Falsificators of History

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Description

Immediately after the Great Patriotic War, the Anglo-American imperialists went into a savage attack against the country which had borne so much of the brunt of the nazi menace, while they had refused to open up a second front until 1944. They released a thousand and one venomous slanders painting the Soviets as nazi collaborators, mainly for the Molotov-Ribbentrop Non-Aggression Pact. These machinations of the imperialists still live on in popular pseudo-history, even though they were refuted immediately at the time they were released. Falsificators of History does precisely that — it explains the peace-loving Soviet foreign policy, how they tried through the League of Nations to secure an anti-Hitler bloc, while all the British counter-proposals involved the Soviets taking on all the war responsibilities. U.S. foreign policy, as stated by then-Senator Harry Truman as late as the beginning of Hitler’s Operation Barbarossa, was blunt: “If we see that Germany is winning the war we ought to help Russia, and if Russia is winning we ought to help Germany, and in that way let them kill as many as possible.” The British and Americans tried to egg Hitler on eastward, and this is explicit in the quotations of officials of the time, to destroy the Soviets. The Soviet Union, in a move of the tactical genius of Stalin and Molotov, had to conclude a temporary non-aggression pact to stave off the inevitable world war, prepare for it militarily for another two years, smashing the Anglo-American-French-German bloc which tried to isolate and crush it.

The American monopolists pursued a likewise key role in facilitating the Second World War — for example the well-known capitalist Rockefeller’s Standard Oil company was highly involved with the Hitlerite company I.G. Farbenindustrie, producing the synthetic fuel nazi Germany stored up for the upcoming genocidal war on the world peoples. Both the Anglo-American and French imperialists, while subjecting Germany to unthinkable colonialist conditions in the Treaty of Versailles, immediately upon Hitler’s rise to power, changed their tone and gave him every aid and loan available to re-industrialize Germany and make it a great power.

Falsificators of History makes all these questions clear, placing grave responsibility on those who supported Hitler, the enemy of all peoples, as a bulwark against communism against Bolshevism, against the great project of socialist construction of the Soviet Union.