Dr. Zamoyski (b. 1949, New York) is a noted historian and from all accounts a relatively good one. It's a shame, thus, that circuмstances of contemporary publication preclude his being as frank as he should be about the true nature and motives of the enemy, Jєωιѕнness being far and away their most salient characteristic. Had circuмstances played out as the world's Jєωs expected them to—in other words, had the "Little Miracle of the Vistula" not occurred—Lenin's armies would have achieved the Jєωs' grand aim: unification of the new Judaeo-Soviet Union with the Jєωιѕн communist revolutionaries in Germany (Luxemburg, Toller, Liebknecht, Leviné, et al.) and the sovietization of all of Europe east of the Rhine and north of the Danube.
Piłsudski was a man of nearly heroic stature; that much is plain. The great work he accomplished save central Europe from the full wrath of the Jєωs for twenty-five years. Finally, in 1945, Generals Eisenhower, Montgomery, and hαɾɾιs and their subordinates succeeded in handing the Jєωs the prize that Lenin had failed to deliver.