The Soviet Orchestrated Global Drug
Network
Our Lady at Fatima said: "If My requests are not heeded,
Russia would spread its errors throughout the world ..."
Not only are intellectual errors being spread by Communist
Russia but also errors in how to live are being spread too. The result of these
errors is drug addiction and death to many North American youths. It is
important that we realize the source of these drug errors and the spiritual
solution Our Lady told us we must take to stop this drug war. We present here
an article which demonstrates that Russia is the source for much of the drug
abuse in America.
The following article consists of extracts taken from the
McAlvany Intelligence Advisor, June 1988: some subtitles are by The
Fatima Crusader.
by Donald McAlvany
Introduction:
Webster defines courage as: "The quality of mind or
spirit that enables a person to face difficulty, danger, pain, etc., with
firmness and without fear; with bravery and valor." Valor is defined as:
"Continuous, active bravery in the face of personal danger; a noble and lofty
quality of courage."
In his book, How Democracies Perish, Jean Francois Revel
describes how the western democracies, led by America, have lost their will to
resist — their courage to fight for their own freedom. This is certainly true
of America's leadership today as it cowers before the Russian Bear and tries to
negotiate peace at almost any price; as it sells out and sacrifices friend
after friend in order to buy friendship and accommodation with the Soviet Union.
But, we wonder if this loss of courage and resolve does not describe the great
majority of Americans today. Do our weak, soft, compromising leaders simply
reflect the people who elected them? Are Americans in today's prosperous,
declining America willing to ever again fight for their freedom or the freedom
of their beleaguered allies, as we did in World War II when 407,000 courageous
men and women made the supreme sacrifice for freedom?
As Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn said in his 1978 address to the
Harvard University graduating class:
"A decline in courage may be the most striking feature about
the West today. The Western world has lost its courage both as a whole and
separately, in each country, government, political party, and in the United
Nations. Such a decline in courage is particularly noticeable among the
ruling and intellectual elites, causing an impression of a loss of courage by
the entire society. There remain courageous individuals, but they have no
determining influence on public life.
"Political and intellectual functionaries, passive and
self-serving, base government policies on cowardice and weakness. And the
decline of courage, is ironically emphasized by occasional outbursts of
boldness and inflexibility when dealing with weak governments or countries
which lack support or cannot offer resistance. (ED. i.e., Panama today.) But
they get tongue-tied and paralyzed when they deal with powerful governments and
threatening forces, with aggressors and international terrorists . . . Must
one point out, that from ancient times a decline in courage has been considered
the first symptom of the end."
The Soviets Are a Major Factor in
World Drug
Trafficking
One of the greatest threats to America today is the epidemic of
drug usage and the avalanche of drugs pouring into this country. It is
estimated that 35-40 million Americans use (or have used) some form of drugs
such as marijuana, cocaine, heroin, speed, etc. An estimated six million use
(or have used) cocaine.
Most Americans believe that the great lion's share of the drug
trade in America is controlled by the Mafia, the Colombian drug cartels, and other
greedy underworld types. We have long been aware of the involvement of the
Soviet Union and Cuba in the drug trade in Central and South America and how
the Communists were using it to finance revolutionary/terrorist operations
throughout the region. But until a recent meeting in Washington with a top
defense analyst (Joseph Douglas) who is the free world's leading authority on
the Soviet involvement in the world drug trade, we assumed such involvement was
a minor part of the total.
This is not true, as the article which follows by Dr. Joseph D.
Douglas, Jr. and a high ranking Czech defector explains. The Soviets are indeed
a major factor in world drug trafficking and have been since the days of Nikita
Krushchev. Drugs are one of the major weapons with which the Soviets hope to
undermine and topple America. The Reagan Administration is covering up this
Soviet orchestration of the world drug trade because it is afraid that if it
becomes known to the American people, that it would discredit the new era of
détente and disarmament which Reagan and Gorbachev have launched. The Soviets
would be seen as the monsters they really are.
Dr. Douglas is a Washington-based national security affairs
consultant. General Major Sejna was Secretary of the Czechoslovak Defense
Council and Chief of Cabinet at Ministry of Defense prior to escaping and
seeking political asylum in the United States.
Jan Sejna is one of the highest-ranking former Soviet Bloc
officials to ever escape from behind the Iron Curtain. He had direct access to
the Soviet Global Strategic Plan, and personally knew Krushchev, Breshnev and
others. Details about Soviet drug warfare are drawn from his personal witness
and experience in the Communist world. He fled Czechoslovakia in 1968 during
the Prague Spring.
Drugs as Political Weapons
There is an all-out, full-scale warfare by narcotics,
orchestrated from Moscow being conducted across the globe. Its primary target
is the United States, the "main enemy: since the days of Lenin". Objective:
to create chaos in American cities, to sap the strength of the U.S. military
and to destroy a generation of American youth and leadership.
Over the past fifteen years, substantial data has confirmed the
deep involvement of numerous Communist nations and subnational groups in
international narcotics trafficking: Cuba, Nicaragua, Bulgaria, East Germany,
Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Rumania, North Korea, and Vietnam. Communist
parties and revolutionary organizations from Latin America to Europe to
Southwest and Southeast Asia are likewise involved.
While economic benefits are always present as an incentive, the
more important motivation behind the drug trade, as expressed by many former
officials of Communist countries and organizations is political. The drugs
and narcotics are viewed as political weapons against the West, especially
against the United States to bring down the established order and speed the
liquidation of capitalism.
Meanwhile, the U.S. agencies whose responsibilities are to
combat the drug and narcotics problem have gone out of their way to argue that
the above is not the case. They insist that by far the dominant motivation is
money, that they have no evidence that the drug trafficking is pursued as a
political weapon, and that they cannot be certain that nations are actually
involved.
Accordingly, there is some important background information on
the origins and growth of the drug problem that is highly significant:
specifically, the role of the Soviet Union, which has been conspicuously
ignored by the media and the government. This oversight is critical because,
unless it is recognized and understood, it might be very difficult, if not
impossible, to combat the drug and narcotics problem in an effective manner.
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Our Lady, Queen of China
The sooner the Pope and the bishops consecrate Russia to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, the sooner Our Lady will save all countries under Communist domination. We pray it is very soon so that the 1.5 billion people enslaved by Communist Russia be freed. |
It Began with the Korean War
Today's problem has its origins in the Korean War when China,
acting with the North Koreans, used narcotics, mainly opium and heroin, to
undermine effectiveness of United States military forces. These Chinese
operations were identified in detail by undercover Treasury agents, Army
Intelligence, and subsequently confirmed by Chinese defectors.
During the war, the Soviets, together with the North Koreans and
Czechs, studied the tactics and equipment of the U.S. Forces. In the process,
they became particularly interested in the effect of drugs on combat
effectiveness. Through autopsies conducted on dead American soldiers, the
Communists learned that a large number of young U.S. soldiers — up to 22% — had
suffered heart damage. While several contributing factors, such as diet, were
identified, the Soviet doctors concluded that the use of drugs among U.S.
servicemen, which Soviet intelligence had reported on in their analysis of the
Chinese narcotics operation, was a major contributing factor.
This finding so excited Krushchev that after the war he
initiated a detailed study of the use of drugs and narcotics as a strategic
weapon that could be used to cripple the capitalist societies. This was a
joint military-civilian study that involved the Soviets, Czechs, and North
Koreans. The study team examined the impact of drugs on the health of the
population, the educational system, the economy, labor productivity,
intelligence services, security, and defense. The long term effects over
several generations were examined. The study concluded that the effects
would be enormous and that the most vulnerable countries were the United
States, Canada, France, and West Germany. The Soviet Defense Council
approved the study in early 1956.
The Soviets spent the next four years developing the production
techniques, marketing strategy and tactics and training intelligence cadres for
the operation. Krushchev viewed this business as a strategic operation that
needed to be carefully prepared, especially that it could be conducted
covertly, without raising the suspicions of the targeted countries, most
specifically, the United States, and thus interfering with their strategy of
peaceful coexistence, and without China becoming aware of the Soviet operation.
CONTINUED IN NEXT ISSUE, Topics to be included
are:
Soviet Drug War Launched After Cuban Revolution (1958); Nikita
Krushchev, the Father of Soviet Drug Trafficking; From Vietnam to American High
School and University Campuses; The Era of Détente: the U.S. Coverup of Soviet
Drug Trafficking.
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