>>520207006
The communist revolution's leaders were 80~90% jewish, Stalin being one of the few gentiles (he wasn't even next in line to be leader after Lenin). Trotsky was supposed to take over after Lenin's death, but when Stalin showed interest in becoming the next leader he made a coalition of jewish leaders to push back against him. This ended up backfiring because the average gentile revolution and most Russians in general already disliked Trotsky and were rather anti-semitic after seeing his behavior during the revolution. Trotsky kept all the jewish leaders in the rear and had all the gentils leaders sent to the most risky parts of the front. After seeing Trotsky's coalition of jews form, most people took Stalin's side. Despite this, the USSR still passed anti-semitism laws as most of the leadership under Stalin was still jewish. But over time some of these jewish started to be replaced as they were incompetent which caused some divide in the CPUSA as half of their members began to see Stalin's actions as a sign of anti-semitism. They were pivotal in the USSR's spy network, so in order to assuage their fears Stalin formed the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee. Soon the gentiles in the USSR noticed that the jews had accrued an uneven amount of power with too much special treatment given to them. They had their own autonomous zone, they made up a majority of the ruling class, they were allowed to continue practicing their religion while everyone else was forced to become and atheist (jewish secret police went around burning down churches and slaughtering priests), and finally the jews led the massacre of Christians in the ukraine. This led to pressure for Stalin to remove these special privelages from the jews, disband many of their autonomous organizations within the USSR, and remove the jewish leaders which were causing too much trouble. The jews saw this and did what they always do whenever their hegemony is threatened: they cried anti-semitism