Thus, the Head of the Provisional Government Kerensky decides to take the Romanov family to Tobolsk. Let us draw our attention to one very important detail: when Prince Lvov was the head of the state, no one thought of transferring Nicholas and his family anywhere. As soon as Kerensky became the head of the Provisional Government, an immediate decision about relocating the Tsar's family to some middle of nowhere was taken. But why Tobolsk? Is it really that much safer there? Sokolov has also pointed out the odd logic of the father of Russian democracy, "I do not understand why transferring the Tsar from Tsarskoye Selo anywhere except Tobolsk meant to transfer him all the way through the Russia of workers and peasants, and why transferring him to Tobolsk did not mean this."[15]
I don't know, what grade Sasha Kerensky had in his geography, it's better to ask his schoolmate Vova Ulyanov about it. Why didn't Kerensky realize that the way to Tobolsk lay across not some different, special Russia, but exactly across "the Russia of workers and peasants"?! It just turned out that way, the historians will say later, it just happened.
Let us consider the statesmen to be capable adults. If their actions seem odd to us, it must be because we fail to understand their true goal. Naivety and unawareness of Alexander Kerensky has to do with one thing, the mass grave of the crown-bearing family. Kerensky didn't shoot the children of the Romanovs himself, but he did everything in order for them not to stay alive. Thus, his actions become quite conscious and reasonable for us. The British intelligence purposefully destroys its competitor, the Russian Empire. The monarchical system is one of its characteristics, and it means that the ruling dynasty must be exterminated. The masters make their recommendations, and the marionette Kerensky should put it into effect. This being said, he wants to somehow justify his actions for the casual observers. As long as there is no rational explanation to his actions, Alexander Kerensky has to make it up. Sometimes it turns out well, sometimes the result is pure nonsense. Kerensky can't write the truth and confirm Sokolov's guess, probably, the most terrible one in his whole book, "There was only one reason for transferring the Tsar's family to Tobolsk. It was exactly the only one that remained of all the others indicated by Prince Lvov and Kerensky: a faraway cold Siberia, the land where other people were once exiled to"[16], can he?
We wish to add for ourselves: Siberia is a land of no return!
The facts push us as well as Kerensky to draw an evident conclusion: it's dangerous to keep the Tsar's family near the capital – Finland is near, and Sweden is not so far, either. In the Crimea there is sea, seaports, and the foreign lands are also close by. One never knows when the Romanovs might flee, break free. That's why it was "unthinkable" to transfer the Tsar, who had abdicated, there. "The life at the time was full of "confusions" everywhere, but all the Imperial personages, who lived in the south, managed to escape, as they all were near the borders of the country,"[17] writes investigator Sokolov.
Odd, isn't it? But everything happens the other way around.
The Tsar and his family will be murdered in the "safest," according to Kerensky, place, while the other Romanovs will manage to escape from the most "unsafe" one.
The transfer of the Tsar to his new place of residence is a closely guarded secret. It's such a big secret that even Nicholas himself doesn't know where he is going. Another scorching day in July, the insects hovering in the air… One wants to bathe and not to think about anything bad.
"July 28. Friday. The day was beautiful: we took a wonderful walk. After breakfast, Mr. Benckendorff told us that we would be sent not to the Crimea but to one of the remote principal provincial towns, a journey to which takes three or even four days! But no one knows, where exactly, even the commandant doesn't. And we were so looking forward to staying in Livadia for a longer period of time!"[18] the former Monarch would write in his diary.
"July 31. Monday. The last day of our stay in Tsarskoye Selo… Our departure has been kept such a secret that even the motorcars and the train were booked after the scheduled hour of departure. We were so exhausted! Alexei was sleepy: he went to sleep and then woke up again several times. A false alarm went off several times: we had to put our coats on, go out to the balcony, and then return inside. Then the dawn broke. We had our morning tea, and then finally at 5:00 Ker[ensky] came and said that everyone was ready to go."[19]
Why can't the itinerary be disclosed to Nicholas Romanov himself? Because he is being deceived, and the deception should be exposed already upon their arrival or on the way, when nothing can be done anymore. There was deception everywhere: Siberia instead of the Crimea, a 12 (!) days' journey to Tobolsk instead of a "three to four" days' one to the east. Tobolsk is a backcountry. Taiga. There's nowhere to run, nowhere to escape. In his diary Nicholas Romanov described the day of the departure in great detail. And this despite the fact that the former Tsar had never been a person of many words.
Now, let us recall why it has become absolutely necessary to transfer the Tsar's family from Tsarskoye Selo. The excuse found by Kerensky was quite reasonable: the protection of the crown-bearing family. At the beginning of July, there was a failed Bolshevik riot in Petrograd, that's why the Tsar's family had to be protected and transferred to a safe place far from this "boiling pot." Allegedly, the Petrograd Soviet was continuously attempting to put Nicholas Romanov into prison and to execute him…
For the orchestrators of Russia's downfall a legitimate pretender to the throne remaining alive is a catastrophe. This is a real threat for the whole carefully planned operation. The strong forces of the country can line up behind him, and the country will be saved. That's why none of the real indisputable pretenders to the Russian throne should survive during the revolution.
This is why the liquidation of the Romanovs did not start with the family of the former Emperor. Those who were planning the murder of the members of the Russian ruling dynasty knew the rules of succession to the throne well. Besides the fact that all the main pretenders to the throne were eliminated at the same time, we have to point out another peculiarity of this grim operation.
The Romanovs were being killed in the order in which they could be enthroned.
The chronology was followed rigidly. We must admit that to kill the third or the fourth pretender to the throne does not make any sense if the first and the second ones are still alive. Only from this perspective we can truly understand the massive slaughter of the Romanovs that started in the second half of 1918. Thus, let's remember two main rules of this liquidation: SIMULTANEOUSLY AND IN THE ORDER OF SUCCESSION TO THE THRONE.
Let's ask ourselves, who was №1 pretender to the Russian throne? In order to disorientate and confuse us and not let us see the cast-iron logic that was at the base of the liquidation of the crown-bearing family members, one simple but effective method was used. First, everything was being hushed up and kept secret. When the facts and documents had been published, the tactics were slightly changed in order to cover the truth. Everyone everywhere was being persuaded that there was only one version of what had actually happened. This one version obscured the real depth of the tragedy. A wonderful veil was woven in order to stop people from seeing and understanding what was going on. What do I mean?
Everywhere you can read that in the night of July 17 the whole family of the last Russian Emperor Nicholas II was shot dead in Yekaterinburg. You can also read that the bloodthirsty Bolsheviks have shot dead all the other Romanovs in order to wipe off the Romanov dynasty and the very memory of it. But this is not the case. After Nicholas II had abdicated from the throne on March 2, 1917, himself and on behalf of his son, his brother Michael Alexandrovich Romanov became the emperor. It was him who on March 3, 1917, under the dictation of the Duma delegation transferred the succession of the Russian throne to the discretion of the All-Russian Constituent