Название | The Liquidation of Russia. Who Helped the Reds to Win the Civil War? |
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Автор произведения | Николай Стариков |
Жанр | Документальная литература |
Серия | |
Издательство | Документальная литература |
Год выпуска | 2013 |
isbn | 978-5-4461-0486-4 |
March 1918. This is a fatal month for the Romanovs.[23] It's exactly from this month that the events that resulted in the death of the Tsar's dynasty representatives speeded up.
It's exactly here at this point that we'll make a stop.
But why exactly March 1918?
March 1918 is the month, when the Peace Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was signed. The death of the Romanovs and the manoeuvres of Lenin and Trotsky between the Germans and the "allies" are directly interconnected. Yet, if today Lenin's eventual connections with Germany are "hyped," his connections with the Entente countries are wrongly forgotten. And these connections are very important in order to understand all the following events, which include the death of the Romanovs, as well…
Right after the October overthrow, Lev Trotsky became the narkom[24] of foreign affairs. His many-volume memoirs are a priceless treasury of information, "On the 18th of November, General Jadson, the head of the American mission, unexpectedly visited me in the Smolny. He told me that he was not able to speak on behalf of the American government yet, but he hoped that everything would be all right'.'[25]Before leaving, the peace-loving general declared, "The time of protests and threats towards the Soviet Power is gone if it ever existed."[26] Kindly pay attention to this: only few weeks have passed since the Bolshevik overthrow, but the official head of the American mission doesn't have any claims towards them. And this is after the new Russian government had addressed Germany with a peace appeal. How could it be different if we remember that the fighter for the people's happiness Lev Trotsky arrived in Russia on the ship from the USA almost simultaneously with Lenin, who had arrived in Russia via Germany…
The unofficial representatives of the western behind-the-scenes forces visited the new Bolshevik leaders. They had "the honour" to continue the huge project on Russia's destruction. Three emissaries from three empires arrived: the representative of the French military mission Jacques Sadoul, the Deputy of the British Ambassador Bruce Lockhart, and the Head of the American Red Cross mission Raymond Robbins represents the USA.[27]
All three of them are not ambassadors and, consequently they are not authorized to conduct the negotiations, and they may not expound the positions of their governments. They are not officially authorized, but they don't need this to carry out their special task. They have aplenty of unofficial authorities, and they are the true Entente representatives.[28] You can easy assure yourself of this if you pay attention to the fact that the official ambassadors of the superpowers left the Soviet capital for… Vologda at the same time. The unofficial representatives stayed. All three official ambassadors: Buchanan (Great Britain), Noulens (France), and Francis (USA) hold a rampant anti-Soviet position.[29] And they go farther away from the main political centre of Russia. The unofficial representatives Sadoul, Lockhart, and Robbins wanted "to make their respective governments recognize the Soviet power,"[30] as the book "The Civil War 1918–1921," which was published before Stalin's purges, informs us.
That's why they stay with the Bolshevik chieftains. Lenin and Trotsky perfectly understand WHO has come to them. And the respect for the unofficial representatives of the "allies," showed by the Bolshevik leaders, corresponded with the significance of this visit. Trotsky met Lockhart almost every day, he gave him a pass to the Smolny he let him use his private train to travel from Petrograd to Moscow and back, and even provided him with a document saying "All the organizations, Soviets, and Commissars are asked to provide all kinds of assistance to the members of the British mission."[31] The French representative Captain Jacques Sadoul also has an "ironclad" document. This character is even more interesting. He was sent on a mission to Russia in September 1917, "striving to get closer to the leaders of the Soviet power; during February and March he managed to considerably neutralize the influence of the French Ambassador Noulens."[32] Later Sadoul "abandoned" the French mission and worked actively as a Communist. You can read about it in the books. He has allegedly turned his heart to the revolutionary ideas, has forgotten about his duties and the sunny valleys of Provence. He has immersed himself in Communism and Marxism.
This is a lie. To understand this, one has to read Vladimir Ilyich's works more attentively. "The French Captain Sadoul, who verbally felt for Bolsheviks, indeed was faithfully and loyally serving the French imperialism,"[33] Lenin writes in the letter to the American workers. The head of the Bolshevik Party can't be deceived by artificial oaths and faked Marxism. His comments regarding Jacques Sadoul tell us directly where this nice young Frenchman has come from to get directly into the offices of the "newly crowned" Soviet power…
Jacques Sadoul was such a prominent figure that he was also mentioned in the memoirs of Lev Trotsky. "Captain Sadoul came to me immediately after the October overthrow to get information. As far as I remember, with the consent of the French diplomatic and military missions in Russia,"[34] the future founder of the Red Army would write in his memoirs. Only the person who knew where and who to go to could come to the chieftains immediately after the overthrow. It means that Jacques Sadoul had contacts with Bolsheviks before the October. That's true – he arrived in Russia in September 1917, i.e., right before Lenin and Trotsky got some real political power in Russia. Jacques Sadoul arrived to meet them. The facts of his biography incontrovertibly prove this version. In March 1919, the former captain of the French Army comes to Russia to participate in the 1st Congress of the Comintern[35] – the organization established to blow the revolutionary fire all over the world. The French Themis reacted quickly and adequately: the same year Jacques Sadoul was sentenced in absentia to death for the treachery of the state, for the communist propaganda among the French sailors, for desertion and for the contacts with the enemy.[36] This is quite understandable. The further development of the events might surprise you. In the end of 1924, Sadoul unexpectedly returns to France. He is arrested and handed over to the Military authorities, his death sentence had been waiting for him in his motherland since 1919. It should seem that the story was coming to its end and that the French Communist Party would have a "ready made" martyr and a hero for its pantheon. But in March 1925, the military court in Orleans unexpectedly releases Jacques Sadoul from charge of desertion. The charges on all the other points against the brave captain are considered to be groundless.[37] The case is dismissed, and Sadoul goes at large. What is this? Yet another "miracle"? No, just a normal situation, which concerns the performance of the most important task at the state level. Only few people are aware of Jacques Sadoul's mission, for everyone else, including the French justice, he is a traitor, who is ripe for the gallows. No contacts with Bolsheviks are needed in 1924 – the USSR has got stronger and can exist without any active support from the "allies." Let's remember that Lenin, the main "contactee" of the French spy, dies in January 1924, and we fully understand, why Captain Sadoul returns to France exactly that year. He goes home, not being apprehensive for his life. At the right moment, the intelligence services will appear from behind-the-scenes. They will stand up for their agent, who has honourably performed his task. And French Themis, looking blank, sets aside the death sentence for the hero of the behind-the-scenes front… In addition to the unofficial diplomatic channels, used to make the contacts with the new revolutionary power and to support it, some other means, functioning under "cover" of the intelligence services, are also used: the press and public activities. For example – the Red Cross
23
This is really true. The February Revolution can be called the March Revolution in accordance with the New Style. In March 1917, the Romanovs lost the throne, and in March 1917 they were arrested.
24
Translator's note: People's Commissar.
25
Trotsky L. My Life (http//www.1917com./Marxism/Trotsky/My_Life/My_Life-00–02–06.html)
26
Ib.
27
The USA didn't have any real intelligence services at that time. But in December 1913, the Federal Reserve System was established – a private little shop which got monopoly on printing the US dollars. Read more about the connections between the bankers, who owned the Federal Reserve System, and our revolutionaries, and about the history of this organization's establishment: Starikov N. Crisis. How It Is Done. St. Pb.: Piter, 2009.
28
Warth R. The Entente and the Russian Revolution. M.: Tsentrpoligraf, 2006. P. 203.
29
Kakurin N. Vatsetis I. The Civil War 1918–1921. St. Pb.: Poligon, 2002. P. 17.
30
Ib.
31
Bruce Lockhart came to Russia with a recommendation letter… from Maxim Litvinov, who in his turn became an unofficial representative of Bolsheviks to Great Britain. In his letter, Litvinov called the professional British spy, who was working under a diplomatic cover, "an extremely honest person, who understands our situation and feels for us". His presence in Russia will be very "useful from the point of view of our interests". (Warth R. The Entente and the Russian Revolution. M.: Tsentrpoligraf, 2006. P. 207.) Litvinov himself bought the weapons on behalf of Bolsheviks in 1905 and had connections with the British intelligence services. His fate is very telling. Being married to a British woman, he was the narkom of the foreign affairs during Stalin's reign and was displaced in 1939. For those who like to talk about the bloody dictator Stalin: his minister of foreign affairs is married to a foreign woman, but he survives through Stalin's reprisals. Why? Because he had connections in Great Britain and was a sort of a communication channel. Directly upon Hitler's attack on the Soviet Union, Stalin sent Litvinov to the USA in order to receive support from there. And Litvinov managed to receive it.
32
Think about it: the captain "neutralized" the ambassador of his country. It means that all questions were resolved exactly by Sadoul, who "was feeling a sympathy" for Bolsheviks by order of his government, and the official representative of this government, Ambassador Noulens, was quietly sitting in Vologda not to disturb the captain in performing his task. (Kakurin N. Vatsetis I. The Civil War 1918–1921. St. Pb.: Poligon, 2002. P. 17.)
33
Lenin V. Works. M.: GIZ, 1950. P. 49.
34
Trotsky L. The French Imperialism and Soviet Russia During Brest. (http://www.comintern-online.com/trot1658.htm)
35
The Communist International, abbreviated as Comintern and also known as the Third International (1919–1943), was an international communist organization that advocated world communism.
36
Trotsky L. The French Imperialism and Soviet Russia During Brest. (http://www.comintern-online.com/trot1658.htm)
37
Ib.