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- <text id=90TT0434>
- <link 93HT1366>
- <link 93HT0061>
- <link 91TT1964>
- <title>
- Feb. 19, 1990: Headed For The Dustheap
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 19, 1990 Starting Over
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 36
- Headed for the Dustheap
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Once upon a time, communism claimed to be the future. How
- Lenin's party rose to power and then disintegrated is this
- century's most gripping tale
- </p>
- <p>BY Otto Friedrich
- </p>
- <p> "This music makes me want to speak sweet nonsense and pat
- on the head people who can create such beauty while living in
- this filthy hell. Nowadays we can't pat heads. We've got to hit
- heads, hit them without mercy."
- </p>
- <p>-- Lenin, on listening to Beethoven
- </p>
- <p> The first Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Workers'
- Party, later to become the Communist Party, consisted of just
- nine delegates representing four labor unions, a workers'
- newspaper and the Jewish Social Democratic Bund. The nine
- delegates met in Minsk on the first three days of March 1898,
- proclaimed themselves a party, called for the overthrow of the
- Romanov rulers and then returned to their homes, where eight
- of the nine were promptly arrested. The fact that the heirs of
- this absurd little group actually did overthrow the Russian
- government not 22 years later was due largely to the malign
- genius of one man who wasn't even present at the Minsk meeting:
- Vladimir Ulyanov, who called himself Lenin (also at various
- times Meyer, Richter and Jordanov).
- </p>
- <p> Son of a highly cultured schoolteacher, Lenin was expelled
- from school for taking part in a student protest. While idling
- at home, he discovered the works of Karl Marx, which prophesied
- the inevitable collapse of capitalism and its empires. He did
- finally get a law degree, but his fascination with Marxism led
- him to Switzerland, to an encounter with the exiled Georgi
- Plekhanov, the eminence grise of Russian Marxism; then to
- meetings with other radicals in Paris and Berlin; then, on his
- return home, to arrest, trial, jail and exile in Siberia. So
- Lenin was far away when the Social Democratic Party was born in
- Minsk and then nearly destroyed. But when he emerged from
- Siberia in 1900, he once again joined forces with Plekhanov and
- vowed to start a newspaper that would organize a rebirth of the
- Social Democrats beyond the reach of the Czar's police. Lenin's
- newspaper, Iskra (Spark), appeared in Munich at the end of that
- year, and a second meeting of the party opened in Brussels in
- 1903.
- </p>
- <p> The tiny party immediately divided. Lenin was determined
- that it should remain small, highly disciplined and "as
- conspiratorial as possible." It must be the "vanguard of the
- working class" but no more than a vanguard. Lenin's more
- open-minded opponents wanted to take in any and all supporters,
- find partners and make coalitions. Lenin, as usual, insisted
- on getting his way, and he got it. With their majority, the
- Leninists took the name of Bolshevik, after bolshoi, big. The
- smaller group was called Mensheviks (minority).
- </p>
- <p> This split in revolutionary strategies lasted for decades,
- and though the Bolsheviks claimed a majority, they were often
- outvoted within the party. Plekhanov tended to side with the
- Mensheviks, and so did an obstreperously brilliant newcomer
- named Lev Bronstein, who signed his fiery pamphlets with the
- name Trotsky. Lenin fought ruthlessly for control. He denounced
- his opponents as not Social Democrats but "Social Chauvinists,"
- as "puerile," as "windbags"; after he lost a vote, he would
- accuse the winners of spiritless "parliamentarianism." When the
- Russian workers rose up in the largely spontaneous revolt of
- 1905, it was Trotsky, still only 25, who headed St. Petersburg's
- first soviet of workers and temporarily seized power in its
- name; when the Czar's soldiers crushed the revolt, Trotsky was
- sent to Siberia (he soon escaped on a hijacked sleigh). Lenin
- remained in Geneva, planning, maneuvering. In 1912 he finally
- had the strength to expel all the Mensheviks from his party.
- </p>
- <p> It was World War I, which the exiled Lenin fervently
- opposed, that finally brought him to the threshold of victory.
- Battered by German triumphs, disheartened by bread riots and
- other signs of popular hostility, Czar Nicholas II abdicated
- in March 1917 and handed over power to a provisional government
- headed by the conservative Prince Lvov. Lenin passionately
- argued that the time for revolution was now.
- </p>
- <p> Lenin could hardly lead a revolution from exile in Geneva,
- of course, but when he asked Berlin for permission to travel
- home through Germany, the Germans happily agreed to provide him
- with a sealed railway carriage (rather like a container for a
- deadly bacillus) and even allocated secret funds to aid his
- plans to stop the war. And so, after ten more years of exile,
- Lenin finally arrived by train at the Finland Station in
- Petrograd on April 16, 1917. He climbed onto an armored car and
- began making a speech. "The people need peace. The people need
- bread. The people need land," he cried. "And they give you war,
- hunger, no bread...We must fight for the social
- revolution."
- </p>
- <p> When rioting broke out in July, Prince Lvov banned the
- Bolsheviks (who grew fourfold, to hundreds of thousands, in
- 1917), sent Lenin into hiding and arrested Trotsky (newly
- arrived from New York City and newly allied with Lenin). Lvov
- then resigned in favor of his War Minister, Alexander Kerensky,
- who called in troops to maintain order in the capital and shut
- down Bolshevik newspapers. Trotsky, out of jail again,
- mobilized Red Guards to defend the Petrograd soviet, which he
- now headed. The government troops would not fight. Lenin called
- for an armed uprising. Almost without opposition, the Bolsheviks
- seized government buildings, electric plants, the post office
- and finally the Winter Palace, where Kerensky's Cabinet had
- taken refuge.
- </p>
- <p> The next day, Nov. 8, Lenin appeared before the Congress of
- Soviets, rejected all talk of a socialist coalition government
- and insisted on an all-Bolshevik Cabinet. He became Premier,
- with Trotsky as Foreign Minister. This was not because the
- Bolsheviks were the biggest or most popular party. In elections
- for a constituent assembly, they won only 25% of the votes, in
- contrast to about 62% for various moderate socialist groups,
- notably the peasant-backed Socialist Revolutionaries, and 13%
- for various bourgeois parties. Dismissing that as a "formal,
- juridical" matter, Lenin simply disbanded the constituent
- assembly after one meeting. And in 1918 he banned all parties
- other than his own, which he had renamed the Communist Party.
- </p>
- <p> In taking such high-handed actions, Lenin now had the weapon
- of a new police force known as the Cheka, which authorized
- local soviets to "arrest and shoot immediately" all members of
- "counterrevolutionary organizations." When a Socialist
- Revolutionary named Fanny Kaplan shot Lenin in the neck, the
- Cheka rounded up and executed 500 of her party comrades in one
- night. Lenin's view: "We have never renounced and cannot
- renounce terror." As for the future role of the Communists, the
- Eighth Party Congress decreed in 1919 that "the Russian
- Communist Party should master for itself undivided political
- supremacy in the soviets and practical supervision over all
- their work."
- </p>
- <p> But governing a disintegrating nation was difficult.
- Although Trotsky made peace with the Germans in the Treaty of
- Brest-Litovsk, Berlin's price was the separation from Russia
- of Poland, the Baltic states and the Ukraine. British and
- French troops landed in Murmansk to keep Russian supplies out
- of German hands. Various anti-Bolshevik "White" armies sprang
- up in the south and in Siberia. Japanese and American troops
- landed in Vladivostok.
- </p>
- <p> By the time all those forces were pushed back or negotiated
- away, the Soviets' hastily nationalized and collectivized
- economy was a shambles. By 1920 industrial production had
- dropped to about 15% of the prewar level; runaway inflation had
- made the ruble nearly worthless; foreign trade had plummeted
- to almost zero. Peasants whose crops were requisitioned for the
- cities began hiding their harvests or not harvesting at all,
- and in 1921 famine killed uncounted millions.
- </p>
- <p> Confronted with this disaster, Lenin zigzagged. According
- to the New Economic Policy inaugurated in 1921, private
- enterprise was once again permitted, farmers could keep or sell
- more of their crops, overtime pay was restored, a new state
- bank reformed the currency (sound familiar?). Predictably
- enough, improvements soon followed--production up, trade up.
- But in this ambiguous moment of success, Lenin suffered a
- stroke. He struggled to stay at his post, to finish his work,
- but two more strokes increasingly paralyzed him, and after 22
- months of decline, he died in 1924, at only 53.
- </p>
- <p> He left a party deeply divided over the New Economic Policy,
- which Trotsky and others criticized as a return to capitalism,
- and over its whole future. Many considered Trotsky the natural
- heir. But Lenin unfortunately left the party machinery in the
- hands of a General Secretary even more ruthless than he had
- been. Joseph Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, who had adopted the
- nom de guerre of Stalin (meaning steel), was a Georgian, a
- onetime seminarian. He had made himself particularly useful by
- staging several armed robberies to replenish the Bolshevik
- party treasury. He was smart, tough and a master of intrigue.
- </p>
- <p> In his political testament, Lenin had urged his heirs to
- "remove Stalin" on the grounds that he was rude and abused his
- power. Stalin shrewdly formed an alliance with two of Lenin's
- oldest comrades, Gregori Zinoviev, who was then chief of the
- non-Russian Communist parties assembled in the Comintern, and
- Lev Kamenev, a Politburo member. This triumvirate controlled
- enough votes to block Trotsky and keep Stalin at the party
- helm.
- </p>
- <p> After defeating Trotsky, Stalin broke with his allies and
- joined forces with the more conservative leaders Nikolai
- Bukharin and Alexei Rykov. In the late 1920s he drove Trotsky,
- Zinoviev and Kamenev out of the party, then turned against
- Bukharin and Rykov too. By 1929, without ever having held any
- government post, he was master of all he surveyed. He ordered
- a relentless program of forced industrialization and collective
- farming, a program that cost millions of lives. Trotsky fled
- into exile.
- </p>
- <p> In 1936, as the uncrowned Czar of all the Russias, Stalin
- drew up a new constitution that described the Communist Party,
- which always remained an elite, never enrolling more than 10%
- of the adult population, as "the leading core of all
- organizations...both public and state." Between 1939 and
- 1952, however, Stalin held no party congresses. He preferred
- to run things by himself, as demonstrated in the great purge
- trials of 1936-38.
- </p>
- <p> Lenin believed in purges, but he had never attempted
- anything on this scale. Before a fascinated and rather
- horrified world, one broken old Bolshevik after another stood
- up in court and confessed to myriad forms of treason,
- corruption and sabotage. Almost 50 of them were sentenced to
- death, including Zinoviev, Rykov and Secret Police Chief G.G.
- Yagoda. Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky, one of the heroes of the
- civil war, was sent to a firing squad, along with seven other
- generals. Many others died in secret. And as a kind of horrid
- climax to the purge, a Soviet agent befriended Trotsky in
- Mexico City, then hacked him to death in 1940 with a
- steel-bladed alpenstock.
- </p>
- <p> Despite such crimes, this was a period of great growth and
- strength for the Communist Party all around the world. In a
- time of global depression and the sinister rise of fascism,
- many people regarded both capitalism and democracy as doomed
- and Communism as the wave of the future. Precisely because it
- was militant and authoritarian and claimed to have all the
- answers, Communism attracted people as diverse as Andre
- Malraux, Paul Robeson, Bertolt Brecht. Their allegiance took
- a severe beating when Stalin negotiated an alliance with Hitler
- that enabled the Nazis to start World War II in 1939. But when
- Hitler invaded Russia in 1941, the Soviets suddenly became
- admired members of the Western alliance.
- </p>
- <p> When Stalin died in 1953, he was far gone in paranoia,
- convinced that a cabal of Jewish doctors was trying to poison
- him. Only after shooting Stalin's reptilian police chief,
- Lavrenty Beria, did the Kremlin survivors, notably the new
- Communist Party Secretary, Nikita Khrushchev, try to shift to
- a new policy known as "the thaw." In a four-hour speech before
- the 20th Party Congress, supposedly secret but widely leaked,
- Khrushchev described to the faithful for the first time the
- full range of Stalin's crimes. ("But where were you during all
- those years?" one listener asked Khrushchev, according to a joke
- at the time. "Who said that?" shouted Khrushchev, who had been
- one of Stalin's commissars in the Ukraine. Silence. "That's
- where I was," said Khrushchev.)
- </p>
- <p> That same year, 1956, the thaw melted too quickly as far as
- the Kremlin was concerned. Polish crowds demonstrated to demand
- a change of leadership. The Hungarians even overthrew their
- government and enjoyed one heady week of independence. Then
- Khrushchev sent in Soviet tanks to restore the old order. When
- he was forced out in 1964, Leonid Brezhnev seemed even more
- determined to maintain that old order forever, sending more
- tanks to suppress Czech independence in 1968 and warning that
- he would do so again whenever necessary. He too proclaimed a
- new constitution in 1977, declaring more strongly than ever
- that the Communist Party was "the leading and guiding force of
- Soviet society."
- </p>
- <p> It sometimes seemed that the tank-backed Communist Party
- monolith was now immovable, impenetrable, even immortal. But
- Brezhnev died, and so did his two successors, and the
- unthinkable idea of Communists actually surrendering power
- slowly began to become thinkable.
- </p>
- <p>-- Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town and Scott
- MacLeod/Johannesburg
- </p>
-
- <p>RED-LETTER YEARS
- </p>
- <p> 1898. The Russian Social Democrat Worker's Party is formed.
- </p>
- <p> 1902. Vladimir Lenin, editor of the Social Democrats,
- newspaper Iskra (Spark) writes his seminal What Is to Be Done?,
- detailing the concept and role of the party.
- </p>
- <p> 1903. The party splits into the Lenin-led Bolsheviks (the
- majority) and the Mensheviks (the minority).
- </p>
- <p> 1917. Czar Nicholas II abdicates, and political parties are
- legalized. Lenin leads the Bolsheviks to power in the October
- Revolution.
- </p>
- <p> 1918. The Bolsheviks disband the freely elected assembly,
- establish one-party rule and rename themselves the All-Russian
- Communist Party.
- </p>
- <p> 1922. The U.S.S.R. is officially formed.
- </p>
- <p> 1924. Lenin dies, and during the next three years Josef
- Stalin outmaneuvers his rivals for power.
- </p>
- <p> 1929. The collectivization of agriculture begins, and
- results in the deaths of millions of peasants by murder and
- starvation.
- </p>
- <p> 1934. Stalin consolidates his authority and starts mass
- political purges that claim millions of more lives during the
- next four years.
- </p>
- <p> 1941. Stalin assumes the post of Prime Minister to accompany
- his role as head of the party.
- </p>
- <p> 1952. The party is renamed the Communist Party of the Soviet
- Union (C.P.S.U.).
- </p>
- <p> 1953. Stalin dies and later that year is succeeded by Nikita
- Khrushchev, 60.
- </p>
- <p> 1956. Khrushchev details the horrors of Stalin's rule at a
- closed session of the 20th Party Congress and begins his
- destalinization policies, inspiring a generation of party
- officials, including Mikhail Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> 1964. Khrushchev is ousted and replaced by Leonid Brezhnev,
- 58.
- </p>
- <p> 1977. The new Soviet constitution formally recognizes the
- </p>
- <p> 1982. Brezhnev dies and is replaced by Yuri Andropov, 68.
- </p>
- <p> 1984. Andropov dies and is replaced by Konstantin Chernenko,
- 74.
- </p>
- <p> 1985. Chernenko dies and is replaced by Mikhail Gorbachev,
- 54.
- </p>
- <p> 1986. Gorbachev spells out his reform programs of glasnost
- and perestroika.
- </p>
- <p> 1988. Party members approve Gorbachev's proposals for a
- dramatic revamping of the political system.
- </p>
- <p> 1989. A new legislative body, the Congress of People's
- Deputies, is elected, and Gorbachev becomes its President.
- </p>
- <p> 1990. At Gorbachev's urging, the Central Committee votes to
- surrender the party's monopoly on power.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-