Bulgarian coup d'état of 1944

Bulgarian coup d'état of 1944

The Bulgarian coup d'état of 1944, also known as the 9 September coup d'état ( _bg. Деветосептемврийски преврат, "Devetoseptemvriyski prevrat") and called in pre-1989 Bulgaria the National Uprising of 9 September or the Revolution of 9 September, was a forceful shuffle in the Kingdom of Bulgaria's state authority carried out on the eve of 9 September 1944. With the help of the advancing forces of the Third Ukrainian Front of the Red Army, the government of Prime Minister Konstantin Muraviev was overthrown and replaced with a government of the Fatherland Front led by Kimon Georgiev. Following that date, large-scale political, economic and social changes were introduced to the country, with Bulgaria quitting the Axis and falling in the Soviet sphere of influence.

On 26 August 1944, the government of Ivan Bagryanov had orally declared Bulgaria's neutrality in the war under the threat of the Red Army's offensive in neighbouring Romania. At the same time, in Egypt the government had entered separate peace talks with the United Kingdom and the United States, hoping to secure the dispatch of British and American troops in Bulgaria. On that same day, the Central Committee of the Bulgarian Workers' Party (BWP) proclaimed the assumption of power by means of an uprising its official task.

A government of the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union (BANU) "Vrabcha 1", until then in opposition, was formed on 2 September 1944, headed by Konstantin Muraviev. It continued the peace talks, declared its support for democratic reforms and ordered the withdrawal of German Army troops from Bulgaria. At the same time, the repressions of the partisans did not cease, the alliance with Nazi Germany was not disbanded and no attempts were made to normalize the relations with Moscow, forcing the Soviet Union to treat the new government with suspicion. On 5 September 1944, the Soviet Union declared war on Bulgaria, and during the peace talks in Egypt the British-American delegates laid down the occupation of southeastern Bulgaria as far north as Yambol by Turkish troops.

On 5 September, the Central Committee of the BWP and the general staff of the Popular Liberation Revolutionary Army hatched an operational plan to instigate an uprising. The plan was further particularized on 8 September. According to it, the coordinated actions of the partisans, the BWP combat groups and the Fatherland Front-supporting army detachments would assume power during the night of 9 September, establishing total control over the country. The declared goal of the uprising was the "overthrowing of the fascist authorities and the establishment of popular-democratic power of the Fatherland Front".

Unrest began all around Bulgaria on 6 September and 7 September, with the strikes of the Pernik miners and the Sofia tram employees, as well as the general strikes in Plovdiv and Gabrovo. The prisons in Pleven, Varna and Sliven were broken open and the political prisoners were released; 170 localities were permanently seized by partisan detachments between 6 September and 8 September. In many cities and villages, the strikes and meetings grew into armed clashes with the police, with victims from both sides. On 7 September, the Red Army invaded Bulgaria meeting with no opposition on the order of the Bulgarian government.

On the eve of 9 September, army units together with Fatherland Front detachments captured the key points in Sofia, such as the Ministry of War, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the post, the telegraph, the radio, the railway station, etc. Early in the morning, the new Prime Minister Kimon Georgiev informed the people on the radio of the shuffle:

On 9 September, on the order of the Popular Liberation Revolutionary Army commander-in-chief Dobri Terpeshev, all partisan units descended from the mountains and assumed power in the villages and cities. In places, this happened without any resistance, but in other cases army and police detachments loyal to the old government put up violent resistance to the Fatherland Front forces. In Sofia, Plovdiv, the region of Pernik, Shumen and Haskovo, the old regime supporters were crushed by military means, with the army passing entirely under the control of the Fatherland Front. The establishment of the new authority happened at the latest in Haskovo, where partisans and other antifascists seized the artillery barracks on 12 September, but suffered many casualties, as the negotiations with the commanding officers failed.

As of 9 September, the Red Army had not reached Sofia but was only in northeastern Bulgaria. As the Bulgarian communists collaborated with the Soviets en masse and were capable of assuming power without any aid, the Red Army commanders decided not to hurry with the seizure of the capital.

The Fatherland Front government included representatives of the BWP, BANU "Pladne", the Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party (Wide Socialists) and Zveno. The old Prime Minister Konstantin Muraviev went underground, Tsar Simeon II's regents and the government were arrested, as were the police, the gendarmerie and some army detachments' heads. On 10 September, the police was abolished and replaced with a popular militia consisting mainly of recent partisans; 8,130 political prisoners were released from the prisons, and the concentration camps of the former regime (e.g. Gonda voda, Krasto pole, Lebane) were done away with. The fascist organizations were banned, as were their publications.

After 9 September, the Bulgarian Army joined the Third Ukrainian Front and contributed to the defeat of Nazism in Europe, helping drive out the Germans from much of Yugoslavia and Hungary, reaching as far as Klagenfurt in Austria by April 1945. Although Bulgaria was not recognized as a true member of the Allies, it still managed to retain Southern Dobruja which it had acquired in 1940.

ee also

* Military history of Bulgaria during World War II
* Armistice between Italy and Allied armed forces
* King Michael's Coup
* Moscow Armistice and Lapland War

References

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