FINAL WARNING: The Communist Agenda
a second breath, revealing everything good which is in the system.”
He also said: “I am a Communist, a convinced Communist. For some
that may be a fantasy. But for me, it is my main goal.” In June, 1990, he
said: “I am now, just as I’ve always been, a convinced Communist. It’s
useless to deny the enormous and unique contribution of Marx, Engels
and Lenin to the history of social thought and to modern civilization as
a whole.”
On August 19, 1991, a report from Russia indicated that Gorbechev
had become ill, and the Vice-President had taken over the country,
imposing a state of emergency. In reality, the military, the KGB, and
communist hardliners had initiated a coup to take over the
government. Or at least that is what they wanted us to think. It is the
belief of Donald S. McAlvany, who publishes the McAlvany Intelligence
Advisor, that the coup was a hoax. He reported that all eight coup
leaders were Gorbachev appointees, and coup leader, Gennady
Yanayev, referred to himself as the “acting President,” saying that
Gorbachev would return to power after he recovered from his “illness.”
In all past coups and revolutions, the KGB would have killed
Gorbachev, and other reform leaders; but they weren’t even arrested.
Only a minimal amount of troops participated in the coup, the internal
or international lines of communication were not cut, the press was
not controlled, and the airports were not closed. A very strange “coup”
indeed.
Boris Yeltsin, the President of the Russian Republic, denounced the
coup, and called for a show of force, which produced about 50,000
demonstrators at the Russian parliament. The picture of him on top of
a Soviet tank, in open defiance of the Communist hardliners, was an
indelible image in the hearts of the Soviet people, and the world. This
Russian “John Wayne” had joined the Communist Party in 1961, at the
age of 30, and by December, 1985, had been appointed head of the 1.2
million member Moscow City Party Committee, the largest Communist
organization in the Soviet Union. However, he resigned from the
Communist Party in July, 1990, and was now known as a “non-
Communist reformer.”
By August 21, 1991, the coup had failed, and Gorbachev was restored
as President. Of the eight coup leaders, one was said to have
committed suicide, and may have been murdered; the other seven