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- Essay Name : 1539.txt
- Uploader : Jeremy Osborne
- Email Address :
- Language : english
- Subject : History
- Title : The Rise of Communism in Russia
- Grade : 88%
- School System : Knott county
- Country : U.S.A.
- Author Comments : Difficult paper to write
- Teacher Comments : Good Paper, Needs more detail
- Date : 11/10/95
- Site found at : A friend told me
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- The Rise of Communism in Russia
-
- -Unless we accept the claim that Lenin+s coup d+─tat gave birth
- to an entirely new state, and indeed to a new era in the history of
- mankind, we must recognize in today+s Soviet Union the old empire of the
- Russians -- the only empire that survived into the mid 1980+s+ (Luttwak,
- 1).
- In their Communist Manifesto of 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich
- Engels applied the term communism to a final stage of socialism in which
- all class differences would disappear and humankind would live in
- harmony. Marx and Engels claimed to have discovered a scientific
- approach to socialism based on the laws of history. They declared that
- the course of history was determined by the clash of opposing forces
- rooted in the economic system and the ownership of property. Just as
- the feudal system had given way to capitalism, so in time capitalism
- would give way to socialism. The class struggle of the future would be
- between the bourgeoisie, who were the capitalist employers, and the
- proletariat, who were the workers. The struggle would end, according to
- Marx, in the socialist revolution and the attainment of full communism
- (Groiler+s Encyclopedia).
- Socialism, of which -Marxism-Leninism+ is a takeoff, originated
- in the West. Designed in France and Germany, it was brought into Russia
- in the middle of the nineteenth century and promptly attracted support
- among the country+s educated, public-minded elite, who at that time were
- called intelligentsia (Pipes, 21). After Revolution broke out over
- Europe in 1848 the modern working class appeared on the scene as a major
- historical force. However, Russia remained out of the changes that
- Europe was experiencing. As a socialist movement and inclination, the
- Russian Social-Democratic Party continued the traditions of all the
- Russian Revolutions of the past, with the goal of conquering political
- freedom (Daniels 7).
- As early as 1894, when he was twenty-four, Lenin had become a
- revolutionary agitator and a convinced Marxist. He exhibited his new
- faith and his polemical talents in a diatribe of that year against the
- peasant-oriented socialism of the Populists led by N.K. Mikhiaiovsky
- (Wren, 3).
- While Marxism had been winning adherents among the Russian
- revolutionary intelligentsia for more than a decade previously, a
- claimed Marxist party was bit organized until 1898. In that year a
- -congress+ of nine men met at Minsk to proclaim the establishment of the
- Russian Social Democratic Worker+s Party. The Manifesto issued in the
- name of the congress after the police broke it up was drawn up by the
- economist Peter Struve, a member of the moderate -legal Marxist+ group
- who soon afterward left the Marxist movement altogether. The manifesto
- is indicative of the way Marxism was applied to Russian conditions, and
- of the special role for the proletariat (Pipes, 11).
- The first true congress of the Russian Social Democratic
- Workers+ Party was the Second. It convened in Brussels in the summer of
- 1903, but was forced by the interference of the Belgian authorities to
- move to London, where the proceedings were concluded. The Second
- Congress was the occasion for bitter wrangling among the representatives
- of various Russian Marxist Factions, and ended in a deep split that was
- mainly caused by Lenin -- his personality, his drive for power in the
- movement, and his -hard+ philosophy of the disciplined party
- organization. At the close of the congress Lenin commanded a temporary
- majority for his faction and seized upon the label -Bolshevik+ (Russian
- for Majority), while his opponents who inclined to the -soft+ or more
- democratic position became known as the -Mensheviks+ or minority
- (Daniels, 19).
- Though born only in 1879, Trotsky had gained a leading place
- among the Russian Social-Democrats by the time of the Second party
- Congress in 1903. He represented ultra-radical sentiment that could not
- reconcile itself to Lenin+s stress on the party organization. Trotsky
- stayed with the Menshevik faction until he joined Lenin in 1917. From
- that point on, he acomidated himself in large measure to Lenin+s
- philosophy of party dictatorship, but his reservations came to the
- surface again in the years after his fall from power (Stoessinger, 13).
- In the months after the Second Congress of the Social Democratic
- Party Lenin lost his majority and began organizing a rebellious group of
- Bolsheviks. This was to be in opposition of the new majority of the
- congress, the Menshiviks, led by Trotsky. Twenty-two Bolsheviks,
- including Lenin, met in Geneva in August of 1904 to promote the idea of
- the highly disciplined party and to urge the reorganization of the whole
- Social-Democratic movement on Leninist lines (Stoessinger, 33).
- The differences between Lenin and the Bogdanov group of
- revolutionary romantics came to its peak in 1909. Lenin denounced the
- otzovists, also known as the recallists, who wanted to recall the
- Bolshevik deputies in the Duma, and the ultimatists who demanded that
- the deputies take a more radical stand -- both for their philosophical
- vagaries which he rejected as idealism, and for the utopian purism of
- their refusal to take tactical advantage of the Duma. The real issue
- was Lenin+s control of the faction and the enforcement of his brand of
- Marxist orthodoxy. Lenin demonstrated his grip of the Bolshevik faction
- at a meeting in Paris of the editors of the Bolsheviks+ factional paper,
- which had become the headquarters of the faction. Bogdanov and his
- followers were expelled from the Bolshevik faction, though they remained
- within the Social-Democratic fold (Wren, 95).
- On March 8 of 1917 a severe food shortage cause riots in
- Petrograd. The crowds demanded food and the step down of Tsar. When
- the troops were called in to disperse the crowds, they refused to fire
- their weapons and joined in the rioting. The army generals reported
- that it would be pointless to send in any more troops, because they
- would only join in with the other rioters. The frustrated tsar
- responded by stepping down from power, ending the 300-year-old Romanov
- dynasty (Farah, 580).
- With the tsar out of power, a new provisional government took
- over made up of middle-class Duma representatives. Also rising to power
- was a rival government called the Petrograd Soviet of Workers+ and
- Soldiers+ Deputies consisting of workers and peasants of socialist and
- revolutionary groups. Other soviets formed in towns and villages all
- across the country. All of the soviets worked to push a three-point
- program which called for an immediate peas, the transfer of land to
- peasants, and control of factories to workers. But the provisional
- government stood in conflict with the other smaller governments and the
- hardships of war hit the country. The provisional government was so
- busy fighting the war that they neglected the social problems it faced,
- losing much needed support (Farah, 580).
- The Bolsheviks in Russia were confused and divided about how to
- regard the Provisional Government, but most of them, including Stalin,
- were inclined to accept it for the time being on condition that it work
- for an end to the war. When Lenin reached Russia in April after his
- famous -sealed car+ trip across Germany, he quickly denounced his
- Bolshevik colleagues for failing to take a sufficiently revolutionary
- stand (Daniels, 88).
- In August of 1917, while Lenin was in hiding and the party had
- been basically outlawed by the Provisional Government, the Bolsheviks
- managed to hold their first party congress since 1907 regardless. The
- most significant part of the debate turned on the possibility for
- immediate revolutionary action in Russia and the relation of this to the
- international upheaval. The separation between the utopian
- internationalists and the more practical Russia-oriented people was
- already apparent (Pipes, 127).
- The Bolsheviks+ hope of seizing power was hardly secret. Bold
- refusal of the provisional Government was one of their major ideals.
- Three weeks before the revolt they decided to stage a demonstrative
- walkout from the advisory assembly. When the walkout was staged,
- Trotsky denounced the Provisional Government for its alleged
- counterrevolutionary objectives and called on the people of Russia to
- support the Bolsheviks (Daniels, 110).
- On October 10 of 1917, Lenin made the decision to take power. He
- came secretly to Petrograd to try and disperse any hesitancies the
- Bolshevik leadership had over his demand for armed revolt. Against the
- opposition of two of Lenin+s long-time lieutenants, Zinovieiv and
- Kamenev, the Central Committee accepted Lenin+s resolution which
- formally instructed the party organizations to prepare for the seizure
- of power.
- Finally, of October 25 the Bolshevik revolution took place to
- overthrow the provisional government. They did so through the agency of
- the Military-Revolutionary Committee of the Petrograd Soviet. They
- forcibly overthrew the provisional government by taking over all of the
- government buildings, such as the post office, and big corporations,
- such as the power companies, the shipyard, the telephone company. The
- endorsement of the coup was secured from the Second All-Russian Congress
- of Soviets, which was concurrently in session. This was known as the
- -October Revolution+ (Luttwak, 74) Through this, control of Russia was
- shifted to Lenin and the Bolsheviks.
- IN a quick series of decrees, the new -soviet+ government
- instituted a number of sweeping reforms, some long overdue and some
- quite revolutionary. They ranged from -democratic+ reforms, such as the
- disestablishment of the church and equality for the national minorities,
- to the recognition of the peasants+ land seizures and to openly
- socialist steps such as the nationalization of banks. The Provisional
- Government+s commitment to the war effort was denounced. Four decrees
- were put into action. The first four from the Bolshevik Revolutionary
- Legislation were a decree on peace, a decree on land, a decree on the
- suppression of hostile newspapers, and a declaration of the rights of
- the peoples of Russia (Stossenger, 130).
- By early 1918 the Bolshevik critics individually made their
- peace with Lenin, and were accepted back into the party and governmental
- leadership. At the same time, the Left and Soviet administration thus
- acquired the exclusively Communist character which it has had ever
- since. The Left SR+s like the right SR+s and the Mensheviks, continued
- to function in the soviets as a more or less legal opposition until the
- outbreak of large-scale civil war in the middle of 1918. At that point
- the opposition parties took positions which were either equally vocal or
- openly anti-Bolshevik, and one after another, they were suppressed.
- The Eastern Front had been relatively quiet during 1917, and
- shortly after the Bolshevik Revolution a temporary armstice was agreed
- upon. Peace negotiations were then begun at the Polish town of
- Brest-Litovsk, behind the German lines. In agreement with their earlier
- anti-imperialist line, the Bolshevik negotiators, headed by Trotsky,
- used the talks as a discussion for revolutionary propaganda, while most
- of the party expected the eventual return of war in the name of
- revolution. Lenin startled his followers in January of 1918 by
- explicitly demanding that the Soviet republic meet the German conditions
- and conclude a formal peace in order to win what he regarded as an
- indispensable -breathing spell,+ instead of shallowly risking the future
- of the revolution (Daniels, 135).
- Trotsky resigned as Foreign Commissar during the Brest-Litovsk
- crisis, but he was immediately appointed Commissar of Military Affairs
- and entrusted with the creation of a new Red Army to replace the old
- Russian army which had dissolved during the revolution. Many Communists
- wanted to new military force to be built up on strictly revolutionary
- principles, with guerrilla tactics, the election of officers, and the
- abolition of traditional discipline. Trotsky set himself emphatically
- against this attitude and demanded an army organized in the conventional
- way and employing -military specialists+ -- experienced officers from
- the old army.
- Hostilities between the Communists and the Whites, who were the
- groups opposed to the Bolsheviks, reached a decicive climax in 1919.
- Intervention by the allied powers on the side of the Whites almost
- brought them victory. Facing the most serious White threat led by
- General Denikin in Southern Russia, Lenin appealed to his followers for
- a supreme effort, and threatened ruthless repression of any opposition
- behind the lines. By early 1920 the principal White forces were
- defeated (Wren, 151). For three years the rivalry went on with the
- Whites capturing areas and killing anyone suspected of Communist
- practices. Even though the Whites had more soldiers in their army, they
- were not nearly as organized nor as efficient as the Reds, and therefore
- were unable to rise up (Farah, 582).
- Police action by the Bolsheviks to combat political opposition
- commenced with the creation of the -Cheka.+ Under the direction of
- Felix Dzerzhinsky, the Cheka became the prototype of totalitarian secret
- police systems, enjoying at critical times the right the right of
- unlimited arrest and summary execution of suspects and hostages. The
- principle of such police surveillance over the political leanings of the
- Soviet population has remained in effect ever since, despite the varying
- intensity of repression and the organizational changes of the police --
- from Cheka to GPU (The State Political Administration) to NKVD (People+s
- Commissariat of Internal Affairs) to MVD (Ministry of Internal Affairs)
- to the now well-known KGB (Committee for State Security) (Pipes, 140).
- Lenin used his secret police in his plans to use terror to
- achieve his goals and as a political weapon against his enemies. Anyone
- opposed to the communist state was arrested. Many socialists who had
- backed Lenin+s revolution at first now had second thoughts. To escape
- punishment, they fled. By 1921 Lenin had strengthened his control and
- the White armies and their allies had been defeated (Farah, 582).
- Communism had now been established and Russia had become a
- socialist country. Russia was also given a new name: The Union of Soviet
- Socialist Republics. This in theory meant that the means of production
- was in the hands of the state. The state, in turn, would build the
- future, classless society. But still, the power was in the hands of the
- party (Farah, 583). The next decade was ruled by a collective
- dictatorship of the top party leaders. At the top level individuals
- still spoke for themselves, and considerable freedom for factional
- controversy remained despite the principles of unity laid down in 1921.
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- Works Cited
- Daniels, Robert V., A Documentary History of Communism. New York:
- Random House Publishing, 1960.
- Farah, Mounir, The Human Experience. Columbus: Bell & Howess Co.,
- 1990.
- Luttwak, Edward N., The Grand Strategy of the Soviet Union. New
- York: St. Martin+s Press, 1983.
- Pipes, Richard, Survival is Not Enough. New York: S&S Publishing,
- 1975.
- Stoessinger, John G., Nations in Darkness. Boston: Howard Books,
- 1985.
- Wren, Christopher S., The End of the Line. San Francisco:
- Blackhawk Publishing, 1988.
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-