RSS/XML | Add to My Yahoo!| Essays | Main Page | Disclaimer | |

March 30, 2005

Soviets tried to kill the Pope

by @ 8:52 pm. Filed under Religious news

Agence France Presse is reporting that the assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II in 1981 - which almost did kill him - was ordered by the old Soviet KGB, the “Committee for State Security.” Comments Civil Commotion,

This has been rumored for a long while, of course, and it is totally believable. It was John Paul II who went to Poland during Lech Walesa?s Solidarity uprising, defying the old Soviet Union to stop him, and kicked-off the disintegration of the USSR.
In fact, the Vatican and President Ronald Reagan’s administration closely coordinated subverting the Communist government of Poland, the Pope’s home country. That came after the assassination attempt, of course, since Reagan entered office only in 1981.

However, the man who took the name John Paul II when elected Pope had been a staunch anti-communist resister in Poland for years. In the early 1970s,

… Karol Cardinal Wojtyla emerged as a strong advocate of human rights and promoted an independent intellectual life. In 1974 Communist Party ideologue Andrej Werbian called the Cardinal “the only real ideological threat in Poland.”
Wojtyla is, of course, John Paul’s Polish name. Wojtyla was elected Pope in 1978, just before the Solidarity workers’ movement was gaining its steam, led by electrician Lech Walesa.
In August 1980 [Walesa] led the Gdansk shipyard strike which gave rise to a wave of strikes over much of the country with Walesa seen as the leader. The primary demands were for workers’ rights. The authorities were forced to capitulate and to negotiate with Walesa the Gdansk Agreement of August 31, 1980, which gave the workers the right to strike and to organise their own independent union.

If any one event had helped to create the psychological climate in which Solidarity trades union emerged, it was the visit of Pope John Paul II to his homeland in June 1979. From the moment that the Pope knelt in Warsaw’s airport to kiss the ground, he was cheered wildly by millions of Poles. John Paul never criticized the Communist regime directly, nor did he have to: his meaning was plain enough. “The exclusion of Christ from the history of man is an act against man,” he told an enormous outdoor congregation in Warsaw. With that hardly veiled allusion to Communism, a deafening roar of approval filled the great city square. Says a Polish bishop of that day: “The Polish people broke the barrier of fear. They were hurling a challenge at their Marxist rulers.”

During the August 1980 defiance of the communist authorities, the Lenin shipyard functioned as the emotional center of an extraordinary national movement. Festooned with flowers, white and red Polish flags and portraits of Pope John Paul II, the plant’s iron gates came to symbolize that heady mixture of hope, faith and patriotism that sustained the workers through their vigil. …

Then in January 1981 Pope John Paul received Walesa at the Vatican and met with him privately for thirty minutes, an unusual honor for a layman of the Church.

In May of that year, Mehmet Ali Agca, an escaped Turkish killer, shot John Paul twice while the Pope was riding in his “Popemobile,” a convertible he used to wave to crowds while standing as the vehicle moved along. According to AFP’s wire report,

New documents found in the files of the former East German intelligence services confirm the 1981 assassination attempt against Pope John Paul II was ordered by the Soviet KGB and assigned to Bulgarian agents, an Italian daily said on Wednesday. …

Bulgaria then handed the execution of the plot to Turkish extremists, including Mehmet Ali Agca, who pulled the trigger.

It’s doubtful that Agca ever knew who actually was paying him. In December 1983, John Paul met with Agca in prison.
“We talked for a long time. Ali Agca is, as everyone says, a professional assassin. Which means that the assassination was not his initiative, that someone else thought of it, someone else gave the order,” he wrote.

“During the entire conversation, it was clear that Ali Agca was burdened by the question: How did it happen that the assassination was unsuccessful? He did everything that was necessary, he took care of the tiniest detail of his plan. But still the victim avoided death. How could this have happened?”

Agca had shot John Paul in the arm and the abdomen. John Paul himself said that divine intervention had steered the latter bullet away from his vital organs. He has never said whom he thought was behind the plot to kill him, but did attribute the attempt to convulsions of “the 20th century ideologies of force.” In 2002, however, John Paul said that he did not believe the Bulgarians were connected to his assailant.

4 Responses to “Soviets tried to kill the Pope”

  1. One Hand Clapping » Blog Archive » Welcome to my WordPress powered site Says:

    […] logger posts here to fill up space. They are, “Linkagery” for today and “Soviets tried to kill the Pope.” Here is a quick index to posts of recent days: BlogNashville is coming […]

  2. Joseph D'Hippolito Says:

    Donald, the key is the Bulgarian connection. During the Cold War, Bulgaria was the USSR’s closest ally in Eastern Europe — not just politically but also ethnically. If the Pope said in 2002 that he didn’t believe the Bulgarans were involved, then perhaps his geopolitical acumen was not as good as people believe it to be.

    Then again, his opposition to the 1991 and 2003 wars against Iraq proved that.

  3. talon karrde Says:

    And I thought Tom Clancy dealt in fiction… (”Red Rabbit”, anyone?).

    Admittedly, it is not surprising news. I did wonder when news agencies would finish combing through the old file archives of the KGB and the Stasi.

  4. One Hand Clapping » Blog Archive » Pope John Paul seriously ill Says:

    […] er it is called for, not just when death looms. In fact, John Paul received this sacrament when he was shot by would-be assassin Mehmet Ali Agca in Rome in 1981, although John Paul later said that he ne […]

Leave a Reply

By Donald Sensing
News and commentary concentrating on foreign affairs, military policy and religious matters. My bio is here.

Why Blogads here work! and see here.

Email is considered publishable unless you request otherwise. Sorry, I cannot promise a reply.

Wordpress archives, begin April 2005:

April 2005
S M T W T F S
« Mar    
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Archives for Jan 03-Mar 05.

Blogroll:

News sites:

Washington Times
Washington Post
National Review
Drudge Report
National Post
Real Clear Politics
NewsMax
New York Times
UK Times
Economist
Jerusalem Post
The Nation (Pakistan)
World Press Review
Fox News
CNN
BBC
USA Today
Omaha World Herald
News Is Free
Rocky Mtn. News
Gettys Images
Iraq Today

Opinions, Current Events and References

Opinion Journal
BlogRunner 100
The Strategy Page
Reason Online
City Journal
Lewis & Clark links
Front Page
Independent Women's Forum
Jewish World Review
Foreign Policy in Focus
Policy Review
The New Criterion
Joyner Library Links
National Interest
Middle East Media Research Institute
Institute for the Secularisation of Islamic Society
Sojourners Online
Brethren Revival
Saddam Hussein's Iraq
National Coalition Against Legalized Gambling
Telford Work
Unbound Bible
Good News Movement
UM Accountability
Institute for Religion and Democracy

Useful Sites:

Internet Movie Database
Mapquest
JunkScience.com
Webster Dictionary
U.S. Army Site
Defense Dept.
Iraq Net
WMD Handbook Urban Legends (Snopes)
Dan Miller
Auto Consumer Guide
CIA World Fact Book
Blogging tools
Map library
Online Speech Bank
Technorati
(My Tech. page)

Shooting Sports

Trapshooting Assn.
Nat. Skeet Shooting Assn.
Trapshooters.com
Clay-Shooting.com
NRA
Baikal
Beretta USA
Browning
Benelli USA
Charles Daly
Colt
CZ USA
EAA
H-K; FABARM USA
Fausti Stefano
Franchi USA
Kimber America
Remington
Rizzini
Ruger
Tristar
Verona
Weatherby
Winchester

Proud member of the Rocky Top Brigade!

Tenn. flag
Blogwise
Essays and columns by others of enduring interest

Coffee Links

How to roast your own coffee!

I buy from CoffeeMaria
Gillies Coffees
Bald Mountain
Front Porch Coffee
Burman Coffee
Café Maison
CCM Coffee
Coffee Bean Corral
Coffee Bean Co.
Coffee for Less
Coffee Links Page
Coffee Storehouse
Coffee, Tea, Etc.
Batian Peak
Coffee & Kitchen
Coffee Project
HealthCrafts Coffee
MollyCoffee
NM Piñon Coffee
Coffee is My Drug of Choice
Pony Espresso
Pro Coffee
7 Bridges Co-op
Story House
Sweet Maria’s
Two Loons
Kona Mountain
The Coffee Web
Zach and Dani’s

Roast profile chart

Links for me

Verizon text msg
HTML special codes
Comcast
RhymeZone
Bin Laden's Strategic Plan
Online Radio
The Big Picture
SSM essay index
See my Essays Index!
Web Enalysis
UMC Homosexuality Links Page

categories:

Other:

Internal links:

Sitemeter

Click here to place an ad on my site!

Great Amazon deals!


Google Search
WWW
This site
Old Blogspot OHC

My grandfather wrote this book:

DVD bestsellers

Military History and Politics

Religion bestsellers

Inbound links

Who Links Here

17 queries. 0.357 seconds