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the period following World War II.
Roosevelt and Eisenhower approved the forced repatriation of some six million people
back to Russia, many of whom were tortured or killed after they reached their
destination.
Two Russians who have written of this abominable decision of these American leaders are
Nikolai Tolstoy and Alexandr Solzhenitsyn. The Americans called this repatriation
“Operation Keelhaul,” after the naval form of punishment or torture where the prisoner
is hauled under the keel of a ship by a rope tied to the prisoner’s body.
These six million individuals were not only soldiers who had fought on the side of the
Germans against the Russians, but they were women and children as well.
700,000 of this total were soldiers under the command of Lt. Gen. Andrei Vlasov, a
brilliant Soviet officer and one of the heroes of the battle of Moscow in 1942. In April of
1945, General Vlasov led his troops to the American lines so that they could surrender and
then volunteer to return to Communist Russia and attempt to oust the Bolshevik
government. They laid down their arms and considered themselves to be American
Prisoners of War.
Vlasov was informed that permission to pass through the American lines had been
refused, so he had to order his unarmed men to save themselves as best they could. Most
of them were forcibly repatriated back to Russia and executed. General Vlasov himself
was taken from an American escort by Soviet troops and spirited away to Moscow where
he was later executed.
The British government behaved no more honorably. Despite guarantees to the contrary,
more than 30,000 Cossacks, including women and children, led by General P.N. Krasnov,
were disarmed and forcibly turned over to the Russian Army. Many committed suicide
rather than be repatriated back to the Communist government in Russia.
[Source: The Unseen Hand, Ralph A. Epperson]
In another section of his book, Epperson relates the immense support that America gave
the Soviets in building up their industrial capacity, their military, and in keeping them
afloat financially. The ultimate goal of the global elite guiding this policy was the formation
of a single world government. Joseph Stalin spoke of the reasons that the Communist
nations needed the support of Capitalist nations. He said:
It is essential that the proletariat of the advanced countries should render real and
prolonged aid to the backward nationalities in their cultural and economic development.
Unless such aid is forthcoming, it will be impossible to bring the various nations and
peoples within a single world economic system that is so essential for the triumph of
socialism.
[Source: Dan Smoot Report, June 22, 1959]
Ralph Epperson shares the following information.