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"Under the Sign of Scorpion" by Juri - Gnostic Liberation Front

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instructors. The Allies were <strong>of</strong>ficially supposed to combat <strong>the</strong> Germans on<br />

all fronts.<br />

Secret documents were later found, which explained a lot about this<br />

situation. It was revealed that <strong>the</strong> English were allowed to supply <strong>the</strong><br />

Whites only with foodstuffs and that <strong>the</strong> French had received orders to<br />

remain completely passive, also at <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> General Anton Denikin's<br />

trouble with <strong>the</strong> Reds in Caucasia. The passive French forces were entirely<br />

withdrawn from Russia on <strong>the</strong> 5-6th <strong>of</strong> April 1919. Alexei von Lampe<br />

claimed that <strong>the</strong> Allied contributions were just a mirage or Communist<br />

propaganda. Nei<strong>the</strong>r did <strong>the</strong> Allies ever co-ordinate <strong>the</strong>ir activities. This<br />

sabotaged <strong>the</strong> operations <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> White Army, which was comprised <strong>of</strong><br />

nationnalist volunteers. The Allies thwarted <strong>the</strong> Whites at all times, and in<br />

<strong>the</strong> beginning <strong>the</strong>y even fought against <strong>the</strong>m. Meanwhile, <strong>the</strong> Bolsheviks<br />

received all kind <strong>of</strong> help, money and information from <strong>the</strong> West. Britain<br />

sent rifles and ammunition for 250 000 men to Soviet Russia, according to<br />

The Manchester Guardian (2nd <strong>of</strong> May 1919). The Whites received an<br />

insignificant portion <strong>of</strong> this shipment. The Frenchmen only gave tiny sums<br />

<strong>of</strong> money to <strong>the</strong> Whites. The Allies even gave <strong>the</strong> Bolsheviks direct aid<br />

when <strong>the</strong>y conquered <strong>the</strong> Ukraine, whereas <strong>the</strong> Ukrainian nationalist<br />

leader and freemason Simon Petlyura's freedom fighters received no aid at<br />

all ("Ukraine & Ukrainians" <strong>by</strong> Dr Ivan Owechko, Greeley, Colorado,<br />

1984, p. 114).<br />

Of all <strong>the</strong>ir opponents, <strong>the</strong> Bolsheviks fought hardest against Simon<br />

Petlyura. In all <strong>the</strong> areas he conquered, <strong>the</strong> people celebrated <strong>the</strong> demise <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> Red Jewish regime. Those celebrations were called "Jew-pogroms" in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Communist propaganda. Petlyura had to flee to Poland in October<br />

1919. His later attempts to save <strong>the</strong> Ukraine from <strong>the</strong> yoke <strong>of</strong> Communist<br />

barnarism also failed. The West had staked everything on <strong>the</strong> Bolsheviks.<br />

Moscow, meanwhile, could not forget Petlyura's struggle against <strong>the</strong>m.<br />

that was why <strong>the</strong> Jewish Bolshevik and freemason Samuel Schwartzbart<br />

murdcrcd him in Paris on <strong>the</strong> 26th <strong>of</strong> May 1926. (Georg Leibbrant,<br />

"Ukraine".) According to <strong>the</strong> Soviet-Estonian Encyclopaedia, this was <strong>the</strong><br />

Jews' revenge. No one was allowed to threaten <strong>the</strong>ir power.<br />

The Whites treated <strong>the</strong>ir opponents somewhat differently. In 1918, a<br />

newspaper editor in Yekaterinoslavl published an exhortation to fight<br />

against General Lavr Kornilov. He was merely banned from <strong>the</strong> city for<br />

his crime. Everything according to Alexei von Lampe.<br />

327

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