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The real terror paymasters: the KGB has long

sponsored the Muslim fundamentalist groups that


have now become a global terror network carrying
out the Marxist-Leninist revolution in Muhammad's
name
New American, The, Sept 3, 2007 by William F. Jasper

In 1972, the Kremlin decided to turn the whole Islamic world against Israel and the U.S. As KGB
chairman Yuri Andropov told me, a billion adversaries could inflict far greater damage on
America than could a few millions.

In the quote above, Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa, head of the DIE, the KGB's little sister in communist
Romania, reveals a conversation he had with Chairman Andropov, the Soviet leader. "We
needed to instill a Nazi-style hatred for the Jews throughout the Islamic world," Andropov told
Pacepa, "and to turn this weapon of the emotions into a terrorist bloodbath against Israel and
its main supporter, the United States. No one within the American/Zionist sphere of influence
should any longer feel safe."

Gen. Pacepa, who defected to the United States in 1978, recounted this story in an August 24,
2006 article for National Review entitled "Russian Footprints." "According to Andropov," said
Pacepa, "the Islamic world was a waiting petri dish in which we could nurture a virulent strain
of America-hatred, grown from the bacterium of Marxist-Leninist thought. Islamic anti-
Semitism ran deep. The Muslims had a taste for nationalism, jingoism, and victimology. Their
illiterate, oppressed mobs could be whipped up to a fever pitch."

Gen. Pacepa explained how this was put into operation:

In the mid 1970s, the KGB ordered my service, the [Romanian] DIE
--along with other East European sister services--to scour the
country for trusted party activists belonging to various Islamic
ethnic groups, train them in disinformation and terrorist
operations, and infiltrate them into the countries of our "sphere
of influence." Their task was to export a rabid, demented hatred
for American Zionism by manipulating the ancestral abhorrence for
Jews felt by the people in that part of the world. Before I left
Romania for good, in 1978, my DIE had dispatched around 500 such
undercover agents to Islamic countries. According to a rough
estimate received from Moscow, by 1978 the whole Soviet-bloc
intelligence community had sent some 4,000 such agents of influence
into the Islamic world.

Likewise, Anatoliy Golitsyn, one of the most important KGB defectors to come to the West,
noted in his 1995 book, The Perestroika Deception, "Under concealed Russian guidance, the
Muslims of the former Soviet Union ... will seek to cooperate and ally themselves with Muslims
in Iran and the Arab states while Russia maintains its open policy of cooperation and
partnership with the West. In this way China openly and Russia secretly will jointly attempt to
swing the balance of power in their favor in the highly strategic, oil-producing Arab/Iranian
areas of the Middle East."

A July 1997 article by Associated Press writer Anthony Shadid provides one measure of the
impact of this Soviet KGB (and ongoing Russian FSB) strategy. The AP story, "Marxism Makes
Way for Islam," profiles a number of influential Marxist-Muslim intellectuals. It begins with the
observation that "on the bookshelf of Adel Hussein sits an odd collection for one of Egypt's
leading Islamic thinkers." Titles like Socialist Integration, On Communism, and Planning in the
U.S.S.R. by leading Marxists, notes Mr. Shadid, "speak more of class struggle than the hand of
God."

Like a surprising number of others across the Arab and Muslim world, Adel Hussein "is a one-
time Marxist and nonbeliever who has turned to Islam, part of a new intellectual generation
reshaping the religion." "I benefited from Marx in both theory and practice," Hussein told
Shadid, "but now, Islam is my starting point and my framework." That doesn't mean he's
abandoned Marx, however. "Hussein, for instance, says his goals have not changed," Shadid
reported. "But he now sees Islam, through its ability to persuade and to mobilize, as the best
tool." In other words, Islam for Hussein is a means to an end, and the end is a Marxist world.

Adel Hussein, says AP's Shadid, is representative of a significant number of today's influential
imams and mullahs. "In a jarring twist, they are the same thinkers who a generation ago drew
the ire of religious Muslims because their Marxist disavowal of God was seen as the biggest
threat to Islam," Shadid reported. "Today, they are often the public face of Islam--writing in
leading Arabic newspapers, speaking at conferences and on television talk shows, enjoying the
support of many younger, more political Muslims interested in their attempts to rethink Islam's
relationship to democracy, minorities and the West."
Evidence for the existence of an ongoing Soviet/Russian strategic plan to foment and use
Islamic extremism is very extensive and goes far to explain the inordinate hatred of Muslim
fundamentalists for America and the West. Not only is al-Qaeda aligned with the Kremlin (see
the article on page 10), so are the other major "Islamist" terror groups including PLO/ al-Fatah,
Hamas, and Hezbollah (see the sidebar below). Of course, none of those groups would amount
to much if not for the immense assistance they receive from Iran and Syria, regimes that were
primary client-state terror sponsors for the Soviets and continue in that role for Russia under
Putin.

Putin continues to build Iran's nuclear program and upgrade its long-range missile program, not
to mention provide Ahmadinejad's regime with all of the conventional weapons that Tehran
and its surrogate terrorists can use. Likewise for the longtime terrorist-sponsoring regime of
Bashar al-Asad in Damascus. In January 2005, Putin welcomed President al-Asad to Moscow
and forgave 73 percent of the $13.4 billion debt owed by Syria to Moscow. Then, a couple
months later, he sold Strelet surface-to-air missiles to Asad and has been showering him with
weapons.

Moscow Masterminds

In the 2005 action film Lord of War, Nicolas Cage plays Russian arms dealer Yuri Orlov, whose
merchandise--guns, tanks, grenades, missiles, planes, bombs --spreads slaughter and genocide
across Africa. The fictional Orlov is a portrayal of the real-life Viktor Bout, a "former" KGB
officer who has built a global empire with his fleet of Soviet transport planes and helicopters
and his unmatched access to a bottomless supply of Soviet armaments. It would be difficult to
find a war, civil war, revolution, terrorist organization, dictatorship, coup, or attempted coup in
Africa, the Middle East, or Central Asia over the past decade and a half that hasn't been fueled
by Bout's deadly merchandise.

Viktor Bout was for years the main arms supplier for the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan
and Pakistan. He subsequently became a major supplier to the U.S.-backed Northern Alliance.
While operating a dizzying array of companies and shell companies out of Belgium and the
United Arab Emirates, Bout has always maintained a home base and safe haven in Russia.

When the Belgian government issued an international arrest warrant for him in 2002, Bout fled
to Moscow. "Asked if Bout was in the country when the arrest warrant was issued, the Russian
foreign ministry said no, even though Bout was giving live radio interviews from studios in
downtown Moscow," note Douglas Farah and Stephen Braun, authors of Merchant of Death:
Money, Guns, Planes, and the Man Who Makes War Possible. "The next day, officials grudgingly
acknowledged he might be in Russia but said they had seen no evidence that he had committed
any crime, and therefore could not act."

According to Farah and Braun and other investigative reporters, Viktor Bout more recently has
been running arms to Hezbollah in Lebanon and the forces of the radical Islamic Courts Union in
Somalia. Bout's status as a private entrepreneur provides protective deniability to his bosses in
the Kremlin--including the top KGB/FSB man himself, Vladimir Putin--but it is obvious that they
are supplying him and protecting him so he can continue stoking the fires of terror and
revolution that they have sparked and fed for decades. Incredibly, Western governments that
verbally condemn Bout's sinister blood trade are more than willing to do business with his
companies. For instance, the U.S. Defense Department has paid Bout's air transport companies
millions of dollars to fly supplies into U.S. bases in Afghanistan and Iraq.

As indispensable as Viktor Bout has been--and is--to the Kremlin's ongoing terror strategy, there
are others who are even more important. One of the most important is Yevgeniy Primakov, the
former KGB chief in charge of Middle East terrorism during the Cold War. Primakov has been at
the pinnacle of Soviet politics for decades: Soviet Politburo member, former Russian Foreign
Minister, head of the Russia Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), and Russian prime minister. Now
he is Putin's right-hand man as a "private citizen." As head of the Russia Chamber of Commerce,
he continues his role directing Russia's client terror states and terrorist groups while on
commercial visits throughout the Mideast.

In 2006, Primakov presided at the founding meeting of Russia's new forum for Muslim
countries, the "Russia-Islamic World Strategic Vision Group." The new group held its first
session in Moscow on March 27-28, attended by delegates from Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt,
Pakistan, Iran, and 12 additional Muslim states. Putin greeted the delegates. Significantly, the
"statesman" who presided at the meeting was Primakov, a renowned Arabist who played a key
role in formulating the Soviet Union's ties with the Muslim world during the cold-war era.

Jihadist Hatred for America

Is the ongoing Soviet/Russian propaganda and terror strategy really at the heart of the militant
jihadist hatred directed at the United States? The overwhelming evidence would seem to
answer resoundingly in the affirmative. After all, the jihadists should have good reason to view
as enemies the regimes in Moscow, Beijing, and the Commonwealth of Independent States that
have killed Muslims on a daily basis. In fact, the Soviet Union murdered over one million Muslim
Afghans and made over five million of them refugees. Post-Soviet Russia brutally subjugated
Muslim Chechnya, killing tens of thousands of civilians and leaving hundreds of thousands
homeless. The Soviet Union persecuted (and present-day Russia continues to persecute) tens of
millions of Muslims in Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, and
Azerbaijan. The current openly communist government of Islam Karimov in Uzbekistan carried
out the Adijan massacre of 2005, slaughtering as many as 5,000 Muslim civilians, with Moscow
and Beijing both publicly voicing support for Karimov's action. Communist China has carried out
a decades-long ruthless persecution of its Muslim Uighar minority.

Communist regimes have forbidden study of the Q'uran, publicly burned countless copies of
this sacred text of Muslims, imprisoned and tortured Muslim believers, and beaten Muslim
clerics and then paraded them in public humiliation. Contrast that with the Western countries,
where Muslims are granted full political and economic rights, can worship freely, and can
obtain a Q'uran at any library or local bookstore. Yes, the jihadists have used our military
presence in Iraq to fan the flames of hatred against the United States, but how about the
communists?

Do the jihadists hate America more than the non-Muslim communist states because we are
uniquely decadent? It is true that Western post-Christian culture, especially as seen in popular
fashions and through Hollywood's ubiquitous and depraved lens, is offensive to devout Muslims
(as it is to devout Christians). But Russia is not pristine by comparison. Putin's Russia boasts one
of the largest pornography industries in the world, featuring the most hard-core kiddie porn.
Russia's mainstream media is much more salacious than its counterparts in the United States.
Russia and the Muslim-populated (but non-Muslim-ruled) countries of the Commonwealth of
Independent States (C.I.S.) are also notorious for forced prostitution, gambling, and the
production, consumption, and export of drugs and alcohol, all of which should earn them
condemnation from the militant Muslim faithful. Instead, the leaders of Hamas, Hezbollah, al-
Qaeda, al-Fatah, and other "Islamic fundamentalists," not only ignore the transgressions of
their infidel sponsors in Russia and China and the cries of their persecuted Muslim brothers, but
they regularly break bread with and publicly support the atheist persecutors of Islam.

We in the Christian West should not kid ourselves--as certain "liberals" would have us do--into
accepting the false proposition that Islam is perfectly compatible with our social-political
system. It is not (see page 31). And we must not succumb to their arguments that we should
accept new waves of Muslim immigrants. But neither should we allow ourselves to be further
dragged into a military "clash of civilizations" (as we already are in Iraq and Afghanistan) by
"Muslim" front men for our so-called allies in Moscow and Beijing.

In his October 11, 2001 news conference, President George W. Bush characterized the new
global conflict as "a war against all those who seek to export terror, and a war against those
governments that support or shelter them." Striking the same theme, but with greater
specificity, Weekly Standard editor William Kristol declared in a July 21, 2006 article, "Radical
Islam Takes On Democracy," that "our focus should be less on Hamas and Hezbollah, and more
on their paymasters and real commanders--Syria and Iran."

But why stop with the middlemen? The real paymasters and commanders aren't in Damascus
and Tehran; they're in Moscow and Beijing, as they have been for decades. These paymasters
and commanders are also patient strategists. They will not try to engage us in head-on military
conflict when they can more easily wear us down by leading us into many "quagmire" conflicts
with their surrogates.

RELATED ARTICLE: Who's who in terrorism.

by William F. Jasper

PLO/al-Fatah. For nearly four decades, the PLO has been the largest, wealthiest, and most
politically connected terrorist organization in the world. For most of that time, it was held in the
firm grip of Yasser Arafat's iron fist. But Arafat was not the fierce, independent actor he posed
as; he was completely dependent on the Soviet KGB and its surrogate Warsaw Pact intelligence
services for arms, training, logistical support, funds, and direction. His KGB handlers included
Vasali Samoylenko, Vladimir Buljakov, and Soviet "Ambassador" Alexander Soldatov. Arafat's
closest friend and head of PLO intelligence, Hani Hassan, was actually an agent of the DIE, the
Romanian subsidiary of the KGB.

Former DIE chief General Ion Pacepa reported in a 2003 Wall Street Journal article:

I was given the KGB's "personal file" on Arafat. He was an Egyptian


bourgeois turned into a devoted Marxist by KGB foreign
intelligence. The KGB had trained him at its Balashikha special-ops
school east of Moscow and in the mid-1960s decided to groom him as
the future PLO leader. First, the KGB destroyed the official
records of Arafat's birth in Cairo, replacing them with fictitious
documents saying that he had been born in Jerusalem and was
therefore a Palestinian by birth.

During the 1960s and '70s, Arafat and the PLO did not hide their Marxist ideology and openly
proclaimed their solidarity with the Soviet Union, Communist China, Communist Cuba, and
every other Marxist dictatorship. But in recent years, as communist-backed "Islamic
fundamentalist" groups like Hamas have gathered more popular support, the PLO leadership
has attempted to portray itself as authentically Muslim. It has adopted more religious rhetoric
and used Muslim names and symbols, even naming Islam as the official and exclusive religion of
Palestine in the 2003 Palestinian constitution. Since Arafat's death in 2004, veteran PLO hand
Mahmoud Abbas has tried, unsuccessfully, to fill his shoes.

Hamas swept to power in the 2006 parliamentary elections (winning 76 seats to Fatah's 43),
and in June 2007 Hamas' military took control of the Gaza Strip in a series of gun battles
through the streets of Gaza's cities that left 120 people dead and hundreds more wounded.
Three of the four so-called Quartet of Middle East peace brokers--the United States, United
Nations, and European Union--announced their I backing for Abbas and the PLO and their
rejection of Hamas. The remaining member of the quartet, Russia, has been playing both sides.
During the last week of July, Mahmoud Abbas visited Putin in Moscow, seeking his
endorsement. Putin gave it, but didn't rule out continuing negotiations and relations with
Hamas. "I want to assure you that we will support you as the lawful leader of the Palestinian
people," Putin told Abbas at their July 31 meeting.

Hamas. The Arabic acronym for Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiyya, or Islamic Resistance
Movement, Hamas is a Palestinian Sunni terrorist organization founded in 1987 by Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin. One of Hamas' claims to infamy is its popularization of suicide bombing as a
terror weapon, pioneering in recruiting females and children as suicide killers. Although posing
as the ultimate in Islamic fundamentalism, like al-Qaeda it has a curious relationship with
Putin's KGB/FSB. According to a March 2006 report by Axis Information and Analysis, "At
present, five of the seven biggest Hamas websites are functioning from the territory of the CIS
member-states. Three of these sites use services of the Russian providers.... There are two
more smaller but rather well-known websites that are functioning from Russia's territory." This
is especially noteworthy since the Putin regime has clamped down on all media and Internet
access by its political opposition and all unapproved parties. Hamas' Internet sites, which have
been so essential in building Hamas' stature, recruiting, and propaganda prowess globally, are
clearly operating with Putin's approval.

Russia does not include Hamas on its list of terrorist organizations. Not surprisingly, Hamas'
political director, Khaled Mashal, has repeatedly affirmed the organization's close friendship
with Moscow. Mashal presides over the Hamas "Politburo," which, in name, structure, and
function, is much more in line with Marxist-Leninist than Islamist thought. Mashal has led
Hamas delegations to Moscow for talks with Putin and has met with Putin and Yevgeniy
Primakov, the KGB's top Middle East scholar, at other forums in Khartoum, Tehran, and Ankara.
Although Hamas never provided any significant aid to its fellow Muslims who were being
slaughtered by the Russians in Chechnya, it did, up until 2004, offer them rhetorical support.
Since 2004, though, it has urged the Chechens to "heal the wound" and surrender in the
interest of "a strong and integrated Russia."

Hezbollah. In Arabic, Hezbollah means "Party of God." But there is little that is godly about the
group, which has exploded in size, power, and influence since first coming to Western attention
by bombing the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, killing over 300 Marines. It is
supported chiefly and directly by Iran and has adopted the revolutionary theology and ideology
of Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini. It also receives military aid directly and indirectly from Syria and
Russia, as manifested by the weapons cases abandoned by Hezbollah after their rocket attacks
on Israel last summer. The containers were clearly marked: "Customer: Ministry of Defense of
Syria. Supplier: KBR Tula, Russia."

Sheikh Hasan Nasrallah, who has been General Secretary of Hezbollah since 1992, keeps in
touch with Moscow through regular communications with Russia's Beirut embassy. This was
confirmed in a 2006 interview with Russia's Ambassador to Israel, Mikhail Bogdanov. That is not
the only channel by which Moscow and Beirut stay in touch. In a detailed 2005 report by Axis
Information and Analysis, entitled Dangerous Liaisons: Covert "Love Affair" Between Hezbollah
and Russia, author Michel Ebaz reports:

Hezbollah's special operations unit ("Muntamat al-Jihad al-Islami"


--MJI or "Islamic Jihad Organization") emissaries have been active
in Russia since the middle of the nineties. Residing in Moscow,
Imad Hadj Hassan Salame heads this special operations unit. His men
were an integral part of Hezbollah's international network for
smuggling weapons to Lebanon.
Yevgeniy Primakov's appointment in 1996 as Russia's Foreign Minister was a critical step in
propelling the Hezbollah-KGB relationship forward. As the KGB's most experienced hand in
Middle East terrorism matters, he was the perfect choice for insuring a smooth transition when
the KGB transformed into the FSB. His official meetings in the 1990s with Lebanon's political
leaders also provided him (and his assistant, Viktor Pasovaluk) with opportunities to meet
secretly with representatives of Hezbollah. In the 2005 elections, Hezbollah and its allies in the
Resistance and Development Bloc won 35 seats (27 percent) of the Lebanese parliament.
COPYRIGHT 2007 American Opinion Publishing, Inc.

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