| |
| | The KPD and the Solidarity of the Illegals |
 | | This position, which the KPD took from the signing of the German-Russian Pact until the appearance of Ulbricht's new article, destroyed anything the KPD had in common with the independent German workers' movement. |
 | | And the KPD hopes, not for the social revolution against Hitler, but the `revolution from above', in which Hitler, together with a part of his apparatus, based on the `National Socialist workers', `expose', using the methods of the Moscow Trials, the elements who are unreliable in foreign policy, both within and without the apparatus. |
 | | The KPD leadership draws the last and most extreme conclusions from its position: having destroyed any link of common politics with the opponents of Hitler's war policy, it now destroys also, both publicly and in every way, the link of solidarity. |
| www.revolutionary-history.co.uk /backiss/Vol3/No4/kpdsol.html (2519 words) |
|