An attempt on Stalin’s Pakistani descendant’s life
Monday, October 8th, 2007
As most suspect, aside from his two “official” wives, Stalin had a large number of mistresses, and despite his thoroughness and safety measures obviously had many bastards. Obviously, the existence of both mistresses and iligetimate children was hidden from the Soviet public, and even many of those children never knew who their father was. A former NKVD officer, Felix reveals:
“Even though he never personaly met those children, Josef tried to provide for them in their obviously uneasy early life, and this helped them rise to prominence - many of them are now quite famous. The most famous, of course, is the Pakistani president Musharraf, whose resemblance to Stalin is quite striking.”
Yes, it very surprising, but not that much if you devote more thought to the matter: an easy hint is the similarity of the mustache :
Pervez Musharraf:
Josef Stalin: 
Apart from this, Pervez Musharaff’s date of birth is consistent with important information that few know: during the first year of the Great Patriotic War - between 1941 and 1942, Stalin made several visits to the to the city of Tomsk in the east. While the official reason behind those visits was the inspection of the Trans-Siberean railway, Felix reveals that Stalin probably had other considerations:
“Stalin was enamored with one Indian woman of the Muslim faith, who worked as a secretary in the Kremlin - they first met in May 1941, just before the war. In November of the same year, she was relocated with most other workers first to Kuybishev, where he temporary government was supposed to be situated, but in the autumn of 1942 even this city seemed unsafe to the General Secretary - and she was relocated to Tomsk. Then Stalin visited her at least four times, until in February of 1943 it became known to him that she is pregnant. The visits stopped at once.”
Stalin’s former mistress stayed in the USSR, and her further fate is unknown. A boy was born on the 10 of August 1943 , and the NKVD was tasked with finding a foster family for him. It is unclear why they chose to place the boy in Delhi in India, but it is obvious that he was aided by “invisible hands”: wherever he went, opportunities for advancement miraculously appeared. In the heavily corrupt Pakistani army, where Stalin’s offspring chose to build his career, Soviet spies did not have trouble to advance a particular person. This aid is evident even after his father’s death, and even later, as the USSR collapsed and Russia’s secret services had more to do then to take care of the illegitimate children of former leaders. Pervez Musharaf became a Lieutenant General in 1995, and a Chief of Staff in 1998.
Since Stalin’s own death is not confirmed as a fact, it seems rather likely that the leader who publicly died, but continued to pull the strings from a secret location would attempt to promote a descendant to the position of a head of a nuclear-armed state, and that exactly what happened: on the 12 of October 1999, Musharaff performed a coup, with help from ex-Soviet agents. But then something went wrong - the new leader of Pakistan adopted an obvious pro-western policy. The war on terror was bringing him much closer to the USA then Stalin would have liked, and therefore those who once aided Musharaff now turned against him- a continuous procession of attempted assassinations proves that now the Soviet agents hunt who they once protected.
Today, the Pakistani presidential escort chopper crashed - as news sources report, from a technical problem:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/10/08/pakistan.chopper/index.html?iref=newssearch
Unless presented with information unknown to the public, this incident seems not suspicious at all - helicopters are known to have technical problems quite frequently. But we know that is was not a mechanical break down that led to the tragedy - it was another attempt of what remained of the Soviet Union to destroy a potential puppet that sided
with the Capitalist West. Once again, they failed - and Musharraf was not even harmed (he was not on board of the helicopter). But as Stalin’s lust for vengeance is unfulfilled, we will probably see similar “accidents” in the future.






