1905
St. Petersburg-Russia, January 1905, 'the news reached the Bolsheviks in exile that on the preceding Sunday, tsarist troops had fired on a workers' demonstration'.
(Jacobs, "Stalin's Man in China", Cambridge, Mass., & London, 1981, p. 7.)Please see also Wilcox, E. H., Russia's ruin, London : Chappell & Hall, 1919 ; New York : Scribner, 1919, 316p. 22cm. "Based on articles published in the Fortnightly review."-- (If you can find it). The author did not know a few details but the general background of these events has been analysed in a persuasive manner.
1915
Constantinople-Turkey, 9 January 1915. "The well-known Russian Socialist and publicist, Dr. Helphand [Parvus] . . . . has for some time been active here . . ." "In a conversation with me, which he had requested through [Max] Zimmer, Parvus said that the . . . interests of the German government were . . . identical with those of the Russian revolutionaries, who were already at work. However, there was as yet a lack of cohesion between the various factions." "He saw it as his task to create a unity and to organize the rising on a broad basis." "He was prepared to take the necessary first steps to this end, but would need considerable sums of money for the purpose". "In Parvus�s opinion, action must be taken quickly, so that the new Russian recruits will arrive at the front already contaminated."
( Ambassador Hans von Wangenheim, telegram to the Foreign Ministry in Berlin ).Constantinople-Turkey, etc., 2-3 April 1915. "Preparations are to be made for a political mass strike in Russia, to take place in spring, under the slogan �Freedom and Peace?" " . . as many railway bridges as possible will be blown up, as during the strike movement of 1904 and 1905." " The task can only be fulfilled under the leadership of the Russian Social Democrats. The radical wing of this party has already gone into action, but it is essential that they be joined by the moderate minority group. So far it has been mainly the radicals who have prevented unification. However, two weeks ago their leader, Lenin, himself threw open the question of unification with the minority. . . . "
( Alexander Helphand (Parvus), Preparations for a Political Mass Strike in Russia, memorandum. )Berlin, 26 March 1915. ". . . Dr. Helphand requires a total of one million marks," etc.
(Herr Frölich to Minister Bergen at Foreign Ministry.)Berlin, 6 July 1915. "Five million marks are required here for the promotion of revolutionary propaganda in Russia."
(State Secretary Jagow to the State Secretary of Treasury.)1916
Copenhagen-Denmark, 23 January 1916. "Dr. Helphand . . has told me the following, in confidence :
The sum of a million roubles which was put at his disposal was immediately sent on, and has already reached Petrograd and been devoted to the purposes for which it was intended." etc.
(Minister in Copenhagen, Brockdorff-Rantzau, report to the Chancellor.)Berlin, 1 May 1916. "On returning to Berlin after a peaceful Easter . . . we were horrified to find the streets surrounding our hotel in a great state of excitement. The hotel even seemed to be in a state of siege, being sourrounded by a cordon of police and a rather threatening-looking mob, who, it seemed, had already stolen the bread supplies from the hotel . . .
"It was in fact the "red" May 1st, and a few turbulent Socialists had tried to get up a passing agitation to celebrate their day in the usual manner, on which occasion Liebknecht, the notorious quarreller in Parliament, was arrested for attempting to disturb the public peace, and is now safely under lock and key."
(Evelyn Blücher, An English Wife in Berlin, London, Constable & Co., 1920, page 135.)Berlin, 8 May 1916. "According to a statement of account dated 28 April, the credit of 180,000 marks, paid to me by the Foreign Ministry at the end of September 1915 for Russian propaganda, is not only totally exhausted, but closed with a deficit of 1,011.93 marks." etc.
"Considerable sums will be needed at once, or in the next few weeks or months . . ." etc.
(Direktor Steinwachs, memorandum to Minister Bergen.)1917
March 1917Berlin, 3 March 1917. " . . . it is in our interest that the radical wing of the Russian revolutionaires should prevail . . ." etc.April 1917
(State Secretary Zimmermann, telegram to the Foreign Ministry Liaison Officer at General Headquarters.)Berlin, 2 April 1917. "According to information received here, it is desirable that transit of Russian revolutionaries through Germany take place as soon as possible . . "
(Under State Secretary, Bussche, telegram to the Minister in Bern.)Bern-Switzerland, 9 (10?) April 1917. Lenins Reise sets out.
Frankfurt-Germany, 10 April 1917. Lenins Reise im plombierten Wagen misses connection, is delayed.
Sa?itz-Germany. 11 (12?) April 1917. The Bolsheviks sojourn in a locked room (per letters in Zeman).
Malmö-Sweden, 13 (14?) April 1917. Lenins Reise welcomed.
Stockholm-Sweden, 14 (15?) April 1917. Lenin refuses to see Helphand (Parvus) and asks that this be put on record (Sobelson in Platten).
Petrograd-Russia, 16 April 1917. Lenins Reise at its destination.Stockholm, 17 April 1917. "Lenin's entry into Russia successful. He is working exactly as we would wish." etc.
(Direktor Steinwachs, telegram to the Foreign Ministry at Berlin.)May 1917
Berlin, May 1917. "Scheidemann's challenge, dashed into the midst of the assembled Reichstag in the shape of a threatened revolution, drew blood, as he hoped . . ." etc.
(E. Blücher, English Wife in Berlin, p. 169.)July 1917
" . . . racing automobiles and armored trucks with armed soldiers and workers appeared on the streets of Petrograd. They stopped private automobiles, ordered out at gun point the drivers and passengers, took the cars over, installed machine guns in them, and joined the other previously armored motors.
Shortly afterward, confused shooting and machine-gun firing ensued, resulting in casualties among peaceful citizens who happened to be on the street.
" Relations with Germany were carried on through Stockholm. In April of this year an attempt was made from Stockholm to publish outside of Petrograd a newspaper for the purpose of waging a campaign against England and France.
Large sums of money appeared among the German agents in Copenhagen and Stockholm in the early days of the revolution, and an extensive recruiting of agents for Russia was launched among our deserters and emigrants. Sums of money (800 thousand rubles, 250 thousand rubles, and other sums) were remitted to Russia from Stockholm through one bank which received orders from Germany.
( Excerpts, Report of the Public Prosecutor, etc., N. S. Karinskii, Petrograd, 22 July 1917.)Petrograd, July 1917. "During these days Lenin with his comrades cost us no less than a good-sized plague or cholera."
(Vladimir Bourtzeff, article in Riech, 20 July 1917.).Petrograd, 18 July 1917. Pereverzev, Nikitine, etc., dismissed by Kerensky.
Petrograd, 18 July 1917. "The Bolsheviks have received no money" lied Lenin in the Bolshevik paper Listok Pravdy ("The Handbill of Truth").
Comment This man was a clever prevaricator ; what seems somewhat probably attested was : his own finances were in the hands of his wife Krupskaya ; it was also she who was receiving the money coming via Olaf Aschberg of the Nia (Nya) bank in Stockholm and by several couriers ; these funds she was disbursing further. Lenin himself might have had little to do with all this finance.
These transations went on some times between 16-17 April and 17-18 July 1917, some petty contrabanda having been also engaged in, so that the couriers Lenin's "Polish comrades" (the Jew Hanecki alias Furstenberg and the Jew Kozlowski) could make some extra pocket-money on the side ; this could have also served as a cover for the greater crimes of treason against the state.
The trip through Germany etc. which brought the radicals to Petrograd was managed by Fritz Platten and it can be reckoned that he would not be in a position to do so without some measure of financial security being present for the expedition.
An Opinion (by an individual) ; somebody's 'guilt' then quite beside the point, one actual problem may be in that the Bolsheviks had never admitted that there was something more to all this Trotzky's "glory" and so on than just the liberation of the workers from their exploiters. The disinformation has been going on ever since those days. Was Lenin "a German agent" ? ; he was, as it has proved, more than that. In the interest of the German Foreign Ministry, the General Staff, etc., he was no other than an agent sent to disrupt the Russian military operations. His ideology was hardly known to the people who had sent him there, it was his trouble-making potential that was counted upon. His staying power was not expected.
The spectre keeps haunting from all appearances, and I would not think this is a matter of just somebody's opinions on 'ideology'. The 'ideology' is not really there, only a number of gross fallacies and some commonplaces about justice (which is may be a fine idea provided the people who want to achieve something of the description do know what they are doing).
The present-day problem with the marxist-leninist had better been not overlooked. (WPT)August 1917
Petrograd/Moscow, 24 August 1917. Kornilov proposes to head a government with Savinkov as Minister of War and Kerensky as Minister of Justice ; the last one cries foul.
(George Buchanan supposed the Kornilov-Kerensky communications had been meddled with by some third party, this seems likely).
The Bolshevik racket begins to prevail.November 1917
Stockholm, 26 November 1917. ". . . in all probability, in not more than a few months, when the raison d?amp;ecirc;tre of the new government [in Petrograd] has ceased to exist . . . it will then be swept away, etc.?December 1917
( Riezler, to the Chancellor at Berlin)Berlin, 28 November 1917. "According to information received here, the government in Petrograd is having to fight against great financial difficulties. It is therefore very desirable that they be sent money.?
(Busche, telegram to the Minister in Bern.)Petrograd, 13 December 1917. Lenin and Trotzky assign two million roubles for international revolutionary propaganda. (Soviet �ambassadors" sent, Joffe to Berlin ; Vorovsky ?to Stockholm ; Finkelstein (Litvinoff) ?to London : Varshavsky (alias Bronsky) ?to Vienna, Ludwig C. A. K. Martens ?to the United States.)
(B. Brasol, Socialism vs. Civilisation.)Berlin, 26 December 1917. �There is no doubt that there is a strong movement in the present Russian government which is working to prevent the peace negotiations which have already begun from coming to an end too quickly. One important reason for this is the wish not to antagonize the Entente too far; the other is the still existing hope that a revolution will break out in Germany, etc.?
(Report from Herr Nasse.)1918
Petrograd, 24 January 1918. ?. . . the government is following the well-tried formula ; �If you won't be my brother I�ll beat your brains in.?The press could hardly be more completely gagged.? �The arrested last week include Shamanski, the president of the Red Cross.? �The great sensation of the last few days was the murder of the ex-Ministers Shingaver and Kokoshkin.? ?amp;nbsp;. . the government clique denies any complicity, claiming that . . . the murder was contrived by the opposition in order to secure for themselves a weapon against the Bolsheviks.?
(Count Mirbach, Report to the Chancellor.)Moscow, 4 June 1918. 'people are being quietly shot by the hundred.'
(Counsellor of Legation Riezler to Minister Bergen.)October
Berlin, 24 October 1918. " . . . Liebknecht . . . has returned from prison, where he has been for the last two years. He was seated in a carriage with his wife, surrounded by flowers, and they drove slowly by the Reichstag and through some by-streets, landing finally at the Russian Embassy. There Liebkencht addressed his assembled friends in a speech . . ."
(E. Blücher, English Wife, etc., p. 256.)November
Berlin, 3 November 1918. "The Russian [?] Embassy [?] is the centre of much suspicious observation. There has been a remarkable number of Russian couriers arriving for some time past with boxes and baggage of all kinds, which are never examined, of course. These couriers are never seen to return. There are reports that the Embassy itself is full of ammunition and weapons, and we suspect it is a hotbed of Bolshevism and anarchy. They ought to have been sent away before. Liebknecht is seen to be constantly going in and out of the Embassy, and publicly proclaims his anarchistic views."
(E. Blücher, English Wife in Berlin, p. 272.)[ the following paragraphs apparently written on the same day at a later hour ]
"I have just been warned by a friend who shall be nameless that the demonstrations are to begin to-morrow. This made me very nervous, and I asked him if they expected bloodshed of any kind. He said he hoped not, as they had managed to get the Bolshevist Embassy away in time, otherwise no one knows what might have happened. They were hurried off last night with scant ceremony, so that they may be across the frontier by to-morrow. One of their numerous cases which I mentioned burst open conveniently in the luggage compartment, and a whole mass of papers came to light, full of anarchist proclamations to the people, stirring them up to bloodshed and plunder.
" My friend said it was he who had given the order for the Embassy to be removed, and the mission had to be carried out as secretly as possible, so as to take the conspirators by surprise and prevent them having any opportunity of communicating with any one here. The commissaries of the police suddenly appeared at eleven o'clock last night, ordered them to be ready to leave by six o'clock this morning, and stayed on keeping a strict watch over them, not leaving them until Joffe with his personnel of seventy Russians were safely despatched in the seven o'clock train this morning, without any one in Berlin being aware of the fact."
(E. Blücher, op. cit., page 274.)Kiel-Germany, 3 November 1918. See Die Wahrheit ?er den Zusammenbruch der Marine by Friedrich Fikentscher (Berlin, G. Bath, 1920 ; Politische- und militaerische Zeitfragen ; Heft 29.)
1919
Riga-Latvia, 3 January 1919. 'Socialism' introduced by a group sent from Moscow fronted with Peter Stutchka (Stootchka).Budapest-Hungary, 21 March 1919, a revolutionary regime established by Aaron Kohn (Cohen) alias Bela Kun.
Munich-Bavaria, 7 April 1919, a 'Soviet Republic' proclaimed.
Riga-Latvia, 22 May 1919. 'Socialism' disestablished.
(The record : over 2,000 executed by the official Soviet statistics, the total number of fatalities estimated at ca. 20,000 ; cf. George Popoff, The City of the Red Plague).1920
August
Vilnius-Lithuania, July-August 1920. Kapsukas enters with the Red Army, attempts to establish the soviet rule, is not successful, goes underground.The Battle of Warsaw." There is not the slightest doubt that, had we been victorious on the Vistula, the revolution would have set light to the entire continent of Europe. . . ."
(the Bolshevik Tukhaczevsky, in Fuller, Decisive Battles)" . . . Had the battle been a Bolshevik victory, it would have been a turning point in European history, for there is no doubt at all that the whole of Central Europe would at that moment have been opened to the influence of Communist propaganda and a Soviet invasion, which it could with difficulty have resisted. . . . "
(Lord d'Abernon, quoted by Fuller).1927
(Moscow?)-U.S.S.R., 9 September 1927. 'The statement that American Communists work under orders from Moscow is absolutely untrue'lied Stalin in an interview with the First American Labor Delegation.
( W.R. Kintner, The Front is Everywhere, 1950, page 81. )1930
"The Bolshevik party had no relation to this commerce" lied Trotzky about Helphand (Parvus)'s scheme (History of the Revolution, Vol. ii, the entire lenghty and carefully convoluted Chapter 26 dedicated to that event).1932
New York City-U.S.A., 1 May 1932. �The tasks . . . vary in the several countries, from the building of Socialism in the Soviet Union, open armed warfare in China, and preparations for an early revolutionary crisis in Germany, to the most elementary phases of mass education, organization and struggle in the United States . . .?
( Wm. Z. Foster, Soviet America, New York : Coward-McCann, 1932, page 241. )Comment This was published in the USA. When you begin to look into these matters, the reader, you may end up in astonishment couldn't the people read, maybe what had been stated in the plainest language. Apparently one sort of illusion later present was, "the Reds had reformed", this carefully cultivated by the Kremlin's masters of deceit. (WPT).
1933
Washington, D. C., 16 November 1933. Diplomatic relations between the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. established ; the Americans apparently deceived by Finkelstein (Litvinoff) etc. into signing ambiguous statements (please examine the official correspondences on that date).1936
Moscow, 29 September 1936. Plan for "special assistance" for the so-called Loyalist government in Spain approved which "envisaged the creation of special companies in other countries for the purchase of weapons, goods, and combat and combat support equipment, and sending it all to Spain."
(Soviet Union's Aggressions Against the World by General Oleg Sarin and Colonel Lev Dvoretsky, Novato, CA : Presidio Press, 1996, page 2.)1939
Moscow, 3 May 1939. Finkelstein (Litvinoff) replaced by Dzugashvilli (Stalin) with Scriabin (Molotov).Note " . . . The readiness on the part of the Kremlin to arrive at a reorientation of its relations with Germany became apparent after the departure of Litvinov. " (Hitler in a letter of 25th August 1939 to Mussolini, reported in Nazi-Soviet Relations, p. 81.)Moscow - USSR, 23 August 1939. Stalin, Molotov, Ribbentrop, von Schulenburg and Gustav Hilger hold talks, a "non-aggression" pact is signed by Ribbentrop and Molotov and then officially published. There was also signed a supplementary, excerpts followIn signing the nonaggression treaty between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the signatories discussed confidentially the question of dividing the spheres of mutual interest of the countries in Eastern Europe. . . .
[1. Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania ; 2. Poland. 3.' the Soviet Union stresses its interest in Bessarabia. Germany declares its complete disinterest in those regions.']
4. This protocol will be kept strictly secret.New York - USA, 24 August 1939. The official news from Moscow reach the American Communists. Browder names Amter, Minor, and Krumbein to work on the development.Washington, D.C. (ca) 25 August 1939. " . . . two days after Hitler and Stalin signed their pactI went to Washington and reported to the authorities what I knew about the infiltration of the United States Government by Communists."
(Whittaker Chambers, statement read before a Congressional committee in 1948).
The information not acted upon.Moscow, 28 August 1939. Several 'supplementary' documents signed by Ambassador Schulenburg and V. Molotov.* Clarification of the Secret Supplementary Protocol of August 23, 1939 has it, 'To make the first paragraph of Item 2 of the "Secret Supplementary Protocol of August 23, 1939" more precise, etc : In case the territorial-political regions are restructured' [etc., Poland and Lithuania mentioned].Moscow, 31 August 1939. The "nonaggression" pact with the Nazi ratified by the Supreme Soviet of the U.S.S.R. after a speech by Molotov acclaiming Stalin.Comment I was not there, but, knowing those people, the 'ratification' was pure mockery, intended (a) to produce a piece of paper which could be shown abroad as a proof of "democracy" in the USSR, (b) to give occasion for speeches extolling Stalin ; possibly a speech by Stalin extolling Lenin etc., (c) for broadcasting the speeches, taking camera-pictures, banquets, etc. One can presume before verifying that the vote was unanimous the fate of any Soviet dignitaries who might be then not quite in agreement with Stalin is known from many sources. WPT1 September 1939. Hitler's armies invade Poland.17 September 1939. The Red Army invades Poland.Note The official justification proposed by Molotov was, 'to go to the aid of the Ukrainians and White Russians threatened by the German advance'. Schulenburg 'could not possibly accept such a justification' which looks rather contradictory to the "nonaggression" pact just signed officially by the two sides.
This had brought a sort of quarrel between the Soviets and the Nazi's between 16 and 18 September, some wording had been finally aggreed on. However, the 'aid of the Ukrainians and White Russians' was soon advertised by the Kremlin, especially, one surmises, after June 1941 especially for the use of such people as the Communist Party USA. This had also been taught in the USSR schools ever after. One hopes but one does not take for granted that this historic detail has been presently clarified which would render it of less relevance.
As a matter of reported historic facts, the people getting "the aid" from the USSR in some parts of the Ukraine had in 1941 greeted the Nazi troops as liberators and this might not surprise anyone who had studied the actual history of marxism-leninism in some detail. The honeymoon was soon over however the Fuehrer etc. did not discriminate between the various attitudes to the Komisar misrule and apparently identified everybody in the USSR as an enemy.
General Fuller was of the opinion that this was the main Hitler's blunder in the USSR, not enlisting the help of those there who, some, perhaps many of them, detested that regime unqalifiedly. (WPT)Moscow, 25 September 1939. Stalin and Molotov confer with von Schulenburg whose report sent to Berlin has, in part :. . . if Germany consented, the Soviet Union would immediately take up the solution of the problem of the Baltic countries in accordance with the Protocol of 23rd August, and expected in this matter the unstinting support of the German Government. Stalin expressly indicated Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, but did not mention Finland.?
(Nazi-Soviet Relations, 1939-41 ; Documents form the Archives of the German Foreign Office, Department of State, Washington, 1948).30 November 1939, 8 am. The Red Army invades Finland.Note The official Soviet justification seems to have been the liberation of the workers in that country from oppression or something like. WPT).Geneva, 14 December 1939. The Soviet Union expelled from the League of Nations because of having invaded Finland. (This found in the Internet, so . . . ).1940
April 1940
U.S.A. 19 April 1940. Nation-wide "Student Peace Strike" on five hundred campuses under the slogan "The Yanks Are Not Coming!" organised by Student Peace Committee, a creation of the Communist Party USA then in a league with the Hitlerite Nazis.May 1940
10 May 1940. Hitler's armies invade France.June 1940
14-17 June 1940. The Red Army invades and occupies Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia.26-30 June 1940. The Soviet Union annexes Bessarabia (and Bukovina)Note Bessarabia was the seat of a strong anti-Bolshevik movement circa 1918. It was mentioned in the secret part of the Nazi-Soviet pact of 23 October 1939 as belonging within the Soviet "sphere of interests". The two events might have been connected.
Bukovina was not part of the Nazi-Soviet "nonaggression" agreements of 23 October 1939 please see William C. Bullitt, The Round Globe Itself which contains a detailed account of the treaties signed by the Nazis on one hand and the Soviets on the other hand. (WPT)August 1940
Moscow, 1 August 1941. " The pact, which the Soviet government has observed to the letter, has eliminated the very possibility of friction between our two countries . . . It therefore provides Germany with assurances against difficulties on its eastern flank. "
( V. Molotov, speech before the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, Cahiers du Bolchevisme, 3rd quarter, 1940, pages 38-43. )The Battle of Britain.Comment This was a series of air engagements and this was from all appearances decisive, in that, had England fallen then what would be next ? Make your own guesses, the reader. The Nazi-Soviet pact was still almost "water-tight" ; in the USA there were the "American" 'peace' mobilisation people actively sabotaging the country for the sake of Hitler's then-ally Stalin. What was all this intended to lead ? (WPT)September 1940
U.S.A., Washington, 3 and 4 September 1940. Protests in the Capitol building against conscription in any manner organised by American Peace Mobilization, a creation of the Communist Party USA then in a league with the Hitlerite Nazis.1941
January 1941
U.S.A., Washington 4 January 1941, the White House. "The Peace Vigil" protesting against munitions for England organised by American Peace Mobilisation, a front of the Communist Party USA then in a league with the Hitlerite Nazis.U.S.A., January 1941. "150,000 man-days were lost on Army contracts alone" due to the striking activities by the Communists then in a league with the Hitlerite Nazis.February 1941
U.S.A. "469.000 man-days" lost in the American factories due the the sabotage by the pro-Nazi Communist front American Peace Mobilization.March 1941
U.S.A. March 1941. "In the first twenty days of March, the Communists [had] deprived the Army and Navy of 412,000 man-days; and this does not include the losses at Universal Cyclops Corporation and Stewart-Warner Corporation."
( J. Spolansky, The Communist Trail in America, New York : Macmillan, 1951. Many other data from that text have been used on this page. WPT)April 1941
Moscow - the USSR, 13 April 1941. Stalin-Matsuoka Pact : of neutrality and friendship ; included a tentative division of their respective spheres of influence by the USSR and Japan.
(A. Rossi, The Russo-German Alliance, Boston : Beacon Press, 1951, p. 193.)May 1941
Chicago, 11 May 1941, Midland Hotel. Harold Christoffel and Robert Minor attend a conference called on specific orders of the Political Committee of the Communist Party "to work out the details of a comprehensive program to influence members of our armed forces as well as young men and women employed in defense plants", this disguised as "an industrial youth conference".June 1941
Washington, the White House lawns, 17 June 1941. F. Field, national secretary of the (pro-Nazi) American Peace Mobilization (a Communist front) proclaims, "Keep America out of Europe's war, etc."22 June 1941. Hitler's armies invade the USSR."For a total of 668 days the Communists had succeeded in keeping America from flexing her industrial muscles. Now, not content with mere defense preparations, they bellowed on every rostrum for war." (etc. Spolansky, The Communist Trail.)Comment It may be not always clearly seen when all this 'socialism' was just a cover over some criminal activities or was this 'ideology' sincerely believed by some deluded persons. Many had simply quit the Communist Party USA in 1939 what about the others : did they really think that they had an 'ideology' worthy of introduction, at the presumed expense of having ruined everything first ? There may have been instances of oppression by one 'class' of another 'class' but to persist with "solving" old problems with old solutions would only lead to new actual problems. The descriptions of society produced in the 1800's were largely untrue in the 1930-41's, (more so in the 2000's, by the way ; disregarding the "solutions" then offered which had proved unworkable wherever attempted). (WPT).
1942
The Battle of Stalingrad, one of the decisive battles in the entire war. The Soviet military operations, the sacrifices of the common soldier, the strategies of the generals, had left little or no room for criticism by the experts. On the political fronts the "ally" had never wanted anything other than to engage in their own sort of 'imperialism' and that was being pursued with the utmost consistency.* "There was . . . a breathtaking gulf between the intelligence supplied to Stalin on the United States and that available to Roosevelt on the Soviet Union.Whereas the Centre had penetrated every major branch of Roosevelt�s administration, [the Americans] had not a single agent in Moscow."
(Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, The MITROKHIN ARCHIVE and the secret history of the KGB, New York : Basic Books, 1999.)* " . . . Stalin was able to establish pro-Soviet regimes in countries like Poland, Hungary, and East Germany, setting up the Warsaw Pact. But he was not content with these gains in Europe. His neoglobalism embraced the Asian continent. The war in Korea, during which American and Soviet pilots opposed one another for the first time, was the last military exploit of the generalissimo. "
(Sarin and Dvoretsky, Soviet Union's Aggressions, page 216 ff.)1943
NovemberTehran-Persia. Franklin Delano Roosevelt subverted by Yosif Dzhugashvilli alias Stalin1944
Washington, D.C. Robert Stripling railroaded into the Army. (Stripling, The Red Plot Against America, Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania : Bell, 1949, pages 46-57).1945
Manchuria, August 1945. The USSR "joins the war" against Japan already practically defeated. An estimated (up to) $4,000,000,000 worth of arms and war materiel, in the main despoiled of the Japanese, given to the Red Chinese under Mao Tse-tung.Moscow, August 15-16 1945. The US and the USSR agree jointly to accept the capitulation of the Japanese in Korea, the two sides respectively occupying areas divided along the 38th parallel.16 Jan - 5 Feb, 1946 a conference between the two powers on the legal status of Korea ; 17 Nov 47, a United Nations commission established to observe elections in Korea ; 10 May 48, elections in the US-held parts of Korea south of the 38th parallel, the members of the UN commission not permitted by the USSR (etc) to enter the zone north of the 38th parallel ; 9 Sept 48, a Soviet-sponsored regime established in the "north" Korea.
( Sarin and Dvoretsky, Soviet Union's Aggressions, pages 55-6.)1946
Washington, D.C., 1 Feb 1946. ". . . the name of Harry Dexter White has been sent to Congress by the President for confirmation of his appointment as one of the two United States delegates on the International Monetary Fund . . " "As will be observed, information has come to the attention of this Bureau charging White as being a valuable adjunct to an underground Soviet espionage organization operating in Washington, D.C."
( J. Edgar Hoover, memorandum to Gen. Harry H. Vaughan at the White House. )
The information not acted upon until 1948.Germany, the Soviet occupational zone. The Soviets get the occupational currency printing plates from the U.S. courtesy of Harry Dexter White etc. (transaction approved by H. Morgenthau Jr., possibly, it seems, unawares).
The U.S. defrauded by the USSR of some $250,000,000.1950
Pyongyang, 19 January 1950. 'There was a reception in the Chinese Embassy' 'Kim Il Sung and I had a conversation' 'Mao does not believe that we should attack the south, but should counterattack if the south initiates an attack. But South Korea is not apt to attack. So Kim wants to visit Comrade Stalin to ask for permission to make an attack on South Korea' 'Mao Has promised support' 'Kim insists on personally reporting to Comrade Stalin on his plans for the attack on South Korea.'
(Soviet Ambassador T. F. Shtykov to Stalin).Pyongyang, 30 May 1950. 'Kim Il Sung informed me that the chief of the general staff has finished formulation of the principal operation plan' 'Out of twenty divisions, seven are ready for the offensive. In July the rains will begin.' 'The general staff suggests that the operation be started late in June. My opinion is that we can agree to this date. The Koreans are asking for fuel and medical supplies. I request expedited directives.' (Shtykov to Stalin).25 June 1950. King Kim's troops cross the 38th parallel heading south, major conflict ensues.1954
Geneva, 20 July 1954. By an agreement between the major powers Vietnam divided along the 17th parallel. Please see Soviet Union's Aggressions Against the World by General Oleg Sarin and Colonel Lev Dvoretsky, Novato, CA : Presidio Press, 1996.1963
Moscow, September 1963. Annual conference of the Communist Parties. Mikhail Suslov's (etc) "pink epidemics" proposed : "the demoralization of the United States and its neighbors on both sides . . . Drugs . . . a principal instrument . . ." (J. D. Douglass, Red Cocaine, Atlanta, Georgia, 1990.)1966
China, May 1966. "Cultural Revolution" inaugurated.
?T]he Buddhist temples, Taoist temples, Buddha statues, historical and scenic sites, calligraphy, paintings, and antiques became the main targets for destruction by the Red Guards. nbsp; (Nine Commentaries on the [Chinese] Communist Party http://ninecommentaries.com ).1970
Chile. The Marxist Salvador Allende in power, 1970-1973. During the last year of Allende�s presidency (1973) U.S. authorities seized $309,000,000 worth of cocaine from Chilean laboratories (Douglass, Red Cocaine).1975
Moscow, 17 July 1975. "There could not have been any such secret agreement" lied Molotov about the secret agreement appended to the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact (also colloquially known as the Hitler-Stalin pact) signed in Moscow, October 1939.
Source : "Molotov Remembers", or, Conversations with Felix Chuev, Chicago, 1993, page 13. Please note that at a later date, (4-29-83) the following exchange took place : [Chuev] : This wasn't the first time I asked Molotov, "What was the secret protocol signed during talks with Ribbentrop in 1939?" : [Molotov] : I don't remember.