Notes of a Plenipotentiary by G. N. Trubetskoi;Borislav Chernev;

Notes of a Plenipotentiary by G. N. Trubetskoi;Borislav Chernev;

Author:G. N. Trubetskoi;Borislav Chernev;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Lightning Source Inc. (Tier 3)
Published: 2015-12-04T17:52:10+00:00


The city of Skopje and Ovče Pole must be defended by a strategic border yet to be determined.

In case Serbia accepted the Allied powers’ stance on Macedonia, it would receive the following territories at the end of the war:

Bosnia-Herzegovina; Syrmia up to the rivers Drava and Danube, including Zemlin and Bačka; the Adriatic coast from Cape Planka to a point ten kilometers south of Ragusa, including the islands Zirone, Budua, Solta, Brazza, and Calametra, and the Sabbioncello Peninsula. If the Allies took over Slavonia, it would go to Serbia.

The Adriatic coast south of the ten-kilometer line by Ragusa would be divided between Serbia and Montenegro.

The coast south of the Drina River would belong to independent Albania.

The future status of Croatia up to the Dalmatian border, including Fiume, would be decided at the final conclusion of peace.

The coastline extending from Planka to the southernmost part of Sabbioncello, and from ten kilometers south of Ragusa to the Voussa River, would be demilitarized.

The Allied powers must insist on the border of the Agreement of 1912 in Macedonia, unless Serbia could persuade Bulgaria to make voluntary alterations.

The border between Greece and Albania would start in Macedonia, but the Allies could not specify its exact location at this point.

The powers would not demand for themselves any of the territories designated in points 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.



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