10-18-2005, 07:17 PM
Beyond Mitrokhin: The Gandhi family nexus by N S Rajaram in Organiser
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->we need to take a close look at the sinister and shadowy figure of Viktor Chebrikov rather than Mitrokhin who was only trying to peddle himself and his suitcases stuffed with smuggled papers for a good living in the West.
Chebrikov held the post of KGB chairman from 1982 to 88. He was arguably the second most powerful man in the Soviet Union. Even when Michael Gorbachev was charming the world, it was Chebrikov who pulled the strings.
Time Europe reported (January 4, 1988): âFormer KGB Chairman Viktor Chebrikov claimed that the Soviet secret service paid for up to half of the complimentary reports about Gorbachev in the western press.â According to Chebrikov, Gorbachev was a poor administrator and had no leadership qualities.
The KGB may no longer exist on paper, but its men and its mindset are firmly entrenched in todayâs Russia. Both President Putin and the present Russian Ambassador Vyacheslav Trubinko are KGB men who served under Chebrikov. Chebrikov was personally in charge of dealings with the Gandhi family going back to Indira Gandhi. It shows the great importance that the Soviet Union and its successor accorded to it.
Dr. Yvgenia Albatsâ book goes much farther. She documents not one-time payments, but a long-term business relationship between Rajiv and Soviet trading companies. Here is the gist of the key letter in her book
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The same report noted that the â320,000 foreign currency roubles allocated for the indicated purpose in 1985â had been spent. The KGB requested an additional 320,000 roubles for 1986 âIn order to support special operations and measures on consolidation of the results of official visit by Prime Minister R. Gandhi to the Soviet Union.â
The letter was signed by V. Chebrikov. Argumenty i Fakty also noted that, âin accordance with this letter funds were appropriated, according to a December 20, 1985 CPSU Central Committee decree and an order of the USSR Council of Ministers on the same day.â
http://intellit.muskingum.edu/russia_folde...ra/sect_16a.htm
This supports Mitrokhinâs claim, but Dr. Yvgenia Albatsâ book goes much farther. She documents <b>not one-time payments, but a long-term business relationship between Rajiv and Soviet trading companies</b>. Here is the gist of the key letter in her book A State Within the StateâThe KGB and Its Hold on Russia. (See copy: the translation from the Russian and the punctuation leave something to be desired):
â<b>The USSR KGB maintains contact with the son of Premier Minister</b> [Sic: there should be a comma after âMinisterâ] Rajiv Gandhi of India.â The ubiquitous Chebrikov who signed the 1982 letter goes on to note:
âR. Gandhi expresses deep gratitude for the benefits accruing to his family from the commercial dealings of an Indian firm he controls in cooperation with Soviet foreign trade organisations.â
We know from other KGB sources how large the âbenefits accruing to his familyâ were. Six months after Rajiv Gandhiâs death, the Swiss magazine Schweizer Illustrierte reported in November 1991 that Sonia Gandhi was controlling a Swiss bank account worth more than two billion dollars. The source again was an official KGB file.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->we need to take a close look at the sinister and shadowy figure of Viktor Chebrikov rather than Mitrokhin who was only trying to peddle himself and his suitcases stuffed with smuggled papers for a good living in the West.
Chebrikov held the post of KGB chairman from 1982 to 88. He was arguably the second most powerful man in the Soviet Union. Even when Michael Gorbachev was charming the world, it was Chebrikov who pulled the strings.
Time Europe reported (January 4, 1988): âFormer KGB Chairman Viktor Chebrikov claimed that the Soviet secret service paid for up to half of the complimentary reports about Gorbachev in the western press.â According to Chebrikov, Gorbachev was a poor administrator and had no leadership qualities.
The KGB may no longer exist on paper, but its men and its mindset are firmly entrenched in todayâs Russia. Both President Putin and the present Russian Ambassador Vyacheslav Trubinko are KGB men who served under Chebrikov. Chebrikov was personally in charge of dealings with the Gandhi family going back to Indira Gandhi. It shows the great importance that the Soviet Union and its successor accorded to it.
Dr. Yvgenia Albatsâ book goes much farther. She documents not one-time payments, but a long-term business relationship between Rajiv and Soviet trading companies. Here is the gist of the key letter in her book
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The same report noted that the â320,000 foreign currency roubles allocated for the indicated purpose in 1985â had been spent. The KGB requested an additional 320,000 roubles for 1986 âIn order to support special operations and measures on consolidation of the results of official visit by Prime Minister R. Gandhi to the Soviet Union.â
The letter was signed by V. Chebrikov. Argumenty i Fakty also noted that, âin accordance with this letter funds were appropriated, according to a December 20, 1985 CPSU Central Committee decree and an order of the USSR Council of Ministers on the same day.â
http://intellit.muskingum.edu/russia_folde...ra/sect_16a.htm
This supports Mitrokhinâs claim, but Dr. Yvgenia Albatsâ book goes much farther. She documents <b>not one-time payments, but a long-term business relationship between Rajiv and Soviet trading companies</b>. Here is the gist of the key letter in her book A State Within the StateâThe KGB and Its Hold on Russia. (See copy: the translation from the Russian and the punctuation leave something to be desired):
â<b>The USSR KGB maintains contact with the son of Premier Minister</b> [Sic: there should be a comma after âMinisterâ] Rajiv Gandhi of India.â The ubiquitous Chebrikov who signed the 1982 letter goes on to note:
âR. Gandhi expresses deep gratitude for the benefits accruing to his family from the commercial dealings of an Indian firm he controls in cooperation with Soviet foreign trade organisations.â
We know from other KGB sources how large the âbenefits accruing to his familyâ were. Six months after Rajiv Gandhiâs death, the Swiss magazine Schweizer Illustrierte reported in November 1991 that Sonia Gandhi was controlling a Swiss bank account worth more than two billion dollars. The source again was an official KGB file.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->