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



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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 The passive French forces were entirely withdrawn from Russia on the 5-6th of April 1919.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 nationnalist 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 October

1919. His later attempts to save the Ukraine from the yoke of Communist barnarism 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 murdcrcd 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, a 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.

Bcing 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 recognise the Soviet regime 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 threatcned 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 17th 329


of 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 20th of March 1918 that it was impossible to be allied with the United States. This manoeuvre belonged to the rules of the game.

When Lenin began nationalising 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 st 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' powcr, 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 a ridiculous myth. The international financial elite needed this diversion to be able to quickly introduce a totalitarian form of capitalism without mar- ket 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 destabilisation 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 moncy, 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). He finally understood the nature of the dirty game he was taking part in, began working against it, and was conse- quently 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

revealcd 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 July 1921. 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 organisations 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 roubles 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 to their 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 after- wards 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 signi- flcantly 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. however. 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 per cent. Antony Sutton emphasised in an article that the Soviet censorship later did everything in its power to erase all information about these co- operative 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 agri- culture, the services and small home-based businesses. From 1922, Lenin permitted the founding of 330 co-operative companies and another 134 firms, 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 in 1925. 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 co- operation 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 practising 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 Sovincentre, 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 335
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 regime 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 nationalised. 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 a 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 1927 that 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, agri- cultural 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 Bolshe- viks. In return, American companies were given goldmining 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 (in prison in Novo-Nikolaievsk). He was later sent to a prison in Solovky whcrc 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.)


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