Enligt Martin McCauley "The Cold War" s.48:
During an official visit, the Austrian chancellor, Julius Raab, handed a gift to Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet party leader. It was an original letter by Karl Marx providing information about revolutionary exiles in London, Paris and Switzerland. He recieved the equivalent of $25 for each missive. In other words Marx was a paid agent of the Austrian secret service but there in no information how Khrushchev reacted to this information.
Enligt Richard Wurmbrand "Marx and Satan" s.20:
The German newspaper Reichsruf (January 9, 1960) published the fact that the Austrian chancellor Julius Raab donated to Nikita Khrushchev, then director of Soviet Russia, an original letter of Karl Marx. Khrushchev did not enjoy it, because it was proof that Marx had been a paid informer of the Austrian police, spying on revolutionaries. The letter had been found accidentally in a secret archive. It indicated that Marx, as an informer, reported on his comrades during his exile in London. He received $25 for each bit of information he turned up. His notes were about the revolutionary exiles in London, Paris, and Switzerland. One of those against whom he informed was Ruge, who considered himself an intimate friend of Marx. Cordial letters between the two still exist.
Finns det mer information om detta brev och vad det innehöll?
During an official visit, the Austrian chancellor, Julius Raab, handed a gift to Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet party leader. It was an original letter by Karl Marx providing information about revolutionary exiles in London, Paris and Switzerland. He recieved the equivalent of $25 for each missive. In other words Marx was a paid agent of the Austrian secret service but there in no information how Khrushchev reacted to this information.
Enligt Richard Wurmbrand "Marx and Satan" s.20:
The German newspaper Reichsruf (January 9, 1960) published the fact that the Austrian chancellor Julius Raab donated to Nikita Khrushchev, then director of Soviet Russia, an original letter of Karl Marx. Khrushchev did not enjoy it, because it was proof that Marx had been a paid informer of the Austrian police, spying on revolutionaries. The letter had been found accidentally in a secret archive. It indicated that Marx, as an informer, reported on his comrades during his exile in London. He received $25 for each bit of information he turned up. His notes were about the revolutionary exiles in London, Paris, and Switzerland. One of those against whom he informed was Ruge, who considered himself an intimate friend of Marx. Cordial letters between the two still exist.
Finns det mer information om detta brev och vad det innehöll?