The dissolution of the Comintern on 15 May was Stalin's tactical move which brought
no significant change to the well established relations between the Comintern leadership, i.e.
Moscow, and its members - the communist parties. The response in Slovenia, immediately
after the official news of the dissolution was varied. The communists accepted the official
explanation of the leadership of the Communist Party of Slovenia justifying the dissolution
of the international association of communist parties, and endeavored to present the Party
to the public as national and patriotic. Some prominent members of the Slovene Liberation
Front considered the dissolution as a significant move which recognized the national identity
of individual countries and allowed the communist parties to become truly national. On the
anti-communist side the assessment prevailed that nothing much would change with the
demise of the Comintern, which Stalin had been compelled to dissolve because of anti-communist feelings among the western Allies, given that national communist parties
continued operating and pursuing their programmes.