The Greco-Bulgarian Conflict
also known as The War of the Stray Dog occurred in 1925 when a Greek
soldier allegedly ran after his dog, which had strayed across the border from Macedonia. The border was guarded by Bulgarian sentries, and
one of them shot the Greek soldier. Given the tense political climate,
escalation was inevitable; in response, the Greek dictatorial government under
General Theodoros Pangalos sent soldiers into Bulgaria. Bulgaria ordered its troops to provide only token resistance,
trusting the League of Nations to settle the dispute.
The League did indeed condemn
the Greek invasion, and called for both Greek withdrawal and compensation to Bulgaria. Greece ceded to this demand and was imposed a fine of
£45,000. Over 50 people were killed before Greece complied. Greece complained about the disparity between its treatment
and that of Italy in the Corfu incident in 1923, when the Italian armed forces
occupied the Greek island of Corfu in retaliation for the murder of Italian general
Enrico Tellini by bandits while surveying the Greek border with Albania.
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