~ Office Supplies ~~ Buy Posters ~~ A-Z Products ~~ Website Advertising


Zinoviev Letter - Wikipedia

<<Up     Contents

Zinoviev Letter

The "Zinoviev Letter" is thought to have been instrumental in the Conservative Party's victory in the British general election of October 29, 1924, which ended the country's first Labour government.

Allegedly addressed from Grigori Zinoviev, president of the presidium of the Executive Committee of the Communist International (Comintern), to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain, the letter purported to advocate intensified Communist agitation in Britain, not least in the armed forces.

Published in the conservative British Daily Mail newspaper four days before the election, the letter came at a sensitive time also in relations between Britain and the Soviet Union, owing to Conservative opposition to the forthcoming parliamentary ratification of the Anglo-Soviet agreement of August 8.

Dated September 15, 1924, the letter is generally thought to be a forgery. Although much of its content otherwise persuasively echoes Comintern vocabulary, the letter contains errors (such as "Executive Committee, Third Communist International" - a nonsensical title) which led many even at the time to denounce it as a hoax.

A particularly damaging section of the document identified the normalisation of inter-governmental relations under the Anglo-Soviet agreement as an opportune moment for increased Soviet propaganda activity within the British Labour movement:

"A settlement of relations between the two countries will assist in the revolutionising of the international and British proletariat not less than a successful rising in any of the working districts of England, as the establishment of close contact between the British and Russian proletariat, the exchange of delegations and workers, etc. will make it possible for us to extend and develop the propaganda of ideas of Leninism in England and the Colonies."

British Labour prime minister Ramsay MacDonald's attempts to cast doubt on the letter's authenticity were hampered by its widespread acceptance among government officials. MacDonald "felt like a man sewn in a sack and thrown into the sea", he told his Cabinet on October 31 as they prepared to leave office.

The Soviet authorities for their part were prevented by poor communication with the Moscow-based ECCI from delivering the immediate unequivocal refutation of the letter required following a British Foreign Office protest note of October 24: not until November 17 did the ECCI even discuss the matter.

An 11-month study by British Foreign Office chief historian Gill Bennett, undertaken with the assistance of Russian archivists, concluded (January 1999) that whatever its origin, there was no evidence that the letter had not been sent from the ECCI to the CPGB, although the U.K. Foreign Office at the time had believed it to be genuine.

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump




 
 
4 carat RARE Honey Yellow Gold BASTNAESITE Facet Cab Rough Golden gemstone Faceting gem jewel PRETTY
 4 carat RARE Honey Yellow Gold BASTNAESITE Cab Golden ing jewel PRETTY 
 
29 carats Tigereye red yellow gold TigerIron Jasper gem tumble polished Cabbing cab tiger iron rough
 29 carats Tigereye red yellow gold TigerIron Jasper tumble polished Cabbing cab tiger iron  
 
35 carat grape STICHTITE gemstone Cabbing lapidary tumble polished rough gem stone jewelry 7 gram 2
 35 carat grape STICHTITE Cabbing lapidary tumble polished jewelry 7 gram 2 
 
33 carats blue Tanzanite zoisite rough crystal specimen jewelry cabbing gemstone 6 grams lot parcel
 33 carats blue Tanzanite zoisite crystal specimen jewelry cabbing 6 grams lot parcel 
 
Brilliant WHITE Clear TOPAZ jewel Loose natural cabochons cut polished jewelry gemstones 4x2 half mm
 Brilliant WHITE Clear TOPAZ jewel Loose cabochons cut polished jewelry 4x2 half mm