Was It Really The ‘Russian’ Revolution? Part Eight

The Miracle on the Vistula

An article by council insider and Nationalist contributor ‘Frustrated’.

Previous posts in this series can be found here: Part One / Part Two / Part Three / Part Four / Part Five / Part Six / Part Seven / Part Eight / Part Nine / Part Ten /

The Miracle on the Vistula

By early 1920, Trotsky’s Red Army had got the better of the anti-Bolshevik Whites in Russia. So, Vladimir Lenin tried to spread Bolshevism westwards to aid faltering revolts in Germany and Hungary by ordering the Red Army to invade the newly independent, devout Roman Catholic country of Poland.

Benjamin H. Freedman, a former Jew who converted to Roman Catholicism, described in his famous 1961 speech that in the aftermath of the first failed Communist revolution in Russia of 1905; “the Jews had to scramble out of Russia, they all went to Germany. And Germany gave them refuge.”

Therefore, Freedman described how the Germans felt betrayed when thousands of ‘Russian’ Jews that they had given refuge to in 1905, then also helped to stage a Red revolution in Germany after the end of World War One! He said: “the Communists took over Germany for a few days, Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Leibknecht, and a group of Jews in Germany took over the government for three days.”

Fortunately, patriotic German ex-soldiers in the Freikorps defeated the Reds after a week of bloody fighting in Berlin. They then executed Luxemburg and Liebknecht on January 15th 1919, thus saving Germany from another ‘Jewish’ Bolshevik coup similar to the one that had earlier succeeded in Russia!

By August 1919, the Jewish dominated Communist regime of Bela Kun in Hungary had also fallen after a short war with Rumania over a border dispute. Bela Kun and most of his government fled to Vienna! Even so, from July 19th 1920 to August 7th 1920, about 220 Communist and Socialist, predominantly Jewish delegates representing 37 countries from around the world met in Moscow for the Second Congress of the Communist International (Comintern) under the chairmanship of Grigorii Zinoviev.

These Bolshevik leaders meeting in Moscow for the Second Congress of the Communist International had already begun to prepare plans for a revolutionary Communist takeover of the world, starting with the nations of Central and Western Europe. Hence Lenin ordered that Warsaw be taken without delay.

Indeed, in the Spring of 1920, Vladimir Lenin, who some academics, including Dr. David Duke, now think that he was also Jewish, ordered his Red Army to invade Poland in an attempt to resurrect his “World Revolution”, by imposing atheistic Jewish Bolshevism on the rest of Christian Europe at bayonet point!

On the 20th of May 1920, a huge Red Army of about 100,000 soldiers broke through the Polish frontier. They raped, murdered and pillaged their way through eastern Poland. By August 1920, this huge army was near Warsaw, so most foreign diplomats evacuated Warsaw as they felt sure that the city would fall.

All looked lost for the Poles. Their appeals for help from the Western powers were ignored. The British Prime Minister, Lloyd George told the British Parliament that Poland had to accept “her fate”. On the 10th of August 1920, the British government even sent a telegram to the Polish government urging it to surrender to the Soviets to avoid annihilation. But instead, the heroic Polish commander, General Jozef Pilsudski put his trust in God and his people by ordering a risky counterattack against the Red Army.

It was then that the “Miracle on the Vistula” happened during the battle for Warsaw in the middle of August 1920. Although vastly outnumbered, the Polish forces achieved a stunning victory over the Red Army, thus halting the Bolsheviks expansion into Germany and western Europe. Lenin was furious!

The Russian Bolshevik leaders never forgave the Roman Catholic nation of Poland and its brave little army for derailing their plan for a “World revolution” by defeating their vast Red Army in August 1920.

So again, in September 1939, their Red Army invaded eastern Poland under the terms of the Nazi-Soviet pact. The Poles in eastern Poland resented the way that many of their Jewish neighbours welcomed the invading Red Army!

The Soviets then committed many massacres of the Poles in order to subdue them including the massacre of their leaders, so that the new Communist rulers could replace them.

The most infamous of these massacres was the ‘Katyn Forest Massacre’. This was a series of murders committed by the Soviets at various liquidation sites in April 1940. The Soviet NKVD police killed about 22,000 Polish officers and intelligentsia. These were the elite Polish leaders who were unlucky to be in the eastern half of Poland during the joint German and Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939.

Polish defences with a machine gun position near Miłosna, in the village of Janki, August 1920.

Credits:

Main Image: Lysy, Halibutt. Released under the GNU Free Documentation License. Graves of soldiers who fell in the Battle of Warsaw (1920), Powązki Cemetery.
Lower Image: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.


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