Berlin 1989 – The Launch of Soviet Long-Term Strategy
Book VI (2025)
The author was a former East-West trader. In this volume, he describes the period 1986-1990 in East Germany and 1991-1997 in the Soviet Union/Russia. He gives us his view of what actually led to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and subsequently to the end of Soviet state socialism in Europe.
After the closure of the liaison office of the US company in East Berlin following German reunification, he was transferred to the Soviet Union to open a liaison office in Moscow.
He witnessed the final phase of Perestroika, the coup against Gorbachev, and Yeltsin’s ban of the Communist Party in the Russia in 1991.
He experienced the turmoil and the violence of privatization, the rise of the oligarchs, the Westernization of Russian society as well as the awakening of broad sections of the population.
In his extensive study of sources since the fall of the Berlin Wall, he came across incredible connections to background powers that continue to influence our lives today.
The author underpins his hypothesis with quotes from insider writings and from a roundtable discussion in 2023 with the former President of the German domestic intelligence service (German Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution), H.G. Maaßen, on the role of climate dictatorship and climate protection, something the KGB had been planning for its own purposes.
The result was the Soviet long-term-strategy that feeds the suspicion that the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 – which made globalization possible in the first place – was an intricately planned, deceptive operation by the KGB to later take over the whole of Europe.
The Chinese military strategist Sunzi wrote about this strategy 2500 years ago: Throw down a brick to get jade. Will the Russians, after throwing down the brick called East Germany, finally get the jade, i.e., all of Europe, in the near future?
The Soviet long-term strategy, activated with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, now seems to finally be implemented 35 years later. Will Russia – after its victory in the Ukraine war – become the new hegemon of continental Europe? This would explain the redrawing of the European borders in the attached political map of a Russian blog from 2023.
Follow the author on his research into the unknown corners of history to discover facts that current historiography – still – prefers to hide.