A e-mail forwarded by a friend offers a bonbon from Robert Service’s new Stalin: A Biography. When Stalin’s desk was emptied after his death, it contained only a few papers. One was a carefully preserved note from the Yugoslav dictator Josip Tito:
Stalin: stop sending people to kill me. We’ve already captured five of them, one of them with a bomb and another with arifle. . . . If you don’t stop sending killers, I’ll send one to Moscow, and I won’t have to send a second. [p. 592]
The biographer adds this gloss: “Thus did one gangster write to another.”
Whether Stalin was amused or terrified by this threat, we don’t know. But Tito did outlive him by nearly thirty years.
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