THE UNREPORTED TRUTH ON RUSSIA


***THE UNREPORTED TRUTH ON RUSSIA***

By J. Adams
October 29th, 1996
"Mad world! Mad kings! Mad composition!"
('King John'; Act II, sc.1)

As the Middle East and Korean Peninsula appear ready to explode, the stage is set for a military coup in Russia (see my "Global War Articles"). Yeltsin is reportedly ailing and in need of heart surgery, possibly as soon as next week. Meanwhile, the Russian President has been taken every step to encourage a military uprising while his health has been failing. First off, the Russian army hasn't been paid since July and has openly threatened to take action against the government. Secondly, the popular former paratrooper general, Alexander Lebed, who was made Yeltsin's security chief during the elections, was just fired. Lastly, Yeltsin is now seeking to have Alexander Korzhakov, the former shadowy figure that dominated Yeltsin's inner circle for the past couple of years, removed from the military in disgrace for attempts to expose government corruption.

The purpose of the coming coup is clear: to open the way for Russia to launch a nuclear attack against the West (see below).


Article Below For Fair Use Only


                         The Washington Times
                           October 28, 1996

                  "Russian Missiles Armed and Ready"

                           By James Hackett

    On  Oct.  3  the  Russian armed forces conducted a major strategic 
command and control exercise that included the launch of four nuclear-
capable missiles, at least one from each of the three legs of Russia's 
nuclear triad.  Very few reports  of  the  exercise  appeared  in  the 
media,  which  is  surprising in view of President Clintion's repeated 
comment that "There are no nuclear missiles pointed at the children of 
the United States tonight." 

    In fact,  there are well more than a thousand operational  Russian 
and  Chinese  nuclear missiles pointed somewhere,  and,  if not at the 
United States, they can be retargeted here in a matter of minutes.  

    The Russian press reported that the military  exercise,  codenamed 
Redoubt  96,  reached  its  conclusion  on Oct.  3 with a mock nuclear 
weapon attack from land,  sea and air.  Tass  reported  that  Russia's 
strategic  rocket  forces launched an SS-25 intercontinental ballistic 
missile from the Plesetsk testing ground  and  that  "the  target  was 
hit."  The  target  was  not identified,  but the SS-25 is designed to 
strike the United States.  

    The Moscow paper Krasnaya Zvezda reported "the presidential button 
worked" on  Oct.  3  when  a  command  from  the  "nuclear  briefcase" 
triggered  the  launch of a ballistic missile from a Russian submarine 
in the Arctic Ocean.  Reuters quoted a source  on  the  staff  of  the 
Northern  Fleet  in Murmansk as saying that the missile's test warhead 
successfully struck a target thousands of miles away on the  Kamchatka 
Peninsula west of Alaska.  

    In  another  story  on  the same day Tass reported that long-range 
bombers of the Russian Air Force launched two nuclear  capable  cruise 
missiles,  which hit their specified targets.  The report stressed the 
ability of the cruise missiles to carry their nuclear  warheads  2,400 
miles  beyond  the range of the bombers.  Russian military commanders, 
who still view the United States as the enemy,  are demonstrating that 
despite  internal  problems they are maintaining the ability to launch 
nuclear destruction at this country.  

    The strategic launches were monitored  by  Prime  Minister  Viktor 
Chernomyrdin  from  the  missile  launch control center of the Russian 
Armed Forces.  Mr.  Chernomyrdin's  participation  was  in  connection 
with  his  receipt  of  the "nuclear briefcase" from President Yeltsin 
while the president undergoes heart bypass surgery.  

    Defense Secretary William Perry reacted to these  developments  by 
repeating  the  administration  line  that  it  has  confidence in the 
ability of the Russian military to maintain  control  of  its  nuclear 
weapons,  despite  repeated warnings from Russian officials that their 
military is in a major crisis.  Reports from Moscow warn of  a  social 
explosion,  with millions of workers not being paid,  the buying power 
of wages  down  70  percent,  one-quarter  of  Russians  living  below 
subsistence levels,  and even military personnel going without pay for 
as long as six months.  

    Yet,  the administration seems determined to deny the problem.  J. 
Michael  Waller  of the American Foreign Policy Council has documented 
89  occasions  over  the  past  two  years  when Mr.  Clinton has said 
America is safe from nuclear weapons.  He said it before a  nationwide 
audience in the Oct.  6 debate with Bob Dole,  and he continues to say 
it.  

    Yet,  Mr.  Clinton's own CIA now is reporting that a grave  danger 
of  the "unsanctioned use of Russian nuclear weapons" is the result of 
social change,  economic hardship and malaise within the armed forces, 
as  reported  by  Bill Gertz in The Washington Times on Oct.  22.  Mr.  
Gertz disclosed a secret CIA  report  warning  that  Russia's  nuclear 
command  and  control system is being subjected to stresses it was not 
designed to withstand.  

    The CIA report reveals deep  concerns  that  officers  at  various 
levels  of  authority  have  the  technical ability to launch Russia's 
strategic nuclear missiles without  a  presidential  order.  Recently, 
national  security  chief  Gen.   Alexander  Lebed  was  charged  with 
plotting a coup and  sacked.  This  increased  the  power  of  another 
general, Interior Minister Anatoly Kulikov, but Mr.  Lebed is plotting 
a  comeback.  As Russia's generals jockey for power,  the CIA properly 
worries that splits in the armed  forces  will  grow,  increasing  the 
danger of an unsanctioned nuclear launch.  

    Yet Mr.  Clinton and Mr.  Gore, like a pair of robots programed to 
say the same thing over and over,  keep reassuring us there is nothing 
to fear. The sad fact is that the next president may have to deal with 
a societal collapse on the order of  the  Russian  Revolution  or  the 
German  economic  disaster that led to the rise of Adolf Hitler.  Only 
this time the collapsing society is armed with  thousands  of  nuclear 
weapons,  and  missiles  that  can  deliver  them in 30 minutes to any 
American city.  

    This is something to think about in deciding who  will  lead  this 
country for the next four years.  

    James T.  Hackett is a contributing writer to The Washington Times 
based in San Diego.  

----------------------------------------------------------------------

                            The Toronto Sun
                           October 27, 1996

                "RUSSIA'S RIPE FOR ANOTHER REVOLUTION"

                           BY ERIC MARGOLIS

   As night fell in St.  Petersburg on Nov. 7, 1917, Bolshevik sailors 
and  soldiers,  besieging  the  provisional  government  of  Alexander 
Kerensky in the former czar's Winter Palace, delivered an ultimatum.  

   Kerensky  and  his  minister  stood  in  the palace's great Hall of 
Mirrors,  debating what to do.  Suddenly,  powerful searchlight  beams 
from  Aurora,  a  cruiser moored in the harbor that had been seized by 
Bolsheviks,  shone through the hall's  floor-to-ceiling  windows.  The 
message  was clear:  surrender,  or 6-inch shells would quickly follow 
the beams of light.  

    Russia's government capitulated.  Kerensky went into exile, ending 
up  -  of all places - teaching at UCLA.  Lenin and his Bolsheviks had 
seized power.  Not, as Communist party propaganda was later to insist, 
through a popular uprising, but by a military putsch.  

   Today, Russia is in the most perilous political condition since the 
autumn  of  1917.  Government and the economy reel out of control as a 
deepening power struggle grips Moscow.  The stage  is  being  set  for 
another coup d'etat, or even civil war.  

   President-czar  Boris  Yeltsin  is  gravely  ill,  barely  able  to 
function.   His  nominal  successor,   stolid  Prime  Minister  Viktor 
Chernomyrdin,  watches  as  his power ebbs away.  Deep in the Kremlin, 
Chief of Staff Anatoli Chubais runs  his  own  government  within  the 
government.  The wily Chubais is relentlessly gathering the  reins  of 
bureaucratic power. He is now the de facto Regent of All the Russias.  

   Chubais  just got his arch rival,  Alexander Lebed,  fired from the 
job of national security supremo.  Ex-general Lebed,  a T-80 tank in a 
GUM   department   store   suit,   predicts   Chubais   will  engineer 
Chernomyrdin's ouster within months.  

   Lebed's other  arch-enemy,  Interior  Minister  Kulikov,  the  main 
architect of the slaughter in Chechnya,  claims Lebed tried to mount a 
military coup using -shades of Seven Days in May - a special  military 
unit ostensibly formed to combat crime and subversion.  

   Meanwhile,  the  still  powerful  Communist  party,  led by Gennady 
Zyuganov,  howls it was defrauded of rightful victory in last summer's 
elections  by  a conspiracy to mask Yeltsin's failing health.  No more 
Tovarich nice guy, say angry Reds: "On to the Winter Palace!" 

   Military putsches are nothing new in Russian  history.  Streltsi  - 
archers  of  the  palace  guard - were czar-makers for three centuries 
until Peter the Great broke their power.  Lenin,  keenly aware of  the 
threat  posed  by  the  army,   demanded  constant  vigilance  against 
"Bonapartism." Stalin had a more drastic remedy:  he had 36,000 senior 
Red  Army  officers  shot.  The  army  was  later  to  participate  in 
overthrowing Nikita Khrushchev, and in the farcical, 1991 coup against 
Mikhail Gorbachev.  

   Today,  the demoralized,  barely paid regular forces,  commanded by 
Defence Minister Igor Rodionov,  have shrunk to 1.2 million men.  They 
may mutiny any day.  

   But  there  are  also  22 other official military and para-military 
groups in Russia, all coup -capable. Gen.  Kulikov's interior ministry 
(MVD)  has  230,000 troops in 30 divisions,  with armor and artillery. 
The brutal, ambitious Kulikov also commands 8,000 crack OMON commandos 
- ideal for putsches.  

   Through the  presidency,  Chubais  commands  a  50,000-man  special 
Kremlin  security force with heavy weapons,  100,000 border guards and 
25,000 mobile security troops.  

   The KGB's internal arm has a sizable  force  of  troops,  including 
armor.  There are a number of top secret "anti-terrorist" outfits that 
are also ideal for coups - like the shadowy Alpha and  Cascade  groups 
who briefly surfaced during the anti-Gorbachev coup.  And,  of course, 
eight elite Spetsnaz commando brigades.  

   In the event of a coup,  four regular army units will  likely  play 
decisive  roles.  First,  two elite units of the Moscow garrison - the 
Taman and Kantimir motor rifle  divisions.  These  Kremlin  praetorian 
guards could well decide who becomes the next ruler of Russia.  

   Second,  the  Tula  and Ryazan elite paratroop divisions.  They can 
move on six hours notice.  Former paratroop general Lebed is hated  by 
the  corrupt  regular military brass,  but loved by his former troops. 
But these divisions are useless unless air force generals agree to fly 
them to Moscow. Lebed has some strong supporters in the air force, the 
most progressive of the armed services. Unusual movement by these four 
divisions will be the first sign of a military coup.  

   A chaotic power struggle in Moscow after the demise of Yeltsin,  or 
economic  collapse,  could  also  ignite regional warlordism,  such as 
China suffered in the 1920s. Siberian military units are traditionally 
independent-minded and are now highly restive.  Talk of setting up  an 
independent  Far  East  republic  is  heard.  Some  military  units in 
Moldova,  the Kaliningrad enclave,  Sebastapol and  the  Caucasus  are 
particularly mutinous.  

   Russians  are  champion muddlers.  They may stumble on downhill for 
many months or years.  Yet one senses a crisis approaching; there is a 
smell of gunpowder in the fall air. A clearcut political resolution of 
the  leadership  crisis  appears  unlikely  - as does another election 
soon.  Either Lebed, or the Communists,  would win.  A Lebed-Communist 
alliance  -  white  knight on a red horse - would sweep the polls,  or 
simply seize power, to the joy of many Russians.

   The failure of the politicians to resolve Russia's titanic problems 
opens the way for the men with guns.  Tough generals  transformed  and 
enriched  once  impoverished  South  Korea  and  Chile.  Why  not that 
international bag lady, Mother Russia?  

 

     
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