Here's what real US-Russian collusion looks like
By Jon Rappoport
The late great author and researcher, Antony Sutton
(1925-2002), labored for many years to unearth US-Russian collusion at
the highest levels. That's why Sutton was censored by mainstream news
and academic institutions.
The Best Enemy Money Can Buy (1986), and his three-volume
classic, Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development, published
between 1968 and 1973, exposed the deep historic relationship between US
and Russian power players.
The recent Clinton Uranium One scandal, which gave Putin
control over 20% of American uranium, should be viewed in the context of
a much larger history.
Sutton meticulously documented the transfer of key technologies from the West to the USSR.
Why would the Rockefellers, Armand Hammer, and others take
the lead in such a covert transfer program, over the course of decades?
Because: money and profits, on one level.
On another level, bolstering the Russian Communist/Socialist
State was part of the elite Rockefeller plan to expand socialism, in
many forms, across countries all over the world.
Under the phony guise of helping the downtrodden establish a
new and better world for all, the socialist goal was, as usual, top-down
control. The theoretical foundation (Marx) was modern; the tyranny was
as old as the hills.
Further, supplying Russia with vital technology it sorely
lacked would eventually produce the Cold War. That mighty stand-off was a
gigantic money maker. It was also created as a threat to Europe, which
justified the rise of the European Union---another major
Rockefeller/CFR/Bilderberg plan to extend the covert agenda of Socialist
Globalism. The EU IS a regional face of Globalism.
With this brief introduction in tow, here are key Antony
Sutton quotes from his 1986 book, The Best Enemy Money Can Buy. The
quotes were compiled by Rolf Kenneth Aristos, at
http://www.rolfkenneth.no/NWO_review_Sutton_Soviet.html:
"In Korea we have direct killing of Americans with Soviet
weapons. The American casualty roll in the Korean War was 33,730 killed
and 103,284 wounded...The 130,000-man North Korean Army, which crossed
the South Korean border in June 1950, was trained, supported, and
equipped by the Soviet Union, and included a brigade of Soviet T-34
medium tanks (with U.S. Christie suspensions). The artillery tractors
were direct metric copies of Caterpillar tractors. The trucks came from
the Henry Ford-Gorki plant or the ZIL plant. The North Korean Air Force
has 180 Yak planes built in plants with U.S. Lend-Lease equipment. These
Yaks were later replaced by MiG-15s powered by Russian copies of
Rolls-Royce jet engines sold to the Soviet Union in 1947."
"By using data of Russian origin it is possible to make an
accurate analysis of the origins of this equipment. It was found that
all the main diesel and steam-turbine propulsion systems of the
ninety-six Soviet ships on the Haiphong supply run that could be
identified (i.e., eighty-four out of the ninety-six) originated in
design or construction outside the USSR [e.g., the US]. We can conclude,
therefore, that if the [US] State and Commerce Departments, in the
1950s and 1960s, had consistently enforced the legislation passed by
Congress in 1949, the Soviets would not have had the ability to supply
the Vietnamese War - and 50,000 more Americans and countless Vietnamese
would be alive today."
"Who were the government officials responsible for this
transfer of known military technology? The concept originally came from
National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger, who reportedly sold President
Nixon on the idea that giving military technology to the Soviets would
temper their global territorial ambitions. How Henry arrived at this
gigantic non sequitur is not known. Sufficient to state that he aroused
considerable concern over his motivations. Not least that Henry had been
a paid family employee of the Rockefellers since 1958 and has served as
International Advisory Committee Chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank, a
Rockefeller concern."
"Armand Hammer of Occidental Petroleum is, of course,
Moscow's favored deaf mute capitalist, possibly vying with David
Rockefeller for the honor. However, Armand has a personal relationship
with the Soviets that could never be achieved by anyone with David's Ivy
League background. One fact never reported in U.S. newspaper
biographies of Armand Hammer is that his father, Julius Hammer, was
founder and early financier of the Communist Party USA in 1919.
Elsewhere this author has reprinted documents backing this statement,
and translations of letters from Lenin to Armand Hammer with the
salutation 'Dear Comrade'."
"That Armand Hammer and Occidental Petroleum would supply the
Soviets with massive plants that can quickly be converted to explosives
manufacture is no surprise. What is a surprise is that Armand Hammer
has had free access to every President from Franklin D. Roosevelt to
Ronald Reagan - and equal access to the leaders in the Kremlin."
"A tractor plant is well suited to tank and self-propelled
gun production. The tractor plants at Stalingrad, Kharkov, and
Chelyabinsk, erected with almost complete American assistance and
equipment, and the Kirov plant in Leningrad, reconstructed by Ford, were
used from the start to produce Soviet tanks, armored cars, and
self-propelled guns. The enthusiasm with which this tank and
armored-vehicle program was pursued, and the diversion of the best
Russian engineers and material priorities to military purposes, have
been responsible for at least part of the current Soviet problem of
lagging tractor production and periodic famines...Since 1931, up to a
half of the productive capacity of these 'tractor' plants has been used
for tank and armored-car production."
"Soviet tractor plants were established in the early I930s
with major U.S. technical and equipment assistance. The Stalingrad
tractor plant was completely built in the United States, shipped to
Stalingrad, and then installed in prefabricated steel buildings also
purchased in the United States. This unit, together with the Kharkov and
Chelyabinsk plants and the rebuilt Kirov plant in Leningrad, comprised
the Soviet tractor industry at that time, and a considerable part of the
Soviet tank industry as well. During the war, equipment from Kharkov
was evacuated and installed behind the Urals to form the Altai tractor
plant, which opened in 1943."
These quotes are but a brief sample of Sutton's research on technology transfers to Russia from the US.
They open up a giant can of worms.
Understanding this history is understanding the elites' political and economic system (absurdly) called Socialism.
It has never has been "bottom-up." It has always been "top-down."
The legions of young dedicated Marxists running around in the
streets, under a variety of banners, railing against monopoly crony
capitalists, have actually been forwarding these monopolists' primary
goals.
You might want to read that last sentence again.
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