The East Came West | PDF Download

Peter J. Huxley-Blythe

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The Cossacks, and more than a million Russians, fought against Communism during World War II, and they still hate Communism today. But they are not pro-American nor are they pro-West. While researching material for the writing of The East Came West, Mr. Peter J. Huxley-Blythe discovered why these people do not trust the United States or Great Britain. When the war in Europe ended, millions of Russian men, women, and children sought sanctuary in the West. They met terror face to face. They were physically beaten into submission and then shipped like cattle back to the Soviet Union to face Stalin’s executioners, or to serve long sentences at hard labor in the death camps of Siberia. The author claims that this brutal appeasement policy was contrary to recognized international law, and was initiated and carried out by the Supreme Allied Commander, General Dwight D. Eisenhower. From survivors, Mr. Huxley-Blythe obtained the details of the Cossacks’ fight for freedom from 1941 until 1945, and from them, he learned the method used by the British to betray them. Former members of the “Russian Liberation Army” and refugees told him of the treatment they had received from U.S. troops who forced them back to the merciless Soviet leaders using rifles and bayonets.

This book is a must-read for the underground historian.  This complimentary download is in PDF format.

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Description

 

Peter Huxley-Blythe was a major proponent of the reparation of the Cossacks, a subject that he started to research in the 1950s.[1] Huxley-Blythe first came to widespread notice with his 1955 book Betrayal: The Story of Russian Anti-Communism where he argued that the West was losing the Cold War and claimed that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was actually supporting Communist groups.

Pedro del Valle in a book review called Betrayal an “excellent work”, being deeply impressed with Huxley-Blythe’s thesis that the CIA was supporting Communist groups instead of anti-Communist groups.[10] Task Force combined its August and September editions of 1956 in order to reprint Betrayal, calling it “one of the most important articles it has ever been a privilege to publish”.[10]

In 1958, Huxley-Blythe demanded in a public letter to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan that Britain pay reparations to the survivors of the Cossack reparation, a request that was refused.[1] Afterward, Huxley-Blythe drew up a petition which he submitted to Queen Elizabeth II criticizing Macmillan and demanding that Britain pay compensation to the Cossacks.[17]

In April–May 1961, he covered the trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem for the American Mercury magazine. His coverage was turned into the 2011 book The Eichmann Trial: An Incredible Spectacle by a Protestant fundamentalist minister from Tulsa, Gerald S. Pope, who served as an editor of the American Mercury.

In 1964, Huxle-Blythe turned his pamphlet Betrayal into the book The East Came West, where he accused General Eisenhower and various British leaders such as Winston Churchill of being war criminals by forcibly repatriating Soviet citizens after World War Two.[1] He praised what he called “Cossacks’ fight for freedom from 1941 until 1945 and from them he learned the method used by the British to betray them. Former members of the Russian Liberation Army and refugees told him of the treatment they had received from U.S. troops who forced them back to the merciless Soviet leaders using rifles and bayonets.”[21] Huxley-Blythe was the first writer in English on the subject, and through his writings on the subject were “highly partisan”, he sparked interest in the matter.[1] In his best-selling 1977 book Victims of Yalta, Count Nikolai Tolstoy called Huxley-Blythe “my friend” and praised him for his “readable outline of the whole story” in The East Came West.[22]

A work of more than passing interest and relevance to any serious student and aficionado of World War 2 history, Castle Hill Publishers is pleased to offer this complimentary download in PDF form to our readers.

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*This description is comprised of excerpts from a Wikipedia article. While pertinent to this subject, the reader should note that Wikipedia is infamous for its leftwing bias, and should exercise their due diligence.