
This less-known episode concerns Roosevelt's draft encounter with Stalin, which meant eliminating Churchill from the game and thus ignoring an Anglo-Saxon ally for the benefit of Russia.
The American President, on May 5, 1943, sent a letter to Stalin, offering him a private conversation on an island in the Bering Strait, between Siberia and Alaska. And he clarified: “I will only take Harry Hopkins (president's advisor), translator and stenographer with me. I will be glad if you besides reduce the number of accompanying persons, adding that it would be hard not to invitation the English Prime Minister in the event of a gathering to Iceland, for example. Unheard of, the president of the United States (dememocracy champion) preferred to deal with the communist power, aside from Churchill? Did Roosevelt want to talk to a tyrant of Russia about military matters (a large American aid to the Red Army was known here) or discuss the world's imagination after the war ended? We do not know due to the fact that the gathering did not happen due to the fact that Stalin did not accept the invitation, he simply did not like to fly a plane, fearing the assassination. Roosevelt so had to accept it, and the thought of specified a gathering went to the lamest. The American president did not like Churchill, whom he believed E.Black thought to be...an arch-imperialist, and Stalin as...a man of good will (?), even though Stalin's crimes (e.g. NKVD operations in the 1930s) were widely known, as well as his ferocious function in the Ribbentrop-Molotov system, or in the civilian war in Spain, where russian Ambassador Rosenberg was at the meetings of the Republican Government in Madrid discussing military supplies for communists. The effort to export the revolution from Russia to the Pyrenees peninsula fortunately after 3 years of struggles ended in failure. The conspiracy of respective generals – Spanish patriots – effectively blocked the russian diversion, and present the world's left avenges itself on the shadow of General Franco, who was the last to enter the conspiracy. Despite specified a political dossier, however, Roosevelt had Stalin's sympathy, which may be surprising, but animosity towards the English and Churchill besides weighed on this, due to the fact that the Dutch genes of the president of the United States possibly made him remember the wars of the Netherlands with England in the 17th and 18th centuries (1652-1784)? It was a long conflict, like another 100-year war... erstwhile Churchill found out about the plans for this meeting, he commented in the harsh words: “Meeting the russian leaders and the president of the United States with the omission of the British Empire would be a serious and depressing event, as well as a amazing and alarming event.” Indeed, but fortunately it did not happen, Stalin lost the chance to argue with his allies. Later it will be even more clear: “Roosevelt seemed to have a gentleman sitting in the Kremlin, and he was just a robber from the Caucasus”!
The Persians among their beliefs have specified that children born on December 21 (the longest night of the year) consider evil children. And on December 21, 1879 Joseph Jugaszvili was born, the future Stalin. By chance this belief fits perfectly with Stalin's nightmare figure, who tried to storm Warsaw in 1920. At the time he suffered defeat, the Polish operation NKVD in the 1930s was his revenge, besides Katyn crime. Unfortunately, thanks to Roosevelt's idiotic fascination, Stalin managed to capture the Lviv and many another Polish cities in the post-Jaltan order, and then a number of east European countries, thanks to which he created a russian empire, not existing before the war. He was instrumental in this, in the passive apathy of Churchill, “a companion” Roosevelt so disliked English imperialism! The planet later paid for it with cold war and another conflicts. And present Europe is struggling with Stalin's post-imperial ambitions. And must build an anti-drone wall from Copenhagen to Kiev, due to the fact that Russian drones fly from the Baltic side, most likely besides Kaliningrad, not to mention Belarus.
The Russian rulers are lucky, aren't they? And even now, Stalin's grandson was on his way to Alaska, possibly not knowing that Russian children were singing a song about the rebound sold by Tsar Alaska. Stalin's grandson besides has an extended evidence of accomplishments, not much appreciated in democracy, but president Trump has turned a blind eye to it due to the fact that he hopes for a peaceful Nobel. Unfortunately, imperial ambitions do not diminish, on the contrary, even after immense losses at the ends. Joseph Nye or General Petreus, however, believe that these are ambitions without cover. And that concludes the memory of a large politician gathering with a large despot on the island in the Bering Strait.
Marek Baterovich








