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American Friends Service Committee — Part 7
Page 54
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oe er ere er emer |
ce Re ng eC +
THE TECHNIQUES OF SOVIET PROPAGANDA 21
munity (EDC),” “for cessation of nuclear testing,” and “against
German rearmament,” all concealed behind a screen of political
neutrality. Among a thousand others, the “day of solidarity with
the people of Cameroon,” organized in 1959 in the Palace of Culture
in Moscow, might be mentioned.
In organizing major campaigns the ep aratus eye its all. Fors
“Universal Peoples’ Congress,”’ a “World Youth Rally,” or an “Inter-
national Writers’ Meeting,” it pays travel and hotel expenses for
numerous pundits and delegates, arranges radio and television cover-
age, hires ands and troupes of entertainers, and organizes elaborate
parades.
A classic and well-remembered example of a “big affair” was the
campaign for the ‘Stockholm Appeal,’ conducted by the para-Com-
munist ‘Fighters for Peace Association.” By the expenditure of
tens of millions of dollars for propaganda, 50 million signatures were
obtained in the free world, many of them affixed in good faith.
+
The fronts and committees swell to a veritable flood when 4 par-
ticularly pressing threat appears in Moscow’s path. During the
French parliamentary debates on EDC, and the subsequent Paris
agreements between the Western Allies and Germany, the flood be-
came a deluge. Crypto-Communist committees sprang up in facto-
ries, hospitals, and laboratories under the widest variety of titles, from
the most explicit, as “against German rearmament”’ to the extremely
euphemistic, as “for the independence of French culture.” Through-
out the debate in Parliament and the Senate, first on EDC and then
on the Paris agreements, representatives and senators were daily
deluged by hundreds of communications from these committees
containing appeals, warnings, and even threats of reprisals on the
great day of the revolution. Some warned the peoples’ representatives
that approval of EDC would result in their pictures being exposed to
public obloquy in every wall in France, Others threatened boycotts
of the representatives’ private businesses.
It has been estimated that there were over 15 million such letters.
Morning, noon, and night, delegations came knocking on the docrs to
deliver petitions to Mombers of Parhament, to indoctrinate and in-
timidate them. Their telephones rang incessantly. This staging—
the Illiad of Communist polwar—unique in the annals of political con-
spiracy and a classic of prote-Soviet propaganda, was intended to
proasta tha tminraccinn amang ambharnrs 1 avhamant that tha nrenonant
VWIOG vuy ALLL PAGO BiVuUs ATACLIVELS VW 2 GLLUGLGY UU UO Po oy
of a European Army had generated a profound indignation throughout
every strata of French society. Actually, an old | theater ruse was
emulated whereby the very same “extras” reappeared a dozen times
in different costumes to create the impression of a crowd. But the
staging succeeded. Its terrible pressure resulted in more than one
negative vote and EDC was rejected—a turning point in postwar
history, and a major Soviet victory achieved almost entirely by
propaganda.
POPULAR FRONTS
While technically an occasional front, the popular front warrants a
somewhat more extensive discussion. This has been one of the most
effective techniques used by the Soviets in expanding their type of
imperialism. Taking advantage of the fact that many uninformed
democrats regard the Communist Party as ‘‘to the left,” the party
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