FINAL WARNING: The Communist Agenda
and initiated a program to privatize thousands of large and medium-
sized state-owned businesses.
The Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START I) had been signed July
31, 1991, in Moscow, by Gorbachev and President Bush, and it was to
reduce the amount of strategic offensive arms by about 30%, in three
phases, over the next seven years. It was approved by the Senate on
October 1, 1992, and the Russian Supreme Soviet on November 4,
1992, but because of the negotiations with the four former Soviet
republics, which are now independent, the transfer of all nuclear
weapons to the Russian Republic had not been completed. The
republics of Belarus and Kazakhstan have each ratified START, and
have acceded to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty as non-nuclear
nations; but not the Ukraine, which was still negotiating with Russia to
transfer their weapons. Meanwhile, On January 3, 1993, President
Bush and Boris Yeltsin signed START II, which became the biggest
disarmament pact in history. It called for both sides to reduce their
long-range nuclear arsenals to about a third of their current levels
within ten years, and totally eliminating all land-based multiple
warhead missiles. It was intended to eliminate those weapons that
would be used in a first-strike situation.
President Clinton and Yeltsin signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test
Ban Treaty (CTB) in 1996, with some other nations, which banned the
testing of nuclear weapons. The U.S. Senate refused to ratify this
Treaty in 1999.
In 2001 Russian President Putin, and President George W. Bush
discussed the possibility of limiting the number of warheads to about
1/3 of what was called for in START II, and it was signed in May, 2002.
Elena Bonner, the widow of Sakharov, said: “The point is that the
Communist goal is fixed and changeless it never varies one iota from
their objective of world domination, but if we judge them only by the
direction in which they seem to be going, we shall be deceived.”
Former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Bernard W. Rogers said:
“The Soviet goal remains world domination.” In 1981, Anatoly Golitsyn,
a former major in the KGB, who defected to the West, wrote a book
called New Lies For Old: The Communist Strategy of Deception and
Disinformation, which was published in 1984. He outlined virtually