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Secrets of Katyn Forest: What's Really Buried There?
Diana West ^ | January 17, 2014 | Diana West

Posted on 01/18/2014 11:54:07 AM PST by WXRGina

The power of history to speak to us depends on our ability to hear it. When we are deaf to its secrets, or too confused or conditioned to decipher them, we miss the opportunity to be empowered by them. We thus fail to overcome the propaganda our own government, like the dictatorships we revile, has all too often deceived us with.

I am struck by this aura of static around a sensational new discovery. Researcher and author Krystyna Piorkowska, the Associated Press reported this week, has unearthed a “lost” U.S. document, dating back to 1945, known as the Van Vliet report on the Katyn Forest Massacre. Few Americans are familiar with the World War II-era massacre, let alone with U.S. Army Lt. Col. John H. Van Vliet, so what is history telling us?

Its message is one that we as a people are deeply conditioned to reject. It concerns decades of U.S. appeasement, support and collusion regarding the USSR, and even in some of the evil empire’s worst atrocities. In American Betrayal I re-examine this terrible pattern, long obscured by false narratives of the “good war” that I learned along with everybody else, for evidence of Soviet agents’ influence on U.S. strategy. Equally important is the corrosive impact this subversion has had on our nation’s character. Nowhere is this moral impact more evident than at Katyn.

This chapter of the story begins when Van Vliet and other prisoners of war held by Nazi Germany were brought by German officials to the Katyn Forest near Smolensk, Russia, to watch the exhumation of thousands of executed Poles, mainly officers, from mass graves discovered there in 1943. The evidence Van Vliet saw convinced him he was looking at a Soviet atrocity of colossal proportions. As part of Stalin’s diabolical plans to Sovietize Poland, the Soviets liquidated 20,000 Polish POWs in 1940, a time when this region was under USSR occupation following the Soviet invasion of Poland in tandem with Nazi Germany in 1939.

By 1943, however, the U.S. and Great Britain had struck a military alliance with the communist dictatorship against the Nazi dictatorship. At the time of the massacre’s discovery, Stalin instantly blamed Hitler. Much more importantly, so did FDR and Churchill. Did they know the truth about their murderous ally (Stalin) against their murderous enemy (Hitler)? Did they want to know the truth?

We know that a British diplomat named Owen O’Malley was dispatched to study the war crime in the spring of 1943. O’Malley wrote a remarkable report for the British government concluding the Soviets were guilty. We know Churchill gave this report to Roosevelt that same summer. Former Pennsylvania Gov. George H. Earle, Roosevelt’s personal emissary, would testify that he presented evidence of Soviet guilt at Katyn to Roosevelt personally in 1944. FDR wasn’t buying it. Meanwhile, “we mustn’t offend the Russians,” went the internal government mantra, confounding truth, morality and, I argue, U.S. strategy. As a result, both the U.S. and Great Britain would peddle Soviet lies about Katyn throughout the war. The Office of War Information, a wartime U.S. government agency we now know was riddled with Soviet agents, was a strong arm for this propaganda.

U.S. support for the Big Lie about Katyn, however, continued long after the war – which is where the Van Vliet report comes in.

At war’s end, newly liberated Van Vliet sped home with his eyewitness account of Soviet guilt. On May 22, 1945, Van Vliet presented what he knew directly to the head of military intelligence, Gen. Clayton Bissell. The general tagged the report Top Secret, and, as Van Vliet later told Congress during its investigation of Katyn in the early 1950s, “then dictated the letter directing me to silence.”

Silence. When we see the past as a struggle between silence – which includes cover-up – and revelation, a new pattern of understanding takes shape. Why was the truth of Soviet guilt at Katyn suppressed until Congress ferreted it out in 1952? What impact did this have on the advance of communism in the world? What or whose cause did silence serve? Not the causes of truth or freedom, to be sure. Meanwhile, it is this silenced American eyewitness account of Soviet guilt at Katyn that became known as the Van Vliet report. From the moment congressional investigators began looking for it in the early 1950s until now, the report has been missing.

In fact, that same report Van Vliet dictated on May 22, 1945, is still missing. What Krystyna Piorkowska discovered is a sworn deposition by Van Vliet dated May 10, 1945. As the testament of America’s most famous witness to Katyn’s toll, this document found by Piorkowska, author of English-Speaking Witnesses to Katyn, is highly significant.

Van Vliet was not the only important American witness at Katyn. Army Capt. Donald B. Stewart was there, too, and, according to declassified documents Piorkowska uncovered last year, Stewart sent a coded message in 1943 to military intelligence indicating that he and Van Vliet believed the Soviets were guilty of the massacre. In other words, U.S. brass received eyewitness information in real time.

It gets worse. In 2012, writing about Piorkowska’s earlier Katyn findings, the AP reported: “The newly discovered documents also show Stewart was ordered in 1950 – soon before the congressional committee began its work – never to speak about a secret message on Katyn.”

History is telling us that more than Polish bodies are buried there.


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Government; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: dianawest; germany; katyn; katynforestmassacre; krystynapiorkowska; poland; sovietunion; unitedkingdom; ussr; warcriminalstalin
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To: WXRGina

Communism murders, democracy buries.


21 posted on 01/18/2014 3:38:48 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious! We reserve the right to serve refuse to anyone!)
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To: The FIGHTIN Illini

“As With All Coverups The Truth Will Eventually Be Revealed.”

2017-18 should be interesting. Out-of-work Dem hacks will want that book advance money.


22 posted on 01/18/2014 3:39:54 PM PST by The Antiyuppie ("When small men cast long shadows, then it is very late in the day.")
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To: WXRGina

23 posted on 01/18/2014 3:41:21 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator

WOW!


24 posted on 01/18/2014 4:02:21 PM PST by WXRGina (The Founding Fathers would be shooting by now.)
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To: Revolting cat!
Communism murders, democracy buries.

And they both seek to destroy the prized representative Republic.

25 posted on 01/18/2014 4:03:17 PM PST by WXRGina (The Founding Fathers would be shooting by now.)
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To: WXRGina

I’m not one of those ‘’few Americans’’who has never heard of the Katyn Forest Massacre. I’ve studied WW2 history since I was in junior high forty-five years ago. The USSR was an ally of Nazi Germany when this happened.


26 posted on 01/18/2014 6:27:54 PM PST by jmacusa ("Chasing God out of the classroom didn't usher in The Age of Reason''.)
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To: jmacusa

Yes, I can see you are very knowledgeable.


27 posted on 01/18/2014 6:50:44 PM PST by WXRGina (The Founding Fathers would be shooting by now.)
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To: WXRGina
RE :”At war’s end, newly liberated Van Vliet sped home with his eyewitness account of Soviet guilt. On May 22, 1945, Van Vliet presented what he knew directly to the head of military intelligence, Gen. Clayton Bissell. The general tagged the report Top Secret, and, as Van Vliet later told Congress during its investigation of Katyn in the early 1950s, “then dictated the letter directing me to silence.”

This is very interesting news to me.

So how long did it take during the Cold War for the US to blame the USSR for the massacre?

Maybe I should know this, I actually took a history course in college called WWII as a elective but that was long ago.

The Cold War was still on back then.

28 posted on 01/18/2014 9:44:55 PM PST by sickoflibs (Obama : 'If you like your Doctor you can keep him, PERIOD! Don't believe the GOPs warnings')
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To: jmacusa
The USSR was an ally of Nazi Germany when this happened.

Absolutely. As far as I am concerned, both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union are responsible for the start of the European war, it could not have happened without the Non-Aggression Pact. And when they signed it, they both knew it meant war.

29 posted on 01/18/2014 9:46:45 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: WXRGina
At war’s end, newly liberated Van Vliet sped home with his eyewitness account of Soviet guilt. On May 22, 1945, Van Vliet presented what he knew directly to the head of military intelligence, Gen. Clayton Bissell. The general tagged the report Top Secret, and, as Van Vliet later told Congress during its investigation of Katyn in the early 1950s, “then dictated the letter directing me to silence.”

Good old Clayton Bissell!

In his reminiscences, Way of a Fighter: The Memoirs of Clair Lee Chennault (New York: Putnam, 1949), General Chennault, who organized a group of volunteer American pilots to fight the Japanese in China that later became the Fourteenth Air Force, had some choice words for Bissell, who was his commanding officer for a time.

He described Bissell as a boneheaded martinet who was so hated by his subordinates that they told their Chinese colleagues that "nuts to Bissell" (it was actually a much stronger statement) was an American greeting. When the Chinese greeted Bissell with that expression, "he was not amused."

30 posted on 01/19/2014 8:26:09 AM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: logitech
The book "Ordinary Men" is a hard read also-- it's about a German reserve military police unit used to hunt down Jews for deportation to the death camps or just kill them outright.

There are lots of complaints about the uncooperative actions of the Polish police or Polish civilians: knowing a ghetto was about to be deported, all the Polish police would call in sick. Some heart-rending stories about Poles married to Jews who chose death with their spouses rather than leave them or Poles who hid Jews or fed Jews hiding in the forest (an offense punishable by death).

I've never met a Pole who lived in Poland during the war who couldn't rattle off a catalog of horrors that would make your hair stand on end. My mother in law, for example, who was forced as a child to watch the Germans machine gun 300 civilians in a reprisal action-- she said she never would have imagined that human blood could run like water through the gutters.

31 posted on 01/19/2014 12:38:10 PM PST by pierrem15 (Claudius: "Let all the poisons that lurk in the mud hatch out.")
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To: logitech

There is a completely unknown episode from 1937 when Stalin order the elimination of Poles living in the Western Territories of the Soviet Union. 110,000 people were murdered (and possibly as many as 150,000). A book about this crime has just been published in Poland.


32 posted on 01/19/2014 12:43:09 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious! We reserve the right to serve refuse to anyone!)
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To: pierrem15

Try reading “Hitler’s willing executioners” by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen (I think).

I read it probably 10 years ago or so. Probably the toughest book I have ever read.


33 posted on 01/19/2014 12:45:20 PM PST by sauropod (Fat Bottomed Girl: "What difference, at this point, does it make?")
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To: dfwgator
Well Russia did invade Poland after the Germans first made sure all the heavy was done and there was their near disastrous war with Finland if you consider that starting the entire European war, yeah you could say that. Stalin didn't send Hitler troops when he invaded Belgium and France and neither did Hitler ask him to. The Red Army would have been all but useless anyway. Stalin's ambitions were more local. Like reclaiming Finland which the Russian's felt was theirs historically and snapping up the Baltic countries. Stalin was an opportunist really.
34 posted on 01/19/2014 2:04:05 PM PST by jmacusa ("Chasing God out of the classroom didn't usher in The Age of Reason''.)
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To: jmacusa

Stalin also counted on the armies of Britain, France and Germany bleeding each other dry, which would have allowed a built up Red Army by around 1943 to swoop in and take over Europe.

One thing Stalin didn’t count on, France falling in six weeks....he had to know by then it was only a matter of time before Hitler turned his sights on him....but Stalin wasn’t ready in 1941.


35 posted on 01/19/2014 2:12:45 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: Revolting cat!; pierrem15

I think a lot of people see these horrible incidents as ancient history.

I’m glad there are still some telling the stories.

It can happen again.


36 posted on 01/19/2014 2:34:14 PM PST by logitech (It is time.)
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To: dfwgator
As paranoid as Stalin he kept ignoring warnings he was being given by Churchill and other Western leaders that Hitler was going to attack him. He thought it was a capitalist ruse to get him to start a war with Germany.Even as Germany was massing troops on the eastern border of Poland and Stalin knew of reconnaissance over-flights by the Luftwaffe he still didn't believe war was coming. Up until almost the last hour before the Germans attacked the last Russian train full of materials and goods as per their trade agreements with the Germans left Russia for Germany. Stalin refused to see what was coming.
37 posted on 01/19/2014 2:35:10 PM PST by jmacusa ("Chasing God out of the classroom didn't usher in The Age of Reason''.)
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