Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 February 1952 — Page 6

-

PAGE 8

Stalin's ‘Mein Kampf'—No.’ a.

~ Conspiracy Is Soviet Keynote

EDITOR'S NOTE: As Hitler revealed in “Mein Kampf” his blueprint for. conquest, Joseph Stalin revealed in his unexpurgated “Marxism ‘and the National and Colonial Question” his plan for the defeat of the West and the establishme™» of world com-., _munism, In this series of Articles, reporter David Snell analyzes the foreign policy of the Soviet Union in the light of Stalin's own , writings.

Little known in the United ..

States, Stalin's “Marxism and the National and Colonial Question” was brought to. the attention of the Scripps<Howard Newspapers by Alice Widener of New York as a public service.

By DAVID SNELL Scripps-Howard Staff Writer “THE war for the overthrowof the international bourgeoisle,” wrote Lenin, “is a hundred timeg more difficult, prolonged and complicated than the most stubborn of ordinary wars between states ,.."” The legions of the Kremlin are pounding along the road of conquest that courses: through Asia and the Middle East. But they do not march as=conquering heroes, in the immaculate rectangles of dress parade. Instead, they stalk in the shadows of master conspiracy. And they are winning. ES . THE United States is officially committed to a belief that the Communist world carries within its bloodstream the germs of fatal illness, In 1947, George F. Kennan, as the author of the famous “X"” article in the magazine Foreign Affairs, projected for the United States “a policy of firm containment, designed fo confront the Russians with unalterable counterforce at every point where they show signs of encroaching upon the interests of a peaceful and ‘stable world.” Years earlier, almost in anticipation of such words, Stalin. had written: “Others think that the socialist offensive is a headlong march forward . . . the muddleheads . . . do not understand the class nature of the, attack . . . Don Quixote also imagined he was attacking enemies when he attacked windmills. But we know he got only a bruised head . ..” When the article appeared Mr, Kennan was chief of the polioy planning staff of the State Department. Of Dec. 26,

1051, President Truman appointed. him Ambassador to Moscow, The Kremlin an-

nounced that the appointment was acceptable, ” » » INFORMULATING our - “containment” policy, Mr. Ken-nan.-wrote: “If disunity were ever to seize and paralyze the (Communist) party, the chaos and weakness of Russian society would bevrevealed in forms beyonds description . . . Soviet Russia might be changed overnight from one of the strongest to one of the weakest and most pitiable of national societies. “1... the possibility remains ~ @nd in the opinion. of the writer: it is a strong one—the Soviet power . . . bears within itself the seeds of its own decay, and that the sprouting of the seeds is well advanced.” But even as Mr. Kennan was writing of ° the sprouting of seeds, the Soviet Union was "reaping a harvest. The Chinese : revolution had become a terrible reality. Two years and five | months after the appearance of the *X" article, the Nationalist government of China fled thé mainland. In that tragic hour the Soviet world doubled its strength. s 8 a ! MEANWHILE, wishful thinking remained an ingredient of | American planning. It was an | ingredient that was to manifest itself often and in curious ways, As late as April, 1951, with the horror of Korea full upon us, Mr. Kennan, in another article in the magazine Foreign | Affairs, found it possible to say: “...to what extent China | can really be said to be part of the Soviet system we do not know , . .” Here, in effect, we are invited to settle into an easy chair, light up a pipe and

Mao Tse-tung will become a Tito. The fact is, as yesterday's article demonstrated, there is more than a reasonable doubt even that Tito is a Tito. The previous year, even’ as Communist artillery pounded American troops tn Korea; Secretary of State Mean Acheson, in an address to the United Nations, conjured up the old vislon of a peace-loving, good neighbor Soviet Union. “This perspective takes into account © the possility,”. he said, "that the Soviet government ‘may not ope inhegently and unalterably committed .to standing in the way of peace, and that it may some day accept a Hive-and-let-live policy ” » ~ “SOME modification of their aggressive policies may follow, if they then recognize that the best interests of the Soviet Union require a co-operative rela-

* tionship with the world.”

The previous year, 1949, in his letter of transmittal accompanying the State Department's White Paper on China, Mr. Acheson wrote: . “We will not help the Chinese or ourselves by basing our policy on wishful thinking.” ° But with the very next sentence, look what turned up: “We continue to believe that, however tragic may be the immediate future of China... ultimately the profound: civilization and the democratic individualism of China will reassert themselves and she will throw off the foreign yoke.” a " "

SUCH HAS been the pattern of American official thinking. The Communists have an answer, In a new Communist Party pamphlet, the Soviet theoretician E. A, Dunayeva writes: “One of the gravest blunders the Hitlerites committed was their banking on the breakdown of the commonwealth of Soviet nations.” : < The nature of Stalin's creeping war is such that he has no fear of our efforts at “containment,” which he regards—as his comment: quoted above makes clear-—as only a Quixotic gesture toward a windmill

Writing of the “ebb and flow”. of revolution, Stalin teaches that communism is

fluid and cannot be contained. The State Department hopes fo make @ommunism hold still, but Stalin tells us it is always in stages of advance or retreat, . and never stationary. What, then, does Stalin fear? He fears being thrown on the defensive. In the book “Leftwing Communism,” Lenin

writes:

“Once the insurrection has begun it is necessary to act with the greatest determination, and, at all costs, on the offensive. The defense is the death of every armed rising.” » » n THEREIN Lenin gives away a vital Communist secret, but the free.world has disregarded it almost completely.

We ignored it in China in the |

crucial year 1946 and 1947, when we cut off aid to Chiang Kaishek while the Communist armies actually were on the defensive and threatened with annihilation. We ignored it in Korea, when China was permitted to attack ‘without being forced to defend her own territory. We are ignoring it in the rest of Asia. and the Middle East, |

SUNDAY DINNER

. our

ticles

where = Communist revolutions are on the offensive, in the convenient absence of: effective counterrevolutionary acts on our part. - The lone exception was the American program for Greece and Turkey, by which President Truman's , short-lived , ‘gettough" policy dealt, the Soviet Unioh one of the few total setbacks it has experienced. Given |

«freely and with no strings at- |

tached, our aid to Greece and Turkey smashed ‘two Communigt revolutions—by throw-

ing them on the defensive. nn " as

BUT WITH the. formulation of the containment policy the

State-Department backed grad-—|

ually away from the get-tough policy, Mr. Kennan wrote that “demands on Russian policy should be put forward in such a manner as to leave the way open for a compliance not too detrimental to Russian prestige.”

In other words, we returmed

to the old practice of failing, as |

Lenin put it, “to act with the greatest determination.” Any such’ failure, or any showing of weakness or indecision, serves only to spur the Communists to greater boldness. Lenin wrote: “The decisive battle may be fully matured when all the class forces hostile to us have become sufficiently confused . when all the vacillating, wavering, unstable, intermediate elements— . . ciently disgraced themselves through their practical bankruptcy. “Then, indeed ‘revolution is ripe; then, indeed , . . our victory is assured.” These articles have exposed the foreign policy of the Soviet Union and the weapons with’ which communism fights its battles, They have laid bare Stalin’s blueprint for world conquest as he himself drafted jt. They

have exposed our own mistakes |

as Stalin sees them. n ” »

THEY have demonstrated that- Stalin's plan is and has been constant—and that it underlies all actions of the Communist movement. “A’ course having baen mapped out,” “Stalin wrote, “it must be pursued no matter

what difficulties and complica- | tions may be encountered on |

the road.” The articles have . demon«strated that the course mapped out by Stalin is being pursued —and is meeting with success aL every turn. But, most important, the arhave revealed Stalin's greatest fear: The fear of being thrown on the defensive. It still is within the power of the free world to seize the initiative. It still is within the power of the free world to force Stalin to go on the defensive— politically as well as militarily. But the hour is late. _ (Last of Series)

have suffi- |

Neig hborhood °

Bwing Your Partner’ OLD TRAIL ~~ “Elopement’ F'anks Are Coming PIXY~laws ORIENTAL Two and "Her First Romance.’ . REX —~ “Callaway Went Thataway'' The Day the Earth. Stood Still.’ RITZ 'The- Lady Pays Off” - and Raging Tide RIVOLI—'""My Favorite Spy’

‘Roadblock’ and “Cave

and

ment,” plus late show tonight: ‘Dallas.’ SANDERS — “M” and “Oklahoma _JusLice SHERIDAN -—- "Fixed Bayonets"

‘Close to My Heart."

SPEEDWAY— "El vr “Alfe : BAY. lopement”* dd Alice ‘In, Ordér as many copies as you ST Spy” and,Want. Many people have been rr.

CLAIR — “My Favorite Calling Bulldog Drummond} STRAND-—"Elopement” and ‘Calling

dog Drummond gifts. - Send 25 cents for each | TACOMA — (Sealed Cargo” and “Girlicopy to SKETCHES,” The Indi-| ‘rom’ San Lorenzo.” a 1 TUXEDO -- “The Day the Earth Stood 'anapolis Times, 214 W. Mary- Tagan Still” and “The Iron Man." . |land St. '5:04-7:37-10:10 UPTOWN— My. Favorite Spy" ‘and BY LS A we——— —e

ment,

| VOGUE Two Tickets to Broadway" The Tanks Are Coming.’

| ZARING—"'My Favorite Spy"

Dangerous.” Starts Church Fund | HARTFORD, Conn, Feb. 2

|(UP)-~The Episcopal Diocese of | {Connecticut has started a $1 mil-| to] communism: | Bishop Walter H. Gray said the! funds will ‘be used, particularly to expand

lion fund raising

fight atheism and

campaign

|among young epople, |the work of the church.

=

The first installment of the hilarious series of six Sunday | only. articles titled “TV-JEE- | BIES,” appears in tomorrow's | Times.

Tickels to Broadway”

and

“Elope- |

afd]

| and "Highly

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SATURDAY, FEB. 2, 1052

Times ‘Amusement :

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