“以流沙为基础的政治迷宫”

Benjamin Tromly
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引用次数: 0

摘要

第二章考察了20世纪40年代末的俄罗斯流亡政治,当时反共组织出现在西德的难民营中。白人流亡者早期建立右翼运动的努力失败了。在最近的战争之前,年轻的弗拉索夫人一直是苏联的臣民,他们顶住了承担起历史上俄罗斯事业的压力。战后的弗拉索夫运动出现了,但陷入了分裂的德国阴暗的间谍世界。这些流亡者在Gehlen组织中找到了支持者。Gehlen组织是一个情报机构,由希特勒已解散的军事情报单位Fremde Heere Ost(东方外国军队)组建而成,战后得到了美军的资助。然而,反共政治和间谍活动的混合使弗拉索夫运动陷入混乱。格伦组织资助了冲突的流亡者部族,而苏联情报部门则加紧努力,通过渗透特工和骚扰来麻痹反共圈子——所有这些实际上都瘫痪了流亡者新生的反共议程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“A Political Maze Based on the Shifting Sands”
Chapter 2 examines Russian exile politics of the late 1940s, when anti-communist organizations emerged in the displaced-person camps of West Germany. The early efforts of White exiles to forge a right-wing movement went awry. The younger Vlasovites, Soviet subjects until the recent war, resisted pressure to take up the cause of historic Russia. A postwar Vlasov movement emerged but became mired in the murky espionage world of divided Germany. The exiles found backers in the Gehlen Organization, an intelligence outfit assembled from Hitler’s defunct military intelligence unit Fremde Heere Ost (Foreign Armies East) which received funding from the US army after the war. However, the intermixing of anti-communist politics and espionage threw the Vlasov movement into chaos. The Gehlen Organization funded clashing exile clans, while Soviet intelligence stepped up efforts to paralyze the anti-communist circles through penetration agents and harassment—all of which virtually paralyzed the exiles’ nascent anti-communist agendas.
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