10 The Cominform and the Revisionist Degeneration of the CPSU (B)

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The Soviet revisionist Suslov openly propagated at the 3rd session of the Cominform (1949) the renunciation of the transition to communism through the dictatorship of the proletariat. There was no more talk of socialism. (Enver Hoxha repeatedly exposed Suslov as a revisionist Soviet leader in his works).

The representatives of the Soviet Union in the Cominform fought Yugoslav revisionism not in the interests of the world proletariat, not in the interests of world proletarian revolution, not in the interests of creating the Stalinist world camp, but in their own interests. Their aim was to prevent the spread of revisionist kingdoms outside the Soviet Union in order to become a social-imperialist world power. The revisionists of the other countries were to be taken under the Soviet revisionist wing by means of pressure. The Soviet revisionists aimed to do this in particular by excluding Tito, using the cover of "Stalinism". The murder of Shdanov as head of the Cominform was carried out on behalf of the modern Soviet revisionists. It was then such modern revisionists as Suslov who took the helm in the Kominform. We Stalinist-Hoxhaists do not regard these events in the Kominform as a coincidence.

A fierce struggle was waged in the Soviet Union against the rise of modern revisionism. Thus, in 1948, the once renowned economist Varga was convicted of revisionism on the fundamental questions of economic construction in the People's Democratic countries.

But there were also fierce battles between the Leningrad revisionist faction and the Moscow revisionist faction, in the course of which, for example, Zhdanov and Vosnessensky, who had worked closely with Zhdanov, were killed. Vosnessensky wanted to make Leningrad the capital of the Soviet Union and had, for example, held revisionist views on economic planning in the USSR.

In May 1955, Nikita Khrushchev held official talks in Belgrade to seal the reconciliation between the CPSU and the CPY. (see Enver Hoxha):

Khrushchev's kneeling before Tito

http://ciml.250x.com/archive/hoxha/english/enver_7_april_1964.html

13 September 1963

Enver Hoxha on Soviet Revisionism

http://ciml.250x.com/archive/pla/english/soviet-revisionism.html

(Collection of Enver Hoxha's writings and documents from the PLA)

(Collection of Enver Hoxha's writings and documents from the PLA)

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THE KHRUSHCHEVITES

http://ciml.250x.com/archive/hoxha/english/enver_hoxha_the_khrushchevites.pdf

Albania challenges Khrushchev revisionism

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Albania challenges Khrushchev revisionism

http://www.enverhoxha.ru/Archive_of_books/English/enver_hoxha_albania_challenges_khrushchev_revisionism.pdf

Enver Hoxha, Volume 19

The Soviet revisionist leaders swore stone and stone on their "loyalty" to proletarian internationalism, pledged their "help" to the revolutionary movements for the newly liberated countries and promised their "support" to the world communist movement after the war.

They use these oaths to disguise their expansionist and aggressive aims and to deceive the people. However, all their practical activity shows that the Soviet revisionists have long since jettisoned this great principle of the working class, just as they betrayed Marxist-Leninist doctrine.

In the time of the Cominform - until the death of comrade Stalin - the Soviet Union was the centre and base of the world revolution.

Today, the only revolutionary and internationalist is the one who fights not only Titoism but also the influence of the Soviet revisionists and the revisionist leaders of all other countries in the Cominform and exposes their treachery, which these traitors kept hidden there behind vows to Stalin.

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