Jiang Zemin’s KGB background and the Soviet Union signed a treaty with the Soviet Union traitorous behavior – The Chinese Communist Party and the Soviet Union signed traitorous treaties in three periods

“Selling out the country and the people” is the inherent nature of the Communist Party, and “selling out the country and seeking power” is also its consistent policy line. On the one hand, it was reflected in its covert collusion with Japan during the War of Resistance; on the other hand, it was reflected in its support for Soviet Russia, its disregard for national interests, and even its repeated signing of traitorous treaties.

Support for the Soviet Union without regard to national interests

In 1921, from the day the CCP was established as the Asian branch of the Soviet Union, it began to receive funds from the Soviet Union for its activities and followed the instructions of the Soviet Union to join the Kuomintang (KMT) to “develop under its shell”, and at the same Time to launch riots to obstruct the KMT’s Northern Expedition to unify China. In 1929, after the Soviet Union took advantage of the Nationalist government’s busy work in the Central Plains and sent 80,000 troops to occupy the Northeast, the CCP not only did not condemn it, but openly went against the interests of the country and the nation by raising the slogan of “armed defense of the Soviet Union” and planned armed riots in many provinces and cities in 1930, “in order to create a national revolutionary climax”.

Even today’s Chinese Communist Party historians are careful to criticize the Communist Party’s “collaboration with the Soviet Union” in the armed insurrection: “To pretend to defend the Soviet Union is actually to oppose internationalism to patriotism, and it is detached from the actual demands of the Chinese masses at that time, and will not be supported by the people. the support of the people.”

Subsequently, because the Soviet Union turned to support the Nationalist government led by Chiang Kai-shek in order to avoid simultaneous fighting on the Eastern and Western fronts. During the war, the CCP did not receive much assistance from the Soviet Union, but its ideology made it consistently support the Soviet Union, even if it disregarded national interests. For example, in 1941 it openly endorsed the Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Treaty and the Frontline Declaration annexed to the treaty, and excused the Soviet Union, which contained the statement, “The Soviet Union pledges to respect the territorial integrity and inviolability of Manchukuo and Japan pledges to respect the territorial integrity and inviolability of the Mongolian People’s Republic in accordance with the Declaration.”

It should be noted that the content of the treaty was clearly contrary to the 1924 Sino-Soviet Treaty, when the Soviet Union recognized China’s “sovereignty” over Outer Mongolia. In response, the ROC government protested, while the Communist Party’s statement indicated that it supported the Soviet Union more than it defended Chinese interests. Undoubtedly, the Chinese Communist Party would rather sacrifice national interests in order to get the support of the Soviet Union.

The Treaty of Selling Northeast China’s Resources in Exchange for Soviet Support for the Civil War

After the end of the war, the Chinese Communist Party, with the help of the Soviet troops in northeast China, quickly occupied the material-rich northeast. True to Mao’s words at the Seventh Communist Party Congress, with the Northeast, “we have a consolidated basis for our victory in the whole country.” “That is to say, our victory was determined.”

According to other historical sources, the biggest gifts the Soviets gave to the CCP were: 100,000 guns, thousands of cannons and countless ammunition and cloth and grain from The Japanese army; and 200,000 Manchukuo troops. Because of this, the Chinese Communist Party ignored the Soviet atrocities in the Northeast.

In order to continue to receive further military support from the Soviet Union, the CCP and the Soviet Union signed two treaties of betrayal during this period.

On May 20, 1947, Lin Biao, a representative of the CCP, and Mikoyan, a representative of the Soviet Union, signed the “Harbin Agreement” in Harbin. “The agreement stipulated that: 1. the CCP promised the Soviet Union special rights and interests in land and air transportation in northeastern China. 2. The CCP should provide the Soviet Union with information on the actions of the ROC government and U.S. forces in China. 3. The CCP should supply the Soviet Union with all the products of the Northeast, including cotton, soybeans and other strategic materials, except for those needed locally. The Communist Party of China promised that specially defined areas in Liaoning and Andong provinces of China would be assigned to the DPRK army and would be incorporated into the DPRK at an appropriate time in the future.

In December 1948, the Chinese Communist Party signed the Moscow Agreement with the Soviet Union in Moscow. The main provisions of the “Agreement” were, first, that the Soviet Union had the right to exploit the minerals in China on a priority basis. Second, the Soviet Union had the right to station troops in northeast China and Xinjiang. Third, the Chinese army should rely on Soviet troops in the event of the outbreak of World War III. Fourth, the Soviet Union could locate its Far Eastern Intelligence Bureau in China. Fifth, if war broke out in Europe, including the Soviet Union, the Chinese Communist Party should send an expeditionary force of 100,000 men and 2 million laborers to support the Soviet Union in the war.

By signing these two treaties, which sold out the country’s rights and interests, the Chinese Communist Party obtained $3.4 billion worth of U.S. aid to the Soviet Union in World War II, acquired a large number of aircraft, artillery, and tanks, equipped 11 modern divisions, trained 300,000 former traitorous troops, and even made some of the Soviet Red Army “commanders” of the Chinese Communist Army, the Air Force, and the Tank Corps. air force and tank troops. These initiatives greatly increased the military power of the Communist Party and allowed it to compete with the Nationalist army.

Sino-Soviet treaties and secret agreements in the early years of the regime

In the early years of the regime, Mao and the CCP, fearing that the United States would assist the retreating Nationalist government in Taiwan to counterattack the mainland, rushed to the Soviet Union and signed the Sino-Soviet Treaty of Alliance and two secret agreements with them.

In the secret agreement, Mongolia’s independence was officially recognized, the Soviet Union was allowed to maintain its privileges in northeastern China, Soviet troops were allowed to hold China in wartime, Chinese naval and air bases were given to the Soviet Union, and ports in the northeast were given to Soviet troops; China and the Soviet Union exchanged goods for goods, and Chinese local products, especially grain, should be exported to Russia as much as possible; the Soviet Union enjoyed special trading rights and railroad management rights in China; it controlled mining rights; in some areas of China, Soviets had the right to live freely; and 10 million laborers should be conscripted to the Soviet Union and 100 million “surplus population” should be compressed, etc.

In 1989, Deng Xiaoping told the visiting Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev: “Since the Opium War, the powers have invaded, bullied and enslaved China, and it was Japan that caused the most damage to China, but in the end it was Tsarist Russia that actually benefited the most from China, including the Soviet Union for a certain period of time and certain problems. ” Deng Xiaoping said probably included this treaty and secret agreements.

Jiang Zemin signed the biggest sellout treaty

It is well known that the Russian-Chinese border has been in constant strife for nearly a century, and war even broke out over it in the 1960s. The territorial dispute over the border between the two sides has been left unresolved by Russia and China. But on December 9 and 10, 1999, in Beijing, Jiang Zemin signed the Protocol between the Government of the People’s Republic of China and the Government of the Russian Federation on the Narrative of the East and West Sections of the Russian-Chinese Boundary (hereinafter referred to as the Protocol) with the visiting Russian President Boris Yeltsin. This is an outright sell-out treaty.

According to the Protocol, Jiang betrayed more than one million square kilometers of China’s valuable territory, equivalent to the combined area of the three northeastern provinces and dozens of Taiwan; in addition, Jiang also allocated the sea entrance of the Tumen River to Russia, blocking the sea entrance to the Sea of Japan in northeastern China.

Specifically, Jiang betrayed several large pieces of China’s northern territory, one is the “Waixing area”, which is more than 600,000 square kilometers south of the Waixingan Mountains and north of the Heilongjiang River, another is the “Wudong area”, which is 400,000 square kilometers east of the Ussuri River, and There is also the Tannu-Urian Sea area, with 170,000 square kilometers, and the Kuril Islands, with 76,400 square kilometers.

It is strange that the first page of the People’s Daily on December 11 contains only a brief 100-word description of the treaty, which is such an important event. Even the then Defense Minister Chi Haotian did not know the details.

It can be said that the Protocol completely negates the Treaty of Nibchu, the treaty of equality between China and Russia on the border, which was won by Chinese officers and soldiers in the bloodshed during the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty, and recognizes the unequal treaties between China and Russia, including the Treaty of Aigun and the Treaty of Beijing, which have been refused by the Republic of China and successive Chinese Communist governments.

In addition, the Protocol permanently transferred to Russia a large area of territory that had been forcibly occupied by Tsarist Russia without a treaty, including the Tannu Uliang Sea area (about 170,000 square kilometers, equivalent to the area of Guizhou Province), which was voted as Chinese territory by the UN General Assembly in 1953, and the 64 cantons of Jiangdong (3,600 square kilometers, equivalent to three times the area of Hong Kong), which was recognized as Chinese territory even by the unequal Treaty of Aigun. equivalent to more than three times the area of Hong Kong), and the Kuril Islands (76,400 square kilometers, equivalent to the area of two Taiwan), which have been under Chinese jurisdiction since the Jin Dynasty and were explicitly assigned to China in the Sino-Russian Treaty of Nipchu.

Jiang’s betrayal of the country is a crime against the future generations of China. At 1,500 mu per square kilometer, Jiang’s sellout was equivalent to taking one mu of fertile arable land away from each of the 1.3 billion Chinese. Jiang was thus called “the greatest traitor of our time.

Why did Jiang sign such a traitorous treaty? Why did other leaders of the Chinese Communist Party who knew the inside story refuse to hold Jiang accountable?

In 1945, the Soviet army raided the northeast and obtained all the files of the secret service system of Kenji Toihara, including, of course, the written and photographic files of the youth training course in which Jiang Zemin had been trained. Thereafter, when Jiang was studying in the Soviet Union, Soviet intelligence reviewed Jiang’s files and discovered Jiang’s history of acting as a traitor, and coerced him into developing into a Far East Bureau agent.

In May 1991, when Jiang visited the Soviet Union in his capacity as General Secretary of the CPC Central Committee, the KGB arranged for Jiang to “coincidentally” meet Krava, the Soviet sex spy who had made Jiang fall under his skirt. Once this identity is exposed, both Jiang and the Communist Party may immediately collapse. In order to keep this secret, no matter how much national interest is sacrificed, Jiang has to make this deal with Russia. And the CCP was afraid that releasing the details of the treaty would lead to its own downfall, which is why the CCP internally refused to hold Jiang accountable after later understanding the situation.

Jiang ordered border guards to retreat 500 kilometers

More appallingly, in 2002, Viktor Litovkin, a military commentator for the Russian news agency, revealed yet another old story that surprised the Chinese people: In addition to selling out the country, in 1992, Jiang, in his capacity as chairman of the military commission, ordered the Chinese border guards to pull back 500 kilometers in order to curry favor with Russia, while four countries – Russia, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan – were Beyond 100 kilometers, the four countries had “130,000 troops (120,000 Russian), 3,900 tanks (90% of which were Russian), 5,800 armored combat vehicles (Russia’s share was 90% then and later) , 4,500 artillery pieces, 290 combat aircraft and 434 helicopters”. And the Chinese Communists had to be 500 kilometers away to station their troops.

Litovkin’s article reveals: “In order to strengthen mutual trust in the military sphere, Beijing took an unprecedented series of measures and undertook a unilateral obligation to achieve a 500-kilometer-wide border zone with these countries without any military presence except for border guards. For Russia and several other CIS countries, this ‘undefended zone’ along the border is only 100 kilometers wide”.

The reason for the ‘inequality’ between Russia and China in the width of the ‘undefended zone’ 100 km wide and 500 km wide is, to put it mildly, quite simple: the reason why we The reason why we can’t pull our troops back 500 km from the border as the Chinese have done is that the cost is too high for us. …… China understands this situation.”

The 100 km of undefended Russian territory is forested wilderness, and nothing is lost by withdrawing, but the 500 km wide zone that China is withdrawing from is full of costly military installations. The destruction of all of them was a huge loss.

At that time, the Chinese border guards stationed there were indignant about the treaty and refused to carry out the orders. In order to withdraw as soon as possible to satisfy Russia, Jiang transferred all the northern border guards who knew the truth to Fujian. It is reported that the reason Jiang was so impatient was that he feared Deng Xiaoping might remove himself at any time and was desperately trying to give away his rank internally and build his turf in the army with corrupt officers. At the same time it hopes to gain the full help of neighboring countries such as Russia to consolidate power for itself from the outside.

Conclusion

From Mao to Jiang Zemin, how much of the Chinese nation’s interests have been betrayed by the Chinese Communist Party, which has no regard for the fundamental interests of the Chinese nation, is probably still unknown to many Chinese people, and the treaty with the Soviet Union is only the largest part of it, which the Chinese Communist Party deliberately hides for fear of its own death knell being sounded. However, the truth will not be concealed forever. The revelation of the truth one by one is the catalyst for the disintegration of the CCP.