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“1) Comrades working in telegraph, teleprinter, and telephone services must organize an<br />

effective monitoring system to intercept important communications, and enable the Party<br />

to learn what is going on inside the U.S. Government, the Security forces, industry, and<br />

in all other important establishments.<br />

2) Comrades working in armament factories or in nuclear establishments must memorize<br />

all charts, blueprints, production lists, etc. that they come upon through their<br />

employment. If it is possible to photograph such documents without the risk of detection,<br />

this is preferable.<br />

3) Comrades must make a determined effort to infiltrate all sections of the U.S. Armed<br />

Forces ... He should be converted into a determined opponent of war between the United<br />

States and the Soviet Union ... Acts of sabotage at nuclear bases are invaluable. If the<br />

well publicized launchings of a space rocket results in a failure, this is of tremendous<br />

propaganda value.<br />

4) In addition to the above special tasks, everyday life in all parts of the U.S. must be<br />

disrupted as often, and as effectively, as possible ... Racial riots are the most easily<br />

provoked disorders. If they are brought about in a way which makes it seem that the<br />

ruling class has precipitated the riots, this is valuable propaganda ... The class enemy<br />

must be discredited, hit often, and where it hurts the most.”<br />

In his book The Conscience of a Conservative, Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater wrote:<br />

“The exchange program in the Soviet eyes, is simply another operation in Communist<br />

political warfare. The people that the Kremlin sends over here are, to a man, trained<br />

agents of Soviet policy. Some of them are spies, seeking information; all of them are<br />

trusted carriers of Communist propaganda. Their mission is not cultural, but political.<br />

Their aim is not to inform, but to mislead. Their assignment is not to convey a true image<br />

of the Soviet Union, but a false image. The Kremlin’s hope is that they will persuade the<br />

American people to forget the ugly aspects of Soviet life, and the danger that the Soviet<br />

system poses to American freedom ... But the Kremlin’s aim is not to make American’s<br />

approve of Communism, much as they would like that; it is to make us tolerant of<br />

Communism ... They know that if Americans regard the Soviet Union as a dangerous<br />

implacable enemy, Communism will not be able to conquer the world.”<br />

During the Johnson Administration, 66 Senators voted for the Consulate Treaty, despite the<br />

tremendous public criticism of it, which opened up the country to spies and saboteurs, who<br />

would be protected with the mantle of diplomatic immunity.<br />

In 1905, Lenin wrote his Instructions to Revolutionaries, which indicated how important it<br />

was to concentrate on young people. He wrote:<br />

“Go to the youth. Form fighting squads everywhere at three, ten, and thirty persons. Let<br />

them arm themselves at once as best they can, be it with a revolver, a knife, a rag soaked<br />

in kerosene to start fires ... Some may undertake to kill a spy or blow up a police station,<br />

others to raid a bank ... for insurrection ... let every group learn, if only by beating up a<br />

policeman; this will train hundreds of experienced fighters who tomorrow will be leading<br />

hundreds of thousands...”

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