrarian youth organization Mazpulki along quasi fascist lines 89 In November 1934 asked by Romanian Ion Clopoțel if the IAB had been abandoned Hodza responded No Not at all However the terrifying agricultural crisis which has been unfolding over these past three years made our reunions pointless Please inform Mr Mihalache of my wish to convene the next international bureau in February or March 1935 90 Radicalization meanwhile was also embraced by the PAPF who at the height of the Stavisky Affair proposed the death penalty by hanging for politicians found guilty of forgery or embezzlement 91 The group formed a single caucus with the far right Comites de Defense Paysanne and expelled its own left wing members in 1936 92 Though a close collaborator of the PAPF the PAE remained loyal to the Second Spanish Republic integrating with a family of right wing republicans which also included CEDA 93 After years of tacit collaboration with the Romanian left 94 the PNȚ also dealt a serious blow to the development of democracy by sealing a pact with the fascist Iron Guard ahead of national elections in 1937 95 On February 28 1937 Mecir attended the Ninth PAPF Congress in Compiegne as the IAB overseer 96 The RSZML had by then entered its own transition toward the far right According to historian Roman Holec the process had begun with Svehla s death in 1933 and was overseen by his successor Rudolf Beran 97 noted earlier for his support of the IAB 77 Its size reduced following the Munich Agreement Czechoslovakia s Second Republic was governed by the Party of National Unity into which the RSZML was dissolved Most of its activists including its leader Beran had belonged to the nationalist right wing of agrarianism 98 The decisive movement in this drift to the right was the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938 after which the IAB was no longer active 73 The notion of a Green International centered on anti fascist policies was embraced in 1939 by the HSS Vladko Macek who proposed that such an agrarian autarky if properly armed by Britain and France could function as a bulwark against Nazi Germany A Croat autonomist Macek also believed that any such arming needed to be conditioned by a Croat Yugoslav settlement 99 From 1940 the effective Nazi hegemony in Continental Europe relocated peasant internationalism to London The IAB was partly reconstructed as the Fabian Society s East European Discussion Group frequented by the likes of Milan Gavrilovic Jerzy Kuncewicz and David Mitrany This initiative produced in July 1942 an International Agrarian Conference overseen by Chatham House during which delegates formally pledged themselves to the Atlantic Charter while restating support for cooperative farming and introducing calls for a planned economy 100 IPU editConsolidation edit nbsp Map of countries nominally represented in the IPU Joined by 1948 Joined by 1950 Joined by 1964 Areas of the Eastern Bloc not represented in the UPU Note Shaded areas represent regional parties Following the King Michael Coup in Romania and the September putsch in Bulgaria the PNȚ and BZNS could organize legally Shortly after party representatives Mihalache and G M Dimitrov announced that they intended to restore a Green International Their project was put on hold in 1945 when Dimitrov was expelled from Bulgaria by the communist Fatherland Front from Italy Dimitrov contacted Stanislaw Mikolajczyk and Stanislaw Kot of the Polish People s Party PSL with whom he discussed plans for an agrarianist counter offensive in Eastern Europe 101 Upon moving to the United States in 1946 Dimitrov also obtained pledges from Macek and Gavrilovic who represented the HSS and ZS respectively and from Ferenc Nagy of Hungary s Smallholders Party FK 102 The IAB was ultimately revived as the International Peasant Union IPU It grouped only parties from the Eastern Bloc and the former Baltic states represented by political exiles to the United States The constitutive session was held at Washington D C on July 4 1947 producing the Independence Day Declaration This document specifically linked the IPU to the interwar IAB it also described the IPU as a legitimate representative of the Eastern European peasants and restated support for the cooperative movement viewed as a decent alternative to the red feudalism of collective farming 103 The four founding sections BZNS FK HSS ZS were joined by the PNȚ later in 1947 that is shortly before leaders Maniu and Mihalache were imprisoned in what became known as the Tămădău Affair The decision to participate in all manifestations of the IPU was taken by Grigore Gafencu Although estranged from the PNȚ he contacted its members in the diaspora arguing that Alexandru Cretzianu had a mandate from Maniu to represent the party in exile Gafencu was also impressed that the IPU had spontaneously protested against the PNȚ s outlawing 104 A delegation of the PSL was also admitted in January 1948 six parties were thus represented at the First IPU Congress in May 1948 105 All these groups made up the original IPU Presidium Mikolajczyk was elected President and Dimitrov General Secretary the four Vice Presidents were Macek the only IPU leader to have served in the higher echelons of the IAB Gavrilovic Nagy and the PNȚ s Augustin Popa 106 By 1948 the Vice Presidents had been grouped into a Central Committee and Popa had been replaced by Grigore Niculescu Buzești 107 During the same period with the revival of Czechoslovak independence the RSZML found itself unable to organize indicted as a pro Nazi organization it was banned by the National Front of Czechs and Slovaks As a result its activists gravitated toward the smaller Democratic Party of Slovakia 108 Two rival parties claiming to represent the RSZML were formed in Paris and London respectively led by Josef Cerny and Ladislav Feierabend After a series of failed attempts at merger Feierabend lost his prestige and his followers joined Cerny s party which had achieved IPU recognition 109 Discussions about joining the IPU were then initiated by Martin Hrabik who was still skeptical about Mikolajczyk s ability to shape Western policies 110 The project received initial grants from the United States Department of State and the National Association of Manufacturers before obtaining stipends from the National Committee for a Free Europe NCFE starting in June 1949 111 The new International continued to view itself as a regional rather than universal body and unlike the IAB never recruited in Western Europe Here the IAB economic agenda was also revived by an International Federation of Agricultural Producers 112 In that context Macek openly argued that the Eastern Bloc peasantry was not just a separate social class but in fact a singular people whose values including traditionalism and religiosity made it stand apart from all other components of society while largely distinguishing them from Western counterparts 113 From 1953 the IPU began publishing Hodza s manuscripts on Central European federalism 114 By 1950 the IPU had also taken in delegates from the RSZML including Cerny who became IPU Vice President 115 Bohumil Jilek once a leader of the Czechoslovak Communists was co opted as well and from 1954 was a member of the IPU Secretariat 116 Also joining in 1948 1950 were the Slovak Democrats the Albanian League of Peasants the Estonian Settlers the Lithuanian Popular Peasants Union 117 By 1952 the IPU was also seeking a rapprochement with the FK s national rival the Hungarian National Peasant Party whose former Secretary Imre Kovacs had escaped to the United States 118 Like the IAB the IPU had problems obtaining support from the Ukrainian diaspora The contentious issue was its apparent endorsement of the territorial status quo As noted in 1953 by Yaroslav Stetsko of the Anti Bolshevik Bloc of Nations whoever sympathizes with the Green International is sympathizing with an indivisible Russian Empire 119 Roman Smal Stotskyi s Ukrainian Agrarian Party finally joined the IPU in 1964 120 The IPU was never interested in representing the agrarian anti communists of East Germany An affiliate magazine Agrarpolitische Rundschau was published irregularly in West Germany 121 Overall however postwar Greens remained proudly Germanophobic as noted by the PSL s Stanislaw Wojcik in 1954 122 Despite being ideologically linked to Eastern European agrarianism IPU leaders maintained a working relationship with France s National Centre of Independents and Peasants as well as with Italy s Christian Democracy and Coldiretti and established contacts in Latin America as well as in South and East Asia 123 IPU congresses were reportedly attended by peasant delegates from Taiwan 124 From 1948 the Greens declared European federalism as an ultimate goal of anti Soviet policies 107 IPU sections were still organized in Western Europe however the IPU was mired by financial difficulties and by 1954 was forced to contain its outreach efforts particularly so under Democratic administrations which reduced federal grants for anti communist groups 125 Decline edit Overall the IPU was effectively powerless in opposing communism as membership remained symbolic and entirely cut off from the source countries 126 In their countries of origin all participating groups were depicted using lines of criticism first tested by the Krestintern as pro fascist bourgeois and counterrevolutionary 127 State propaganda consistently accused the IPU branches of having collaborated with Nazism charges which as noted by scholar Miguel Cabo were almost universally groundless 128 The IPU s own propaganda works highlighted Nazi and communist state terrorism as used against Nikola Petkov Wincenty Witos and other peasant martyrs for democracy 129 Soon after being set up the group began a large scale awareness campaign about the status of peasants in communist countries One of its memorandums was drafted for the United Nations Security Council in April 1948 but went unheard due to being vetoed by the Soviet delegation 130 From 1952 the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic staged a clampdown against alleged Green International cells led by Antonin Chloupek Josef Kepka Josef Kostohryz Vilem Knebort and Otakar Capek the accused were not RSZML members though most had a background in Beran s Party of National Unity 131 Kostohryz was indicted for having co signed a 1949 Memorandum calling for a Western intervention in Czechoslovakia 132 The prosecution fabricated charges according to which the group were all IPU infiltrators who wished to dilute Czechoslovak sovereignty into a European Federation and an agrarian colony of the USA 133 Caving in during the interrogations Kepka supported this claim noting that the Greens wished to create a federal state of 100 million inhabitants in accordance with Hodza s interwar blueprints 134 At the end of a show trial Kepka received the death penalty while Chloupek and others were sentenced to life in prison 135 A wave of trials for similar charges resulted in charges for other alleged IPU cells The prosecution obtained more minor sentences for two former RSZML leaders Josef Dufek and Frantisek Machnik though neither had been politically active after 1948 136 Sentences were revised during the following decade of De Stalinization when the regime acknowledged that confessions were obtained under torture 137 A smaller trial occurred in the People s Republic of Bulgaria following the September 1954 abduction of two political exiles in Austria Petar Penev Trifonov and Milorad Mladenov Both were made to confess that they had left Austria voluntarily as they grew disgusted of serving the National Bulgarian Committee a propaganda organ of the United States and the Green International which is also subsidized from American coffers 138 According to IPU communiques the cases of Petkov Maniu and Bela Kovacs showed that peasant movements are main obstacles in the path of Soviet imperialism 107 The Greens also criticized the Bulgarian regime for its reclamation of Stamboliyski as a cult figure noting that such practices glossed over his anti communism 139 The Greens agenda was mainly focused on criticizing Western politicians who talked of deescalating tensions with the Soviet Union referring to such an agenda as appeasement 140 Mikolajczyk took on the mission of reminding Westerners about historical issues that the Soviet government had either obscured or denied including the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact and the Katyn massacre while Nagy popularized totalitarianism as an umbrella term for both fascism and communism 141 David Mitrany and other IPU intellectuals dedicated much study to Marxism s take on agrarian questions concluding that peasants and Marxists were forever incompatible This development Cabo argues signaled that the Greens were no longer searching for a Third Way but rather folded into a standard capitalist vision the IPU reserved some praise for Nordic agrarianism and highlighted the progress of mechanized agriculture in the West but refrained from advancing any specific model for future development 142 The organization was weakened from within by a conflict between Mikolajczyk and Dimitrov which flared up as early as 1953 and required arbitration by the NCFE 111 Erupting shortly after the Hungarian Revolution lifted hopes of defeating communism but apathy followed in the wake of its defeat at the time American politicians began avoiding the IPU which they now saw as inefficient 143 In 1964 following renewed disputes with other IPU leaders and a decline of his health Mikolajczyk resigned and Nagy became the IP President by then the central office had moved to New York City 144 The organization remained centered on the Eastern Seaboard which hosted eight of its nine congresses down to its last held in New York City in 1969 145 Its final activities were directed at condemning the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia and honoring Jan Palach s memory In 1970 an IPU executive officer Robert Bohuslav Soumar deposed a wreath at the Palach Statue in Rome he also directed the effort to erect a monument to Palach in the West resulting in the 1973 installation of a sculpture inside Cleveland Public Library 146 Despite his efforts to restore the IPU s prestige Nagy was unable to prevent its demise Under his watch high ranking figures such as Cerny Popa and Jozef Lettrich no longer made an effort to attend meetings and IPU activity was more or less driven only by Bulgarians and Poles 147 In 1971 the IPU had closed down its bulletin as well as its offices in New York though announcing that it remained nominally active from Washington 148 It is presumed to have been entirely inactive after that moment though attempts to revive it were made in 1978 and 1986 149 With the advent of relative liberalization Goulash Communism in the Hungarian People s Republic Nagy contemplated abandoning his political exile and returning home He was still undecided at the moment of his death in 1979 150 Political symbolism editDespite commonplace reference to the Green International and its green banner that political color was not officially adopted by the organization In its original Stamboliyskian incarnation international agrarianism was visually associated with the color orange This paradox was noted in 1921 by Albert Londres according to whom the Green International has an orange banner 15 The color was chosen early on to represent ripe wheat fields lending its name to the Orange Guard it endured as the main component of BZNS flags until the 1940s when green was added 151 Scholar Fabien Conord notes of the IAB which historians commonly designate as the Green International The color does not in fact show up on the organization s bulletin whose successive editors never make a point of using the term green in their discourse 152 However the Bureau began popularizing the four leaf clover usually green as a universal agrarian symbol 153 In 1927 upon being convened by Jan Dabski the Polish People s Party used red flags with the IAB logo as the agrarian banner Both fell into disfavor by 1931 when the party adopted ears of wheat on green as the banner while still using clovers on member badges 154 Also in 1931 the PNȚ s newspaper Țara de Maine informed its readers that the symbolic color of peasant or agrarian agricultural etc parties is green 62 In 1937 Romanian fascist Ion V Emilian pointed to Mihalache s usage of green flags as a direct homage to the IAB which according to Emilian also stood for a communist orientation being created by the Jews to undermine the unity of Christian nations 155 The PAPF had been using a green flag with the French tricolor in canton 156 It popularized green flags and armbands which appeared during demonstrations in Beauvais 1929 and Chartres 1933 but used as its main symbol the pitchfork selected for its revolutionary connotations 157 Other IAB members also chose clovers though not always from the same source a four leaf clover adopted by Latvian agrarianists in 1929 was a direct reference to the 4 H movement in the United States it was displayed on green and white flags 158 A variant gold on green was also used in Romania and seen for instance at a PNȚ rally in 1936 159 while another one showed up in Czechoslovakia as the main emblem of the RSZML 160 The four leaf clover was to be finally selected as the IPU logo 161 Green banners associated with IAB members nbsp Banner of the Farmers League nbsp French Agrarian and Peasant Party flag nbsp Mazpulki flag nbsp Banner used in World War II by the Polish People s Party Bataliony ChlopskieNotes edit La settimana L istituto internazionale d agricoltura in Il Cuneo Periodico Socialista Issue 7 1905 p 1 Kurnatowski pp 81 82 a b c d e f L organisation patronale L Internationale verte in Le Peuple Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme September 10 1921 p 4 a b c Marcel Dunan Lettre d Autriche L Internationale Verte in Le Temps December 5 1920 p 2 Kurnatowski p 82 a b Mayer Janos Parisba megy a zold internacionale erdekeben in Zalai Kozlony July 2 1921 p 1 a b Borras Jr et al p 174 Kurnatowski pp 82 83 a b c d Kubu amp Sousa p 39 a b c P de Docelles Sous l egide de la Charrue et de la Beche Le Congres des paysans bulgares in L Europe Nouvelle Vol 4 Issue 10 March 1921 pp 308 309 Scurtu pp 32 33 Borras Jr et al pp 174 175 Francis Stuart Campbell The Menace of the Herd or Procustes at Large p 80 Milwaukee The Bruce Publishing Company 1943 a b c Augustin Hamon L Internationale Verte La guerre a provoque une veritable revolution paysanne qui doit rejoindre la revolution ouvriere malgre les tentatives des capitalistes opposant le travailleur des champs a celui de l usine in Le Peuple Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme March 21 1921 p 3 a b Albert Londres Une enquete de l Excelsior dans les Balkans L Internationale Verte in Excelsior February 28 1921 p 2 Adolphe Hodee La reaction mondiale Les agrariens contre le B I T in Le Peuple Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme June 24 1921 p 4 Marius Ary Leblond Les principaux questions exterieures Le probleme des Internationales in Paris Midi May 15 1921 p 3 Valota Cavallotti pp 297 298 Dans le Proche Orient Un mouvement agraire international in Le Temps June 14 1921 p 2 G Welter Opinions La victorire du paysan in Le Confedere Organe des Liberaux Valaisiens Issue 89 1921 p 3 Valota Cavallotti p 286 a b Valota Cavallotti p 295 Paul Gentizon Lettre des Balkans Belgrade Sofia in Le Temps November 8 1923 p 2 Scurtu pp 33 35 a b Borras Jr et al p 175 Cimek p 211 Viktor Chernov Socialisme et Communisme en Orient in Le Peuple Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme September 23 1924 p 4 Cimek pp 220 222 Cimek pp 220 221 Les evenements de Sofia seraient bien d origine agraro communiste in Excelsior April 19 1925 p 1 Borras Jr et al pp 175 176 Cimek pp 212 216 Holec pp 52 53 Le voyage de M Raditch a Moscou in Bulletin Periodique de la Presse Yugoslave No 53 July 7 1924 p 4 Scurtu pp 35 36 Scurtu p 36 Les faussaires contre les Soviets Materiaux pour servir a l histoire de la lutte contre la Revolution russe p 10 Paris Librairie du travail 1926 Les documents saisis chez M Raditch in Bulletin Periodique de la Presse Yugoslave No 58 March 20 1925 p 4 Cimek pp 217 219 Scurtu pp 36 37 Conord p 416 Holec p 60 Kubu amp Sousa p 35 Scurtu p 38 See also Gmitruk pp 118 119 Hrabik Samal p 121 Costea pp 392 395 400 Costea pp 395 400 Tarnowski pp 9 11 Costea pp 395 398 400 Cabo p 303 Kubu amp Sousa pp 37 38 Nicolas Zvorikine La Terre seule source du bien etre humain in La Pensee Francaise Vol 4 Issue 70 March 1924 p 4 Andre Pierre Les dernieres publications dans les pays de langues slaves Bulletin du Bureau International Agricole Prague 1923 in L Europe Nouvelle Vol 7 Issue 317 March 1924 p 336 G D H Cole Communism and Social Democracy 1914 1931 Part I p 273 London Macmillan Publishers 1958 Holec pp 53 59 a b Holec p 64 a b Jules Sauerwein L Internationale verte celle des paysans prend naissance a Prague M Hodza ministre de Tcheco Slovaquie nous dit son espoir d etablir grace a la democratie paysanne l equilibre en Europe centrale in Le Matin May 27 1928 p 1 Costea p 395 Borras Jr et al p 177 Cabo p 303 Kubu amp Sousa pp 35 37 39 40 Kubu amp Sousa p 38 Scurtu p 38 Scurtu p 39 Cabo p 303 Tarnowski p 9 a b c d Le Congres de l Internationale Verte in Bulletin Periodique de la Presse Tchecoslovaque No 29 December 11 1929 p 7 Cimek pp 223 225 Conord p 415 See also Gmitruk p 119 a b Biroul Internațional agrar in Țara de Maine Vol I Issue 1 March 1931 p 2 Valota Cavallotti p 295 See also Conord p 415 Bernet pp 29 31 Lynch p 56 Passmore p 287 Gerard Vee Touche in Le Midi Socialiste March 15 1938 p 3 Le Premier Congres National du Parti Paysan Francais in L Express du Midi January 27 1929 p 1 Borras Jr et al p 177 Cabo pp 303 304 Juhani Paasivirta Finland and Europe the Early Years of Independence 1917 1939 Societas Historica Finlandiae Studia Historica 29 pp 262 263 Helsinki Suomen Historiallinen Seura 1988 ISBN 951 8915 14 8 Miroslav Tomek Ukrajinska monarchisticka emigrace v CSR a organizace agrarni strany in Josef Harna Blanka Rasticova eds Regionalni zvlastnosti politiky agrarni strany v obdobi prvni Ceskoslovenske republiky Studie Slovackeho Muzea 17 2012 p 187 Uherske Hradiste Slovacke Muzeum v Uherskem Hradisti 2012 ISBN 978 80 87671 01 6 Anka Vidovic Miklavcic Zveza slovenskih kmetov v letih 1932 1935 in Zgodovinski Casopis Vol 43 Issue 4 1989 pp 556 557 Le congres du parti agrarien in Bulletin Periodique de la Presse Tchecoslovaque No 29 December 11 1929 p 10 a b c Cabo p 304 La vie sociale et corporative Communications diverses in Le Peuple Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme November 30 1932 p 4 Alessandro Stanziani Cajanov Kerblay et les sestidesjatniki Une histoire globale in Cahiers du Monde Russe Vol 45 Issues 3 4 July December 2004 pp 404 406 a b La Conference du Bureau International Agraire s est ouverte a Prague in Le Petit Journal October 30 1930 p 3 a b Kubu amp Sousa p 40 Emile Guillaumin Lettres de la campagne Les verts in Le Peuple Organe Quotidien du Syndicalisme May 24 1932 p 1 Presses departamentales in Le Temps September 4 1932 p 2 Cabo p 304 See also Conord p 415 Rueda Hernanz p 310 a b Tarnowski p 14 Tarnowski pp 11 12 14 15 Tarnowski p 12 Derniere minute de l etranger Le Grand conseil fasciste qui arretera la reponse italienne se reunit aujourd hui in Paris Midi December 18 1935 p 3 Conord pp 416 417 Holec p 53 Sandra Souto Kustrin De la paramilitarizacion al fracaso las insurrecciones socialistas de 1934 en Viena y Madrid in Pasado y Memoria Issue 2 2003 p 200 Johan Eellend Cultivating the Rural Citizen Modernity Agrarianism and Citizenship in Late Tsarist Estonia Studia Baltica Serie II 1 p 231 Stockholm Stockholm University 2007 ISBN 978 91 89315 75 4 Uldis Kreslins 15 May 1934 Coup d Etat in Latvia Regularity of Development of the Existing Parliamentary System or a Breakthrough Called by the Actual Situation The View of the USA Legation in Latvia in Latvijas Vestures Instituta Zurnals Issue 3 108 2018 pp 73 76 Kuck passim Ion Clopoțel D Dr Milan Hodza despre problemele economice Vom intensifica raporturile economice cu Romania chiar cu prețul sacrificiilor spune ministrul cehoslovac al agriculturii in Adevărul November 17 1934 p 5 Marius La justice expeditive in Chantecler Litteraire Satirique Humoristique Issue 99 1934 p 2 Bernet pp 32 34 Lynch pp 67 68 Passmore pp 287 288 306 314 See also Marie Elizabeth Handman Les agriculteurs et la politique depuis Meline in Apres Demain Journal Mensuel de Documentation Politique Issues 94 95 May June 1967 pp 14 15 Rueda Hernanz pp 303 312 Gh I Ioniță Succesele forțelor democratice din Romania in alegerile comunale și județene din anii 1936 1937 in Studii Revistă de Istorie Vol 18 Issue 4 1965 pp 785 805 Dennis Deletant Hitler s Forgotten Ally Ion Antonescu and His Regime Romania 1940 1944 p 33 London Palgrave Macmillan 2006 ISBN 1 4039 9341 6 Vlad Georgescu The Romanians A History p 192 Columbus Ohio State University Press 1991 ISBN 0 8142 0511 9 Holec pp 57 58 Le neuvieme congres du Parti agraire s est tenu hier a Compiegne in Le Matin March 1 1937 p 7B Holec p 62 Andrej Toth Count Janos Esterhazy 1901 1957 Short Political Portrait of Leading Figure of Czechoslovak Hungarian Minority in the Thirtieths sic of the 20th Century in Acta Fakulty Filozoficke Zapadoceske Univerzity v Plzni Vol 9 Issue 2 2014 p 25 M de Loince M Matchek expose les desiderata croates a notre envoye special in Excelsior April 4 1939 p 3 Cabo p 305 Cabo pp 306 307 Cabo p 307 Nekola p 109 Cabo pp 301 302 307 316 317 Grigore Gafencu Elena Istrătescu Credința in fireasca datorie in Magazin Istoric January 1998 p 29 Cabo pp 302 307 308 Cabo pp 308 323 See also Nekola p 110 a b c L Internationale verte se developpe Declaration de la Federation Internationale Paysanne in Messager de Pologne Vol II Issue 10 February 1948 p 2 Hrabik Samal pp 102 107 Hrabik Samal pp 108 114 121 Hrabik Samal p 120 a b Nekola p 110 Borras Jr et al pp 177 178 179 Cabo pp 315 316 Vladimir Gonec New Central Europe in Co operating and United Europe Czechoslovak Ideas in 1920s and 1930s and Attempts at Coordination with Austrian and Hungarian Ideas in Wilfried Loth Nicolae Păun eds Disintegration and Integration in East Central Europe 1919 post 1989 p 89 Baden Baden Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft amp Editura Fundației pentru Studii Europene 2014 ISBN 978 3 8487 1330 1 Hrabik Samal pp 117 121 Anev p 28 See also Hrabik Samal p 121 Cabo p 310 Papp pp 338 340 342 Yaroslav Stetsko The Perspective of Our Campaign in ABN Correspondence Vol 4 Issues 3 4 March April 1953 p 10 Cabo pp 310 311 Cabo p 309 Nekola p 110 Cabo pp 314 315 Cabo pp 311 312 316 317 Nekola p 112 Cabo pp 309 310 Valota Cavallotti pp 298 299 See also Cabo pp 302 322 323 Cabo pp 303 313 314 See also Anev passim Hrabik Samal pp 117 118 Papp pp 341 342 Cabo pp 304 312 313 Cabo pp 312 313 Nekola p 111 Anev pp 23 27 Anev p 27 Anev pp 25 28 See also Hrabik Samal p 118 Anev p 28 Anev pp 29 30 Anev pp 30 33 Anev p 34 Le communisme dans le monde libre Rapt d hommes en Autriche in B E I P I Bulletin de l Association d Etudes et d Informations Politiques Internationales Vol 6 Issue 117 October 1954 p 9 Cabo p 314 Cabo pp 318 319 Cabo pp 321 322 Cabo pp 316 321 Nekola pp 112 113 Cabo p 326 Cabo p 308 Nekola p 112 Mary Hrabik Samal The Cleveland Czech and Slovak Community s Heartfelt Protest against the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 in Kosmas Czechoslovak and Central European Journal Vol 1 No 2 2018 pp 93 97 Nekola p 113 Cabo pp 326 327 Cabo p 327 See also Nekola pp 113 114 Papp p 351 Manuela Schmoger Orange as a Political Colour in Proceedings of the 25th International Congress of Vexillology Rotterdam August 2013 Paper 31 2013 p 9 Conord pp 415 416 Gmitruk p 119 Gmitruk pp 119 120 Aniversarea Svasticei de Foc Intrunirea din sala Eintracht in Curentul November 17 1937 p 5 Bernet p 31 Lynch pp 59 60 65 66 Kuck pp 186 188 190 Ofensiva pentru răsturnarea guvernului liberal in Romanul Organ al Partidului Național Țărănesc din Jud Arad Issue 14 1936 p 3 Hrabik Samal p 113 Cabo p 309 Nekola p 109References editPetr Anev Procesy s udajnymi prisluhovaci Zelene internacionaly in Pamet a Dejiny Issue 4 2012 pp 23 34 Jacques Bernet Un compiegnois celebre dans l entre deux guerres Fleurant Agricola fondateur du Parti agraire 1864 1936 in Annales Historiques Compiegnoises Vol 2 Issue 6 April 1979 pp 29 34 Saturnino M Borras Jr Marc Edelman Cristobal Kay Transnational Agrarian Movements Origins and Politics Campaigns and Impact in Journal of Agrarian Change Vol 8 Issues 2 3 April July 2008 pp 169 204 Miguel Cabo El trebol de cuatro hojas La International Peasant Union y su actuacion durante la Guerra Fria in Historia y Politica Vol 40 2018 pp 299 329 Henryk Cimek Wplywy Miedzynarodowki Chlopskiej na Balkanach in Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie Sklodowska Sectio F Historia Vol 57 2002 pp 211 225 Fabien Conord Principes antithetiques et adversaires communs partis paysans et partis socialistes en Europe des annees 1920 aux annees 1960 in Studia Politica Romanian Political Science Review Vol 11 Issue 3 2011 pp 411 421 Simion Costea Ideea de unificare europeană in doctrina și acțiunea politică a lui Iuliu Maniu 1924 1937 in Revista Bistriței Vols XII XIII 1999 pp 391 402 Janusz Gmitruk Zasady i symbole polskiego ruchu ludowego in Mysl Ludowa Issue 5 2013 pp 115 128 Roman Holec Ideove zdroje medzinarodneho agrarizmu a jeho narodnych specifik in Josef Harna Blanka Rasticova eds Agrarni strana a jeji zajmove druzstevni a penezni organizace Studie Slovackeho Muzea 15 2010 pp 51 72 Uherske Hradiste Slovacke Muzeum v Uherskem Hradisti 2010 ISBN 978 80 86185 90 3 Mary Hrabik Samal In Search of Vindication and Liberation The Czechoslovak Republican Agrarian Party in Exile during the Paris Years 1948 1951 in Kosmas Czechoslovak and Central European Journal No 28 1 Spring Fall 2014 pp 102 128 Eduard Kubu Jiri Sousa Sen o slovanske agrarni spolupraci Antonin Svehla ideovy a organizacni tvurce Mezinarodniho agrarniho bureau in Blanka Rasticova ed Agrarni strany ve vladnich a samospravnych strukturach mezi svetovymi valkami Studie Slovackeho Muzea 13 2008 pp 35 40 Uherske Hradiste Slovacke Muzeum v Uherskem Hradisti 2008 ISBN 978 80 86185 72 9 Jordan Kuck Renewed Latvia A Case Study of the Transnational Fascism Model in Fascism Vol 2 2013 pp 183 204 Jerzy Karol Kurnatowski Wspolczesne idee spoleczne Warsaw Naklad Fundacji Wieczystej im H J Chankowskiego 1933 Edouard Lynch Le Parti agraire et paysan francais entre politique et manifestation Succes et limite d une strategie de contestation paysanne dans les annees 1930 in Histoire amp Societes Issue 18 2006 pp 56 68 Martin Nekola Exilove internacionaly ve studene valce jako nastroj boje proti komunismu in Soudobe Dejiny Vol XXII Issues 1 2 2015 pp 102 129 Istvan Papp Hungarian Emigration and State Security The Story of Imre Kovacs in Caietele CNSAS Vol VIII Issue 1 2015 pp 335 354 Kevin Passmore The Right in France from the Third Republic to Vichy Oxford etc Oxford University Press 2013 German Rueda Hernanz Notas El partido agrario Espanol 1934 1936 Analisis sociologico de la seccion Valenciana y estudio comparativo con la agrupacion madrilena del Partido Republicano Radical in Revista de Estudios Politicos Issues 206 207 1976 pp 303 323 Ioan Scurtu Relationships of the Peasants Party of Romania with the Agrarian Parties of Central and South East Europe in Revue Des Etudes Sud est Europeennes Vol 19 Issue 1 January March 1981 pp 31 39 Adam Tarnowski Two Polish Attempts to Bring about a Central East European Organisation London Polish Hearth Club 1943 Bianca Valota Cavallotti L Internazionale verde tra pace e guerra in Publications de l Ecole Francaise de Rome Vol 95 1987 pp 285 299 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Agrarian Bureau amp oldid 1190752613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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