‘Green little men’ could use KGB’s caches to seize the territories of East European countries. ‘Green little men’, which, according to some well-known Russian politicians, will arrive in Baltic countires and Eastern Europe to seize administrative buildings and to hold ‘referendums’ using the Soviet army caches created by the agency during the ‘cold war’. This was reported today by the ukrainian news agency Ridnyi Krai (Motherland).
Recently a number of Russian politicians, including GosDuma vice-speaker Vladimir Jirinovskiy, have openly stated that the Kremlin has plans to take over Baltics, Poland and other regions of Eastern Europe.
Apparently the Russians will again use their XXI century know-how– the method of war when unidentifiable Russian speaking armed forces will invade a country yet they will deny any affiliation to the Russian army.
They will hold a referendum, the results of which will be immediately hidden from the public and in a week’s time they will announce the territory to be joining the Russian Federation.
Given the fact that military crossing of the Eastern European border could prove rather difficult, Moscow may activate ‘the Plan B’ using the army caches full of weapons created in the last decades of XX century by soviet agents operating in West and East European countries.
The information about these caches have become public lately following the publication of Mitrohin’s archives in Cambridge last summer.
According to those documents, captured by Mitrohin, who escaped to the UK, the weapons stored in those caches are in the quantities sufficient enough to resist large police forces and even an army.
Given the tough Russian media propaganda in Baltics targeted at russian-speaking population of the region, there may well be found some people willing to fight for ‘one and indivisible’ Russia.
How soon some camouflaged Russian speaking people will appear in Riga, Vilnus, Carlovy Vary and Baden-Baden? It depends on the international talks on Ukraine and the progress of the current political events.
photo by fmbrussel.be, i.dailymail.co.uk