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=== Denial by Zinoviev === The Comintern and the Soviet government strongly and consistently denied the authenticity of the document.<ref name="Bennett pg. 2">Bennett, "'A Most Extraordinary and Mysterious Business,'" p. 2.</ref> Grigory Zinoviev issued a denial on 27 October 1924 (two days before the election), which was finally published in English in the December 1924 issue of ''[[The Communist Review]]'', the monthly theoretical magazine of the CPGB, well after the MacDonald government had already fallen. Zinoviev declared: {{quote|The letter of 15th September, 1924, which has been attributed to me, is from the first to the last word, a forgery. Let us take the heading. The organisation of which I am the president never describes itself officially as the "Executive Committee of the Third Communist International"; the official name is "Executive Committee of the Communist International." Equally incorrect is the signature, "The Chairman of the Presidium." The forger has shown himself to be very stupid in his choice of the date. On the 15th of September, 1924, I was taking a holiday in Kislovodsk, and, therefore, could not have signed any official letter. [...] It is not difficult to understand why some of the leaders of the Liberal-Conservative bloc had recourse to such methods as the forging of documents. Apparently they seriously thought they would be able, at the last minute before the elections, to create confusion in the ranks of those electors who sincerely sympathise with the Treaty between England and the Soviet Union. It is much more difficult to understand why the English Foreign Office, which is still under the control of the Prime Minister, MacDonald, did not refrain from making use of such a white-guardist forgery.<ref>Grigorii Zinoviev, "Declaration of Zinoviev on the Alleged 'Red Plot'", ''The Communist Review'', vol. 5, no. 8 (Dec. 1924), pp. 365β366.</ref>}}
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