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Jews Communized China, Too
[Edited 2-22-07]
The three major political figures who helped to introduce communism into China are shown below: all
Jewish communists, just like in Russia. Granted, there were a few non-Orientals who
helped communize China who were not Jewish, e.g., Hendricus Sneevliet, aka Maring, but Maring only paid three
visits to China.
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Mikhail Markovich Borodin
(1884-1951); Soviet advisor sent to China in 1923. Originally named Mikhail
Gruzenberg. A Riga, Latvia Jew.
Adolf Abramovitch Joffe (aka Ioffe,
Yoffe; 1883-1927); was sent to China in August 1922. Official title: Russian
Envoy Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to China. Helped create the Sun-Joffe
Manifesto of January 1923.
Grigorii N. Voitinsky (1893-1953); emissary to
China from Soviet Third Communist International (Comintern). Went to China in
early 1920; aka Zarkhin.
In addition to the early involvement of Jews in Chinese communism, there was later involvement as well. Two Jewish officials of the U.S. Treasury Department, Solomon Adler and Harry Dexter White (both of whom were accused Soviet spies), played a key role in weakening the nationalist (i.e., anti-communist) government in China for
the benefit of the communists. Adler and White successfully halted most of a $200 million American loan to the Chinese nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek. China requested the loan in
July 1943, and - strangely enough - the U.S. government granted the request, but only about $30 million was ever received by Kai-shek. As a result, the Chinese economy suffered severe monetary inflation. That, in turn, discredited Kai-shek, i.e., it allowed the communists to publicly portray him as a leader who couldn't be trusted to manage
China's economy. In other words, the curbing of that vitally-needed loan helped the communists to come to power a few years later. (With the rise of the communists' power in China, Kai-shek was forced to flee and, therefore, to set up another nationalist government on the nearby island of Formosa, now called Taiwan. In a sad turn of events, the United Nations ruled in 1971 that the communists, and not Chiang's government, were the actual leaders of China, and the UN therefore ceased to recognize Chiang's government as legitimate - which makes us ask the question: since when is any communist government legitimate?). Interestingly,
Adler later relocated to China, where he died in 1994.
More on Jewish involvement in the communization of China Here.
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