USSR2 File: Gorbachev joins meeting of political analysts, evaluates Russian elections, denounces United Russia as "degraded copy of the CPSU"
Last week, as reported by state-owned Kommersant Daily, a group of US, European, and Russian political scientists convened near Paris to evaluate Russia's recent presidential and parliamentary elections. Mikhail Gorbachev attended, lashing out at the (crypto-communist) Putinist regime and, tellingly, branding United Russia as a "degraded copy" of the (supposedly defunct) Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Well, the geriatric ex-Soviet tyrant should know. In his first book New Lies for Old (1984) former KGB Major Anatoliy Golitsyn warned the West at least five years before the Berlin Wall was dismantled that the Soviet strategists would fake their own demise in order to advance the Leninist plan for global domination. The plan worked . . .Gorbachev Raised Voice against Elections
April 28, 2008
Big-name political analysts of Europe and the United States as well as Russia’s scientists and chiefs of Science Academy’s institutions gathered late past week in Château-de-Forge estate near Paris to evaluate the recent presidential and parliamentary elections in Russia. Once president of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev lashed out at today’s political system of the country. In the last half-year, Gorbachev declared, Russia suffered the biggest rollback in its democratic advance.
The event headlined “Elections in Russia, European Union and the United States in Context of the World Election Standards” was arranged by Alexander Lebedev, ex-member of Russia’s parliament and today’s president of the Institute of Political Culture Comparative Research and owner of Château-de-Forge estate.
Lebedev opened the conference by saying that Alina Kabaeva wouldn’t attend it. For some reason, the host confined his participation to that opening joke. According to Moscow Correspondent newspaper, world's ex-star of rhythmic gymnastic, beautiful and charismatic Alina Kabaeva is the alleged next wife of Vladimir Putin.
The first shocking speech of the conference was the address of Russia’s Ambassador to France Alexander Avdeev. Avdeev said Russia’s image in France was far from desired and faulted the media for it. In France, they pay attention to the general underdevelopment of the civic society and political system in Russia and it wouldn’t be easy to dispute that attitude, Avdeev made clear.
The ambassador didn’t go into details about the country's elections, specifying, however, that the notion of administrative resource is absent in France but the French were quick to learn what it means thanks to Russia.
It was Mikhail Gorbachev, who stole the show. The sole president of the USSR, Gorbachev said the recent elections to the State Duma and of president were the biggest rollback in terms of democracy in the last decade and United Russia is the degraded copy of the CPSU (Communist Party of the Soviet Union). Gorbachev urged to immediately abandon novelties of the last years, including the 7-percent ceiling at State Duma elections, new rules for the party registration, the ban on election blocs, exclusion of “against all” line from the ballot and pro-rata election to the State Duma. Without any optimism, the former leader called for direct elections both of governors and the Federation Council of Russia.
Pictured above: Russian President Vladimir Putin, East Germany's last and only "non"-communist Prime Minister Lothar de Maiziere, German Chancellor Angela Merkel (who belonged to East Germany's communist youth organization as a girl), and Gorbachev pose prior to talks in Wiesbaden, Germany, on October 15, 2007. De Maizière was a member of the Christian Democratic Union of (East) Germany, which was subservient to the ruling Socialist Unity Party of Germany through its membership in the National Front of Democratic Germany.
That United Russia is a front for the continuing CPSU is a reality that we have established before at this site. Earlier this month, for example, as reported by Kommersant Daily, representatives of the Ulyanovsk branch of United Russia attended a ceremony commemorating the birthday of Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin. In April Russia's independent and state-owned media analyzed that month's United Russia party congress, in which Putin was invited to become the party's "non-member" leader, and provided several clues that expose the link. On April 16 the independent Moscow Times reported:
United Russia dismisses comparisons with the Soviet-era Communist Party, despite similarities in rituals and routine. During the two-day congress, party delegates rubber-stamped every proposal submitted by the party leadership. Not a single delegate voted against the proposals or abstained. Books of speeches by Medvedev and chief Kremlin ideologue Vladislav Surkov were distributed free of charge to attendees. Alexei Leonov, the first man to step out of a spacecraft into space and a senior United Russia official, said the party had many more "elements of democratization" than the old Communist Party.
Two days later, under the title "Creating a New CPSU," Moscow Times journalist Vladimir Ryzhkov reflected:
No matter what new party we create, in the end, it always turns out to be the Communist Party of the Soviet Union!" This was Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin's famous phrase that he coined in the mid-1990s to describe the hordes of bootlickers and careerists who rushed to join the Our Home is Russia party. Chernomyrdin, in his trademark style, hit the nail right on the head. It is difficult to shake off a feeling of deja vu after seeing how delegates to United Russia's ninth annual congress on Monday and Tuesday obediently applauded and stood at attention to the music of the perennial Soviet-cum-Russian national anthem.
The Our Home Is Russia party eventually merged with other potemkin "non"-communist parties to form United Russia in 2001. Russian political analyst Boris Makarenko, who works for the Center for Political Technology, revealed the potemkin nature of United Russia in the April 14 issue of Kommersant Daily: "ER is not an independent political party with an ideology and membership base. Rather, it broadcasts the orders of the presidential administration."
Several years ago some astute elements of the Western media noticed the neo-Soviet character of "post"-communist Russia's ruling party. In 2003 the Christian Science Monitor noted: "United Russia's tactic is to seduce the communists' traditional constituency by appearing more like the old Soviet Communist Party than the KPRF does. The pro-Kremlin party has stolen the Communists' anti-big business slogans, its posters feature Soviet-era icons like dictator Joseph Stalin and cosmonaut Yury Gagarin, and its attack ads slam the KPRF for including rich businessmen among its candidates." The following year the same publication warned that "United Russia increasingly resembles the former CPSU which, at its peak, was a vast 'state within a state' where all important decisions were made and then imposed by millions of loyal party members in every Soviet government office, legislature, workplace, school, and military unit."
In his second book, The Perestroika Deception (1995, 1998), Golitsyn urges Western governments to adopt a counter-strategy that will defeat Moscow's drive for world proletarian revolution via deceptive reforms in the Soviet political system and the realignment of nations into communist-controlled regional political-military-economic blocs like the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the European Union. At this stage, with Russian bombers once again airborne and more entering service, do not expect the White House to implement that counter-strategy. Every US president including and since Ronald Reagan has either fallen for or winked at the Soviet deception. Barack Obama will not deviate from the Kremlin line. You might wish to conduct an inventory of your personal food stocks and ammunition cache and plan your "bug out" route.















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