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- <text id=93HT1400>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1942: Joseph Stalin
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 4, 1943
- Man of the Year
- Joseph Stalin
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Die, But Do Not Retreat
- </p>
- <p> The year 1942 was a year of blood and strength. The man
- whose name means steel in Russian, whose few words of English
- include the American expression "tough guy" was the man of 1942.
- Only Joseph Stalin fully knew how close Russia stood to defeat in
- 1942, and only Joseph Stalin fully knew how he brought Russia
- through.
- </p>
- <p> But the whole world knew what the alternative would have
- been. The man who knew it best of all was Adolf Hitler, who found
- his past accomplishments turning into dust.
- </p>
- <p> Had German legions swept past steel-stubborn Stalingrad and
- liquidated Russia's power of attack, Hitler would have been not
- only man of the year, but he would have been undisputed master of
- Europe, looking for other continents to conquer. He could have
- diverted at least 250 victorious divisions to new conquests in
- Asia and Africa. But Joseph Stalin stopped him. Stalin had done
- it before--in 1941--when he started with all of Russia
- intact. But Stalin's achievement of 1942 was far greater. All
- that Hitler could give he took--for the second time.
- </p>
- <p> Men of Good Will. Above the heavy tread of nations on the
- march, above the staccato uproar of the battlefields, only a few
- men of peace were heard in 1942.
- </p>
- <p> Britain's William Temple, who made his pilgrimage to
- Canterbury in 1942 and became the new Archbishop, was one of
- them. His church-approved program of reforms brought religion
- closer to the center of British national life than at any time
- since Cromwell's Roundheads. Temple challenged all Britain's
- well-established institutions of economic privilege, espoused the
- cause of mankind's economic freedom (which Britain loosely calls
- socialism), probably to leave a lasting mark on British history.
- </p>
- <p> Another man who may leave a similar mark is Henry J. Kaiser,
- the man who launched one of his Liberty ships in four days and 15
- hours and, more important, preached as a practical businessman
- "full production for full employment." His gospel challenged U.S.
- industry to lead the post-war world out of depression.
- </p>
- <p> A third man who left a mark was Wendell Willkie, whose
- world-circling trip as the politician without office had an
- effect perhaps more lasting than the U.S. yet realizes on U.S.
- relations with Russia and the Orient.
- </p>
- <p> But Willkie's accomplishment was dimmed by his failure to
- command the firm support of his party, and the plain fact was
- that in 1942, a year of war, men of good will had no achievements
- to match those of men of arms and men of power.
- </p>
- <p> Men of War. Flamboyant Erwin Rommel and cold-mouthed Fedor
- von Bock were Germany's two top generals in a year whose laurels
- were reserved primarily for fighting men. Rommel, who drove to
- within 70 miles of Alexandria before he was stopped by the
- British, established himself as one of the great virtuosos among
- field commanders. Bock directed a brilliant campaign which
- reached the west bank of the Volga, but the final spark that
- would have meant victory was not in him.
- </p>
- <p> The greatest military conquests of the year--although not
- against the greatest forces--were those of frog-legged Tomoyuki
- Yamashita, who blasted the British out of Singapore, the Dutch
- out of the Indies and the U.S. out of Bataan and Corregidor.
- Yamashita in one year successfully seized a great empire for his
- country. On his side were advantages in numbers, in preparation,
- in the stupidity of the Allied nations, but Yamashita
- successfully capitalized on them.
- </p>
- <p> Quite different were the military triumphs of Yugoslavia's
- General Draja Mihailovich, who capitalized on a conquered
- nation's unconquerable urge for freedom to fight when fighting
- seemed impossible. But before the year was out thousands of his
- countrymen, probably distrusting the Yugoslav Government in Exile
- more than they did Mihailovich, supported the rival Partisan
- guerrillas who were carving out their own fighting front. From
- high on the crags of southern Serbia, Mihailovich, a great
- fighter, saw, instead of the unification of his country, a
- preview of rival aims and clashing ideologies which may bring out
- a rash of civil wars in post-war Europe.
- </p>
- <p> As for the military men of the U.S., 1942 offered them few
- opportunities for great achievement. General Eisenhower's able
- occupation of North Africa only placed him on the threshold of
- his real test. Douglas MacArthur, whose brilliant skill and
- courage raised him to the rank of hero while he fought an
- inevitably losing fight, still lacked the means to win the crown
- of a great victory. Outstanding among Americans for
- accomplishment in battle stood the name of Admiral William
- Halsey, who, not once but again & again, took his task force into
- swift encounters against the Japs to deal them telling blows.
- </p>
- <p> Yet no military man from Rommel to Halsey was the man of
- 1942 for a good sufficient reason: there was no military victory
- of the year which showed signs of being conclusive.
- </p>
- <p> Men of Power. There was perhaps no more unlikely place to
- look for a Man of 1942 than in prostrate France. Yet two
- Frenchmen, both of whom the U.S. disliked and distrusted, rose to
- the top of a soiled political heap. One of them was Pierre Laval,
- who rose to the honor of a meeting with Hitler to which the
- tragicomic Benito Mussolini was not invited. If Hitler wins,
- Pierre Laval may yet be a successful man. Jean Francois Darlan's
- deal with General Eisenhower might have profited him eventually,
- but his award was an assassin's bullet.
- </p>
- <p> A far greater step to power was taken by a Japanese. From
- behind his horn-rimmed glasses and the ask-ack of his cigar
- smoke, Premier Hideki Tojo emerged as a character worthy of his
- nickname: The Razor. He, like Stalin, was tough. So were his
- people. He took the major political risk of the year in tackling
- Britain and the U.S., and, for the year, it turned out to be a
- good speculation. His armies conquered Hong Kong, the
- Philippines, Singapore, the Dutch East Indies and Burma. Never in
- history had one nation conquered so much so quickly. Seldom had
- any nation's fighting abilities been underestimated so badly.
- Tojo, or Emperor Hirohito, in whose name all Japanese wage holy
- war, might well have been the man of the year, if the explosive
- Japanese campaigns had not shown signs of burning out.
- </p>
- <p> For the great leaders of the United Nations 1942 was another
- story. China's Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek struggled on
- stubbornly against China's internal problems and the invading
- Japanese. Britain's Winston Churchill, Man of 1940, delivered
- victory in Egypt after standing on the verge of defeat. Franklin
- Roosevelt, Man of 1941, shouldered mountainous problems, solved
- some, left others still crying to be solved. He successfully
- brought the weight of the U.S. to bear against the Axis. But the
- 1942 accomplishments of Chiang, of Churchill and of Roosevelt
- will not bear fruit till 1943. And, worthy though they may prove,
- they inevitably pale by comparison with what Joseph Stalin did in
- 1942.
- </p>
- <p> At the beginning of the year Stalin was in an unenviable
- spot. During the year before he had sold over 400,000 miles of
- territory at the price of saving most of his army. Gone was a big
- fraction--how large only he knew--of the precious tanks,
- planes and war equipment which he had been hoarding for years
- against the Nazi attack. Gone was roughly one-third of Russia's
- industrial capacity, on which he depended for replacements. Gone
- was nearly half of Russia's best farmland.
- </p>
- <p> With all this gone, Stalin had to face another full-weight
- blow from the Nazi war machine. For every trained soldier the
- Germans had lost in the previous year's battles, he had probably
- lost as many and more. For every bit of valuable experience which
- his soldiers and commanders had gained, the Germans had had the
- opportunity to gain an equal amount.
- </p>
- <p> Stalin still had the magnificent will to resist of the
- Russian people--who had as much claim to glory as the British
- people had when they withstood the blitz of 1940. But a strong
- people had not prevented the loss of White Russia and the
- Ukraine. Would they be any better able to prevent the conquest of
- the Don basin, of Stalingrad, of the Caucasus? The strongest will
- to resist can eventually crack under continued defeat.
- </p>
- <p> Only one new resource had Stalin for 1942: the help of the
- U.S. And, as events were to prove, that was to come late and to
- be bottlenecked by German attacks on the North Sea route and the
- Caucasus.
- </p>
- <p> With these reduced resources, Stalin tackled his problem,
- trying to pick abler leaders for his Army, trying to improve its
- resistance, trying to maintain the morale of his underfed people,
- trying to extract more aid from his Allies and to get them to
- open a second front.
- </p>
- <p> Only Stalin knows how he managed to make 1942 a better year
- for Russia than 1941. But he did. Sevastopol was lost, the Don
- basin was nearly lost, the Germans reached the Caucasus. But
- Stalingrad was held. The Russian people held. The Russian Army
- came back with four offensives that had the Germans in serious
- trouble at year's end.
- </p>
- <p> Russia was displaying greater strength than at any point in
- the war. The general who had won that overall battle was the man
- who runs Russia.
- </p>
- <p> The Man. In his birch-paneled office within the dark-towered
- Kremlin, Joseph Stalin (pronounced Stal-yn), an imponderable,
- soberly persistent Asiatic, worked at his desk 16 to 18 hours a
- day. Before him he kept a huge globe showing the course of
- campaigns over territory he himself defended in the civil wars of
- 1917-20. This time he again defended it, and mostly by will
- power. There were new streaks of grey in his hair and new
- etchings of fatigue in his granite face. (Stalin was 63 on Dec.
- 21, a date not recorded in the Soviet Encyclopedia and not
- mentioned in the Soviet press for the past three years.) But
- there was no break in his hold on Russia and there was long-
- neglected recognition of his abilities by nations outside the
- Soviet borders.
- </p>
- <p> The problem for Stalin the statesman was to present the
- seriousness of the plight of Russia as an ally to Western leaders
- long suspicious of Stalin and his workers' State. Stalin, who had
- every reason to expect the city named for him to fall shortly
- after its heroic siege began on Aug. 24, desperately wanted aid
- from his allies. Stalin the politician made these desires the
- hope of the Russian people. He made them think that a continental
- second front had been promised to them, and thereby strengthened
- their will to hang on.
- </p>
- <p> For his armies Stalin coined the slogan Umeraite No Ne
- Otstupaite (Die, But Do Not Retreat). It had been shown at Moscow
- that a strongly fortified city can be held as a strong point
- against attack by mechanized forces. Stalin chose to make
- Stalingrad another such point. While Germans and Russians were
- booting each other to death in the bomb-pocked streets, Stalin
- was organizing the winter offensive which burst into the Don
- basin with the fury of the snowstorms that accompanied it.
- </p>
- <p> To keep his home front intact, Stalin had only work and
- black bread to offer. He added a promise of victory in 1942 and
- called to his people to sacrifice collectively to preserve the
- things they had built collectively. Children and women foraged in
- the forests for wood. A ballerina canceled one performance
- because she was stiff from chopping wood. Production norms were
- increased, apartments went unheated, electricity was turned off
- four days a week. At year's end the Russian children had no new
- toys for the New Year's celebration. There were no red-cloaked
- wooden replicas of Dyed Moross (Granddad Frost). There was no
- smoked salmon, no pickled herring, no goose, no vodka, no coffee
- for the grownups. But there was rejoicing. The Rodina
- (Motherland) had been saved for the second time in two years and
- now victory and peace could not be too far off.
- </p>
- <p> The trek of world dignitaries to Moscow in 1942 brought
- Stalin out of his inscrutable shell, revealed a pleasant host and
- an expert at playing his cards in international affairs. At
- banquets for such men as Winston Churchill, W. Averill Harriman
- and Wendell Willkie, Host Stalin drank his vodka straight, talked
- the same way. He sent Foreign Minister Viacheslav Molotov to
- London and Washington to promote the second front and jack up
- laggard shipments of war materiel. In two letters to Henry
- Cassidy of the A.P., Stalin shrewdly used the world's headlines
- to state the Russian case for more aid.
- </p>
- <p> Stalin did not get his continental second front in 1942, but
- when a new front was opened in North Africa he publicly approved.
- On the 25th anniversary of the Bolshevist Revolution, Stalin, in
- his big state speech of the year, reviewed the past and for the
- future struck the note of statesmanship.
- </p>
- <p> The Past. The Revolution that was begun in 1917 by a handful
- of leather-coated working men and pallid intellectuals waving the
- red flag, by 1942 had congealed into a party government that has
- remained in power longer than any other major party in the world.
- It began under the leadership of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, on
- Marxist principles of a moneyless economy which challenged the
- right to accumulate wealth by private initiative.
- </p>
- <p> The world reviled and caricatured the early Bolsheviks as
- bush-whiskered anarchists with a bomb in each hand. But Lenin,
- faced with hard facts and a war-beaten, superstitious, illiterate
- people, compromised with Marxism. Stalin, succeeding him,
- compromised still further, concentrated on building socialism in
- one state. Retained through the years of Russia's great upheaval
- was the basic conception that the ownership and operation of the
- means of production must be kept in the hands of the state.
- </p>
- <p> Within Russia's immense disorderliness, Stalin faced the
- fundamental problems of providing enough food for the people and
- improving their lot, through 20th-Century industrial methods. He
- collectivized the farms and he built Russia into one of the four
- great industrial powers on earth. How well he succeeded was
- evident in Russia's world-surprising strength in World War II.
- Stalin's methods were tough, but they paid off.
- </p>
- <p> The Present. The U.S., of all nations, should have been the
- first to understand Russia. Ignorance of Russia and suspicion of
- Stalin were two things that prevented it. Old prejudices and the
- antics of U.S. communists dangling at the end of the Party line
- were others. As Allies fighting the common enemy, the Russians
- have fought the best fight so far. As post-war collaborators,
- they hold many of the keys to a successful peace.
- </p>
- <p> The two peoples who talk the most and scheme the biggest
- schemes are the Americans and the Russians. Both can be
- sentimental one moment, blazingly angry the next. Both spend
- their money freely for goods and pleasures, drink too much, argue
- interminably. Both are builders. The U.S. built mills and
- factories and tamed the land across a continent 3,000 miles wide.
- Russia tried to catch up by doing the same thing through a
- planned program that post-pioneer Americans would not have
- suffered. The rights as individuals that U.S. citizens have, the
- Russians want and believe they eventually will receive. Some of
- the discipline that the Russians have, the U.S. may need before
- the end of World War II.
- </p>
- <p> The Future. In his 25th-anniversary speech Stalin emphasized
- that the most important event in foreign affairs, both for war
- and peace, was Allied collaboration. "We have the facts and
- events," he said, "pointing to a progressive rapprochement among
- the members of the Anglo-Soviet-American coalition and their
- uniting in a single fighting alliance." This was a frank approach
- to the post-war world, as realistically sensible as Stalin's
- expressed ideas on dealings with Germany. "Our aim," he said, "is
- not to destroy all armed force in Germany, because any
- intelligent man will understand that this is as impossible in the
- case of Germany as in the case of Russia. It would be
- unreasonable on the part of the victor to do so. To destroy
- Hitler's army is possible and necessary."
- </p>
- <p> What other war aims Stalin has are not officially known, but
- there are reports in high circles that he wants no new
- territories except at points needed to make Russia impregnable
- against invasion. There is also a story in high places that, in
- keeping with the "tough-guy" tradition, credits Stalin with one
- other desire: permission from his allies to raze Berlin, as a
- lesson in psychology to the Germans and as a burnt offering to
- his own heroic people.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-