Chapter 62 Back to Berlin

Release Date: 2024-07-05 14:55:43
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In the middle of the whole thing, Alan Wilson asked himself, in fact, the only possible exposure lies in Mihailovich, after all, with Alan Wilson’s relatively mediocre mind can not come up with a foolproof way out.

However, for Mihajlovic, he was not completely without a little confidence. The other party was at least a figure who had appeared in Time magazine, although the cover of the weekly magazine that year was Stalin. Mihailovich was purely, the Americans picked someone who fit their position to bring Mihailovich out to fill the cover.

And historically after Mihailovic’s death, the Yugoslav Fatherland Army fought Tito until 1957. It could be described as an armed force of strong faith that just happened to run into a much more powerful opponent.

Mihajlovic, who had such strong prestige in the Fatherland Army, Alan Wilson had no reason to doubt the other side’s firm will.

Aside from the leaders of the entire Yugoslavian Fatherland Army, Alan Wilson felt that no one should be able to connect the dots, not even MI6.

It was the equivalent of playing a game coming up and giving a panoramic map, and Alan Wilson had a good idea of who might notice him. He was still driving the map called the Cambridge Five, which he had deliberately avoided on his report, and neither Whitehall nor the Kremlin should have suspected him.

In short, this time the planning, talk about not perfect, but there is also a feeling of nine out of ten. Before leaving the border Allen Wilson left, he also made a special fanfare to find De Kovic, saying that he wanted to return to Berlin, “If there are exchanges between Britain and Yugoslavia in the future, I will definitely try my best to apply for a trip to Yugoslavia, and I hope that by then we will still be able to meet.”

Alan Wilson, who had only just said goodbye to Mihailovic, the leader of the Fatherland Army, spoke with Tito’s representative at this time with just as much affection, hoping that Yugoslavia would not forget that Britain had supported it in the midst of the war against Germany, and, if there was anything good to come of it, hoping that Britain’s economic interests would be taken care of.

“Mr. Allen is returning to Berlin so soon? In fact, wasn’t the Berlin parade a bit rushed?” De Kovic said with some curiosity, “Not a joint parade of four countries? Even if Britain doesn’t consider the Soviet Union, it can still ask the United States and France for their opinions.”

“What’s the point of waiting for a redneck, a country that throws up its hands and surrenders.” Alan Wilson bristled, “I don’t deny the strength of the Americans, but Britain is far more credible than the Americans on certain matters.”

De Kovic could disagree now, but by the time the refugees on the border ran into American-occupied territory, it wouldn’t do for the Yugoslavs not to believe it.

For Alan Wilson, history had taken a small turn for the worse, and Britain certainly hadn’t held a parade in June. He still needed to return to Berlin to grasp the historical pulse through observation.

Passing through Vienna, Allen Wilson, who seemed to be making a great triumphal turn, traveled back to the Eppstein Palace and led the American, British and French diplomats in Vienna on a visit to Petrov, the representative of the Soviet Union.

Allen Wilson boasted at the Eppstein Palace about solving the refugee problem at the Austrian border, “No one understands refugees better than I do, and when I was in British India I saw unclothed Indians at all times and had my own solutions to similar food shortages , e.g. …… ”

Retracting the words of, for example, the Bengal Famine from his lips, Alan Wilson analyzed, from a professional point of view, the post-war reconstruction, “We have the most powerful collection of nations in the world today, and peace will surely be maintained in what is now Europe, the center of the world’s civilization.”

Shielding himself from the subtle expressions of the American delegates, Allen Wilson did not feel that he had said anything wrong. Britain and France would have to wait for the Suez Canal War ten years later to have their bottoms stripped off. It was only after that that Europeans gradually recognized in their hearts that America was already above Europe.

“Mr. Allen is right, a few of our countries were able to keep the war away from Europe from now on.” France on behalf of Henry, as a professional comic opening and Allen Wilson’s words, France in the end of the war, the first thing to do is to let all the countries, forget in the world war, was Germany instantly cut the throat of the embarrassment of the second.

Restore the status of France, the most consistent interest is, also pay a heavy price of the United Kingdom. The old imperialists are still able to look out for each other at critical moments.

“And we in the Soviet Union certainly agree with that!” Petrov had also seen the subtle expression on the American representative’s face, and it was times like these that he was happy to see a degree of controversy among the three countries that most of the time had one nostril.

Being able to solve the current refugee problem on the Austrian border, Petrov, as Austria’s Soviet representative, certainly felt happy, but not all the same, and he was equally skeptical that the imperialist enemy, would not take the opportunity to do anything in Yugoslavia.

But this concern is only suitable for secret investigation afterward, at least ostensibly Alan Wilson is to return to Berlin, has nothing to do with the Austrian matter.

Unfortunately, before Petrov could rejoice for long, Allen Wilson said, “I have rejected Yugoslavia’s move to expel the Teutons into British-occupied territory.”

Standing in the middle of the American and French delegates, Allen Wilson seemed as if he were Su Qin, who was hanging the seal of the Six Nations. Standing in such a position that Petrov took a look at it, it was the British, American and French imperialists, again working together to apply pressure.

But in fact he does not know, this has nothing to do with the United States and France, purely liaison officer stirring instincts attack. As for what Petrov thought and how to report to the Kremlin, that was a matter for the Soviet Union.

Back in Berlin, it was already a few days later, and Allen Wilson, after all, had to bypass the Soviet-occupied zone and had to go into western Germany, before traveling by plane to the city of Greater Berlin, West Berlin to be exact.

The time was already in June, and Allen Wilson, who had been away for more than twenty days, had returned to Berlin with a renewed sense of accomplishment in settling the Austrian refugees, which had been demonstrated in the last few days by a clear message from Belgrade applauding the efforts of London to repatriate them, and which showed that his work had not been in vain.

Ivor was happy about Alan Wilson’s return, after all, the preparations for the parade had been hectic, and one more man was one more laborer, and Ivor, who had become proficient at exploiting surplus value, was very pleased.

“Seems like I haven’t heard of it before, we are going to hold a military parade ah, isn’t it a joint parade of four countries together?” Alan Wilson was still thinking about how this parade, which was certainly not in June in history, had come out.

“It’s a new move by the Foreign Office, we can only try to get the job done.” Avril shrugged, “The Soviets didn’t object either, and as for the Americans and the French, there was even less need to object.”

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