CHAPTER 9
AMERICAN AID TO THE
SOVIET UNION
On the 15th of August,
1871, the American general Albert Pike, who was a high-ranking Masonic leader,
wrote a letter to the Italian Illuminati leader Giuseppe Mazzini. In that
letter, he described his amazing plans, including the destruction of the
Russian Empire.
The Bolsheviks' path to
power was financially paved by Jacob Schiff, Paul Warburg, John Rockefeller,
Franklin Vanderlip, John Pierpoint Morgan Jr (who gave at least a million
dollars to Lenin) and William Averell Harriman from the United States of
America. There were also similar forces in Europe with the same aims. There,
the English Grand Master Alfred Milner and the Rothschild family supported the
Bolsheviks.
The Soviet Union began using the red banner of the Rothschilds as the official symbol of Socialism-Communism.
There are a few books by
honest researchers, including Antony Sutton's "Wall Street and the
Bolshevik Revolution" and Gary Allen's "None Dare Call It
Conspiracy", which expose the financial circles which helped the
Bolsheviks remain in power at any cost. Without this financial support it would
have been impossible for them to remain in the saddle; Russia would quickly
have thrown them off.
Doctor of economics
Antony C. Sutton spent several years collecting documents to prove this. The
material he found is published in a series of books, including the giant, three
volume work "Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development",
published by the Hoover Institute. He has also published two other important
books on the subject: "The National Suicide" and "The Best Enemy
Money Can Buy".
The American trade
embargo was just a gigantic bluff. The totalitarian and completely ineffective
Soviet state could never have survived without aid from outside. The history of
ancient China provides us with an example of a similar state. In the year 8
A.D., an important official, Wang Mang, usurped the power and proclaimed
himself emperor one year later. He tried to gain control over the economy by
the aid of radical (almost socialist) reforms.
Wang Mang strengthened
the central government with characteristic Oriental discipline and severity. He
nationalized property and prohibited the selling of slaves. The economic
situation deteriorated catastrophically. In the year 17, the peasants had had
enough and started a revolt to depose Wang Mang. They were successful and
killed him like a mad dog.
Antony Sutton emphasized
that 95 per cent of the Soviet technology came from the United States of
America or their allies. His conclusion was that the Communists would not have
been able to remain in power for even a single day without their aid. The
Bolsheviks would undoubtedly have lost the four-year-long civil war unless the
West had offered to help them. That was why the Allies staged the so-called
intervention.
U. S. Congress while
appropriating billions for defence against Communism has at the same time given
over six billion dollars in direct military and economic aid to the Communists.
Radar-equipped F-86 jet fighter planes worth over 300 000 dollars each have
been sold to the Communist dictator of Yugoslavia for 10 000 dollars. The
Eisenhower Administration approved it. ("Report, U.S. Foreign
Assistance", U.S. Agency for Int. Dev., March 21, 1962.)
THE
"INTERVENTION" AS A DIVERSION
It is necessary to point
out that the initiative for the "intervention" actually came from the
Bolsheviks. Leon Trotsky, people's commissary for military affairs, sent a note
written in English requesting military aid from the Allies on the 5th of March
1918. British troops were to be sent to Arkhangelsk and American troops were to
occupy Vladivostok to prevent the advance of the Japanese. (Yuri Felshtinsky,
"The Failure of the World Revolution", London, 1991, pp. 283-284.)
In the same month (March
19), 2000 British soldiers landed in Murmansk. They were to halt the advance of
Finnish troops. The local Bolshevik leadership received orders from Petrograd
to establish an all-round cooperation with the British troops. (Staffan Skott,
"Sovjetunionen fran borjan till slutet" / "The Soviet Union from
Beginning to End", Stockholm,1992)
Trotsky approved the
joint military soviet composed of British, Soviet and French representatives.
(M. Jaaskelainen, "Ita-Karjalankysymys: kansallinen laajennusohjelman synty
ja sen toteuttamisyrityksetSuomen ulkopolitiikassa vuosina 1918-20" /
"The Question of Eastern Karelia: The Beginnings of the National Extension
Program and Attempts of Finnish Foreign Policy to Realize it in the Years
1918-20", Helsinki,1961)
There were officially 10
052 foreign soldiers in Murmansk on the 1st of July 1918, including 6850
Englishmen and also Serbs and Frenchmen.
Such official figures are
usually debatable. The British Major-General Sir Charles Maynard's figure,
published in his memoirs "The Murmansk Venture", was quite different.
He claimed that the Allied troops never exceeded 1500 men. Trotsky had
previously demanded aid from the French in founding his Red Army, but Paris had
no wish to comply.
The American Colonel Raymond Robbins had no scruples about helping the Bolsheviks, however. 4500 American soldiers arrived in Arkhangelsk on the 4th of September 1918, according to Louis Fischer. ("The Life of Lenin", London, 1970, p. 430)The American President Woodrow Wilson had sent two million men to the Western front in the spring of 1917.
Maynard himself left
England on the 18th of July 1918 with only 150 Royal Marines. The Bolsheviks
needed no protection from the Germans, since it was actually the Germans who
were protecting the Bolsheviks from the Whites. The British regarded only the
White Finns as enemies.
The Red Finnish troops,
who were pro-Communist, were led by the British, according to General Maynard.
When he wanted to hand £150 000over to the White Russian troops (and a total of
5000 men), London refused to give its approval.
He went to London to
explain the desperate situation of the Whites. Only then was he given
permission to give the money to the Whites, who fought against the Bolsheviks
and wanted to re-establish the Tsarist Empire.
The Finnish Whites were
eager to occupy Murmansk as soon as possible, but the Finnish President, Pehr
Evind Svinhufvud, after receiving warnings from London, did not dare
issue orders to this effect. When it became clear that the White Russian troops
in the north were making too great advances, David Lloyd George (Freemason)
demanded that Churchill should call off the British venture in Murmansk.
Demands that the British should cease their aid to the Whites in Russia were
also published more frequently in the press. In August 1919, Lord Henry
Rawlinson (Freemason) was sent from London to Murmansk. He gave instructions to
take the British troops home again.
In the beginning, the
West claimed rather hypocritically that the Bolsheviks were dangerous. In spite
of these warnings, the British sent only a few soldiers to ostensibly fight
against the Reds. In actual fact, the Allies avoided disturbing the Bolsheviks.
An example of this was when the British promised Boris Savinkov, one of the
Social Revolutionary leaders and a Freemason, to send two divisions against the
Bolsheviks in Arkhangelsk. Only 600 troops were actually sent, and these were
not involved in any fighting. Savinkov accused the British of secretly aiding
the Bolsheviks.
President Woodrow Wilson
was one of the first heads of state to recognize Soviet Russia. On the 6th of
July 1918, the Americans decided to send a further 7 000 soldiers to
Vladivostok. The purpose of this was to lessen the Japanese preparedness for
action. The Americans soon became worried and were forced to take measures
against the Japanese army.
On the 26th of August
1918, the American consul in Vladivostok, John Caldwell, sent a telegram to
Robert Lansing, the secretary of state in Washington: "Nearly 18 000
Japanese soldiers have landed in Vladivostok.
Another 6000 are en route
to the front in Manchuria. The Japanese are pushing forward everywhere they
can... the situation is critical." ("Papers Relating to the Foreign
Relations of the United States, 1918, Russian", Vol. II, pp. 328-29)
The Americans regarded
the situation as dangerous primarily because the Japanese overthrew the Soviet
regime everywhere they came. There were already 70 000 Japanese soldiers in the
Far East in the beginning of November 1918, according to official sources.
Robert Lansing, by the way, did not conceal his opinion that the Bolshevik Jews
were spiritually underdeveloped, i.e.: primitive beings.
Despite the strict Soviet
censorship, one important and revealing phrase could still be read in certain
collections: "The American government was obviously against the Japanese
advance." ("Documents of Foreign Politics of the Soviet Union",
Vol. I, Moscow, 1957, p. 225). This sentence was later censored, since the
falsifiers of history regarded it as much too dangerous and revealing.
The civil war was too
exhausting for Lenin. That was why the West increased its contributions to
bring an end to it. The Allies began to withdraw and their equipment was left
to the Bolsheviks.
As early as in March 1918, five American officers had begun to train Red Army units.
The Americans also sent
some war equipment to the Bolsheviks, according to Antony Sutton ("The
National Suicide", Melbourne, 1973, p.76). Sutton refers to another
important document, which proves that Trotsky asked the American ambassador,
David R. Francis, for official aid to train the Red Army in 1919.
The United States, being
a mighty military power, made certain that the Japanese did not threaten the
establishment of the Soviet regime. The United States occupied the Far East
until the Red Army could stand on its own feet and control the Soviet
territory. President Woodrow Wilson had given corresponding secret instructions
to the commander of the American troops in the Far East, William S. Graves. Antony
Sutton referred to those documents. The Americans controlled the Trans-Siberian
Railway, so it was easy for them to drive Kolchak's White forces out of
Vladivostok.
They could eventually
ceremoniously hand the entire area over to the Bolsheviks. An announcement
about this event was published in The New York Times on the 15th of February
1920. The Associated Press related in a telegram that street meetings and
celebration parades were held in Vladivostok after admiral Alexander Kolchak's
troops had been forced to leave. Red flags fly on many houses. In ceremonious
speeches the Americans were called real friends who had at a critical time
saved the situation. The Americans, on their part, stressed that they did not
wish to invade the Far East by controlling certain Soviet areas, but that the
operation should be regarded as the Allies' contribution to peaceful settlement
of the local situation.
General Alexei von Lampe
revealed in the Russian exile periodical Russky Kolokol No 6 and No 7, 1929,
published in Berlin, that the purpose of the Allied presence in Russia was to
ward off the German threat against the Allies. There were several thousand
foreign soldiers stationed near Murmansk and Arkhangelsk in Northern Russia.
When the Russian front became superfluous, they simply left the scene of
operations.
Before this happened, the Allies suggested that the White Russian
troops, too, should call off their military activities. When the Whites refused
to do so, the English dumped their equipment and ammunition in the sea.
Alexei von Lampe
described the events outside Petrograd when the British navy deserted General
Nikolai Yudenich's White forces in 1919.They were no longer given any support.
Of course, there were Englishmen who did not wish to side with the Bolsheviks.
One of these was Crombie, the British military attaché in Petrograd. He was
removed in an original manner. The Red Guards simply forced their way into the
British Embassy on the 31st of August 1918 and murdered Crombie. No one there
offered any resistance.
Winston Churchill wrote a
letter to the British Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, on the 21st of
February 1919. He had no objections to the general standpoint that the Russians
had to take care of themselves. David Lloyd George officially explained the
motive for not helping the White Russians in the following way:
"To send our soldiers to shoot Bolsheviks would be the same as creating Bolshevism here at home." (Paul Johnson, “Modern Times", Stockholm, 1987, p. 108)
He justified his
co-operation with the Bolsheviks in this way:
"We have made deals with cannibals, why not with the Bolsheviks?"
Lloyd George was in
favour of active contributions to aid the Soviet government. A trade agreement
between the Soviet Union and Great Britain was signed on the 16th of March
1921.
On the 14th of February
1919, President Wilson demanded withdrawal of the foreign forces in Russia. The
Bolsheviks were simply to be left in peace. He explained this demand in a most
peculiar manner:
"There is no use for our forces in Russia."
The American President’s
position is quite clear from his message, which was read at the Fourth
Extra-Ordinary Soviet Congress on March 14, 1918. He wrote, among other things
that the United States' government will do all it can to help Russia become
completely sovereign and independent in its own internal affairs as well as
recreating its important role in Europe and in the life of our present society.
Those were not just fair
words - United States of America immediately began supporting the Bolsheviks in
all imaginable ways. By 1920, the Americans had already built two harbours in
the Far East for Soviet Russia. Forty-five thousand French soldiers (the number
is probably exaggerated) were stationed near Odessa and on the Crimean
Peninsula.
The French also deserted
the Whites. The Allied forces suddenly left the theatre of war and refused to
fight the Bolsheviks. At the same time, the Frenchmen in Berezovsky near Odessa
handed the first tanks over to the Reds. The whole story must have seemed very
puzzling to the Whites, especially since the Bolsheviks, according to the
French, had German instructors. The Allies were officially supposed to combat
the Germans on all fronts.
Secret documents were
later found, which explained a lot about this situation. It was revealed that
the English were allowed to supply the Whites only with foodstuffs and that the
French had received orders to remain completely passive, also at the time of
General Anton Denikin's trouble with the Reds in Caucasia. The passive French
forces were entirely withdrawn from Russia on the 5-6th of April 1919.
Alexei von Lampe claimed
that the Allied contributions were just a mirage or Communist propaganda.
Neither did the Allies ever co-ordinate their activities. This sabotaged the
operations of the White Army, which was comprised of nationalist volunteers.
The Allies thwarted the Whites at all times, and in the beginning they even
fought against them.
Meanwhile, the Bolsheviks
received all kind of help, money and information from the West.
Britain sent rifles and
ammunition for 250 000 men to Soviet Russia, according to The Manchester
Guardian (2nd of May 1919). The Whites received an insignificant portion of
this shipment. The Frenchmen only gave tiny sums of money to the Whites.
The Allies even gave the
Bolsheviks direct aid when they conquered the Ukraine, whereas the Ukrainian
nationalist leader and Freemason Simon Petlyura's freedom fighters received no
aid at all ("Ukraine & Ukrainians" by Dr Ivan Owechko, Greeley,
Colorado,1984, p. 114).
Of all their opponents,
the Bolsheviks fought hardest against Simon Petlyura. In all the areas he
conquered, the people celebrated the demise of the Red Jewish regime. Those
celebrations were called "Jew-pogroms" in the Communist propaganda.
Petlyura had to flee to Poland in October1919. His later attempts to save the
Ukraine from the yoke of Communist barbarism also failed. The West had staked
everything on the Bolsheviks.
Moscow, meanwhile, could
not forget Petlyura's struggle against them. That was why the Jewish Bolshevik
and Freemason Samuel Schwartzbart murdered him in Paris on the 26th of May
1926. (Georg Leibbrant,"Ukraine")
According to the
Soviet-Estonian Encyclopaedia, this was the Jews' revenge. No one was allowed
to threaten their power.
The Whites treated their
opponents somewhat differently. In 1918, newspaper editor in Yekaterinoslavl
published an exhortation to fight against General Lavr Kornilov. He was merely
banned from the city for his crime. Everything according to Alexei von Lampe.
Antony Sutton pointed out
that the West eagerly began supporting the Bolsheviks in December 1917, when
the possibility of establishing the Soviet Regime was still very uncertain. In
fact, an intensive and systematic aid operation was begun just after the
Bolsheviks' seizure of power.
Antony Sutton asserts that the Bolsheviks received all they needed (primarily weapons and tin) from the West. The Soviet Union was founded by the same financial circle, which had broken up Europe at Versailles and thereby created the necessary conditions for the outbreak of the Second World War. This circle has controlled both sides in several wars.
Being a Freemason, the
American President Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) had very reluctantly sent 4500
troops to Northern Russia, since the Freemason and supreme commander of the
Allied troops, Ferdinand Foch, had demanded it.
The historian Louis
Fischer confirms in his biography of Lenin that Wilson tried to keep the
American presence to a minimum ~ the American forces did virtually nothing in
Northern Russia.
The official numbers were
also greatly exaggerated. Fischer stressed that the foreign troops played a
very small role for the outcome of the civil war. (Louis Fischer, "The
Life of Lenin", London, 1970, p. 489)
So, the United States of
America and their allies were not at all interested in deposing the Bolsheviks.
The formerly secret and extremely interesting reports about the Russian civil
war in the archives of the American State Department confirm this fact. These
papers have been available to researchers since September 1958.
Among other documents
there are the instructions from the State Department which were telegraphed to
the American ambassador, David Francis, on the 15th of February 1918, telling
him to maintain close unofficial contact with the Bolsheviks, so that there
would be no need to recognize the Soviet régime officially. Francis had
suggested crushing the Bolsheviks altogether.
Washington ignored this
suggestion.
It would not have been
difficult to crush the Bolsheviks, if there had been any real wish to do so,
since they were exceedingly weak in the middle of 1918. In July 1918, the
Germans and the Chinese who crushed the Social Revolutionaries' revolt saved
them. The Finnish General Carl Gustaf Mannerheim also believed that his
well-disciplined troops were capable of conquering Eastern Karelia and deposing
Lenin (who was totally ignorant of military tactics) in Petrograd.
The Germans prohibited
that action, however. Then threats came from the British. London even
considered a declaration of war against Finland if the Finns really threatened
the Bolsheviks. (M. Jaaskelainen, "Ita-Karjalan kysymys..."
/"The Ouestion of Eastern Karelia...", Helsinki, 1961)
In the spring of 1918,
Leon Trotsky asked for economic aid from the United States in order to be able
to combat the Whites more efficiently. Lenin also asked President Wilson for
help in building up his socialist state, according to Louis Fischer's "The
Life of Lenin" (London, 1970).
Of course, the United
States gave the Bolsheviks all kinds of aid. The American ambassador, David
Francis, reported to Washington on the 17thof March 1918 that Trotsky wanted
five American military experts, traffic controllers for railways, and equipment
(U.S. State Department Decimal File. 861.00/1341). Trotsky wrote officially in
Russkoye Slovo on the 20thof March 1918 that it was impossible to be allied
with the United States.
This maneuver belonged to
the rules of the game.
When Lenin began
nationalizing foreign companies in 1918, he made exceptions of the American
companies. Louis Fischer confirms this in his book "The Life of
Lenin" (London, 1970). The Americans were allowed to keep control of
Singer and Westinghouse, International Harvester and other firms.
The Allies made a
complete withdrawal from Northern Russia in order to seriously damage the
morale of the White troops after General Anton Denikin had managed to conquer
Kiev on the 31 of August 1919 and had begun marching on Moscow. This was
revealed in Paul Johnson's book “Modern Times" (Stockholm, 1987, p. 109).
The Polish socialist
General Jozef Pilsudski was very successful, however. He defeated the
Bolsheviks at the battle of the Wisla. Being a Freemason, he was immediately
thereafter forced to agree to peace with Lenin. Lenin later admitted that if
Pilsudski had continued the war for just one more week, it would have meant the
end of the Bolsheviks' power, since General Peter von Wrangel's forces were
approaching and the Reds were unable to counter them.
The Polish Jews,
meanwhile, helped Lenin’s troops very actively when the Red Army attacked
Poland in 1918-19.
The Intervention and the economic blockade were, unfortunately, just ridiculous myth. The international financial elite needed this diversion to be able to quickly introduce a totalitarian form of capitalism without market economy ~ the most important form of Illuminism, which we know by the name of Communism ~ in Russia.The Western financial elite wanted to use market economy capitalism as an anvil and Communism as a hammer to rule the world and entirely subdue it, as the American historian and publicist Gary Allen expressed it in his book "None Dare Call It Conspiracy".
The Soviet Union was
later transformed into a base for the destabilization of the rest of the world.
This was the reason win everything possible was done to keep Moscow's Communist
Empire alive, despite the fact that it had entered the world as an economic
monstrosity that had to be constantly kept alive. At the same time, the false
fronts of Communism had to be set up.
Oswald Spengler, a great thinker and historian of our century who wrote the important book "Der Untergang des Abendlandes" ("The Decline of the West") also perceived the fact that the left wing political parties are controlled by the very same men of finance whom they officially regard as their enemies.
He claimed:
"There is no proletarian, not even a communist movement that has not operated in the interests of money, in the direction indicated by money ~ and that without the idealists among the leaders having the slightest suspicion of the fact."
Spengler went so far as
to call socialism the capitalism of the lower class.
Reginald McKenna (head of the Midland Bank in Great Britain) admitted forthrightly"Those who find and hand out the money and the credit, direct the government's policy and hold the fate of nations in their hands."
Several
serious works have demonstrated by means of documents that each and every war
in Europe during the last two centuries has been caused by the financial elite
in their own interests.
Commander
William Guy Carr confirmed in his book "Pawns in the Game" that the
Jacobin Napoleon Bonaparte was, in the beginning, the loyal servant of the
financial elite (he was a passive bystander on the side of the Robespierre
brothers during the so-called French Revolution, but violently put down the
royalists' revolt in 1795).
Napoleon finally understood the nature of the dirty game he was taking part in, began working against it, and was consequently removed.
The
American president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, once admitted that nothing in
politics happens by accident. If anything happens, you can be sure that it was
planned that way. A famous Jewish Illuminatus and Freemason, Walter Rathenau,
who became minister of finance in the German Weimar Republic, admitted in 1912:
"Three hundred men, who all know each other, control the finances of Europe and appoint successors from their own ranks." (Wiener Presse, 24th of December 1912)
Everything
has been done according to the programme. That was revealed by Walter Rathenau
in Paris, 1913, when the financial elite and the Illuminati founded the
International Bank Alliance:
"The moment has come for the financial elite to officially dictate their laws to the world, as they have previously done only covertly... The financial elite will be required to succeed empires and kingdoms with an authority which does not extend only to one country, but spans the entire world."
It is
therefore hardly surprising that the Bolsheviks received enough rifles and
ammunition from the West to crush the Whites. The Western democracies paid no
heed to the reports which related that the majority of those killed by the Reds
were common people, the poor, the workers, even pregnant women. This was
confirmed by a 90-year-old exiled Estonian, Kustav Pohla, in 1978. He had
witnessed those crimes in Russia himself. (Eesti Pdevaleht, Stockholm, 8th of
April 1978)
THE
FAMINE AS A WEAPON
Lenin
knew he could break the back of the Whites by damaging the peasants. The
systematic confiscation of agricultural produce led to a terrible famine which,
in turn, caused epidemics of typhus and other severe illnesses. People began
plundering. The situation was chaotic. The fact that the confiscated grain was
sold abroad was concealed from the public. In this way Lenin used the famine as
a weapon against his enemies.
Another
reason for the famine was to establish the Bolshevik regime and to reduce the
Russian population, according to Vladimir Soloukhin("In the Light of
Day", Moscow, 1992, p. 52). The situation deteriorated drastically.
Therefore, the Bolsheviks had to stop confiscating grain in 1921, but it was
already too late.
Ten million people were starving in July1921. During the
winter of 1921-22, 35 million were without food.(Vladimir Berelovich's article
"The Diplomacy of Starvation" in the weekly newspaper Russkaya Mysl,
Paris, 27th of September 1985.)
Lenin exploited the situation and set up food-traps, Torgsin, where people could buy macaroni, lard, grain, for gold or foreign currency. All who tried to buy anything were immediately seized and forcibly relieved of all their gold. They were also forced to explain where they had got their money.
Millions
of lives were saved by various private organizations from Sweden and the United
States ~ above all by ARA (American Relief Administration). ARA collected 70
million dollars (56 million of this came from the donations of Americans). This
money was enough to buy food for 18 million Russians.
Lenin
had collected 400 million rubles in gold from Kiev, 500 million from Odessa and
100 million from Kharkov, but he felt absolutely no inclination to give any of
it away to the starving. He announced: "We have no money!" (Igor
Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p.85)
Meanwhile,
the bands of criminals and robbers Trotsky had set free continued to pillage
the country. Later, Mao Zedong in China also used criminals. The famine
threatened to bring tens of millions of people toothier graves. Cannibalism
occurred in the hardest hit areas.
A
committee called Pomgol was established to help the starving. Russia’s most
eminent citizens joined this group. What happened afterwards was perfectly
revolting. The committee had scarcely been formed before all of its members,
except Maxim Gorky and Vera Figner, were arrested. They had distributed
foodstuffs and medicines. The Bolsheviks did not like the fact that the members
of the committee had talked about the cause of the famine, which amounted to criticism
against the War Communism. When the committee had been dissolved, all aid
ceased (Stanislav Govorukhin's film "Our Lost Russia"). The ARA was
accused of espionage.
Five
million people died of starvation during 1921-22, according to official
sources. The emigrants claimed that the real figure was significantly higher.
The Russian press has also demonstrated this more recently. Lenin was
responsible for all these lives.
The
cruel War Communism did not work, despite the vast amounts of foreign aid, and
already at the beginning of 1921 Lenin was forced to say:
"It is finished!"
The
international financial elite did not want to give up. Colossal measures were
soon taken and in the beginning of March 1921, Lenin announced that a new
economic policy ~ the NEP ~ was to be enforced. This was done to save Communism
from its economic crisis and to calm the many revolts of the peasants across
Russia, since these were another important contributory cause of the
introduction of the NEP.
Lenin
permitted foreigners to start so-called concession companies, where the
Westerners owned 51 per cent and the Soviet side owned 49 percent. Antony
Sutton emphasized in an article that the Soviet censorship later did everything
in its power to erase all information about these cooperative businesses from
the history books.
Lenin
called this reform campaign the "policy of two steps forward, one step
backwards". He proclaimed that the doors were open to foreign capital and
Western technology. He encouraged the setting up of private ventures within
agriculture, the services and small home-based businesses.
From
1922, Lenin permitted the founding of 330 co-operative companies and another
134firms, which dealt with technical aid. On the 21st of February 1922, Pravda
wrote about how the American Barksdall Corporation began delivering modern
equipment to the oil industry in Baku.
Singer
was another business, which founded a concession company in1925. The Bolsheviks
later took over this firm entirely. Many other companies could, for a
subsequent period, co-operate quite openly with the Communists and even take
their profits out of the Soviet Union. Those businessmen included Armand Hammer
and W. Averell Harriman, who became the American ambassador in Moscow in 1943.
This open cooperation continued up to 1937 in certain areas.
On
October 28, 1921, Lenin gave the Jewish businessman Armand Hammer what amounted
to a monopoly. His family had emigrated from Odessa to America where he had
founded the American Communist Party together with his father. He later
arranged for himself to represent 38 American companies (including Ford) in
Moscow.
Hammer
co-operated with nearly all the Communist leaders. He met Gorbachev for the
first time on the 18th of June 1985. Stalin was the only one who gave him any
trouble. In 1930 Stalin refused to have anything to do with Hammer and he was
forced to cease his activities in Moscow. The reason for this was that Hammer
had co-operated too closely with Leon Trotsky.
Lenin, as previously mentioned, was more interested in appropriating the property and riches of the Russians than in practicing Utopian socialism. The Swedish socialists, too, in the name of "fair distribution”, have transformed their subjects into tax-slaves of the financial elite.
In this
situation, the plundering escalated.
It was primarily "the greedy Jew", Armand Hammer, who brought the Tsars' and the aristocrats' jewels and art to America where it was sold to other rich Jews. (Everything according to Svenska Dagbladet, 30th of March 1987)
Hammer
began his “business" with Lenin by exchanging gems and furs for
foodstuffs, of which the Russians would have produced a surplus themselves if
Lenin had not destroyed their capacity to do so. This was a part of the
bandits‘ plan. In this way, the Faberge eggs, the diamond-topped tiaras and the
icons, which had been plundered from the churches, ended up in the hands of
Armand and his brother Victor Hammer.
When
their supplies were finished, new stolen goods were brought in from the Soviet
Union; this presented no difficulty since the bandit chieftains in Moscow were
always eager to fatten up their foreign bank accounts a little more with the
help of Armand Hammer and other fences.
Lenin
had said to Armand Hammer:
"Soviet Russia needs American capital and technical aid to get the wheels rolling again." {Dagens (Nyheter, 25th of November 1984)
When
Hammer later landed in Moscow with his private aeroplane, he never needed to go
through the passport or customs control. Everyone was equal, but it appears that
some were more equal than others. "It was Lenin who convinced me to become
a capitalist," Hammer later declared.
In
1980, the Communist billionaire Hammer "donated" the Sovin centre, a
gigantic office block, to Moscow, in order to watch his interests more closely.
Hammer's chemical factories in the Soviet Union devastated the natural
environment as well as the people's health (for example, in Ventspils in
occupied Latvia). But he did not care. The most important thing was his profit.
He never had enough! Hammer did not conceal his satanic attitude:
"He who tells the truth has no future. The future is built exclusively on lies."
Those
lies have now turned back upon the liars. During the NEP period, Lenin also
performed the political manoeuvre of changing the name of the Cheka into the
GPU (the Board of Government Politics) on the 6th of February 1922. He returned
several companies to their original owners, but they were later re-confiscated.
In June
1925, the GPU chief of the Lubensk area (in the Ukraine), Dviyannikov, sent a
secret circular to his district chiefs. Dviyannikov instructed the GPU to keep
a low profile during the passive NEP period, but to keep gathering information
about the enemies of the Soviet régime so that they would be ready to strike
the killing blow against these forces at the right moment.
He
encouraged his underlings to be more active in their spying on the people so
that the lists would be ready when it was time to begin liquidating the enemies
of the people, whose smiles of relief would soon enough be replaced by grimaces
of fear. He was expecting the enemies to reveal themselves.
The
Soviet propaganda has eagerly spread the myth about the Western threat to the
Communist system in Russia. This propaganda completely lacked substance,
however. This can easily be proved with the following facts.
In
March 1924, the Commander-in-Chief Mikhail Frunze demanded that the Red Army be
dissolved because it had turned into a band of thieves and robbers. This was
done ~ in complete secrecy. Only the commanders remained. So, the Soviet Union
was actually without an army throughout the summer of 1924.
Frunze
began building up a new army only in the autumn of 1924, when he drafted a
large number of young peasants. The leading circles in the West were well aware
of this fact, but concealed it from the public.
They had no wish to eliminate Communism, even though they knew that Communism was a kind of system in which great efforts were made to solve problems which would never have existed without Communism.
DEALS
WITH THE BOLSHEVIKS
Soon
after the Bolsheviks had reached power, Standard Oil bought up hall of the oil
wells in Caucasia even though these were officially nationalized. This
information comes from Harvey O'Connor's book "The Empire of Oil",
New York, 1955, p. 270.
Antony
Sutton explains that Standard Oil of New York built refiners in Russia in 1921
to strengthen the Bolshevik economy. Standard Oil and its subsidiary company
Vacuum Oil sold the Soviet oil in the European countries. Closely associated
with Standard Oil and other Rockefeller concerns was Jacob Schiff of the Wall
Street banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
The
newspaper National Republic announced in September 1927that the Bolsheviks had
even been given a loan of 65 million dollars. In 1928, the Rockefeller Chase
National Bank began selling Bolshevik bonds in the United States of America.
Nineteen large oil refineries were constructed in the Soviet Union between 1917
and 1930, but only one of these contained units manufactured in the Soviet
Union.
Even in
the beginning, large amounts of industrial equipment, agricultural machinery
and munitions were brought into Soviet Russia from the United States. During
the years 1921-25, the Americans delivered 37 million dollars worth of
machinery and other technology to the Bolsheviks.
In
return, American companies were given gold mining rights by the Amur River.
The
British company Lena Goldfields Ltd built a modern mine with all the necessary
equipment near Vitimsk on the taiga near the river Lena. A tried and tested
technique was later used to conceal this gift: the Bolsheviks imprisoned all
the leading British engineers and accused them of economic espionage.
The
less important aid-lenders and businessmen acting on their own began
experiencing severe problems with the local Bolshevik leaders who took the
official anti-capitalist propaganda seriously.
A Czech
citizen, Benedickt, who lived in Vienna, arrived in Russia at the beginning of
1924. He bought a steamboat and loaded it up with valuable goods. He had
received official permission. The GPU in Novorossiysk laid an embargo on the
steamer and incarcerated Mr. Benedickt. The central leadership immediately
ordered them to release Benedickt and return his goods, but the local authorities
refused to obey.
Benedickt
ended up in Siberia (imprisoned in Novo-Nikolaievsk). He was later sent to a
prison in Solovky where he stayed for three years.
A
Finnish businessman could find no suitable lodgings in Moscow. At this point,
the GPU came to his rescue and offered him a room at the GPU headquarters. He
ended up in the Butyrka prison. Businessmen of this kind, including one named
Koch, were commonly accused of espionage. (A. Klinger "The Soviet Forced
Labour", 1928)
General
Electric (a Morgan Subsidiary) in the United States made an especially large
contribution to the build-up of the Soviet Empire. This company helped to carry
out the GOELRO plan, which was designed to electrify Russia through the
building of 100 power stations between 1920and 1935. Zinoviev instead spoke of
27 power stations in January 1921.
Only a
small part of the plan was actually carried out. The company’s representative
Carl Steinmetz turned to Lenin on the 16th of February1922 and wished him the
best of luck with the build-up of his socialist state. Lenin thanked Steinmetz
for his aid in his written answer. (Lenin, “Collected Works", Vol. 27, pp.
275-276, and p. 539)
It
should probably be mentioned here that the directors of General Electric and
Standard Oil were also members of CFR (the Council on Foreign Relations). This
group has a great influence on society, according to the Chicago Tribune (9th
of November 1950). They have exploited the prestige which their riches, social
position and upbringing have given them to lead their nation into bankruptcy
and military decline.
Between
the years 1927 and 1932, American and British engineers built the Dneprogess
power station with the aid of American technology and Russian slaves. Colonel
Hugh Cooper completed the building in 1932. The Dneprogess, which was 760
metres long and 60 metres tall, was called the world’s largest building. It
produced 2.5 billion Kwh of electricity per year.
In the
beginning, the power stations (Volkhov, Svir and Dneprogess) were constructed
entirely by General Electric. The company later planned large turbine factory
in Kharkov, so that the Russians would be able to produce their own turbines.
The production of this factory was two and half times greater than that of
General Electric's factories in the U.S.A.
Six
British engineers (including Thornton from Metropolitan Vickers) were sentenced
to forced labour for "sabotage" in 1933, in order to frighten the
other foreign engineers into silence. (Mikhail Heller and Alexander Nekrich,
"Utopia in Power", London, 1986, p. 245)
Meanwhile,
more and more gold ended up in the treasure chambers of the banking elite.
American companies began to build up Soviet Russia’s heavy industry as early as
the beginning of the 1920s. Arthur G. McKee from Cleveland designed the world's
largest steelworks in Magnitogorskin 1928 and the construction was begun in
January 1929. It became replica of the Garg steelworks in Indiana. All the
equipment came from the United States of America, from the Clearing Mach Corporation,
among others.
The
eight largest ovens were also constructed for the Bolsheviks. The whole complex
was 17 kilometres in length, something The Kremlin immediately began to boast
about in its propaganda, as it did about all the other giant projects which the
Americans undertook for the Soviet Union.
They had even worked out in advance the number of Russian workers and slaves, which they expected to perish during the construction.
German
and American experts and workers also worked there. One of these was John Scott
who was employed as a welder in September 1932. He worked in Magnitogorsk for
five years. John Scott was lucky enough to receive permission to leave the
Soviet Union before the Second World War. Most of the foreign experts had
already left in 1932.
The
steel production increased to 4.2 million tons in 1928. According to the plan,
it was to have risen to 10.5 million tons, but even 1933, the last year of the
first five-year plan, yielded only 5.9 million tons of steel. So the production
had only increased by 1.7 million tons. Thus only 57 percent of the plan was
achieved.
The same happened in all areas, since the production was always of a
much lower quality than the calculations accounted for. Stalin still proclaimed
that the first five-year plan had been93.7 per cent successful. The monopolized
economy eventually turned into organized poverty.
A
period of even more extensive industrialization in the Soviet Union began in
1926, two years after Lenin's death. During two years (1926-27) most of the 788
major factories were built with American aid. Antony Sutton revealed:
"There is a report in the State Department files that names Kuhn, Loeb and Co. as the financier of the First Five Year Plan."(Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development", Vol. II.)
During
this five-year period (1928-33) a total of 1500 industrial companies were
built, including an aircraft factory and new tractor and car plants, according
to the Soviet-Estonian Encyclopaedia (Tallinn, 1973,Vol. 5, p. 439).
COLLECTIVIZATION
AS A WEAPON
There
were only 7000 tractors in the Soviet Union in the beginning of1929. Tanks had
to be used for ploughing at the start of the collectivization. The number of
tractors increased to 30 000 by the end of the same war. Some of these had been
bought directly from the USA. At least 250 000 tractors were needed for the
collectivization. Kuhn, Loeb & Co. accordingly increased their aid
contributions to Moscow in order to neutralize the independent peasant (he was
much too dangerous for the dictators) and force him to work on the kolkhozes
(kibbutzes).
Eighty
American companies took part in the building of three gigantic tractor
factories in Russia. The factory in Stalingrad was actually built in the United
States, brought to the Soviet Union in parts and fitted together in three
months. Twenty-six American companies joined in this project alone. The
Bolsheviks wanted to produce 50 000 tanks and caterpillar tractors each year.
Factories were built in the same way in Kharkov and Chelyabinsk. The building
of the last-named tractor and tank factory was planned and led by an engineer
from Detroit named Calder.
In the
beginning, these factories were all supervised by Western engineers. The
Americans also built a modern asbestos industry for Moscow and designed the
irrigation system for Central Asia, which has now virtually destroyed the Aral
Sea. It shrank from 62 000 square kilometres in 1923 to just 40 000 in 1990.
The
independent farmers and peasants were regarded as especially dangerous since
the agricultural system had once more begun to produce surplus of foodstuffs.
The agricultural expert Vladimir Tikhonov also confirmed in Literaturnaya
Gazeta on the 4th of August 1988 that Stalin’s claim that the collectivization
had been undertaken due to the food shortage was entirely false.
In
actual fact, the agricultural system had begun recuperating fairly quickly
after Lenin had given the peasants their land back and abolished the government
control of them. The situation was almost normal by 1927 and Russia had once
more begun exporting grain. 100 000 tons of grain were exported by Russia in
1928, 1.3 million tons in 1929, 4.8 million tons in 1930 and 5.1 million tons
in 1931.
At this
point Stalin and Kaganovich began to implement Trotsky’s insane idea of
agricultural collectivization. Stalin declared that, after the quick
industrialization (which was called 'perestroika'), they would be able to
supply the cities with food from giant farms. That argument was completely
fallacious, according to Tikhonov.
Fifteen
million people lost their homes as a result of the collectivization. Many
peasants ran away from the kolkhoses to the cities. One million were sent to
labour camps and 12 million were deported to Siberia, because Stalin and
Kaganovich had all peasants who owned more than one hectare of land stamped as
class enemies. The agricultural production levels sank massively after the
collectivization.
After
this, Stalin's henchman Kaganovich organized a famine during the years 1932-33
which sent nearly eight million Ukrainians and two million Russians in northern
Caucasia, by the Volga Delta, and in other places, to their graves.
The
British historian Robert Conquest has even claimed that the number of victims
amounted to 15 million. ("The Harvest of Sorrow", Alberta, 1986)
Several Russian historians have arrived at the same figure. The famine was
brought about by ordering troops to confiscate the entire grain reserve.
The
United States calmly watched as this tragedy took place.
In
Yalta, Stalin cynically assured Churchill and Roosevelt that ten million people
had fallen victim to his reforms. He underestimated the total, which has later
been estimated at closer to 48 million. All rumours about the famine were
officially denied, no help was given to the suffering areas, no (humiliating)
aid from abroad would be accepted.
As
previously mentioned, a new famine was organized in the Ukraine between 1946
and 1947, in which two million people died. At the same time, the Ukrainians
were forced to supply the Soviet Army (several million men) with food. The
Chinese and Ethiopian Communists also used starvation as a weapon.
The
collectivization caused an enormous erosion of earth from the usable land,
which resulted in the destruction of many villages and later led to the
introduction of a rationing system.
The
historian Sergei Kharlamov, a specialist on the circumstances surrounding the
forced collectivization, emphasized that the first five-year plan caused a
backlash in the industrial production since the Russians wasted large amounts
of metals, resources and energy, often to no purpose.
Sergei
Kharlamov even goes so far as to claim that if the German-Soviet conflict had
broken out a few years later than 1941, the Soviet Union would have broken
apart on its own as a result of Stalin's economy and oppression.
Kharlamov wrote the following about the politics of the Soviet Union: "There were no advances. Quite the opposite, in fact."
Wagens
Nyheter, 7th of April 1988.) Moscow's Communist leadership became over more
dependent on American aid. That was the intention. A similar situation occurred
in China in the 1950s during the so-called “Great Leap Forward".
The
international financial elite were not worried by this development.
The
false fronts of Communism had to be built up at all costs. America’s leading
capitalists and politicians did not lose any sleep over the millions of people
who were at the same time being taken to Gulag camps to die.
These
amounted to 15 million between 1926 and 1938, according to investigations made
by the historian Dmitri Yurasov. (Dagens Nyheter, 7thApril 1988) It was later
revealed that the figure had actually been even higher.
The
people's commissary for foreign affairs, Maxim Litvinov, met the banker Paul
Warburg (Kuhn, Loeb & Co.) at a conference in London in 1933, at which
the world economy was discussed. The Soviet Union received a huge loan shortly
thereafter.
Universal
Oil Products, the Badger Corporation, the Lummus Company. Alco Products, the
McKee Corporation and the Kellogg Company, among others built up the Soviet oil
industry.
In June
1944 Stalin admitted to the American ambassador, W. Averell Harriman, that two
thirds of the Soviet large industry had been founded by American companies.
Stalin added that Germany, France, Great Britain and Italy had built up the
rest. This was exactly what Harriman wrote in his report to the U.S. State
Department in Washington D.C.
Contract
followed contract. In 1922 the Russo-American trade delegation, the primary
task of which was to save the Bolshevik economy, was founded. Rockefeller's
Chase National Bank played the main role in this delegation. Herbert Clark
Hoover (backed by the extremely influential Council on Foreign Relations) found
the money for food deliveries. But Lenin used this capital exclusively for his
own and the highest leaders’ personal needs, according to the historian Gary
Allen ("None Dare Call It Conspiracy"). The peasants who were given
back their land were forced to look after themselves ~ which they also did, as
the reader will soon realize.
On the
30th of December 1922, the Soviet Russian Empire was officially named the
Soviet Union.
The
American government could not maintain diplomatic ties with the Soviet state
since the American public had a very negative view of the Communist barbarism.
That was why the financial circles did what they could to paint as fair a
picture as possible of the Soviet regime in the press.
The
truth had to be concealed!
Rockefeller hired the advertising bureau Ivy Lee to paint the Bolsheviks in the warmest possible colours. Ivy Lee even claimed that the Bolsheviks should be regarded as confused idealists and benefactors of mankind. He made propaganda for recognition of the Soviet Union, added that the Communists were "all right" and that there was really no Communist problem. It was just a psychological error.
Walter
Duranty, the correspondent for the New York Times in Moscow, did all he could
to portray the mock trials of the 1930s as favourably as possible ~ he even
justified them (Dagens Nyheter, 29th of September1990). These American
journalists knew full well what was really happening, since they have written
about it themselves in their memoirs.
The American editorial staff did not permit them to tell the truth.It was not surprising, therefore, that Stalin, who was kindly called"Uncle Joe", was named man of the year by Time Magazine in 1939.
Adolf
Hitler had received the same honour the year before. Ivy Lee had advertised
Hitler in the same manner. Time explained their decision in the following way:
"Hitler is a guarantee for world peace."
But
when the British newspaper the Manchester Guardian's reporter published an
article about the mass fatality in the countryside as early as in 1933, the
"progressive" Western opinion did not wish to believe him.
BUILD-UP
OF THE SOVIET REGIME
The
Germans also eagerly took part in the build-up of the Soviet Union since they
were expecting large profits and the chance to rebuild their own war machine...
After the First World War, the Versailles treaty prohibited Germany from
developing a war industry and the aeroplane factories Junkers, Dornier and
Rohrbach were forced to move abroad. The Rapallo treaty, signed by Soviet
Russia and Germany on the 16th of April 1922, gave Junkers-Werke the chance to
found the aircraft industry FIL near Moscow. The factory was completed by April
1924.
German
pilots were given the opportunity to train there. The factory, under the
direction ofJunkers and with license from Mercedes Benz, began producing 300
aeroplanes per year of which the Soviet government bought 60. Junkers also had
a gifted pupil at the FIL factory, Andrei Tupolev, who later constructed the
ANT-5 fighter with American aid.
Junkers
built another factory in the province of Tver, where German engineers were
employed. Junkers also produced passenger planes at that plant. The aeroplane
engines and the spare parts were bought for Moscow by the Chase National Bank,
which remained the prime helping hand.
Rothschild's
banks in Great Britain, France and the United States of America were also used
to finance the war industry in the Soviet Union and Germany between 1925 and
1939.
Alexander
Solzhenitsyn pointed out in his "Letter to the Leaders of the Soviet
Union" (Paris, 1974), that Moscow had, after the signing of the Rapallo
treaty, allowed the Wehrmacht to train German officers in modern blitzkrieg
tactics. The Red Army also found the joint tank manoeuvres in the Ukraine
useful.
The
Soviet Union began a large-scale co-operation with Krupp, who from the
beginning only sold locomotives from their factory in Essen. Krupp had, up to
1927, built 17 weapon factories in Leningrad, Petrokrepost and Central Asia.
Krupp also began producing submarines in Leningrad and Nikolaievsk. They built
diesel motors for the Bolsheviks and founded, in northern Caucasia, the first
model of a mechanized agricultural co-operative. Tanks were produced in the
tractor factory in Rostovna Donu, which was built by Krupp. A training ground
for tanks was built in Kazan where also German tank crews were allowed to
practice.
In
addition, Moscow had an agreement with the Jewish aeroplane manufacturer Ernst
Heinrich Heinkel, who sold fighter planes assembled from parts, which had been
sent from Germany to the Soviet Union. AEG and Linke-Hoffman-Werke also moved
their factories to the Soviet Union.
Russia's
economy had begun sliding backwards immediately after the Bolshevik take-over.
In 1920, the industrial production reached only 13.8per cent of what it had
been in 1913. Unemployment increased. Salt production sank massively to just 25
million tons. Russia had produced122 million tons of salt annually in the
Tsarist era. The party apparatus, however, increased enormously, despite all
attempts to limit this development.
The
propaganda beat all previous records for lying. It was only revealed in the
newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda, in October 1988, that the world-famous record
worker Alexei Stakhanov was a bluff. Two other workers helped him when he set
his legendary coal mining record on the31st of August 1935. Stakhanov was 29
years old when he supposedly mined 105 tons of coal in 5 hours and 45 minutes
(his ordinary shift). This was 15 times the average and led to a huge
propaganda campaign.
Stakhanov
even had a town named after him, where a statue of him was raised. Stakhanov
died in 1977 at 71 years of age.
Stalin
intended to uniform the population. Different groups (workers, intellectuals,
party functionaries and others) were to wear special overalls in symbolic colours.
But the foreign sponsors had no desire to pay for this project and so the idea
was shelved. After the Second World War, Stalin succeeded in uniforming at
least a part of the population: railway men, guards and the militia wore blue
soldier-shirts (gimnastyorkas). School pupils had to wear grey soldier-shirts
while the pupils at vocational schools had to wear black shirts.
The
Communists in North Korea and China decreed that nearly the entire society
should be uniformed.
INCREASING
AMERICAN SUPPORT
Rockefeller
paid particular attention to the build-up of the Soviet war machine.
American
experts admitted that Communism was in danger again and would have collapsed if
the first five-year plan had not been financed from the United States. The
Americans continued financing them also later, despite the fact that the
ignorance of the Russians constantly presented new problems. American money
continued to breathe life into this fragile, inefficient and brutal system,
despite all the difficulties.
A
contract was concluded with the Ford Motor Company on the 1st of May 1930. Ford
promised to spend 30 million dollars (approximately 600million dollars today)
to build up the Soviet automobile industry. So the Americans built a Ford
factory in Nizhny Novgorod, which was called the Molotov factory and had
already begun producing 140 000 cars per year by 1932, including the GAZ-A
(Ford-A).
The
Freemason Henry Ford had previously made sure that the Russian workers had been
given good work experience in his factories in the United States. He also
donated equipment. Americans ran the factory for the first few years. Ford
later built factories in Ulyanovsk, Odessa and Pavlovsk, where also tanks were
produced. 10 million dollars in wages were paid to the Americans each year.
The
American Electric Boat Company and British and Italian companies began helping
the Soviet Union to build submarines in 1930. The Soviet air force was built
entirely with foreign capital in the 1930s.
Moscow
had earlier bought aeroplanes from Germany, Britain, Italy, the United States
of America and other countries.
The
American Seversky Aircraft Corporation began to help the Soviet air force with
the building of hydroplanes in 1937. When the factory in Russia was finished,
it could produce 10 seaplanes per day.
The
Radio Corporation of America began building up the Soviet radio and telegraph
system as early as 1927.
The
DuPont Company built five chemical factories in Russia, which produced (among
other things), nitric acid, necessary for the production of explosives. The
Russians were often incapable of building any sophisticated factories, even
though the Americans gave them detailed instructions.
So the
industrial builder Albert Kahn from Detroit closed a deal with Moscow in
February 1930 according to which he was to build a number of industries in the
Soviet Union. The total cost amounted to two billion dollars. Of the major
projects the Zionist Albert Kahn carried out, I can mention the electric motor
factory in Elmash in the Urals and the turbine factory in Kharkov (designed by
General Electric). His closest assistants were advisers to the Soviet
government for questions connected with the second five-year plan, according to
Encyclopaedia Judaica.
The Soviet propaganda enticed 100 000 American workers to go to Russia. Most of them were not allowed to return home. They were turned into Soviet citizens against their will. Some who began protesting and criticizing Communism even ended up in prison camps.This goes to show how frightened the power-mongers were of the American public finding out any detailed information about the conditions in the Communist “paradise".
60 000
German workers also moved to Stalin's empire.
Describing
all the American projects designed to build up the false fronts of Communism
would take up too much space. This will have to be enough. The international
financial elite (Kuhn, Loeb & Co., Morgan, Rockefeller, the Warburgs,
Dillon, Cyrus Eaton, David Kendall and others), who took such good care of the
Bolsheviks, also helped Adolf Hitler to power. This is confirmed by various
documents and is quite another subject.
It is a
myth that the leading capitalists did not know what they were doing. They knew
very well why they helped all kinds of political bandits. They made sure that
the Soviet Union received all the necessary foreign technology.
That
the resources of the Bolsheviks were enormous is also apparent when considering
the fact that only a quarter of the foreign technology in the Soviet Union was
actually used, due to the lack of order in the country.
There
were technical resources, which had to wait for ten years before being put to
use. No one could use the foreign equipment for a sugar factory in the
Dnepropetrovsk area, which had cost millions. Only 13 percent of the foreign
conveyor belts were used. The rest just rusted.
The
situation in Uzbekistan was even worse. Only two per cent of the conveyor
belts, which had been sent to Uzbekistan by foreign capitalists, were used.
This was revealed by Yuri Chernichenko in his article "Who Needs a
Farmers' Party and Why?" (Literaturnaya Rossiya, 8th of March, 1991)
Stalin
and Hitler had common business interests whilst they prepared to annihilate
each other.
Germany
sold 36 aeroplanes, including 6 HeinkelHe-100 fighter planes, 5 Messerschmidt
Bf-llOs, two Junkers Ju-88 bombers and others to the Soviet Union, according to
the trade agreement signed in connection with the Ribbentrop pact on the 23rd
of August 1939.
Shavrov
revealed this in his history of aeroplane construction. The Soviet Union bought
22 000 tons of copper from the United States in November1939 and then sold it
to Germany. Some cargoes were taken from México via Vladivostok to Germany. The
Soviet Union carried on delivering its goods until just before the German
attack.
WAR AID
TO MOSCOW
It was
decided in San Diego in May 1941 that Hitler would attack Stalin and not
vice-versa. This would be more beneficial to the interests of the financial
elite.
Admiral James O. Richardson's analysis had reached the conclusion that it would be more beneficial to the U.S.A. if Hitler attacked Stalin first (Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 133).
Therefore,
the terrorist Bolshevik regime once more came into grave danger in the summer
of 1941, when Stalin had planned an attack against Hitler (operation Thunder),
although he had personally deprived the Red Army of its best commanders. The
attack was to have taken place on the 6th of July 1941. This information comes
from the defected GPU agent Viktor Suvorov's (Vladimir Rezun's) books "The
Ice-Breaker" (Moscow,1992) and "M Day" (Moscow, 1994).
Hitler's
spies had warned Berlin about this and a counterattack plan, Barbarossa, was
worked out.
The
plan was put into action, after certain delays, on the 22nd of June 1941, thus
anticipating Stalin's planned attack by only two weeks. Stalin was surprised,
in spite of the reports of his own spies. He could not understand Hitler’s
foolhardiness in maintaining two fronts simultaneously. He had not expected
this ~ he even had difficulty believing the announcement of war. He saw it as a
provocation. Neither had he believed the stories of a coming attack from German
deserters on the previous day. It was only later in the evening that he gave
the order to resist.
Stalin
had declared before the Central Committee already in 1925:
"If great war breaks out in Europe, we shall not just watch. We shall take part, but among the last ~ to decide the fate of the war. And naturally, therefore, to pick the fruits of the war..."
In
1941, no one wanted to believe Adolf Hitler's explanations that he wished to
anticipate Stalin's planned attack. Suvorov has managed to prove, with
documents from German archives and open Soviet sources, that Hitler's
information was correct.
The
High Command of the Red Army had already, on the 21st of June (the day before
Hitler's attack), received orders to attack Romania on the6th of July 1941. The
commander of this operation was to have been Marshal Semy on Timoshenko. He was
supposed to have traveled to Minsk on the 22nd of June to prepare the attack,
in which 4.4 million men were to have been used. But the Germans attacked
first.
The
so-called Black Divisions were formed from Russian camp prisoners, who were
trained very thoroughly in Sochi and sent to fight the Germans in July-August
1941. Stalin had more paratroops for attack purposes than any other nation.
Stalin had promised by Lenin's bier that he would expand the borders of the
Soviet Union {Pravda, 30th of January 1924). He also had special A-tanks
(Avtostradnye tanki) which could travel on German motorways.
Stalin
had a total of 15 000 tanks, three times more than Hitler. Suvorov quotes
Marshals Georgi Zhukov, Alexander Vasilevsky, Vasily Sokolovsky,Nikolai
Vatutin, Ivan Bagramyan and others, who all confirmed that Stalin was preparing
an attack and not defense as was later claimed.
This
was the reason why Moscow's losses became so enormous ~ 600 000men in the first
three weeks, 7615 tanks, 6233 fighter planes (of which1200 were lost on the
first day) and 4423 artillery pieces.
The
Jewish senator and high-ranking Freemason Harry S. Truman, who became
vice-president and later president of the United States explained the situation
after Hitler's attack in the following way:
"If we see that Germany is about to win, we should help Russia, and if we see that Russia is winning, we should help Germany, because in this way we shall be able to let them kill as many as possible." But no one was allowed to risk Stalin’s life, since his death would be a "real catastrophe". (Noam Chomsky, "Mankan inte morda historien" / "You Cannot Murder History", Gothenburg, 1995, pp. 503-504)
Did
Truman fear that no other Red bandit chieftain would be able to murder Russians
as efficiently?
Truman
could sate his lust for murder in August 1945 when he had atom bombs dropped on
two cultural centres of Japan. Gore Vidal reveals, in his introduction to
Professor Israel Shahak's book "Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The
Weight of Three Thousand Years" (London, 1994), that
Truman received two million dollars” support" from a Zionist when he came to run for president in 1948.
A large
number of Russian soldiers let themselves be taken prisoner. By the end of the
first year, 3.8 million had gone over to the Germans. The Red Army simply
refused to fight for the cause of Communism. Most of the remaining 1.2 million
was killed in action. Joseph Stalin became frightened.
On the
24th of August 1941, Radio Moscow encouraged international Jewry to help the
Soviet Union wholeheartedly in its moment of need. It is therefore
understandable that the financiers of Wall Street were seized with panic and
began sending all kinds of equipment to the Soviet Union as quickly as they
could. In August 1941 the United States began to confer with Moscow about how
Hitler's troops could most effectively be repulsed. The United States meanwhile
continued to give the Nazis military and economic aid, but on a smaller scale.
Equipment
immediately began to be sent to the Soviet Union. The United States also
demanded that Stalin temporarily "forget" Communist slogans and
anti-Russian propaganda. He had to open the churches, release priests and even
allow a certain amount of religious freedom (the corresponding demand from President
Roosevelt was relayed to Stalin by Father Brown, the Catholic priest at the
American Embassy in Moscow).
Washington
also wanted the Soviet Union to begin using the old tsarist army uniforms.
Stalin had to comply with this. The new uniforms were sewn in the United States
in 1941-43. The Soviet army wore the tsarist army soldier shirts until 1970. A
patriotic Russian song, "The Holy War"~ which had rallied the Tsar's
soldiers in the First World War, was also exploited.
The
Soviet Union, the United States of America and Great Britain signed the
preliminary protocol concerning military aid in Moscow on the1st of October
1941, following which 400 aeroplanes, 500 tanks, artillery pieces and other
munitions were immediately sent to the Soviet Union.
One of
those involved in this deal was Henry Ford. Stalin asked for barbed wire on the
1st of October 1941 and 4 000 tons of barbed wire were sent to the Soviet Union
on the 10th of October.
The
Soviet Union's war production increased 25 times over during the four years of
the war. A significant part of the American aid came in the form of food. 4 291
012 tons of preserves, sugar, salt, nuts, tea, fruit and other foodstuffs,
including vitamins were sent to the Soviet Union between the 1st of October
1941 and the 31st of May 1945. A total of 782 973 tons of tinned meat were sent
to Moscow. In 1945 the shops stocked 46 times more canned meat than they did in
1940.
Stalin
became frightened when he saw how rapidly the Germans were advancing (they had
already reached Minsk by the sixth day of the war).
He fled
from Moscow in the autumn of 1941. Two and a half million Jews were moved, by
order of Stalin, from the invaded areas towards the central regions of the
Soviet Union where they immediately began dealing on the black market. (Isaac
Deutscher, "The Un-Jewish Jew", Stockholm, 1969, pp. 96-97) Stalin
was prepared to make peace with Hitler in October1941.
He
wanted to give the Germans the Baltic states, Byelorussia, Moldavia
(Bessarabia), a part of the Ukraine (Bukovina) and the Karelian Isthmus.
General Nikolai Pavlenkov revealed this in the spring of 1989 in the newspaper
Moskovskyie Novosti. The people's commissary for interior affairs, Lavrenti
Beria, was given the task of beginning peace negotiations with Hitler, through
his agent Stamenov, who was the Bulgarian ambassador. Hitler refused to
negotiate with Moscow. All this is proved by documents, which Dmitri Volkogonov
presented in Izvestiya on the 9thof May 1993.
President
Truman wanted to justify his aid to the Communist Party, so he turned to his
Jewish friend Jack Warner in Hollywood and ordered a propaganda film,
"Mission to Moscow", which praised Stalinism. The film was completed
in 1943. The Soviet propaganda later claimed that all the advances in the war
against the Nazis were due to the heroism of the Soviet people.
Fortunes
of the war turned, thanks to American aid, and things began to look brighter to
Stalin, who used this opportunity to proclaim a holy war of Communism. In Yalta
he was given free hands to occupy new areas and countries in Eastern Europe.
The Soviet-Estonian Encyclopaedia admits:
"It
was decided that Konigsberg and its surrounding area should be handed over to
the Soviet Union."
The
former intelligence agent Douglas Bazata admitted in the autumn of1979 in
Washington that his chief, Donovan, had paid him 800 dollars extra to stop
General Patton's advance in France in 1943. Bazata did this in August 1944,
when Patton and his troops were close to Dijon. Patton had been far too
successful and would have ended the war far too early.
Despite
the fact that the American General George Patton later managed to liberate
large parts of Czechoslovakia, he was given a sharp order by the
Commander-in-Chief Dwight Eisenhower (1890-1969), a high-ranking Freemason, to
leave Czechoslovakia to the Red Army.
Patton
unwillingly complied and with a heavy heart withdrew his troops from
Czechoslovakia. When Patton's Third Army was prepared to enter Berlin, all the
petrol was suddenly withdrawn ~ the intention was to stop him from reaching
Berlin before the Russians. After this he was given orders to attack ~ many
American soldiers died in vain. Patton could have ended the war nine months
earlier.
In this
way, the Russians were given the opportunity to take Berlin, Prague and Vienna
first. The Soviet Union took the chance to also occupy Rumania, despite their
separate peace with this country.
After
this, General Patton proclaimed all the more eagerly that the real enemy of the
USA was in Moscow and that the Americans should continue their battle against
the East instead, in order to free the enslaved peoples of the Soviet Union.
Patton
became too difficult for the high-ranking Freemasons. He also wanted to use
German troops to crush the Communists in Moscow.
For this reason, it became necessary to dispose of Patton in 1945.
Bazata
was paid to kill Patton. But he warned the general instead.
Another
agent was then used to be on the safe side. He made several attempts which all
failed. In the autumn of 1945, General Patton was the victim of a mysterious
car accident (a lorry ran into his car) in Germany (Bavaria). In connection
with this accident, the agent attempted to shoot Patton with a metal projectile
from a specially produced weapon. Patton was wounded. Despite the fact that the
general was paralyzed, he began to recover in hospital. At that point he was
poisoned with a new kind of potassium cyanide. Patton died on 21 December 1945
after a long spell in hospital.
The White House is considered to be behind all these crimes.
The
murderer himself has related this to Bazata. Bazata was tested with a lie
detector. He was considered to be telling the truth. {The Spotlight, 22October
1979)
The
Western powers also handed more than two million war refugees over to Stalin.
It was well known what fate awaited them. No mistakes were made. Some of those
who had managed to escape from Soviet Russia in the 1920s and had already
become Western citizens were also handed over.
The
76-year-old general of the reserve, Piotr Krasnov, who was a German citizen,
was sent back to the Soviet Union. He was executed in Moscow on the 17th of
January 1947, according to the Soviet-Estonian Encyclopaedia. The case of
Krasnov is the most infamous example of America’s betrayal of the
anti-Communists. The British extradited the legendary White General Andrei
Shkuro to Stalin. He had received the Order of Bath from King George V for his
services to Britain.
The
Freemason Harold Macmillan also sent back 70 000 Cossacks who had found their
way to the West. All information about them was classified. Many documents
disappeared without trace. The historian Nikolai Tolstoy in England revealed
this. The BBC was not allowed to mention his book "The Minister and the
Massacres", which deals with this dirty business. The Cossacks resisted
but the British used gross assault to deliver them in May of 1945. Most of them
were killed with their families
It was
later revealed that the initiative had come from the Freemason Anthony Eden.
(Nikolai Tolstoy, "Victims of Yalta")
The
Yugoslavian dictator Josip Tito (actually Broz), whose closest aides were the
Jew Moses Pijade and Aleksander Rankovic (Rankau, who led the red terror as
minister of the interior) also had his deserters returned to him.
Many
events become significantly clearer when viewed from a historical perspective.
British agents helped to topple the Yugoslavian government on the 27th of March
1941. A new leadership, with the Freemason General and the Freemason Richard D.
Simovic at the head, immediately began to co-operate with Stalin, signing a
pact of friendship on the 5th of April.
London
funded Tito intensively during the entire Second World War and later helped him
to power. After the war, Tito received massive support from the West to build
up Communism. Without that support his regime would have collapsed immediately.
His crimes were concealed at the same time.
The
United States alone sent Tito 35 billion dollars in secret aid between 1948 and
1965. An expert on international law, Smilja Avramov, revealed this to a
Serbian newspaper, Politika Ekspres, in an interview, published January 16,
1989. That support for Tito covered 60per cent of the expenses of the Communist
regime. Smilja Avramovstressed:
"Our regime would never have survived without that economic aid."
The
American aid to Yugoslavia is an important state secret, which the American
Embassy in Belgrade refused to comment upon. The contributions of Western
private banks became an even better kept secret.
The
West delivered lists of all captured soldiers who had demanded political
asylum. They were executed immediately upon their return to the Soviet Union.
Other Soviet soldiers who had been prisoners of war were sent to special prison
camps. President Boris Yeltsin's military adviser,General Dmitri Volkogonov,
discovered Stalin's instructions to build a large number of prison camps with a
capacity of ten thousand prisoners each. This was where these poor soldiers
were sent.
It was
a Swedish state secret how nearly a thousand imprisoned Russian soldiers were
sent from Gavle on two ships, under the strictest secrecy, to certain death in
the Soviet Union on the 10th of October 1944.
They had had enough of the war
and decided to escape to Sweden. This was revealed only in the spring of 1992
by the historian Dr Anders Berge in his book "Flyktingpolitik i stormakts
skugga, Sverige och de sovjetryska fangarnaunder andra varldskriget" /
"Refugee Policy in the Shadow of a Super Power, Sweden and the
Soviet-Russian Prisoners during the Second World War" (Uppsala, 1992).
According
to Berge, Moscow also demanded the addresses of the Russian prisoners who had
been granted residence permit in Sweden.
The
Swedish government co-operated and made lists available to the Soviet Embassy.
This was espionage at a high level. Communist agents were immediately sent out
to begin working on those refugees. Berge states that Sweden "gave Soviet
officials plenty of authority... to subject the uncooperative to persuasion,
disinformation, threats and other methods". This resulted in another 180
Russians returning to the Soviet Union. Less than half~ 1750 ~ of the refugees
the Soviet Union wanted returned were eventually given political asylum in
Sweden.
It was
an irony of fate that Stalin had allowed the NKVD to co-operate and share their
experiences with the Gestapo. The NKVD and the Gestapo even executed people
together. The historian Nikolai Tolstoy also revealed those pre-war actions.
FOREIGN
SLAVES IN THE SOVIET UNION
Until
recently, it has been concealed from the public that the Soviet Union also used
hundreds of thousands of foreign slaves for various rebuilding projects after
the Second World War. Millions of new slaves were needed.
That was why new slave camps for foreigners were built with the silent approval of Western leaders.
A
revealing film about these slaves was released in France in 1995 "Foreign
Slaves in the GULAG”. Whilst the West celebrated the victory, an order came
from Moscow to the Soviet zone in Germany, commanding the NKVD and Smersh
(Death to the spies!) to imprison any foreigners in the zone. Among those
arrested were Italians, Frenchmen, Poles and others who had worked in the
German war industry, and foreign (including many Russian) refugees.
Many
allied prisoners of war, who had been held in German prison camps, also became
Soviet slaves.
Of
course, many German prisoners of war were also enslaved.
In this way, hundreds of thousands of innocent foreigners were captured during a short period of time. Western governments declared those people "missing" or "deserted". They wanted to conceal the real circumstances from the public.
An
American citizen, John Noble, was among those captured in Dresden on the 5th of
July 1945.
The
fact that he had Swiss diplomatic immunity did not save him or his family. The
Gestapo had held his family under house arrest during the war and John had been
waiting eagerly for the Soviet "liberators". He was quickly
disillusioned, however, since the Red soldiers began murdering, raping and
looting in Dresden and in other towns.
The
American authorities did not listen to John Noble's cry for help. In the
beginning he sat with other foreigners, doctors, lawyers and businessmen and
their wives and children, in a prison where all the prisoners were tortured.
Some of them were shot in the neck because they were not physically strong
enough for slave labour. The foreigners had been caught in raids on their
houses, in institutions and in the streets.
The captured foreigners were taken to concentration camps. What happened after the war in these concentration camps, including those in Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen has been completely ignored by the history books. Many of the terrible crimes committed in those camps were later blamed on the Nazis.
John
Noble stated that 10 000 people from different nations died as a result of
malnutrition during a single year at Buchenwald. He had discovered this from
Soviet documents whilst working in the camp's office.
The
prisoners' governments had betrayed and forgotten them. Those crimes were also
committed to smooth the way for the expansion of Communism. The fates of those
individuals were uninteresting.
Foreign
citizens in those Communist prison camps in Germany were charged with
"anti-Soviet activities". John Noble received a sentence of15 years
in a slave camp in Vorkuta. It was thought to be a destination with no return.
The foreign prisoners were transported to the Soviet Union under strict
secrecy. The Western political leaders were informed about this but kept quiet.
In Vorkuta, there were a total of half a million slaves who worked in 40 coalmines, in cement and brick factories. A coal miner's average production was 17 tons of coal per shift, a totally inhuman amount. Six-seven people died each day. Their corpses were thrown into a mass grave. 15 percent of the prisoners were women and children. Among the slaves were Americans, Germans, Czechs, Slovaks, Estonians, Finns, Englishmen, Japanese, Italians and others. Only the strongest survived.
After
Stalin's death, General Maslennikov came to Vorkuta to find out what the
prisoners really thought about their lives there. No one would be punished for
what they said. There was no one who dared to say a word about the
matter.
The
general continued to encourage the prisoners. Finally, a score of men,
including a former professor of history from Leningrad, stepped forward. The
ex-professor said: "I shall speak, even though I know I shall be given
another ten years of slave labour here for what I have to say."
Maslennikov
assured him no such thing would happen to him. The professor then summarized
slavery through the ages and finished by commenting on the slavery in the
Soviet Union: "Never before has any slavery been as cruel and
inhuman."
The
professor was not given another ten years of hard labour ~ he was shot
immediately.
John
Noble managed, with great difficulty, to smuggle a postcard to his parents in
Detroit. They turned to President Eisenhower, who was forced to ask Moscow to
release John Noble. He was finally released in 1955.
Nikita
Khrushchev released over 200 000 foreigners from 45 countries from the slave
camps. The release of foreign slaves ceased in 1964 when he was deposed. After
the fall of Communism, the KGB files on foreign slaves in the Soviet Union were
finally opened. It was shown that the security police had managed to capture 57
238 foreigners, including Englishmen, Yugoslavs, Frenchmen, Poles, Romanians,
Iranians, Afghanis, Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Turks, Danes and Belgians, in
1950 alone.
A Swiss
had also been kidnapped and taken to the Soviet Union. Many foreigners had been
arrested while visiting Moscow.
The
Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg was the most famous person to be captured by
the Soviet Union. He was kidnapped in Budapest on the 17th of January 1945 and
taken to Moscow, where they tried to recruit him as an agent. Wallenberg
refused. He was then murdered by two Jewish Chekists ~ Colonels Grigori
Mairanovsky and Dmitri Kopelyansky ~ with an injection of poison.
This
was revealed by the Jewish publicist and Freemason Arkadi Vaksberg in Svenska
Dagbladet on December 13, 1995. He thought it an irony of fate that Jews
finally murdered Wallenberg, who had saved the lives of many Jews. It has now
been revealed that the Swedish Legation in Budapest had also helped German and
Italian National Socialists to escape from the Red Army with false passports.
The Swedish Foreign Ministry classified this information in 1952.
Not
even the officials at the American Embassy were safe ~ some ended up as slaves.
The 22-year-old Alex Dolgun was kidnapped while strolling along a street in
Moscow in December 1948. He worked at the Embassy. Alex was born in New York
and was an American citizen. His father was an engineer who had been fooled by
the Soviet propaganda and went to Russia together with tens of thousands of
other naive Americans in 1933 to help with the build-up of the Communist
industry.
He was
not allowed to leave the country after his contract had run out. He was
regarded as a Soviet citizen against his will and was drafted into the Red Army
during World War Two. His son Alex was charged with "anti-Soviet activity
and espionage" and sent to a slave camp. He was released in 1956, in
connection with Khrushchev's amnesty. Alex was not allowed to leave the Soviet
Union, despite the fact that his sister in New York regularly sent invitations.
Thanks to his sister's efforts he finally escaped the Red hell in1971.
(Alexander Dolgun and Patrick Watson, "Alexander Dolgun'sStory. An
American in Gulag", 1975)
The
most difficult thing those people had to accept was the fact that their own
embassies did not care about their fate, although many signals were smuggled to
them. They were also mentally strained by the fact that they were held in slave
camps whereas they were quite innocent.
Moreover,
they were depressed by being forced to live in a foreign country and obey
orders in a foreign language.
Some of
the foreigners, who were unsuitable for physical labour, were also executed in
the Soviet Union. The former KGB Colonel Kirillin confirmed that 7000
foreigners had been shot in the village of Butovo (on the so-called Polygon)
near Moscow.
Documents
reveal that over 60 000 foreigners, including Finns and Romanians, were taken
to Pechora in Komi. President Boris Yeltsin ordered these sensitive documents
classified once again.
Lenin
had, during his time in power, decided that the spine of the Soviet system
would be comprised of slave labour. He laid down the slaves' work averages and
food rations. He had even decided how many victims were to die. A previously
unknown order signed by Lenin in 1919 was shown in the French documentary film
mentioned above. "Publication prohibited!" had been written on it.
This amazing order stated that all "useless “foreigners were to be sent to the concentration camps.
STALIN'S
HOLY WAR
In
1936, Stalin fought a "holy war" also in Spain. Moscow sent the
Spanish Communists 648 aeroplanes, 347 tanks, 60 armoured vehicles,1186
artillery pieces and 3000 Soviet military experts between 1936 and1939. The
total support amounted to 274 million rubles (50 million dollars), according to
the periodical Vikerkaar No. 1, 1986. The financial elite suddenly changed
their plans and the Soviet (i.e. the American) aid to the Republic was
withdrawn in the autumn of 1938. Therefore, Franco was able to take Madrid on
the 28th of March 1939. Nearly 1.4 million people were killed in the Spanish
Civil War.
The Spanish gold reserve of 600 million dollars (the fourth largest in the world) was handed over to Moscow in order to keep it out of Franco’s reach. Moscow kept the gold.
Two
Italian Stalinists, Carlo and Nello Roselli, had planned a revolution in Venice
for the 25th of May 1937, where they were to have led the attack of 2600
terrorists and thereby provoked a civil war. Stalin suddenly decided to cancel
this operation and prohibited the Roselli brothers from taking action in Italy.
The
Communist brothers ignored Theban, however. The NKVD then organized the murder
of the two brothers with the aid of a right-wing group, according to the
historian Franco Bandini's book "The Cone of the Shadow" (1990).
Bandini declared to the newspaper Il Tempo (Rome,), on the 11th of April 1990:
"The lobby of historians has tried to silence every unpleasant piece of information during the last 45 years. They considered documents of this nature as their own private property. They worked only to conceal the unpleasant truth."
The
holy war reached Poland on the 17th of September 1939. Finland was attacked on
November 30th in the same year. But Moscow was forced to cease its war against
Finland on March 12, 1940 ~ it had become too expensive (the Soviet side had
already lost 250 000 out of a million men)
Stalin
said to Churchill in 1943:
"A nation which has fought so intensely for its independence is worthy of respect."
Stalin
changed his mind in1948 when he said, according to the witness Mlovan Djilas:
"It was wrong not to occupy Finland." (Helsingin Sanomat, 16th of March 1983)
In the
summer of 1940 it was time to introduce Communism into the Baltic States and
Bessarabia (Moldavia). The flowering economies of the Baltic States were a very
negative advertisement for their eastern neighbor and for this reason the
countries had to disappear.
Finland,
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania had a turnover of 586 474 000 dollars on the
world market in 1938 while the gigantic Soviet Union's turnover was only 512
508 000 dollars. (J. Bokalders, "The International Yearbook",
Riga.1944.)
England
broke off its negotiations with Stalin concerning the Baltic States.
The financial elite decided that Germany should "deliver" the Baltic States and Finland to the Soviet Union.
Stalin
understood, during the negotiations in London, that he would be permitted to
occupy the Baltic States. President Roosevelt was well informed about the
secret additions to the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact the day after it was signed.
This is evident from a secret telegram (71.6211/93). He made no outward sign,
but continued to play the role of the naive and "well-meaning" Western
leader.
He
never warned the Baltic States, since it was also to the interests of the
United States that those nations should disappear from the map. When the Red
Army had occupied Estonia, Franklin Delano Roosevelt cynically said to the
journalists:
"If the Estonians don't like Communism they can leave Estonia!"
Roosevelt
knew very well whom he was dealing with. His judgment of Stalin shows this.
When Felix Hapsburg visited the White House, Roosevelt asked:
"Felix, have you ever met the devil?"
Felix
Hapsburg did not understand what he meant by this. Roosevelt continued:
"Felix, I have met the devil. He was in Yalta and his name was Stalin." (Erich Feigl,"Kaiserin Zita", Vienna, 1977, pp. 226-227.)
It
should be pointed out here that the United States continued to aid Moscow up to
and during the Finnish Winter War, in spite of Roosevelt’s promise that Stalin
would receive no support for the attack on Finland (there was officially an
embargo against the Soviet Union). Three hundred firms in fifteen states sent
their goods to the Pacific from where it was sent on to Vladivostok.
The
Soviet Union, meanwhile, supplied Germany with grain, oil and other raw
materials, which were needed for the war operations against Western Europe in
the spring and summer of 1940. Within 17 months Germany received 865 million
tons of oil, 14 000 tons of copper, 1 million tons of timber, 11,000 tons of
flax, 15 000 tons of asbestos, 184 000 tons of phosphates, 2736 kilograms of
platinum, 1462 million tons of grain, and more, from Moscow. In November of
1939 alone, the Soviet Union had bought 22 000 tons of copper from the United
States and sold it at a profit to Germany.
The
Finns allied themselves with the Germans in the summer of 1941 and took back
the areas the Soviet Union had occupied. Stalin asked Great Britain for help.
And indeed ~ Great Britain declared war on Finland in November 1941. They
immediately sent 500 fighter planes, 280 armoured vehicles and 3000 lorries to
Arkhangelsk. The sensible Finnish commander-in-chief, Marshal Carl Gustaf
Mannerheim, broke away from the German forces and continued operating on his
own. He wanted to recapture all the areas Finland had lost during the Winter
War of 1939-40.
Not
even Peter the Great could defeat the Swedish King Charles XII without secret
aid from England.
The
United States of America did not want to declare war on Finland directly, but
in the summer of 1942 the Americans closed their consulates in Finland and
demanded that Helsinki also close its consulates in the United States. The
Soviet Union attacked once more on the 9th of June 1944, this time with
American weapons, but Finland managed to resist.
Washington
was infuriated. The United States broke off their diplomatic relations with
Finland on June 30th, 1944 to force the little country to steer a more
Soviet-friendly course. Finland continued to defend itself.
Moscow
had the impudence to demand 300 million dollars "damages “from Finland
when the Continuation War finished in September 1944.The French historian
Raymond Cartier has made an interesting study, comparing Hitler's armaments to
the equipment, which the United States sent to Stalin. Germany, in its attack
against the Soviet Union, used 1280 aeroplanes, 3330 armoured vehicles and 600
000 cars.
In
comparison, the United States sent the following to the Soviet Union during the
nine month period from the 1st of October 1941 to June 1942: 1285 aeroplanes,
2249 armoured vehicles, 81 289 automatic weapons, 30 million kilograms of
explosives, 36 825 cars, 56 445 field telephones and other equipment.
During
the entire war, the United States sent a total of 376 000 vehicles (including
45 000 "Willis" jeeps and 29 000 motorcycles), 29 000 locomotives, 12
536 tanks, 17 834 aeroplanes, 130 500 automatic weapons,240 000 tons of explosives
and ammunition, 13 200 revolvers, 2.5 million tons of petrol and other war
materials. Here I can mention that American cars made up two thirds of the Red
Army’s total supply, and that another 43 494 cars were sent from Great Britain.
The Red Army received a total of 419 494 cars and other vehicles.
Only
120 000 cars were produced in the Soviet Union between 1942 and1944 ~ thus over
three times less than they received from the West.
Neither
did they have any trouble with uniforms, because the United States had 34
million uniforms, including the tsarist army shirts, sewn with Singer sewing
machines. America also delivered 50 million metres of woolen cloth. The tank
drivers wore American overalls. This information comes from Keesen's
"Archiv der Gegenwart" (Part XV, 1945, p. 76) among other sources.
The
Communists received a total of 17.8 million tons of goods worth 10.8 billion
dollars from America. Of course, Moscow was unable to repay more than a tiny
part of this. In January 1951 the U.S.A. wanted 84 war-ships worth 800 million
dollars returned but Stalin refused categorically.
It is
obvious that Moscow would never have survived Hitler's attack without American
aid. As proof of this claim I will point to the fact that the Soviet Union
lacked heavy bombers. Only 79 of the Pe-8, the Soviet Union’s only four-engine
aeroplane, were ever produced. 50 000 similar aeroplanes were produced in Great
Britain and the United States during the same period. The Soviet bomber 11-4
was considered an inferior aeroplane.
AID
DURING THE "COLD WAR"
The
United States continued to build up the Soviet Union even during the so-called
cold war. The West continued to deal with the East militarily as well as
economically. Antony Sutton confirms that the build-up of the Soviet steel
industry was completed by Fretz-Moon, Aetna Standard, Mannesman and other
American companies. Two thirds of the Soviet merchant navy, which in 1970
amounted to 6000 ships, were built outside the Soviet Union. Four fifths of the
marine engines were also built outside the Soviet Empire. The rest were built
with Western help.
Congress
while appropriating billions for defence against Communism has at the same time
given over six billion dollars in direct military and economic aid to the
Communists.
Radar-equipped
F-86 jet fighter planes worth over 300 000 dollars each have been sold to the
Communist dictator of Yugoslavia for 10 000dollars. The Eisenhower
Administration approved it. ("Report, U.S. Foreign Assistance", U.S.
Agency for Int. Dev., March 21, 1962.)
The
entire Soviet automobile industry came from the West, primarily from the United
States. Moscow used 30 000 heavy transport vehicles to move its missiles and
other war materials, all of which were produced with American aid.
Ford
Motor Company built a gigantic lorry factory in Gorky (now Nizhny Novgorod) in
1968.
Gleason,
New Britain Machine Company and TRW of Cleveland in the United States delivered
the equipment for Fiat's car industry in Togliatti.
The
Americans also built the world's largest lorry factory in Kama in the1970s.
Information about which companies besides Ford took part was classified by the
State Department. 1200 foreigners worked with the installations of the factory,
which had a full production capacity on150 000 three-axle lorries and 250 000
diesel motors per year. As a result of the Soviet lack of skill, only 41 000
lorries were produced in the Kama factory up to 1978. The Kama Company had
great military significance.
Other
documents prove that Arthur Brandt Company of Detroit, Michigan, built the car
factory ZIL. The Chase Manhattan Bank gave 192 million dollars for this
project.
Prime
Minister Alexei Kosygin confirmed at the end of 1965 that "the
mechanization was completed much too slowly". In some cases the delays amounted
to four years or more. Over 100 000 building projects were unfinished as a
result. Not even the United States could help the Soviet Union this time.
Only
676 000 tractors of the 2 762 200 in the Soviet Union between1966 and 1974
worked properly. The others were quite inferior. (Charles Levinson,
"Vodka-Cola", Essex, 1979, p. 127) Only 30 per cent of 10 000 combine
harvesters were actually delivered in 1964.
The
Soviet T-54 tank is suspiciously similar to the American Christie tank. One
might suspect the Communists of having stolen the model and copied it. It was
actually simpler than that. The U.S. Wheel Track Layer Corporation produced the
tanks for Moscow. During Gorbachev's time in power (1985-91) the Soviet Union
produced twice as many tanks as the United States of America did during
Reagan's presidency (1981-1988).
3300
tanks were produced in the Soviet Union in 1986, 3500 in 1987, and again in
1988. Thousands of other armoured vehicles were also produced in the Soviet
Union during the same time. There were a total of 53 000tanks in the Soviet
empire. That, to put things in perspective, was three times more than NATO had.
In 1966
France gave a guarantee to finance the building of chemical industries for 3.5
billion francs. Moscow also received 1.5 billion francs to build the Renault
car factory by the Kama River in 1971 and another 800 million francs for the
building of a paper-mill. In 1988 the billionaire Armand Hammer invested six
billion dollars in the building of chemical factories in the Soviet Union. The
Jewish capitalist Robert Maxwell, drowned under mysterious circumstances in
1991, also had an intensive co-operation with Moscow.
80 per
cent of all the goods delivered to the Soviet Union were bought on credit.
(Charles Levinson, "Vodka-Cola", Essex, 1979, p. 26)
Many intelligent Russians found it hard to understand why the Americans did not put an end to Communism.
Meanwhile,
the KGB in the Soviet Union and its satellite states had to follow secret
instructions to the effect that no one was permitted to introduce any new
inventions, which increased production.
Those
instructions were revealed only in the summer of 1990.
Antony
Sutton emphasized that the Russians would never have been able to carry out
their space program, Soyuz, without the help of the United States.
Thousands of captured German rocket experts were sent to the Soviet Union and the first Russian sputnik was propelled into space by German rockets, which had been further developed.
The
Soviet Union's own contributions to space research were generally just a big
bluff, as the defected journalist Leonid Vladimirov proved quite clearly. The
Swedish daily Expressen revealed on the 21st of January 1985 that high
technology had been smuggled into the Soviet Union via France, in spite of the
American embargo against the Kremlin. This made it possible to continue the
co-operation in space. American presidents had classified a pact of this nature
with France.
NASA was responsible for smuggling modern electronic equipment into the Soviet Union.
The
United States of America had 5000 computers at the end of the 1950s, while the
Soviet Union only had 120. In 1973 the United States had 70 000 and the Soviet
Union 6000 ~ the Soviet computers were all of the first or second generation.
The American computers could manage 2500 operations per second in the Second
World War and 15 000 in the 1950s.
IBM and
the British company International Computer and Tabulation Ltd. began supplying
the Soviet Union with their computers.
The
activities of the Soviet research institutes and so-called letterbox factories
were strictly secret. In that way the Soviet Union concealed from the public
the fact that it was lagging behind in the field of technological development
and that some projects originated from abroad. Those in the West who were
interested could read in various books about what was happening in these
institutions.
The
Soviet Union's military expenses amounted to 35 per cent of its GNP (compared
to 5.5 per cent in the United States and 2.5 per cent in Sweden). The White
House in Washington and Wall Street in New York continued to support the Soviet
system despite officially condemning Moscow’s invasion of Afghanistan.
An
agreement to develop Soviet agriculture was signed as late as the 18th of June
1985. Young American farmers were sent to the Soviet Union to train Russian
kolkhoz functionaries. Modern technology was also delivered. (The International
Herald Tribune, 19th June 1985)
At the
same time, Moscow sent aid to all the other Communist countries.
Nicaragua
alone received 294 million dollars during three years.
Moscow
sent 300 million dollars each month to support the Communist regime in Kabul.
THE
DISMANTLING OF THE SOVIET UNION
Only
one conclusion can be drawn from all of this: the United States of America
could have ruined the Soviet Union whenever they wanted to.
They
would only have needed to stop delivering modern equipment.
Washington
continued. The United States could have defeated the Vietnamese Communists
easily.
But
they did not want to.
On the
contrary, modern American war equipment was delivered to the Viet Cong. And
more than 58,000 young American men were sacrificed. All this served the
purposes of the financial elite (and the United States had the opportunity to
experiment with various bacteriological and chemical weapons).
The financial elite wanted to keep the Vietnam War going at any cost. It was a perfect cover for the profitable narcotics trade, according to Dr Alfred W. McCoy.
Several
American researchers, including Richard Pipes of Harvard, have pointed out that
the Americans only needed to stop sending their aid to overthrow the Communists
in Moscow. Antony Sutton emphasized in a lecture to the leadership of the
Republican Party that this efficient weapon had, for some reason, never been
used. If the aid had been withdrawn, they would have saved millions of people
from the most terrible suffering and furthered the cause of democracy.
The aid
to the Soviet Union and its satellite states was concealed in many different
ways, mostly by loans at incredibly low interest rates. It was well-known that
Moscow could not even afford to pay the interest on these loans. Repayment was
not expected. In 1984 alone, the Soviet bloc received loans totaling 50 billion
dollars at the same time as modern technology was delivered free of charge.
(Det Basta, October 1985)
In 1984
the Soviet Union owed the Western banks 136.7 billion dollars, including 28.7
billion owed to various private banks. (Svenska Dagbladet, 4 May 1985)
Despite
this, "loans" amounting to 200 million dollars were received from the
First National Bank of Chicago while Morgan Guaranty, the Bankers Trust and the
Irving Trust gave the Soviet Union another 200 million dollars at an especially
low rate of interest. These loans were without securities and the borrower was
supposed to have begun repaying them six years later.
The
borrower was allowed to use the money for anything whatever ~ as if the Soviet
Union was the banks' best customer. The newly opened archives have revealed
that Moscow made illegal money transfers to Communist parties all around the
world. Moreover, some goods were sold to the Soviet Union at a much lower price
than on the world market. The Western taxpayers had to pay the difference.
In this
way the EEC "sold" 100 000 tons of butter to the Soviet Union for
approximately 45 pfennigs per kilogram while the German consumer had to pay
over 10 DM per kilogram (100 pfennigs = 1 DM).
Another
100 000 tons of butter were later "sold" to the Soviet Union at the
higher price of 70 pfennigs per kilogram. Everything according to Expressen,
8th of August 1987.
In the
years 1984-1986, the Soviet Union lost approximately 8 billion dollars in
yearly oil-profits (though the volume of exports was roughly the same) as a
result of the fall in price. This should be compared with the nation’s total
exports, which amounted to 20-25 billion dollars.
In
1989the Soviet Union managed to scrape together only 18 billion dollars’ worth
of exports (mainly consisting of oil, gold and weapons). A third of the export
capital in 1990 was spent on grain. Other goods also had to be imported. The
Soviet Union's imports paid for in Western currencies increased by 23 per cent
in 1989 while its income of the same currencies increased only by 7-8 per cent.
The
satellite states and third world countries, in turn, owed the Soviet Union 85
billion dollars, which they could not repay. The Soviet budget deficit in 1989
was 100 billion rubles, making up 25 per cent of the budget.
In the
spring of 1990 the Soviet Union faced an acute currency crisis; the annual
growth rate had decreased to two per cent, the galloping inflation was at least
23 per cent and there was a shortage of all kinds of consumer goods. Strikes
made the situation worse. Moscow received new loans amounting to 14 billion
dollars from private banks in Germany, France, Italy, Japan and other countries
at the end of 1990, according to the Moscow business newspaper Kommersant
(November 26, 1990).
In
spite of the very low prices, the Soviet Union came to owe many countries vast
amounts of money for necessary commodities. Moscow owed the German banks 37.6
billion DEM by the end of 1991 (Svenska Dagbladet, 27th of November 1991).
Various
Japanese companies were owed a total of 200 million dollars by Moscow in 1996.
The
Soviet Union had outstanding debts for various goods from different Western
companies, which amounted to almost 10 billion dollars in the spring of1990.
The Soviet citizens were tired of nourishing their parasites.That was why they just pretended to work.
The
United States tried to keep the Soviet Union above water in all kinds of ways.
Washington sent aid worth15 billion dollars to the Soviet Union in 1991 (Moscow
was not required to repay this).
Wall
Street calculated that Moscow would need loans of 30 billion dollars per year
to cover its most vital needs. But they received only half of this.
Several
Western companies helped to finance the Soviet propaganda on Moscow Central
Television by advertising goods, which were virtually impossible to obtain in
the Soviet Union.
Intelligent people in the Soviet empire realized that the capitalists had no intention of allowing them to live a normal life, since they constantly sent more aid to the Soviet Union and thereby prolonged the suffering of its citizens.
Why was
the Soviet Union finally made to fall?
It
became increasingly difficult for the United States to support the Soviet
empire, as appeared from facts given in Dagens Nyheter on the 13th of July
1991. America did not have enough money to cover even its own expenses. The
American government owed 4000 billion dollars to private banks in 1992.
Meanwhile, the budget deficit in 1992 had increased to 285 billion dollars. (Svenska
Dagbladet, 30th of October 1992).
Voice
of America declared in August 1987 that American banks were then lending the
Soviet Union and other Communist states at least 33 million dollars per day (1
billion per month). The Secretary of State, Alexander Haig, complained:
"We are lucky if we get back 25 cents for every dollar."
German,
British and French private banks alone pumped over 11 billion dollars into the
Soviet Union during the first ten months of1988. Voice of America proclaimed
already in August 1988 that not even the entire tax revenue of the West could
save the inefficient Soviet economy.
The CIA
had also systematically overestimated the survival power of the Soviet economy.
It was stated that the CIA made serious errors in its analysis of the
development of the Soviet Union, according to Svenska Dagbladet, 5th of
November 1989.
There
was only one way out ~ Russia had to change to a market economy. Every future
possibility of credit now became completely dependent on this condition. This
was also underlined in Budapest by the important Jewish freemason Jacques
Attali, director of the European Bank of Reconstruction: "If any problems
should arise with democracy, or if the government is unable to continue its
present policy, we will stop the aid immediately." {Dagens Nyheter, 14th
of April 1992.) Attali, a member of B'nai B'rith, was regarded as a grey
eminence behind the Freemason François Mitterand, then president of France.
Western banks made a plot to undermine the Soviet economy in the beginning of 1991 in order to speed up the phasing-out of the Soviet Union.
They
flooded the country with worthless rubles and thereby caused hyperinflation
with the intention of deposing Gorbachev. Prime Minister Valentin Pavlov
revealed this on the 13th of February 1991 in the newspaper Trud. This huge
flow of money into the Soviet Union had been well prepared.
Banks
in Austria, Switzerland, Canada and Russia joined in the operation. President
Mikhail Gorbachev was disturbing the development towards a market economy and
so doing stood in the way of the financial elite. The Soviet Union tried to
protect itself by taking all 50 and 100 ruble notes out of circulation. This
was proclaimed to the nation by the news programme Vremya on Moscow Television
at 9 PM on the 22 of January 1991.
Ordinary
people were permitted to exchange their old currency for new, but only a sum
equal to their monthly wage, not exceeding 1000 rubles. The state collected 40
billion rubles’ worth of those notes out of a total of 48 billion. This is an
example of how certain forces can provide for themselves when empires break up.
The
public never got to know about another, still more decisive, secret manoeuvre
performed by the financial circles to dismantle the Soviet Union. In 1991,
between 14 and 19 billion dollars in foreign currency were taken out of the
Soviet Union. As a result, production sank drastically. (Noam Chomsky,
"You Cannot Murder History", Gothenburg, 1995, p. 511)
This
action immediately ruined the Soviet Union, since 79 per cent of the work force
worked, in one way or another, in the war industry, which constantly needed
foreign currency.
Even
the Tsar's wines were sold at various auctions in the 1980s. 13 000 bottles of
Massandra wine, as well as 62 other bottles which had belonged to the cabinet
office, were sold at Sotheby's in London in March 1990. These bottles of wine
were worth nearly a million dollars. They fetched a price of 280 dollars per
bottle in 1987. The gold and diamond supply had also been significantly reduced
in order to pay running bills already in the 1980s.
President
George Bush informed Mikhail Gorbachev on 27 May 1991 that 150 million dollars
had been transferred to the latter's bank account in Switzerland. Gorbachev
used to call President Bush "my friend George".
All this
is evident from an interview with the KGB General N. Leontiev. The interview
was published in Komsomolskaya Pravda on 26 December1995. Gorbachev had
forbidden his telephone conversations with Bush to be tapped. The KGB tapped
and recorded all the conversations anyway.
The
Soviet leaders made a secret pact with the United States after the collapse of
the Soviet Empire, according to which the most important pieces of art in the
country were to be transported to the United States.
Russia
received tractors and grain in return. These lines can be read in the pact:
"This contract is secret. Art experts do not know about it. If they got to know about it, they would become hysterical. This is why it is important to keep it secret."
TASS
still managed to obtain a copy of the contract in New York. This art for wheat
deal was made on the 29th of October 1991, after the breakdown of the Soviet
Union! This was one of Gorbachev's last crimes against the Russian people
before his resignation in December. His previous crimes are exposed in my book
"Bakom Gorbatjovs kulisser" / "Behind Gorbachev's Scenes"
(Stockholm, 1987).
Soon
after this, President Bush sent aid money for food in the form of a loan of 1.5
billion dollars to the Soviet Republics (except for the Baltic states, which
had become independent) which was to be repaid {Expressen, 19th of November
1991.) At the same time he demanded that Gorbachev should use violence if
necessary.
On
the 8th of July 1992 in Munich, George Bush said:
"There is not enough money in the whole world to save Russia. Now the Russians have to start working too." (Swedish TV-Aktuellt, 8th of July 1992)
Being
a member of the influential Trilateral Commission, Bush of course knew what he was
speaking about.
THE
PHASING OUT OF COMMUNISM IN EASTERN EUROPE
The
KGB made some important contributions to the demolition of the Communist
dictatorships in Moscow's satellite states. The KGB quite simply helped to
overthrow the totalitarian regimes in East Germany (Erich Honecker later stated
that there had been a plot to depose him), Czechoslovakia, Poland and Romania.
Sweden's
television has even shown documentaries where various representatives of the
former Soviet regime confirmed that a conspiracy of this kind was controlled from
Moscow. That was why it was so easy to breach the Berlin wall.
It
was the Jew Kurt Goldstein who conceived the idea of building such a wall.
The
Jewish Party chief at the time, Walter Ulbricht, immediately approved the idea.
This was revealed in Der Spiegel (No 16, 1991). That evil plan was realized on
the 15th and 16th of August 1961.
I can mention here that the relatives of those who were shot trying to cross the wall had to pay for the bullets.
The
democratic president of Czechoslovakia, Vaclav Havel, who is a freemason, also
confirmed that the KGB had made preparations for a coup d’état to depose the
Communist leader Milos Jakes. Not everything went according to their plans, but
the preparations of the KGB led directly to the so-called velvet revolution,
which swept the Communists from power and brought Vaclav Havel to the fore. The
KGB presidential candidate Zdenek Mlynar, who lived in Vienna and was
Gorbachev's boyhood friend, refused to take part in the coup. (Dagens Nyheter,
the article "KGB planerade kupp mot Jakes" / "The KGB Planned a
Coup Against Jakes", 31st of May 1990.)
It
was stated in the BBC documentary "Czechmate Inside the Revolution” that
the KGB recruited people to provoke trouble among the students in order to
depose Jakes on the 17th of November 1989.
The
chief of the secret police, Alois Lorenz, had received precise instructions
from Viktor Grushko, the vice-chief of the KGB, who had arrived from Moscow.
Rumours were to be spread about a student who had supposedly been killed in a
clash with the police. The agent Ludek Zivcak was given the task of pretending
to get killed. An ambulance was immediately sent to take away the
"body". This operation (wedge) was only partially successful. Jakes
was deposed but the KGB agents could not silence the demands of the students
afterwards.
The
KGB also helped to liquidate Communism in Poland. Several political observers
revealed this. After this it was time to overthrow tin hard-line Communist
regime in Romania. In July 1994, the new Romanian Security Service, RIS,
released a report about the hitherto concealed circumstances surrounding the
deposition of the dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. RIS referred to secret agreements
between Bush and Gorbachev.
About
1000 Soviet cars suddenly began arriving every day beginning on the 9th of
December 1989 (only 80 cars had previously passed the border every day). In
each car were two or three "tourists” well-built men between 25 and 40
years old.
Voice
of America had earlier revealed how coded messages to the conspirators had been
printed in the Romanian press. RIS asserted that agitators suddenly began
turning up before the 21st of December 1989.
They
handed out drugs, which made people brave enough to challenge the tanks. The
Soviet "tourists" (actually KGB officers) also took part in the
clashes near the town of Craiova (Hommikuleht, 19th of July 1994, p. 7).
Romania
was the only nation in the Eastern block to have a bloody anti-Communist
"revolution". It claimed thousands of lives. The dictator Nicolae
Ceausescu perceived the conspiracy behind the events already at an early stage
and tried to speak of the foreign involvement on television. He was eventually
arrested whereupon the victors decided to quickly execute him and his wife,
which they did on the 25th of December 1989.
The
government power was taken over by the KGB agent Ion Iliescu, who immediately
began to "democratize" Romania.
To
overthrow all the Eastern European regimes which refused to give in was also
important to Moscow who needed to persuade their own old hard-line Communists
to take a new direction. The United States of America was behind everything, as
a Soviet representative hinted to the news agency Reuters in November 1989.
{Dagens Nyheter, 30th of November 1989.)
It
was also the United States of America that incited the Soviet Union to crush
the rebellions in Eastern Europe in 1956 and 1968, since the interests of the
lofty financial circles demanded it. The Swedish red writer Jan Myrdal revealed
in the periodical Folket i Bild (No. 20, 1979, p. 31) that "the American
State Department, through Swedish diplomats, before the invasion in 1956, asked
the Soviet Union to re-establish order in Hungary".
Before
the 4th of November 1956, the State Department sent an explanatory telegram to
the Communist leadership in Moscow, in which it was made clear that the
American government does not look with favour upon governments unfriendly to
the Soviet Union on the border of the Soviet Union. ("Congressional
Records", 31 of August 1960, p. 17 407)
Several
Hungarian historians admit that the U.S. government wanted to put down the
Hungarian anti-Communist revolt. The American propaganda also claimed that
Hungarians began murdering Jewish Communists and that it was therefore time to
intervene. That was a false statement, however. Not even the Jewish
executioners within the Communist security service were killed. In fact, not
even the hated Jewish chief of the security police, Gabor Peter (actually
Benjamin Ausspitz), suffered that fate.
Voice
of America, meanwhile, encouraged the Hungarians to revolt.
They
were convinced that the United States would come to their aid. This was a mere
play for the gallery, like Allen Dulles's speech about liberating Hungary from
Communism. The United States calmly watched when Moscow violently and cruelly
put down the revolt. 1945 people were killed in Budapest and a further 557 were
shot in the province. 20 000people were injured. {Dagens Nyheter, 1st of
December 1990.) Moscow used 1500 tanks and 150 000 infantry troops. 200 000
people fled from Hungary. 40 000 were arrested.
In
contrast, both the United States and Moscow condemned British and French
aggression during the Suez crisis in the autumn of the same year. Washington
also gave the Kremlin the green light before they marched into Czechoslovakia.
Zdenek Mlynar, who was a member of the Communist Party’s Politburo in
Czechoslovakia in 1968, revealed after his escape to the West that Leonid
Brezhnev had told the leaders in Prague at the end of August 1968 that the
American President Lyndon Johnson had assured the Soviet Union that the United
States of America would not interfere with the Soviet aggression in
Czechoslovakia. (Zdenek Mlynar, "Nachtfrost"/
"Night-frost", Cologne/ Frankfurt am Main, 1978, p. 301)
The
United States refused to give the go-ahead when the Soviet Union wanted to
attack China in 1969. (Mikhail Heller and Alexander Nekrich,"Utopia in
Power", London, 1986, p. 713)
Moscow
had to shelve its plans to attack China. But it was quite all right to occupy
Kabul in 1979.
The
United States also helped to put down the anti-Communist popular movement
Solidarity in Poland. The Swedish journalist Ulf Nilson told Expressen the
following on July 24, 1989:
"The man whom the American president valued most highly ~ and helped the most ~ was the ex-dictator Jaruzelski. Without Bush's help, the man who prohibited Solidarity would not have been elected president, but the United States sided with, paradoxically, the Communists."
The
CIA headquarters made sure that the operation with 1200 men in the Bay of Pigs
at the beginning of April 1961 was foiled.
The invisible hand in this case was not at all interested in deposing the freemason and Marrano Fidel Castro, whom it had itself helped into power. Guess who paid for his equipment, food bills and weapons in the Mexican training camps!
The historian Jean Boyer stressed that Castro's money and weapons did not come from Moscow but from the United States. It was the freemason Eisenhower who helped Castro to power.
The
military aid to Cuba was later sent via the Soviet Union. So we need not be surprised
at the fact that 5000 Cuban soldiers were used to protect the American and
French oil companies in the Cabinda area of Angola when UNITA guerilla forces
attacked foreign oil plants. {The Economist, Contra No. 5/1988.)
The
United States ceased supporting President Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua and
began secretly helping the Marxist Sandinistas instead.(Svenska Dagbladet, 21
July, 1989.)
President
James Carter cut off all military assistance to Nicaragua and prohibited sales
of military hardware to the country. The Carter administration successfully
closed all markets where Nicaragua could purchase arms and ammunition. The International
Monetary Fund twice blocked badly needed standby credit for Nicaragua.
The
White House successfully pressured all shipping companies to boycott Nicaragua
so that the coffee crop could not be exported. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture gave arbitrary instructions to beef inspectors to stop Nicaraguan
beef exports to the United States. Public support was given to the Sandinista
Communist movement.
The
White House chose to let the Marxists take over Nicaragua. (Anastasio Somoza
and Jack Cox,
"Nicaragua Betrayed", Belmont, 1980)
According
to the official version of history, the CIA's aid to the Mujahedin began
during 1980, that is to say, after the Soviet army invaded Afghanistan, on
December 24, 1979. But this is not correct. On July 3, 1979, President Jimmy
Carter secretly signed the first directive for secret aid to the opponents of
the pro-Soviet government in Kabul.
Zbigniew
Brezinski, National security Adviser in the Carter Administration, wrote a note
to the president in which he explained to him that this aid was going to induce
a Soviet military intervention against Afghanistan. (Le Nouvel Observateur,
interview with Zbigniew Brezinski, January 15-21, 1998)
Carter
wanted to provoke a war in Afghanistan. As if this was not enough, the CIA even
helped the KGB to persecute and expose critics of the regime. The Soviet
propaganda poet and Freemason Yevgeni Yevtushenko (actually Gangsnus) in the
periodical Ogonyok claimed this on the 6th of December 1988.
Senator
Robert Kennedy admitted during a conversation with him in 1966 that it was the CIA
exposed the regime critics Yuli Daniel and Andrei Sinyavsky, who were soon put
on trial.
THE
UNITED STATES ALSO HELPED THE CHINESE COMMUNISTS GAIN POWER
The establishment of Communism in China was also supported by the Americans through Moscow or sometimes even directly.
As early as in the1920s, highly placed Jewish functionaries were visiting China to introduce Communism into certain areas.
Among
those "advisers" were Adolf Yoffe, Michael Borodin (real name: Jakob
Grusenberg, founder of the Communist Party in Mexico in 1919), Bela Kun,
Enrique Fischer (actually Heinz Neumann) and Vasili Bluecher (Galen-Chesin),
who became responsible for gruesome atrocities against the Chinese people.
Another
Soviet Jew, Anatoli Gekker, who had been the veiled power behind the puppet
Communist leaders Damdin Sukhkhe-Bator (1893-1923) and Khorlogin Choibalsan
(1895-1952) in Mongolia in 1922, became political commissar for the Communist
regions of China in 1924. Communism was introduced into Mongolia in 1921. Two
Jews from Russia, V. Levichevand Yan Gamarnik, led the Chinese Red Army. An
English Jew named Billmeier saw to it that the Chinese Reds were armed with Soviet
weapons.
The
Chinese Marxist Sun Yatsen (Sun Yixian) was an eminent freemason.
Even
Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi) co-operated with the Communists in the
beginning. He was a 33rd degree freemason (of the Scottish rite) who later
broke away from the Communists and became the leader of bourgeois China.
The
United States demanded of the Japanese to stop fighting the Chinese Communists
between 1937 and 1945. The American government betrayed Chiang Kai-shek's
anti-Communist front in the autumn of 1948.
General
George C. Marshall (1880-1959), then secretary of state, demanded that Chiang
Kai-shek allow the Communists into his government.
Marshall
had been President Truman's special envoy in China from1945 to 1947. He
asserted that the Communists were good people but Chiang Kai-shek refused to
comply. This refusal was all the Americans needed and Chiang Kai-shek was left
without help.
Instead, the support for Mao Zedong increased (the aid to the Chinese Communists went via Moscow).
On
the 31st of January 1949, Communists in American tanks rolled into Beijing and
on the 31st of October, the People's Republic of China was officially
proclaimed. The civil war ended after having claimed 20 million lives. In the
following year the United States claimed that Mao Zedong had distanced himself
from dictatorship and sought to introduce democracy. Of course this was a lie,
but they needed to show a good picture of the Chinese Communists.
This
was planned as early as the Potsdam Conference in the summer of 1945, according
to Gary Allen. Understandably, USA wished to conceal its role in this process.
This was confirmed by the representative of the State Department, Owen
Lattimore:
"The problem was how to allow them [China] to fall without making it look as if the United States had pushed them."
China
is now an environmental disaster area. The most infamous area of industrial
pollution in Russia and Eastern Europe seem like nature reserves by comparison.
There are towns like Benxi (perhaps the world’s dirtiest town) where
25-year-old Chinese die of cancer. (Dagens Nyhetcr, 9th of January 1994)
Mao Zedong had several Jewish advisers behind him.
One
of these was the British Jew Sidney Rittenberg who worked for Mao from 1946 to1976.
They were called "voluntary advisers".
Thanks
to such advice, Mao murdered 46 000 well-educated people in his campaign
against intellectuals in 1957. The number of such victims was later to rise.
43
million people died of starvation during a three year period in connection with
the “Great Leap Forward". Another two million were murdered.
The
agricultural “reforms" had earlier killed 1.5 million landowners. During the
Cultural Revolution, the Red Guards persecuted 100 million people,
approximately half of which are believed to have died. It is known that at
least 400 000 were murdered. No one knows the exact figures ~ the real figures
may well be twice as high.
90
000 people were reported to have been massacred in Guangxi alone, according to
incomplete statistics. (Dagens Nyheter, 17th of August1992.)
At the same time, an epidemic of cannibalism swept across Wuxuan. Its most extreme forms were "cannibal banquets": meat, liver, heart, kidneys, thighs, shins... boiled, fried, and roasted. At the "highest" point of this epidemic, human meat was even prepared in the dining rooms of the revolutionary committee for the town of Wuxuan. (Dagens Nyheter, 17th of August 1992)
Zheng
Yi, a Beijing Red Guard, related the following in an interview for a BBC
documentary about Mao Zedong in 1993:
"In the beginning people murdered one another because of their political convictions. Then they began to eat people. Just killing them wasn't enough. Only by eating the flesh of their enemies could they show their class-consciousness. You would torture someone first, then cut up their stomach while they were still alive. Like at the slaughter of a pig, you would cut out the heart and liver, chop them up and eat them."
Zheng
Yi later became a dissident and succeeded in photographing some secret
documents concerning Communist crimes in China. At least 137 people and
probably hundreds more were eaten, according to secret documents about
cannibalism among the Red Guards in the Guangxi province at the end of the
1980s. (Dagens Nyheter, 8th January 1993)
Approximately
30 million people are assumed to have been killed during the first ten years up
to 1959. The bloody terror began in Beijing on the 24th of March 1951 and
spread to other major cities. In 1960 alone, more people were killed in China
than during the entire Sino-Japanese War. Professor Richard L. Walker at the
University of South Carolina estimated the casualties of Chinese Communism up
to 1971 to be 62.5million at the least.
In
July 1994, after the release of new, shocking documents, Chen Yizi at Princeton
University told the Washington Post that the total number of Chinese killed
during the Communist terror was at least 80 million. (Dagens Nyheter, 19th of
July 1994, A 9)
It came to light later that the number of victims to Communism in China was 140million. (Hufvudstadsbladet, Helsinki, 23 December 1997)
The United States of America is also responsible for those lives.
The
wealthy Jewish banker and Illuminatus, David Rockefeller, described Chairman
Mao's terror regime as
"one of the most important and successful in human history".
He
believed that it had succeeded in fostering high moral and common purpose in
China. (The New York Times, 10th of August, 1973, Gary Allen, "The
Rockefeller File")
After
the massacre in Tienanmen Square in 1989, when Washington imposed official
sanctions against Beijing, American companies continued to sell their products
in China as if nothing had happened. The sanctions were not observed; they were
just a play to the gallery. (Dagens Nyheter, 13th
of December 1989.) Israel has also given China military and economic aid.
The
United States helped Adolf Hitler, Pol Pot's terrorists in Cambodia, Saddam
Hussein (who, with this help, murdered at least 300 000 Arabs living in the
oil-rich marshes between the Tigris and Euphrates in March1991) and other
political terrorists. But that is another story...
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