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When The Cold War Came To Los Angeles By Bill Steigerwald

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  • When The Cold War Came To Los Angeles By Bill Steigerwald

    WHEN THE COLD WAR CAME TO LOS ANGELES BY BILL STEIGERWALD

    Townhall.com
    11/26/2007

    No military battles in the Cold War took place on American soil. But
    30 years ago, the clashing civilizations of capitalism and communism
    slugged it out for 18 days in -- of all places -- downtown Los Angeles.

    The bloodless 1977 skirmish started when the Soviet Union sent 200
    bureaucrats and KGB agents to the Los Angeles Convention Center
    to put on a gigantic communist propaganda show called the "Soviet
    National Exhibition." The Soviets hoped to impress Americans with
    the glorious scientific, industrial and cultural achievements of 60
    years of Communist Party rule.

    But the rare exhibit, which ran Nov. 12-29 and attracted 310,000
    visitors and hundreds of anti-communist protestors from the U.S.S.R.'s
    many captive republics, hurt the Soviet image more than it helped.

    No doubt many children, movie actors and devout socialists were
    impressed by the government flea market of shiny Soyuz spacecraft,
    Armenian micro-art and 100-pound reel-to-reel tape decks. They'd have
    agreed with the Los Angeles Times, which called the exhibit "splashy"
    and "seductive."

    But to any red-blooded capitalist who looked at the exhibit with a
    critical or malicious eye -- as I did during six visits -- words like
    "boring," "clueless" and "unintentionally hilarious" came to mind.

    The show's 10 ceiling-to-floor propaganda banners and huge
    silk-screened panels celebrating great moments in Communist history
    were dumb enough. But what fool at the Ministry of Marketing thought
    ordinary Americans -- in hip, happening L.A.! -- were going to be
    interested in viewing large-scale models of things like hydroelectric
    dams and BN-600 fast-neutron reactors?

    The official Soviet pamphlets and brochures were pitiful. Printed
    on cheap paper and dully written, they were rife with government
    statistics about electric power capacities, rolled ferrous-metal
    output and 10-year-plan goals.

    And Orwell would have loved the print up of a translation of a
    speech Leonid Brezhnev gave to mark the 60th anniversary of the
    "Great October Socialist Revolution."

    Delivering perhaps the Cold War's greatest series of 180-degree-wrong
    predictions, Brezhnev droned on for 32 pages about the Communist
    Party's heroic past, capitalism's imminent demise and the inevitable
    triumph of socialism. His ringing final line -- "Onward, to the victory
    of communism!" -- was followed by this parenthetical and unintended
    punch line:

    "L.I. Brezhnev's report was heard with great attention and punctuated
    with prolonged stormy applause."

    The Soviets also made another marketing mistake by scattering
    guest books around for Joe Six-pack to scribble such comments as
    "This is almost as impressive as the Berlin Wall," "No toaster,
    no microwave?" and "P.S.: Lenin needs a hair transplant."

    Few of these quipsters probably realized that the Soviets' hapless PR
    road show -- which naturally was slobbered over by L.A.'s media and
    civic booster elites -- was a perfect microcosm of the Soviet Union.

    Totally controlled by government, saturated with propaganda and devoid
    of consumer goods, the exhibit was manned by overworked employees who
    during off-hours were imprisoned in their motel and forbidden to go
    anywhere alone.

    In 1977, many experts who should have known better were saying the
    Soviets were winning the Cold War. But if those "experts" had looked
    behind the smoke and shiny Soyuzes at the Soviet exhibition, they
    would have seen many hints that, at age 60, the fearsome Evil Empire
    was a clumsy, senile and sickly superpower.

    Mr. Steigerwald is a columnist at the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
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