$300 MILLION GOLD FOR SVETLANA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00001R000400200007-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 2, 1999
Sequence Number: 
7
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 15, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00001R000400200007-5.pdf116.22 KB
Body: 
STATINTL CPYRGHT .QPYRGHT $300 MILLION GOLD When Svetlana Stalina Alli1 luyeva first sought political` FOR SVETLANA Communist defector in the 50-year history of the Soviet pretended she had accidentally shot herself. He marked regime, in Moscow.:.; ? . her grave with a beautiful white marble monument: '13uf' the-little child Svetlana knew the truth; she was awaken- CIA Agent-supervisor Robert F. Rayle took charge ; I ed from her sleep by the loud quarreling and heard the , .. of her in New Delhi, escorted her froth India to Switzer-. shot that killed her mother. land and hid her away from inquiring reporters. Svetlana always feared her ruthless father despite his Contrary to popular opinion the U.S. did not detour apparent public affection for her. When she grew older: Stalina to Switzerland. It was StaAa who insisted on she learned to really hate him for the murder of her; going to Switzerland before coming to the U.S. The real . mother. She also knew that he was plotting another reason is that sh w t d t i k $300 illi d l e an e o p c up m on o - blood purge of Soviet civilian officials and military,,,' lars in gold deposited in a Berne bankl leaders shortly before his timely death; he was also so planning a pogrom of the Jews that would have made father, old "bloody Joe" Stalin, transferred 300 million Y $ Hitler's massacres look pale in comparison. Stalin told in gold from the Soviet treasury to a secret numbered account in his own name in a bank in Berne, Switzer- seven Jewish physicians whom he claimed had tried to:a land- if he had to flee to the Free World he wanted a poison hug. ,?E; little pocket money. Later, Stalin legally named Svetlana Unfortunately, little of real behind-the-scenes stories"4 the sole benefl i f th $300 illi m ld h h c ar o e t y m on go at e . in her book will ever be published. Censors of thb ";` h d l f a sto en rom the Soviet government and lodged in State Department and the CIA are already busy deleting J: h b k i B I hi th h t e an erne. ( n s you n e abandoned study-.. 1 ... - __ t .. .. and rew iti r ng bank robber.) Svetlana's startling revelations could have afforded'.: ih.TT fl . the Middle Ages, the Soviet Government couldn't. attach the Stalin fund. Despots of previous ages had long made Switzerland a sanctuary for their loot. Stalin-supreme intriguer that he was-realized hind the present two Soviet "front men" Kosygin and that the greedy scoundrels and cutthroats that he had ? Orezhnev; namely, Vladimir Semiohastny, Aleksanda' collected around him, after he had liquidated all his Shelyepin and Anastas Mikoyan. The latter three men old Bolshevik comrades-in-arms of the 1917 Revolu- tion, would quarrel among themselves, and in the strug- gle for power and wealth, his daughter would, be left penniless. Svetlana submitted documentary evidence proving her cultural exchange program. Actually, he is reorganizing true identity and the Swiss bank officials have ruled the Soviet espionage network here. He has been dele- that she has establish a valid claim t& the. Stalin fortune, gated absolute power that- extends even over the Soviet according to an American intelligence source. There is much newspaper ? speculation about the amount. of royalties..Stalin's daughter. .will.receiv.e. from, the publication of her memoirs. The truth- is she couldn't care less! The inner workings of the Kremlin has always been shrouded in mystery, and even the famed British intelligence global network in its former heyday was seldom able to penetrate the walls of the Kremlin. Stalin, a mater clandestine operator, took delight in feeding phoney information to both foreign and domestic spies. If Svetlana would write the truth about some of the r under ancient- Swiss banking laws, dating back to , S ? ? powe propaganda weapon to combat Sanitized - Ap1Pt'F'", 4" asylum 'at the American Embassy in New Delhi the story that r father shot and killed her mother, Nade- zhda Alcluyeva, in a midnight quarrel. Madezhda had bitterly protested against her husband's terrible Blood . Purges of the 1930's and had threatened to leave him if he did not stop his mass executions. Rather than be oviet psychological warfare that is being waged on a ambassadors at the UN and in Washington. He has installed an entourage of new. bodyguards. at. the United:. . Nation he adquarterg that'are? known .to be :professional assassins. Young Mikoyan, is feared by all the Russians. Stalin's daughter also knows the hidden powers be- information that has leaked to the Senate Internal'. Security Subcommittee. Incidentally, Mikoyan's son has-: been on a long extended visit in the U.S. under the things that happedW W dter*ppvovdd#,F R.eIease : CIA-RDP75-00001 R000400200007-5 lin it would provide a monumental contribution of world history. For example, she could positively confirm the