1917. Key to the “Russian” Revolution
Николай Викторович Стариков
It wasn't by chance that the Russian Empire collapsed in 1917, and nor was it the case with the Soviet Union. In both cases a powerful external force initiated Russia's falling apart using villains and fools, who completely destroyed their own country for money and attractive promises.
The history of this great catastrophe still holds many mysteries, and there are much more questions than answers here. Germany, which is still blamed for it, was not more than a tool and fell a victim to its own revolution afterwards. February 1917 – this is when the Russian catastrophe of the 20 century started, and we paid too high a price to overcome the damage. However, as soon as we forgot how Russia's geopolitical enemies had destroyed our country, disintegration and chaos came back. In both cases, this force hid behind the smokescreen of an "alliance" and "universal values." And now their conceptual descendants, sufficiently sponsored from abroad, are ready to provoke a new revolution in Russia.
Read this book and learn
• why Nicholas II and his brother abdicated so easily;
• who and how arranged Lenin's return to Russia in a "sealed" railway car;
• why the British agent Oswald Rayner put a security round into Grigori Rasputin's forehead;
• why the German General Staff never knew they had a spy by the name of Ulyanov;
• why the Provision Government paid for the passage of revolutionaries, who were going to overthrow them;
• why Alexander Kerensky didn't fight Bolsheviks but played a giveaway game with them and tried to hand the power to Lenin.
Kerensky = Gorbachev = Yeltsin = …?
Enough of this! There should be no more revolutions in Russia!
Nikolay Starikov
1917. Key to the "Russian" Revolution
В© English translation by Piter Publishing House, LLC, 2018
В© Piter Publishing House Ltd., 2018
Author's Note
February and October 1917.
Two parts of the same whole.
The bullets shot from one gun.
Steps of one stairway leading to Russia's collapse.
A lot of questions haven't been answered yet.
It is still unclear how this thing, which should never have happened, came to pass.
To this day Russia hasn't completely recovered from the mayhem of those days.
After all, the USSR falling apart in 1991 is the direct consequence of what happened in 1917.
We've never learnt the truth about those days.
We haven't acknowledged how and why our state, the Russian Empire, collapsed.
We haven't learnt the lessons of the February and the October days.
And the catastrophe recurred, albeit not as bloody, not as crucial.
And today we hear new calls for resolution of Russia's problems through revolution.
The tragedies have been forgotten, the lessons haven't been learnt, the real number of victims is shrouded in secrecy.
Revolution is not about happy protesters and the collapsed state regime.
Revolution is about millions of victims, hunger, and illnesses, it is about the civil war, the fronts, where the "freed" Russians were sent to shortly after.
No revolution should ever happen again in our lands.
And that is why we need to understand how it happened before. Who is the orchestrator of our revolution?
Can a revolution have an orchestrator?
That is the main mystery of the Russian Revolution…
Chapter 1
Dark Spot in the History of the Russian Revolution
The revolutionary October and February are inseparable on the calendar of the Russian Revolution just as they are on the calendar of nature. These are two links of one chain, fever and ulcers of the same plague.
В В В В Anton Kersnovsky
It's bad enough to be enemies with Anglo-Saxons, but it's even worse to be friends with them.
В В В В General Alexei Vandam
Almost 90 years have passed after the February and the October Revolutions, but it is still not clear why and how the powerful Russian Empire fell into oblivion. Whenever you study the history of the Russian Revolution, you will find dark spots here and there. Historians have come up with lots of explanation