Nobody knows that Zionism appeared as a Marxist movement, a socialist one Zionism is actually a revolution



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The British author George Bernard Shaw dismissed the bestial behaviour of the Bolsheviks by saying that primitive Russia needed to be subjected to force from above. He claimed that certain nations had the right to exterminate so-called undesirable elements among the people. He even recommended Stalin for the Nobel Peace Prize after a visit to Russia in 1931 (Svenska Dagbladet, 13th of September 1991).

Stalin felt no compassion, even for his own comrades, least of all when he felt threatened. People's commissary Grigori (Sergo) Ordzhonikidze demanded an end to the mass terror on the 16th of February 1937. Ordzhonikidze said: "You are insane. Now I know that..." On the 18th of

February, Stalin sent Chekists to his home. They informed him that he had the choice of shooting himself or dying in the NKVD basement.

Ordzhonikidze had no way out. He officially committed suicide and Stalin publicly cried over his death. Stalin was a good actor. (Abdurakhman Avtrokhanov, "The Technology of Power", Frankfurt am Main, 1976, p. 422.)

Raskolnikov, another naive old Bolshevik, protested. He remained

abroad and sent a letter to the general secretary: "You should be put on trial, Comrade Stalin, as an instigator of famine, a vandal, traitor to the revolution and as the executioner of the intelligentsia, the army and of science!"

Stalin continued with his "perestroika". Nikolai Yezhov, meanwhile,

became ever more troublesome. He was known as an alcoholic and also used other drugs. When Stalin had to choose a new chief of the terror, he had a choice between Yezhov and Beria. He chose Yezhov, who had impressed him by hitting Sokolnikov (Brilliant) in his face at a meeting of the Central Committee. This, Yezhov's argument, won Stalin's appre- ciation. Yezhov was promoted to be Stalin's closest aide. Yezhov felt threatcned by Lavrenti Beria, so he began, as chief of the NKVD, to

collect compromising information about the latter. He also tried to

outmanoeuvre Kaganovich. Beria heard about this through the grapevine and immediately flew to Moscow to report everything to Stalin. Stalin ordered an investigation into the matter. The investigatory commission reached the conclusion that there were, according to Yezhov, only two honest Communists left in the leadership of the party - Stalin and Molotov, apart from Yezhov himself, of course. Yezhov was fired in July 1938 and instead became chief of water transport. For his contributions to the uncovering of an anti-Stalinist plot, the Jew Lavrenti Beria (his mother was a Jewess) was named people's commissary for internal affairs and later also became chief of the NKVD. Marshal Georgi Zhukov called him a "monstrous person". This was certainly true, and now he became Stalin's and Kaganovich's best henchman.

Beria's Contribution

Stalin became extremely interested in the UFO phenomenon. Beria was asked to collect information about that enigma. Stalin was also interested in other mysterious subjects. He was very pleased when, before the Second World War, Hitler's Jewish astrologer and seer Wolf Messing came over to Russia and helped Stalin in every way. He was even able to predict that Hitler would be defeated in May 1945.

Stalin began to trust Beria, since Beria had saved him from an attempt on his life by lake Ritsa in Abkhazia. Stalin and Kaganovich had Yezhov executed through Beria on the 1st of April 1940, by way of an April fool's joke. Yezhov had "punished citizens without reason". (Everything accor- ding to the periodical Ogonyok, February 1988.)

The first thing Lavrenti Beria did was to soften the regime in the prison camps. The torture ceased. At the same time, he immediately began executing the old Chekists. He wanted new men who would compete with each other in trying to imprison or execute as many people as possible. General Leonid Reikhman became one of his most important Chekists.

Beria hated children. For that reason he wanted as many children as possible sent into heavy slave labour. In October 1940 his Chekists managed to imprison up to a million children between 14 and 17 years of age. NKVD units had kidnapped those children in various Russian cities and immediately herded them like cattle to prison camps where most of

them died from starvation and exhaustion. From 1943, the Chekists managed to collect two million children per year.

Bcria became a dreadful executioner during the Second World War, since he was able to conceal his crimes as the work of the Nazis. He had

nearly 20 million people captured and sent to slave camps.

According to the latest estimates, the Soviet Union lost at least 32

million, possibly 45 million, citizens during the Second World War. The historian Nikolai Tolstoy claims that most of them (presumably 20 million) were killed by order of Lavrenti Beria. All those deaths were

blamed on the Germans. During the war, Beria had founded a fearsome terror organization, Smersh ("Death to the spies!"), which murdered a vast number of people. Those executioners were so proud of their work that they had themselves filmed while in action. The director Stanislav

Govorukhin showed a few such film sequences in his "The Russia We Lost", where Smersh hanged "enemies of the people" and cheerfully applauded their crime. Many people ended up in special camps called ChSIR. Those were intended for the families of traitors to the fatherland. All prisoners of war were also regarded as traitors. Millions were captured in thc years 1941-42. Many of them starved to death since Lazar

Kaganovich and Lavrenti Beria, in Stalin's name, forbade the Red Cross

to bring the prisoners food. Oddly enough, the Red Cross complied, and still more people died.

Stalin, Kaganovich and Beria took care to destroy all the food stores before the German siege of Leningrad - they wanted to destroy all the awkward witnesses to the historic events in that city. Ludmila Grunberg, who lived in Leningrad at the time, confirmed this.

Beria was made marshal of the Soviet Union for his cruel terror during the war. Semyon Ignatiev was named the new chief of the NKVD. Beria was made chairman of the Atomic Commission in 1946. He still held a lot

of power as the people's commissary for internal affairs and continued his

terror campaign also after the war. He proved himself to be a thousand times worse than Yagoda and Yezhov together.

During the campaigns against "counter-revolutionaries and for the realisation of the land reform 1949-52" at least five million people, according to conservative estimates, were executed. (Svenska Dagbladet,

27 th November 1988.) Kaganovich and Beria were responsible for

those mass murders.

The history of the Second World War has also begun to be revised in Russia now. The defected Russian intelligence officer Viktor Suvorov (Vladimir Rezun) revealed in his books "The Ice-Breaker" (Moscow, 1992) and "M Day" (Moscow, 1994) that it was actually Stalin who planned to attack Hitler, and Germany was therefore forced to a pre- emptive attack.

During the last weeks of the war, the Jewish journalist Ilya Ehrenburg encouraged the Soviet soldiers to rape the enemy's women in hundreds of pressreleases. "Kill them! Nobody in Germany is innocent. Neither the living nor the unborn. Heed the words of comrade Stalin and crush the Fascist beast in its cave! Break down the racial pride of the German woman! Take her as your legitimate spoils of war! Kill them, you brave soldiers of the victorious Red Army!"

His exhortation was followed. The Red Army, according to TV Rapport (Sweden, 8th of January 1994), raped two million German women (180 000 died as a result). Gang rapes of German women took place. 300 000 children, many of whom died from malnutrition, were born as a result.

Lavrenti Beria constantly abused his power, forcing women who took his fancy to sleep with him. Police cars were used to kidnap pretty girls who were brought to Beria. He raped them, following which they were | shot and buried in the garden of his little private palace. Skeletons of

young women were found in this garden in March 1993. {Dagens Nyheter, 6th of April 1993.) Beria also kidnapped, sexually exploited and killed young boys.

Ordzhonikidze had warned Stalin about the fact that Beria had been the agent of the Musavatists in Baku between 1918 and 1920. The British controlled the Musavatists' intelligence. In 1919 Beria began working for the British. Stalin did not care about those accusations, since Beria had later become a double agent for the NKVD. Instead, everyone who dared mention this subject vanished mysteriously. That was why Grigori Kaminsky, people's commissary for public health, was executed. Some historians assert that Beria was Stalin's homosexual lover.

Stalin had also been an agent of the tsarist police, the Okhrana, after he had lost his job as assistant meteorologist in Tiflis (now Tbilisi). Stalin had written many reports to the Okhrana's chief, Vissarionov. In 1906 he

was arrested together with other Bolsheviks, but was released a few hours later. But when Stalin wanted to get rid of his fellow agent Roman Malinowski, he was sent to Siberia. Malinowski was lured to Soviet

Russia in November 1918, where he was executed by order of Lenin. Stalin, Kaganovich and Beria had 25 700 Polish citizens executed in April 1940. The murder of more than 4000 Polish officers (including many of Jewish blood) in Katyn was brought to light by the Germans. It

was Ivan Krivozhertsev who informed the Germans about the mass graves in the Katyn forest. No one wanted to listen to the Nazis' claim that it had been the work of the Bolsheviks, since the Soviet Union had blamed the Germans.

It was only on the 14th of October 1992 that a copy of the decision signed by Stalin and passed by Molotov, Kaganovich, Kalinin and others, was handed over to the Polish President Lech Walesa by the Russian government. It was not really so strange that Jewish Chekists had also executed Jewish officers (including Abram Engel, Samuel Rosen, Isaak Gutman, Isaak Feinkel and others) who had served in the Polish army. After all, the Old Testament states that Yahweh is equally merciless against his own chosen people (Joshua 24:19). They were regarded as traitors!

The President of the United States of America Franklin Delano Roose- velt, and the British Prime Minister Anthony Eden, prohibited all publicity about this mass murder. Roosevelt officially asserted that the events in 309


Katyn were a German plot. Winston Churchill warned his ministers: "The whole subject must be avoided!" At the same time, he assured Stalin that he would do all he could to silence the Polish exile newspapers in London.

Voice of America was not, even in the 1970s, allowed to relate that the Bolsheviks had killed the Polish officers. Hans Holzapfel, the Jewish chief of the European section, was responsible for the censorship.

It is now known exactly what happened. The mass murders began in April 1940. The Polish officers, wearing winter uniforms, were brought in small groups - 30-40 at a time - to the execution site. They were then shot in the neck, one at a time, whilst standing by the edge of the mass grave. The NKVD continued working every day for nearly six weeks. A total of 4143 officer's bodies were found. 4421 people were killed in the Katyn forest, according to the documents. All the identified bodies proved to be former prisoners from Kozielsk. The prisoners who had been incarcerated in the Starobielsk (near Kharkov) and Ostashkov (near Kalinin) camps were murdered elsewhere. The latter amounted to 10 131 (3820 + 6311) people. Another 7305 Polish citizens were murdered in Byelorussia and the Ukraine. The pertaining documents were marked: "Must never be opened!"

Kaganovich founded actual slave camps, where the inmates worked in chains. Of the most important Jewish camp commanders (Aaron Soltz, Naftali Frenkel - a Turkish Jew -, Yakov Berman, Sergei Zhuk, Yakov Rapoport, Nakhimson, Yakov Moroz, Abramson, Pliner, Matvei Berman, Samuil Kogan, Samuil Firin, Biskon, Finkelstein, Serpukhovsky). Lazar Kogan was picked out as insufficiently effective. He was executed in 1938 and replaced by another Jew.

Kaganovich made an important contribution to the founding of the state of Israel. Moscow stated in the beginning of May 1947 that Palestine should be divided into an Arabic and a Jewish state. Meanwhile, Zionist Jews marched into Palestine singing the "Internationale". At a later point, the perfect astrological time for the birth of the new state was worked out. Astrologically, it would favour both the leadership and the subjects. Therefore, the state of Israel was proclaimed on May 14, 1948 at 4:37 in the afternoon. The UN General Assembly, however, had already made the decision giving this project the green light, on the 29th of September 1947.

The Zionists, led by the first president of Israel, Chaim Weizman (who came from Poland), knew that the best available weapons came from

Czechoslovakia, but the right-wing government of that country refused to sell anything to the Jews. So Stalin organised a Communist coup in Prague (led by Klement Gottwald) in February 1948 and in the summer of 1948, half a year after the coup, Western European (including Swedish) airmen began secretly smuggling goods from Communist Czechoslovakia to the new state of Israel.

It was David Ben-Gurion who took the initiative for the weapons deals. Stalin and Kaganovich had seen to it that all those weapon deliveries were effected by an American airline company. American instructors in a secret camp outside Prague trained Israeli pilots. (Dagens Nyheter, 23rd of December 1990, "Svenskar hjalpte Stalin" / "Swedes Helped Stalin" by Andcrs Persson.)

All those weapons were produced in 1944-45 for Hitler's Nazi Germany and were intended for anti-British Arabs. The ammunition later used

against the Arabs was marked both with swastikas and with Arabic letters. Even Issaac Deutscher admitted that Stalin sent both financial and efficient material aid to the Jews in Palestine. ("The Un-Jewish Jew", Stockholm, 1969, p.99. )

Stalin began fighting against the Zionist leaders in 1949. His psycho-

logical disturbances had become worse. That was the reason why he began the campaign against the "Cosmopolites" in November. He thought it was time to begin persecuting the Jews and reviling the Zionists. Stalin had the Jewish author Samuil Persov arrested on the 18th of January 1949 and executed on the 23rd of November 1950. Samuil Gordon met the same

fate when he was executed on the 21st of July 1951.

Stalin began persecuting all kinds of Jewish cultural workers in August 1952. On the 12th of August 1952, 24 Jewish cultural workers (including Yiddish language authors) were arrested and 23 of them were executed. On the same evening, another 217 Jewish poets and prosaists, 108 actors, 87 artists and 19 musicians also vanished without trace. The authors David Bergelson, Fefer Itsik and David Hofstein were among those murdered. Then Stalin began cleaning out the Jewish elements from the government apparatus, not just in the Soviet Union but also in its satellite states. The Prague trial against Rudolf Slanski (actually Salzmann), Vlado Clementi and others was much discussed.

The Murder of Stalin

The leading Jews became extremely worried and began to take counter- measures. They managed to fire Joseph Stalin from the post of general secretary in October 1952. ("The Encyclopaedic Reference Book", Moscow, 1955, Vol. 3, p. 310.) This fact has been left out of all of Stalin biographies. The public at large has never heard anything about this Jewish revenge. Georgi Malenkov was chosen to fill the post of first secretary of the Central Committee. There is no information about this in later encyclopaedias. Stalin was relegated to an ordinary secretary within the Central Committee. He also retained the post of prime minister.

Stalin became deeply concerned and responded with counter-measures. Thus, he ordered a group of Jewish doctors (Professor Boris Kogan, Professor J. Rapoport, A. Feldman, Miron Vovsy, A. Grinstein, Y. Etinger and others) to be arrested on November 7, 1952. They were accused of! causing the deaths of two Russian members of the Politburo (Andrei Zhdanov - the chief of Cominform - and Alexander Shcherbakov). In the case of Zhdanov, those doctors supposedly made a false diagnosis and kept the symptoms of his heart-condition secret.

On the 1st of September 1948, Izvestiya had related that Andrei Zhdanov had died in the hospital. Now Stalin asserted that his Jewish doctors had contributed to his death. Stalin also accused them of planning to kill some other Russian members of the Politburo and that they received their instructions from the Zionist organisation the Joint Distribution Committee, everything according to professor Vovsy's confessions. (Abdurakhman Avtrokhanov, "The Mystery of Stalin's Death", Frankfurt am Main, 1981, p. 182.)

We may presume that this was one of Stalin's invented accusations. When Stalin accused Trotsky of being a German spy, everyone thought he was lying. Documents found in Western archives have now confirmed that Stalin was right.

The Joint Distribution Committee is an international Zionist organi- sation, founded in 1914, which works with large-scale economic and propaganda activities in the interests of Jewry. The central leadership of the organisation has its headquarters in New York. Paul Warburg was among the leaders. The Joint Distribution Committee has hidden represen- tatives in nearly all countries.

The organisation was officially active in the Soviet Union up to 1938. The chairman of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee was once the Illuminatus Felix Warburg, according to the Encyclopaedia Judaica. This was the subversive organisation Joseph Stalin accused the doctors of working for.

Beria responded with an intrigue to remove Stalin's Russian doctor, professor Vladimir Vinogradov. He reported to Stalin that Vinogradov had recommcnded that he (Stalin) should refrain from all activity for reasons

of health. Stalin was furious and shouted: "Put him in irons!"

Stalin continued to rid himself of Jewish aides as fast as he could. Leon Mekhlis, whom Stalin had made editor-in-chief of Pravda, was among the victims. Stalin suspected Mekhlis of having something in common with

the arrested Jewish doctors and for this reason sent him to Saratov, where he was quietly seized and brought back to Moscow to be murdered. He witnessed against the imprisoned Jewish doctors in the hospital of the Lefortovo jail. Mekhlis died on the 13th of February 1953. He was buried

in Red Square, but this time Stalin was not there to shed crocodile tears for him. (Abdurakhman Avtrokhanov, "The Mystery of Stalin's Death", Frankfurt am Main, 1981, p. 197.)


An article by Stalin about the murderous Jewish doctors was published on the 13 th of January 1953. It was also apparent from this article that Stalin's next aim was to purge the Politburo of Jews and other members with Jewish relatives (wives). There were two Jews (Kaganovich and Beria) left among the eleven members of the Politburo at that point, as well as five Russian members with Jewish relatives (Molotov, Malenkov, Khrushchev, Andreyev, Voroshilov), according to the historian Abdu- rakhman Avtrokhanov. Stalin wanted to form a new, larger Politburo with Russian members.

The leading Jews began worrying about their positions. They realised that Stalin could go much further. One of those concerned was Lazar Kaganovich, member of the Politburo. He decided to organise a plot to have Stalin removed. He invited three other members of the Politburo; Nikolai Bulganin, Vyacheslav Molotov and Kliment Voroshilov, to Voroshilov's villa in Zhukovka where he, according to his own admission, suggested using his own sister Roza (Stalin's wife), who was a doctor, to kill Stalin by means of tablets which caused cerebral haemorrhage. It was decided that Stalin's usual tablets should be exchanged for some others, which Molotov called rat-poison. Everybody approved of Kaganovich's suggestion. (Stuart Kahan, "The Wolf of the Kremlin: Stalin's Right-Hand Man", Stockholm, 1988, pp. 268-269.)

Beria also felt threatened and worked out his own plan, which he called Mozart. Beria got Nikita Khrushchev, Georgi Malenkov and Nikolai Bul- ganin over to his side. Everybody waited for the right moment.

Stalin suspected that something was going on. He realised that he was no longer useful to the Jews. He therefore said to the presidium at the end of February that the main proceedings against the Jewish doctors would take place in the middle of March.

At the same time, he took the opportunity to present a proposal for a new decree, according to which all Jews were to be deported to Central Asia. Kaganovich and Molotov protested. Stalin did not care about the consequences. He had had enough of the Jews. Everything according to the secretary of the central committee, Panteleimon Ponomarenko's story to foreign journalists in 1956.

Ponomarenko was then also the ambassador of the Soviet Union in Poland. (A. Avtrokhanov, "The Mystery of Stalin's Death", Frankfurt am Main, 1981, p. 228.)

The conspirators could wait no longer, since the Soviet Union would

have fallen apart altogether if the decree had been put into practice.

At Stalin's stately home in Kuntsevo (formerly Orlov's estate), 84 km

from Moscow, his bodyguards, Piotr Lozgachev and Mikhail Stratostin, became suspicious on the evening of March 1, 1953, since they had not heard from Stalin all day. They were both afraid to go in to him on their own authority. Lozgachev finally plucked up courage to open the door. He found Stalin stretched out on the floor by the dining table, with one elbow propped awkwardly against the carpet. Beside him lay a pocket watch and

a copy of Pravda. He was conscious, but had lost the power of speech. Stratostin immediately informed Georgi Malenkov, the Party's general secretary, who asked him to call Beria too. Beria did not want anyone else to know about Stalin's illness. He turned up at three o'clock in the mor- ning together with Malenkov. They brought no doctor. They listened to Stalin's loud snoring for a while. Then Beria turned to Lozgachev and said in a menacing voice: "Are you trying to cause panic, eh? Don't you see that comrade Stalin is fast asleep?"

Nikita Khrushchev came along only at 7:30 on the morning of the 2nd

of March and only after that did the first doctors appear. Beria had made sure that Stalin received no medical aid for the first 12-13 hours since the discovery of his illness. Stalin died three days later, on the 5th of March. Beria was named people's commissary for internal affairs for his contri- bution to Stalin's demise. At the same time, everything was done to re- cstablish Jewish rule. Stalin had really tried his best to get rid of the

extremist Jews as soon as he began to mistrust them. For instance, Piotr Pospelov (actually Fogelson) had worked as the chief ideologist of the Communist Party between 1940 and 1949. Stalin had Pospelov discharged and made him director of the Institute for Marx, Engels and Stalin Studies. He was also fired from this post in 1952.

Beria released the Jewish cultural workers and doctors who had been imprisoned as quickly as possible. M. Ryumin and other Chekists, who were involved in the preliminary investigation against the leading Jewish doctors, were executed in 1954. Professor B. Kogan had himself been an important Bolshevik leader, who enforced the Soviet regime in Volynia in 1954. (The Soviet Estonian magazine Aja Pulss, No. 9, 1988, p. 28.)

The Power Struggle After Stalin's Death

Between the 6th of March 1953 and the 27th of June 1953 (113 days), the Soviet Union was run entirely by the Jews headed by Lavrenti Beria. He forced Georgi Malenkov to resign as head of the Party on March 14th. (Malenkov died in Moscow in January 1988 at 86 years of age.) Nikita Khrushchev was named deputy general secretary. The Communist Party lacked an official leader until September 1953, when a meeting of the Central Committee officially confirmed Khrushchev's position as Party leader. It was Kaganovich and Molotov who helped Khrushchev to get rid of Malenkov. It must be stated here that this period was not at all as chaotic as Khrushchev later maintained. The hitherto secret documents are explicit in that respect. The professor of history Boris Starkov presented these documents in his article "100 Days of the Marshal of the Lubyanka or Was Lavrenti Beria a Reformer?" (The newspaper Fontanka in St. Petersburg, November 9, 1993.)


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