OUR COMMUNIST ENEMY
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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP75-00149R000700400017-6
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RIPPUB
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K
Document Page Count:
2
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
January 3, 2005
Sequence Number:
17
Case Number:
Publication Date:
June 23, 1960
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OPEN
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Approved For Release 200510'
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
of
HON. STYLES BRIDGES
OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
Thursday, June 23, 1960
Mr. BRIDGES. Mr. President, the ac-
tion of the Communist-inspired mobs
in Japan raises once more the question
of whether the American people are fully
aware of the real threat of world coln-
munism. Are we losing all over the world
because of the actions of a minority
C _RDP75-00149R01
Appendix
For years Marx was In ill health. He did
not have a regular job. He depended upon
pittances, especially from Engels. He lived
from pawn shop to pawn shop.
It was in this sordid atmosphere that the
philosophy of communism was born which
today controls two out of five peoples of the
world.
The Communist leaders, from Marx. to
Khrushchev, have proclaimed that capitalism
and communism are incompatible, that
sooner or later one or the other must be
destroyed. Within the last year Khrushchev
has boasted that he and his fellow travelers
will bury us.
Communism, as we know it today, made
little progress until it was recognized by the
Government of the United States in 1933.
Presidents Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, and
Hoover knew that one of the greatest assets
the Communists could have would be for the
U
S Government to reco
nize the Commu-
.
g
.1946 on various forms of foreign aid in nist government of Russia. They knew that
order to "win friends and influence peo- this would give them freedom to Infiltrate
pie" outside the Iron Curtain and I have our newspapers, radio, moving pictures,
voted for mutual security appropriations schools, colleges, government, church, and
in support of the President's program. labor organizations.
Mr. G a Stringfellow of,,,aSt In a letter dated October 10, 1933, to
Stalin's stooge, the president of the All
Orange, N.777 e ere an a dress- June union central Executive Committee of the
10 before the is Club of ALLStl, I, I7,S.S.R., President Roosevelt said: "I con-
Tex., which I be ieve raises Some niter- template the desirability of an effort to end
esting points relating to this subject. the present abnormal relationship between
Mr. Stringfellow points out that, in his the 125 million people of the United States
again" because of the collapse of the sum-
mit conference "is not, a f
ss, but a gain."
o
I , ,iis1 unanimous ? consent that, 1VIx.
Stringfellow's speech be printed in the
Appendix of the RECORD.
There being no objection, the address
was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as follows:
THE NATURE OF OUR ENEMY
The principle of communism is not new.
Some primitive societies practiced it.
Marxism-Leninism communism is a, little
over a century old. "Scientific socialism," as
it Is called, stems from the writings of Karl
Marx who, at the age of 24, became the editor
of a leftwing newspaper In Cologne, Ger-
many and launched a tirade against the gov-
ernment. The paper was suppressed. Marx
then went to France for 7 years. He then
went to England where he remained until
his dea th-at the age of 65.
One of Marx' few friends was Friedrich
Engels whom he met In 1842 when he was
editor of the leftwing newspaper. They be-
came intellectual comrades. Engels sup-
ported Marx financially.
Marx and Engels were atheists and, of
course, revolutionists, Marx is known as the
"originator" of communism and today his
memory is highly respected by Communists
everywhere. Engels, is appropriately called
the collaborator of arx. Engels had an en-
cyclopedic memory. His extensive knowl-
edge of industrial techniques supplied Marx
with important information. Engels also
wrote, not only under his own name, but in
some instances,. under Marx' name. To-
gether they conceived and formulated the
Communist doctrine.
Engels lived for years with a woman out
of wedlock. Upon her death, he lived with
her sister. Years later he married,her on
If you are of a similar mind," said President
Roosevelt, "I should be glad to receive any
representatives you may designate to explore
with me personally all questions outstanding
between our countries."
Seven days later the president of the All
Union Central Executive Committee of the
U.S.S.R. replied stating that he agreed with
President Roosevelt and appointed. M. M.
Litvinov, People's Commissar for Foreign
Affairs, to represent him in the negotiations.
Following several conferences at which the
Russians were wined and dined at the White
House and Hyde Park and shown every cour-
tesy, President Roosevelt wrote Litvinov on
November 16, 1933 in part as follows: "I am
happy to Inform you that as a result of our
conversations the Government of the United
States has decided to establish normal dip-
lomatic relations with the Government of
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and
to exchange ambassadors.
Litvinov replied, to the Roosevelt letter the
same day saying: "I share the hope that the
relations now established between our peo-
ple may forever remain normal and friendly,
and that our nations henceforth may coop-
erate for their mutual benefit and for the
preservation of the peace of the world."
You will observe from the foregoing that
we, not the Communists, initiated formal
diplomatic relations with them.
The Soviets have not kept a single major
agreement entered into with us since the es-
tablishment of diplomatic relations.
At the time the President gave official rec-
ognition to Soviet Russia, the Communist
dictatorship, under Joseph Stalin, had not.
consolidated its hold over Russia. The free-
dom-loving Ukrainians were resisting col-
lectivism and Khrushchev, Stalin's lieuten-
ant, was conducting a systematic, man-
made famine in which 7 million Ukrainians
died. The Soviet Union was virtually bank-
rupt. There was worldwide distrust of the,
TAT
Bolsheviks. The United States recognition
gave them respectability, and monetary
credit. We gave or sold -them much of our
industrial know-how, and that which we did
not give or sell them,, their agents stole,
In 1945 and 1946, Great Britain and the
United States became so anxious to main-
tain their wartime friendship with Stalin
that they permitted Soviet Russia, still a
second-rate primitive nation, to place its
agents in the governments of all eastern
European countries. In a short time the
Communists had control of Poland, Estonia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
Rumania, Bulgaria, Albania, and Yugo-
slavia and were exterminating millions of
people who might have resisted communism.
At the Yalta Conference in 1945, the
United States permitted Russia to take over
Chinese Manchuria. Then the Moscow-
trained Communists were supplied with
Russian arms. The United States cut off aid
to our friend, Chiang Kai-shek, head of Na-
tionalist China, and communism quickly es-
tablished its control of much of Asia. This
was one of the most remarkable actions in
the history of the world.
In 1957 and 1958, C ba fe&under the
CORllll m4stx'?oontrol-after ie United States
had withdrawn'grined support to the Cuban
Government and otherwise aided Castro and
his Communist cohorts. The State Depart-
ment gave official recognition to Castro's
military dictatorship before his bearded
bully boys had reached Havana in force.-
Scarcely any well informed person in
America has any doubt now that Cuba is
being built into a Communist bridgehead,
just 90 miles from Florida. The disturbing
factor about the Cuban development is that
some important segments of our molders of
public opinion helped to turn Cuba over to
Castro and his Moscow-controlled agents.
Just as our Government helped to turn China
over to the Communists 10 years earlier.
We do not appear to learn anything from
our experience with the Communists.
Respected American publications, in 1957
and 1958, built up Castro as a romantic
rebel-a Robin Hood, leading his fight for
social justice in Cuba. While their aid to
world communism was unwitting, it none-
theless damaged our security. Their widely
published complimentary article on Castro
went out of their way to dispel any idea
that Castro's movement had a Communist
complexion-although Castro's record to the
contrary was readily available.
Benea of the events having to do
with the' - lane lost in Russia on May I.
are root errors of what appears to be the
desire of some persons of appeasing Russia
over the last 20-odd years. Since we ac-
cepted the untenable military position in
Berlin, we have sometimes listened to those
having the policy of appeasement, conces-
sion, acquiescent, insults, and humiliations
that Britain followed so disastrously toward
Hitler.
Pressure for this policy has come largely
from the liberals and the political leftists.
Khrushchev, like Stalin, has successfully
broken every promise and treaty the moment
it suited his end to do so. He feigned troop
withdrawal from Hungary to give him time
to bring in more tanks to machinegun pa-
triots in the streets. Yet we have been
urged to negotiate with this monster as if
he wgre.s. man of good faith, good will, high
CONGR SSIONAL RECC?
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A5414
character, peace loving, and as if his word
or his signature were worth something,
In view of the actual threat we face, the
fact that we are tense again is not a loss, but
a gain.
We have. I hope, been saved from a worth-
less agreement a. the summit conference,
which might have caused us to live In a
fool's paradise while Russia built up for a
devastating surpri se attack.
We should never have agreed to the sum-
mit conference. No matter how we may try
to disguise the facts, we agreed to that
conference under the Khrushchev threat to
kick us out of Berlin, We should have told
him that we are there in accordance with
our occupational rights and there was noth-
ing to discuss.
Let us hope that we are at least through
with summit conference dreams. Our ap-
peasement has encouraged Khrushchev to
recklessness.
Let us at last launch a real propaganda
counteroffensive c-f our own. Let us expose
the nonsensical claims of Communist eco-
nomic growth instead of swallowing them
whole. Let us have the courage to defend
capitalism and explain the superiority of
economic freedom.
Instead of trying to call off the cold war,
which we can't, let us recognize at last that
It Is being relentlessly fought against us by
an enemy determined on world conquest.
Let us realize that our only hope of peace
and security is to accept the ideological chai-
lenge and seek not a truce but a victory.
Then and only then will we be worthy of our
preserve our liberty.
Will T. McKinney
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
OF
HON. FRANK E. SMITH
OF MISSISSIPPI
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Wednesd, Junc 22, 1960
Mr. SMITH of Mississippi. Mr.
speaker, one of th Nation's outstanding
niTation
Approved For Release 2005/01/04 :'CIA-RDP75-00149R000700400417-6
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX
on Thursday, June
Mr. McKinney had
year plans for
ark on the Yazoo
made many
Commission
often flood
River.
a brilliant
of getting t
Active In many areas, Mr. McKinney was a
merchant, a farmer and a banker. He served
a year as president of the Delta Council and
was vitally interested in agricultural re-
search. He was one of the guiding lights in
the formation. of the Delta Research Foun-
keep the, rivers and streams
tl.e rich lands of the lower
]ley and as chairman of the
Flood Control Committee, he
ips with the Mississippi River
rg_ng funds for levees and re-
along main line Mississippi
on the first project in the
of the lower delta, a project
ect thousands of acres that are
by high water on the Yazoo
intangible, the spirit
manner in which the
synonomous with the
almost from the very
write the most glowing
From the days when A
as McKinneyville-the d
people used McKinney
tender-there have been I
Mr. Will to shoulder eve;
cy was a dedicated leader with
nd and a soft-spoken manner
om Deer Creek Pilot]
(EDITOR'S
was written
would reach
orning.
often the me
tributed muc
measure the th
entire area-as
such a man, the
Of course, the
those responsihill
the presidency of
as the Delta Con
sistent and active 1
backwater projects,
have not benefited
These are but the
and material-things
In paying tribute t
However, we snspectq that when history
marks the record of rtt only Mr. Will but
the entire McKinney ffmlly. it will be the
nning which will
about it. We were too late,
use Mr. Will died early this
do feel, however, that some-
re. Mr. Will will know-and
that history will record him
f the area's and the State's
crossing our desk last week
t the thought that all too
and families who have con-
to not only their neighbors
no but* the entire area as
little recognition for their
11 as the State-owes to
ast we can do is try.
ublic generally knows of
ch service organizations
1 and Importance posts
kshot soil and his per-
terest in drainage and
iguiila was known
lys -when, indeed,
script as legal
cKinneys such as
more than their
Having said all of th
n{zed the e:.qulzlte gen
with the manners at
C)iiesterfleld-we thin]
most outstanding char
is the breadth of chE%
df aling with persons I
thess vigorously disagr
hi,s soft-voiced friendil
n? matter how firmly
May we say "thankq
on the behalf of the
for the material thin
fished In the public's I
ptrtant, for having bei
h live.
119 THE SENATE OF
Mr. FULBRIG
Sheriff Robert S. Mo
Ark., was recently
annual meeting of
Denver. The associ
This is not only
Moore, but it is an
State of Arkansas.
egrry out his duties
firient manner and
success during his t
I ask unanimous c
tonal and a news a
be printed in the Ap
ORD.
There being no obje
Mid article were order
iFrom the Arkansas G
Mr. McKinney's goal
Mr. McKinney wa
leader in many fields.
Under unanimous
Times at Greenville,
Deer Creek Pilot of
W. T. McBaINSY
The varied talents and energies of affable
W. T. "Billy" McKinney, E tirelessly applied share of the load-to do-.voluntarily those
to his beloved Delta coup and to Misais- thankless and unsung jobs' sways incidental
sippt have been of incalcu ble value to this to progress-at the sam time setting a
area. His death on Wedusday night is a pattern of cultured grace in his personal
great loss, comportment.
OOi.OSO'g5 .
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0001429
the welcome word that t
I~s annual convention at
Arkansans will hail b
th. a election of Sheriff Moo
to a sizable group of out
some 2,000 next June.
-and having recog-
ineness of this man
I charm of a Lord
that perhaps the
eteristic of Mr. Will
icier he displays in
ith whom he has at
ed-retaining always
ess toward the man
e opposed his views.
' Mr. Will? Thanks
atire area-not only
you have accomp-
half, but, more im-
the man that you
UNITED STATES
ie 23, 1960
Mr. President,
Association at the
he association in
law-enforcement
nd experience for
in the National
honor for Sheriff
nor for the entire
wish him every
ure in office.
ng his selection
HONOR
sheriff, Robert S.
and with that
this week came
NSA would hold
because it brings
e of the State's
Sheriff Moore has held numerous posts and
gained many honors within law enforcement
groups in his home State. He has served
ae president of the Arkansas Sheriffs Associa-
tion and the Arkansas Peace Officers Associa-
tion. He is today executive secretary of the
ASA. In these positions he became active
lit national peace officer work, and his elec-
tion by delegates from 26 States at Denver
climaxes 10 years service on the board of
governors of the National Sheriffs Association.
The esteem Bob Moore enjoys among law-
men nationally and the selection of the